J-horror meets J-pop in this one-of-a-kind faux-documentary shocker that reveals that Koji Shiraishi, a filmmaker best-known in the UK for the BBFC-baiting pseudo-snuff movie Grotesque, possesses a wicked sense of humour. Conceived of as a vehicle for the saccharine sweet pre-pubescent idol band Momoiro Clover, Shirome, meaning 'white eyes', takes its title from an urban legend about a malevolent spirit said to haunt an abandoned school. Shirome has the power to grant wishes yet also inflict insanity and death on those that beseech its powers should their intentions be less than a hundred percent sincere.
Shiraishi, appearing as himself, is the director of a Most Haunted-style TV show specialising in real-life paranormal phenomena, allegedly hired by the girls' management agency to boost their profile. He approaches them with a Faustian pact offering the kawaii young songbirds a chance to fulfil their ambition of appearing on NHK TV's annual Kōhaku New Year's Eve music show. There's just a few crucial details he neglects to tell them as he leads them into the heart of Shirome's lair, where they are to perform their latest single in front of the mysterious butterfly symbol representing the evil spirit, in this cruel but funny hybrid of The Blair Witch Project and The X Factor.
Purchase of the screening ticket includes free entry to the KanZeOn party starting 8.30pm at the Institute of Contemporary Arts. Please rest assured that the party's main event live performances will begin after Shirome ends.
Born in Fukuoka prefecture in 1973, horror specialist Koji Shiraishi entered the professional film industry working on Sogo Ishii's surreal August in the Water (1995), before making the jishu eiga films Boroku ningen (1997) and Kaze wa fuku darou (1998), the latter awarded the Grand Prix at the 1999 Pia Film Festival. This led to Shiraishi directing the making-of documentary for Shinobu Yaguchi's 2001 comedy Waterboys. In 2004, he directed the J-horror Ju-Rei: The Uncanny, which he followed with titles including Carved: Slit-Mouthed Woman (2007) and his signature fake documentaries Noroi: The Curse (2005) and Occult (2009). In 2009, his film Grotesque was banned by the BBFC due to its "unrelenting and escalating scenario of humiliation, brutality and sadism."
Momoiro Clover Official Website (Japanese only) [http://www.momoclo.net]