IMDb RATING
6.3/10
8.4K
YOUR RATING
A group of high school students are forced to play a game of death without knowing who, why or how.A group of high school students are forced to play a game of death without knowing who, why or how.A group of high school students are forced to play a game of death without knowing who, why or how.
- Awards
- 1 win
Ryunosuke Kamiki
- Amaya Takeru
- (as Ryûnosuke Kamiki)
Tommy's Masa
- Daruma
- (voice)
Atsuko Maeda
- Beckoning Cat
- (voice)
Katsuhiro Higo
- Kokeshi Taro
- (voice)
Jimon Terakado
- Kokeshi Oni
- (voice)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe video game Shun plays near the beginning is Biohazard 6 (Resident Evil 6).
Featured review
Based on manga with the same title, Kamisama no iu tôri (As the Gods Will) is a story of average high school students forced to play a series of deadly games. Takeshi Miike who has proved capable with such theme is the perfect pick to create a fascinating, occasionally humorous and gory live action of the manga. He has a distinct stylish visual, timely touch of horror and a proper respect to the original source.
For such grimly movie, the cinematography is very sleek and cool. Viewpoints from above and panoramic shots are used often to set the ambiance. Visual offers bloody gore with mildly tone down violence. For the part of full blood pool of the manga, this movie counterpart uses a more comical effect yet without neglecting the intensity of the scene. In fact Miike, as expected, produces a couple of nasty gruesome sequences of his own.
Humor and philosophical elements are steadily present. The first half sees more comedy for ironic purpose, as the story progresses and the death dealing intensifies the tone tends to be more serious. The movie has taken the liberty of creating more appropriate screenplay for later games. This is due to the fact that it might become overly complex for a feature length movie to display later arcs, and frankly it's not a cause for concern as the new screenplay is still presentable and keeps all the thrilling attributes of the manga.
Miike has a knack for the unassuming shift of tone, as seen from Crows Zero and 13 Assassins. Sometimes the movie would transition from quiet scene to a rather explicit one. It doesn't venture into dark territory too much, but it does warrant a mature rating. If there's any concern, it's that the nature of the games is highly inspired by Japanese culture, this might create a rather awkward narrative at some points though it's only a minor hindrance.
Equally quirky and disturbing, the myriad of bizarrely captivating games of death is brought to live by Takeshi Miike.
For such grimly movie, the cinematography is very sleek and cool. Viewpoints from above and panoramic shots are used often to set the ambiance. Visual offers bloody gore with mildly tone down violence. For the part of full blood pool of the manga, this movie counterpart uses a more comical effect yet without neglecting the intensity of the scene. In fact Miike, as expected, produces a couple of nasty gruesome sequences of his own.
Humor and philosophical elements are steadily present. The first half sees more comedy for ironic purpose, as the story progresses and the death dealing intensifies the tone tends to be more serious. The movie has taken the liberty of creating more appropriate screenplay for later games. This is due to the fact that it might become overly complex for a feature length movie to display later arcs, and frankly it's not a cause for concern as the new screenplay is still presentable and keeps all the thrilling attributes of the manga.
Miike has a knack for the unassuming shift of tone, as seen from Crows Zero and 13 Assassins. Sometimes the movie would transition from quiet scene to a rather explicit one. It doesn't venture into dark territory too much, but it does warrant a mature rating. If there's any concern, it's that the nature of the games is highly inspired by Japanese culture, this might create a rather awkward narrative at some points though it's only a minor hindrance.
Equally quirky and disturbing, the myriad of bizarrely captivating games of death is brought to live by Takeshi Miike.
- quincytheodore
- May 26, 2015
- Permalink
- How long is As the Gods Will?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Kamisama no iu tôri
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $1,938,654
- Runtime1 hour 57 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content