Nel Pacifico del 1942, un soldato giapponese e un prigioniero britannico si ritrovano bloccati su un'isola deserta. Inseguiti da una creatura letale, i due nemici sono costretti ad allearsi ... Leggi tuttoNel Pacifico del 1942, un soldato giapponese e un prigioniero britannico si ritrovano bloccati su un'isola deserta. Inseguiti da una creatura letale, i due nemici sono costretti ad allearsi per sopravvivere.Nel Pacifico del 1942, un soldato giapponese e un prigioniero britannico si ritrovano bloccati su un'isola deserta. Inseguiti da una creatura letale, i due nemici sono costretti ad allearsi per sopravvivere.
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Great action, great suspense, great script, great practical FX, great creature design (although of course, based on the original), great story, great acting, great pacing, great location, great cinematography, great editing, great gore.
This movie is so goddamn fun! From the opening frames, to the somewhat heartfelt final moments, it's such an enjoyable ride. The film makers here set out to do one thing - make a fun movie - and that's EXACTLY what they accomplished. A nearly perfect escapism film that will have you enthralled the entire run time.
Absolutely recommended! Won't disappoint.
This movie is so goddamn fun! From the opening frames, to the somewhat heartfelt final moments, it's such an enjoyable ride. The film makers here set out to do one thing - make a fun movie - and that's EXACTLY what they accomplished. A nearly perfect escapism film that will have you enthralled the entire run time.
Absolutely recommended! Won't disappoint.
No pun intended - since Predator came out many moons ago (decades actually) any movie that is close to what it did, will be compared with it. You know: if it bleeds, we can kill it. Same applies here and again no pun intended. Just saying for arguments sake and all that.
Now I do not remember the budget that Predator had, but it was big budget (Schwarzenegger just to name one of the actors in it) - and this right here is anything but. So if you consider the budget this had, this is really well done! And while the story may not have many surprises, the effects work as intended. Also the run time is short enough - so I don't think anyone will be annoyed at any point. Action and stunts are good too - the make up/costume is also quite good ... yes you can tell it is a human in a suit ... but suspension of disbelief is needed with most movies anyway, this is no different in any regard.
Just go along with the ride ... not a holiday vacation of course.
Now I do not remember the budget that Predator had, but it was big budget (Schwarzenegger just to name one of the actors in it) - and this right here is anything but. So if you consider the budget this had, this is really well done! And while the story may not have many surprises, the effects work as intended. Also the run time is short enough - so I don't think anyone will be annoyed at any point. Action and stunts are good too - the make up/costume is also quite good ... yes you can tell it is a human in a suit ... but suspension of disbelief is needed with most movies anyway, this is no different in any regard.
Just go along with the ride ... not a holiday vacation of course.
Stranded in the middle of the war, Japanese and American soldiers are stuck on a remote island while their sides wage war during World War II and must work together to fight off the ravenous creature that's living on the island, hunting everything that sets foot there.
For the most part, this was a fairly fun creature feature. Among the better qualities of this one stem from the storyline featured here, which takes a somewhat conventional monster movie trope and offers some fresh spins on everything. With the experience detailing the closing days of World War II and the efforts by the Japanese soldiers to come to terms with their stance in the war in the form of a traitor in their ranks only to be prevented from doing anything due to the Allied strike on the ship performing the inquiry, there's some fun setup at play here. Not only does this provide a fun way to strand everyone on the island when the survivors are washed ashore before the ship explodes with everyone onboard, but it also allows us to generate some sympathy between everyone, and we also get to experience a bit more about the dynamic between the two of them when they arrive on the island. How they bond and interact with each other is a great way to set this one up going forward, with the whole thing being interrupted by the discovery of the creature, all of which helps this one rather nicely as we see their friendship blossom. The other big positive here is the strength of the creature attacks, which are handled incredibly well. The humanoid stance and fishman-like appearance of the creature being accomplished practically means this one gets up and personal with how it focuses the immediacy of the attacks, interrupting the Japanese soldiers talking to him on the island or stalking the group through the jungle, which gives this some impressive sequences. As well, the second half is devoted almost entirely to the hunt to stop the creature, which means a slew of fun tactics is ready to defend themselves against the creature, only to be confronted with the possibility of having to rely on different tactics to finally stop it. This all results in some exceptionally gruesome and bloody kills featuring the creature ripping not just the soldier victims it comes across but also the other random figures at home on the island, which is just as much fun as the rest of the action involved with the film, all of which makes for a lot of fun positives here. There are some issues present here that do hold this one down somewhat. The main drawback to be had with this one is the somewhat bland pace featured here, which gives everything a draining experience to sit through. The fact that so much happens in the second half is obvious from the extended amount of time featuring the duo on the island, trying to come to terms with the situation, mostly due to the decision to make all of their bonding occur at that point in the film. Trying to come to an understanding and recognize who they are and what they need from each other to survive is a great way to start everything but it does this at the expense of the action, as that first half becomes a struggle to get through, as it becomes apparent it just doesn't have enough to justify a feature-length running time. Dispatching as many bodies as it does immediately, only to then go through time-wasting scenes such as ammo stock-up or just meandering exploration of the jungle doesn't offer a lot of thrilling elements throughout here, and it tends to give this one the kind of sluggish start that's hard to overcome.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence and Language.
For the most part, this was a fairly fun creature feature. Among the better qualities of this one stem from the storyline featured here, which takes a somewhat conventional monster movie trope and offers some fresh spins on everything. With the experience detailing the closing days of World War II and the efforts by the Japanese soldiers to come to terms with their stance in the war in the form of a traitor in their ranks only to be prevented from doing anything due to the Allied strike on the ship performing the inquiry, there's some fun setup at play here. Not only does this provide a fun way to strand everyone on the island when the survivors are washed ashore before the ship explodes with everyone onboard, but it also allows us to generate some sympathy between everyone, and we also get to experience a bit more about the dynamic between the two of them when they arrive on the island. How they bond and interact with each other is a great way to set this one up going forward, with the whole thing being interrupted by the discovery of the creature, all of which helps this one rather nicely as we see their friendship blossom. The other big positive here is the strength of the creature attacks, which are handled incredibly well. The humanoid stance and fishman-like appearance of the creature being accomplished practically means this one gets up and personal with how it focuses the immediacy of the attacks, interrupting the Japanese soldiers talking to him on the island or stalking the group through the jungle, which gives this some impressive sequences. As well, the second half is devoted almost entirely to the hunt to stop the creature, which means a slew of fun tactics is ready to defend themselves against the creature, only to be confronted with the possibility of having to rely on different tactics to finally stop it. This all results in some exceptionally gruesome and bloody kills featuring the creature ripping not just the soldier victims it comes across but also the other random figures at home on the island, which is just as much fun as the rest of the action involved with the film, all of which makes for a lot of fun positives here. There are some issues present here that do hold this one down somewhat. The main drawback to be had with this one is the somewhat bland pace featured here, which gives everything a draining experience to sit through. The fact that so much happens in the second half is obvious from the extended amount of time featuring the duo on the island, trying to come to terms with the situation, mostly due to the decision to make all of their bonding occur at that point in the film. Trying to come to an understanding and recognize who they are and what they need from each other to survive is a great way to start everything but it does this at the expense of the action, as that first half becomes a struggle to get through, as it becomes apparent it just doesn't have enough to justify a feature-length running time. Dispatching as many bodies as it does immediately, only to then go through time-wasting scenes such as ammo stock-up or just meandering exploration of the jungle doesn't offer a lot of thrilling elements throughout here, and it tends to give this one the kind of sluggish start that's hard to overcome.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence and Language.
Despite of never having heard about the 2024 movie "Orang Ikan" (aka "Monster Island"), of course I opted to watch it as I had the opportunity here in 2025. I am a big fan of all things horror after all.
The storyline certainly sounded interesting as served through the synopsis, however I have to say that the actual movie itself, well not so much. Sure, it was watchable, and there was potential, but ultimately it was a tedious and generic movie.
I was not familiar with a single actor on the cast list. The acting performances were not particularly outstanding or memorable, which was a shame, as the movie had a very small cast ensemble, and thus was depending on the acting performances to carry a certain weight of the movie.
The effects in the movie were okay, and I did like the creature design and the way that they made the aquatic creature look. It definitely helped keep the movie afloat, pardon the pun.
Ultimately then "Orang Ikan" is not a movie that I would recommend you to waste 84 minutes on watching.
My rating of writer and director Mike Wiluan's 2024 movie "Orang Ikan" lands on a generous four out of ten stars.
The storyline certainly sounded interesting as served through the synopsis, however I have to say that the actual movie itself, well not so much. Sure, it was watchable, and there was potential, but ultimately it was a tedious and generic movie.
I was not familiar with a single actor on the cast list. The acting performances were not particularly outstanding or memorable, which was a shame, as the movie had a very small cast ensemble, and thus was depending on the acting performances to carry a certain weight of the movie.
The effects in the movie were okay, and I did like the creature design and the way that they made the aquatic creature look. It definitely helped keep the movie afloat, pardon the pun.
Ultimately then "Orang Ikan" is not a movie that I would recommend you to waste 84 minutes on watching.
My rating of writer and director Mike Wiluan's 2024 movie "Orang Ikan" lands on a generous four out of ten stars.
Monster Island is a World War II-era creature feature that swings for the fences with a bold genre mashup: part survival thriller, part war drama, part folklore-fueled monster flick. Directed by Mike Wiluan (Buffalo Boys), and inspired by Malay mythology and classic films like Creature from the Black Lagoon, the movie feels like a love letter to mid-century horror wrapped in the rugged grit of a wartime survival tale.
The setup is promising. A Japanese soldier and a British POW are marooned on a remote island during WWII, forced to put aside their hatred and histories to survive. But it's not just each other, or the encroaching Japanese military they have to worry about. Something hungry stalks the jungle, able to camouflage itself like a chameleon, striking from the shadows with lethal precision. Think The Defiant Ones meets Predator, with a splash of Southeast Asian folklore.
It's a clever concept, and the film wears its influences proudly. The callbacks to The Defiant Ones aren't subtle, nor are the nods to classic monster movie tropes: the slow reveal of the creature in the dense jungle. When the film leans into its atmosphere, it works. There are stretches where you feel the tension between the two men just as much as the threat lurking in the trees.
Unfortunately, the execution doesn't always live up to the potential. The CGI creature design is interesting-drawing on mythical elements instead of going full Hollywood-but the visual effects themselves are... well, rough. The monster too often looks like it belongs in a Syfy original from the early 2000s, standing out awkwardly from the environment rather than blending in. That disconnect pulled me out of the experience, and while I try not to judge a film solely on its visual effects, they do matter in a creature feature... especially one built on stealth, camouflage, and primal terror.
Storywise, it's serviceable. The relationship between the two leads carries enough emotional weight to keep the film moving, and the pacing never drags. There are a few solid gore moments, but nothing that will shock seasoned horror fans. The ending, while not bad, lands right where you expect it to a little too safe for a film that tries to position itself as something unique.
For fans of offbeat monster movies or those with a soft spot for war-horror hybrids, Monster Island is a solid watch. It might not break new ground, but there's enough here-folklore inspiration, tension between enemies, turned-allies, and a cool creature concept to justify its runtime. For me personally, the movie didn't quite hit the right notes. I love a good creature feature, but I'm easily turned off by poor CGI and uneven tone. Still, there are many flavors of horror, and this one might just be the right bite for someone else.
The setup is promising. A Japanese soldier and a British POW are marooned on a remote island during WWII, forced to put aside their hatred and histories to survive. But it's not just each other, or the encroaching Japanese military they have to worry about. Something hungry stalks the jungle, able to camouflage itself like a chameleon, striking from the shadows with lethal precision. Think The Defiant Ones meets Predator, with a splash of Southeast Asian folklore.
It's a clever concept, and the film wears its influences proudly. The callbacks to The Defiant Ones aren't subtle, nor are the nods to classic monster movie tropes: the slow reveal of the creature in the dense jungle. When the film leans into its atmosphere, it works. There are stretches where you feel the tension between the two men just as much as the threat lurking in the trees.
Unfortunately, the execution doesn't always live up to the potential. The CGI creature design is interesting-drawing on mythical elements instead of going full Hollywood-but the visual effects themselves are... well, rough. The monster too often looks like it belongs in a Syfy original from the early 2000s, standing out awkwardly from the environment rather than blending in. That disconnect pulled me out of the experience, and while I try not to judge a film solely on its visual effects, they do matter in a creature feature... especially one built on stealth, camouflage, and primal terror.
Storywise, it's serviceable. The relationship between the two leads carries enough emotional weight to keep the film moving, and the pacing never drags. There are a few solid gore moments, but nothing that will shock seasoned horror fans. The ending, while not bad, lands right where you expect it to a little too safe for a film that tries to position itself as something unique.
For fans of offbeat monster movies or those with a soft spot for war-horror hybrids, Monster Island is a solid watch. It might not break new ground, but there's enough here-folklore inspiration, tension between enemies, turned-allies, and a cool creature concept to justify its runtime. For me personally, the movie didn't quite hit the right notes. I love a good creature feature, but I'm easily turned off by poor CGI and uneven tone. Still, there are many flavors of horror, and this one might just be the right bite for someone else.
New Horror Releases in July 2025
New Horror Releases in July 2025
With I Know What You Did Last Summer coming to theaters and Sinners dropping on HBO Max, let's take a look at the wide world of new horror offerings this July.
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July 2025 TV and Streaming Premiere Dates
July 2025 TV and Streaming Premiere Dates
"Foundation" and "Dexter: Resurrection" are two of this month's most anticipated TV releases. Check out our July calendar for more!
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By what name was Orang Ikan (2024) officially released in India in English?
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