School-Live! (Japanese: がっこうぐらし!, Hepburn: Gakkō Gurashi!) is a 2019 Japanese horror film and adaptation of the manga series by Norimitsu Kaihō. A live-action film adaptation of School-Live! was announced in an issue of Manga Time Kirara Forward in November 2017,[1][2] and it was released by Universal Pictures and Regents in Japan on January 25, 2019.[3][4]
School-Live! | |
---|---|
![]() Theatrical teaser poster. | |
Japanese | がっこうぐらし! |
Hepburn | Gakkō Gurashi! |
Directed by | Issei Shibata |
Written by | Issei Shibata |
Based on | School-Live! by Norimitsu Kaihō |
Produced by | Toshinori Yamaguchi |
Starring |
|
Cinematography | Kazuaki Yoshizawa |
Edited by | Sagara Naoichiro |
Music by | Shu Kanematsu |
Production company | Dub Inc. |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures Regents(Japan) Sentai Filmworks(International) |
Release date |
|
Running time | 105 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
The film is directed by Issei Shibata and starred the members of the idol group Last Idol.[5]
School-Live! received mixed reviews from critics. Criticism was aimed at the screenplay, plot, inconsistent tone, lack of originality, special effects, and character development.
Sentai Filmworks distributed the film in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Latin America, Nordic countries, the Netherlands, Spain and Portugal in 2021[6]
It tells the story of Kurumi Ebisuzawa, Yuki Takeya, Yuuri Wakasa and Miki Naoki attending the same high school in Japan, but they also know one another because they reside in the school's dormitory and having a school club. The school girls are having fun until a zombie outbreak occurs, infecting the school population. The four girls must now learn to survive in this new world, if they want to stay alive.
Matt Schley from Japan Times gave the film a negative review and a 1.5 out of 5 citing: "Being aggressively boring, in fact, is the greatest sin of “School-Live” The principle that each scene of a film should push the story forward is discarded with abandon."[7]
Despite the movie's reception, the movie was praised by the authors of the original School-Live! manga.[8]
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link)