U-SA-GUI
Usagui
Usagi ga Kowai
Genres
- Avant Garde
- Horror
- Suspense
Genres: Avant Garde, Horror, Suspense.
#784
Popularity
2
Favorites
784
Members
#25
This Season
Popular Movie
#35
This Season
Rated Movie
- Aired
- Jan 1, 2002 –
- Duration
- 12 min
Alternative Titles
en-x-romajiUsagi ga Kowai
ja兎ガ怕イ
enUsagui
enThinking and Drawing: Nihon no Shinseiki Art Animation
enThinking and Drawing: Japanese Art Animation of the New Millennium
Synopsis
Tetsuji Kurashige's nightmarish U-SA-GUI (2002) begins by citing a section from Brillat-Savarin's 1825 treatise, The Physiology of Taste, in which the renowned French epicure suggests that stimulating foods, meats in particular, can have an influence on one's dreams. The film depicts a macabre game played by two rabbits and a blindfolded woman. The rabbits face each other over an old-fashioned ill
Tetsuji Kurashige's nightmarish U-SA-GUI (2002) begins by citing a section from Brillat-Savarin's 1825 treatise, The Physiology of Taste, in which the renowned French epicure suggests that stimulating foods, meats in particular, can have an influence on one's dreams. The film depicts a macabre game played by two rabbits and a blindfolded woman. The rabbits face each other over an old-fashioned illustrated board game. When they land on a square, the woman must eat the food indicated in the illustration. If she has chosen correctly, a die pops out of her mouth and lands on the floor giving the rabbits their next move.
(Source: Midnight Eye)
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Tetsuji Kurashige's nightmarish U-SA-GUI (2002) begins by citing a section from Brillat-Savarin's 1825 treatise, The Physiology of Taste, in which the renowned French epicure suggests that stimulating foods, meats in particular, can have an influence on one's dreams. The film depicts a macabre game played by two rabbits and a blindfolded woman. The rabbits face each other over an old-fashioned ill
Tetsuji Kurashige's nightmarish U-SA-GUI (2002) begins by citing a section from Brillat-Savarin's 1825 treatise, The Physiology of Taste, in which the renowned French epicure suggests that stimulating foods, meats in particular, can have an influence on one's dreams. The film depicts a macabre game played by two rabbits and a blindfolded woman. The rabbits face each other over an old-fashioned illustrated board game. When they land on a square, the woman must eat the food indicated in the illustration. If she has chosen correctly, a die pops out of her mouth and lands on the floor giving the rabbits their next move. (Source: Midnight Eye)
Status Breakdown
Relations
Recommendations
Information
- Type
- Movie
- Status
- Airing
- Aired
- Jan 1, 2002 –
- Episodes
- 1
- Duration
- 12 min
Alternative Titles
en-x-romajiUsagi ga Kowai
ja兎ガ怕イ
enUsagui
enThinking and Drawing: Nihon no Shinseiki Art Animation
enThinking and Drawing: Japanese Art Animation of the New Millennium