Review | Cannes 2025: Exit 8 movie review โ€“ live-action adaptation of walking simulator video game



3/5 stars

Itโ€™s hardly every day that a novelist-turned-filmmaker will follow up an award-winning, genial family drama with a live-action adaptation of a video game.

Appropriating images and ideas aplenty from Stanley Kubrickโ€™s The Shining, Genki Kawamura has turned a simple premise โ€“ in which a player is made to run repeatedly down a short underground passage to search for a way out โ€“ into a psychological thriller exploring a manโ€™s guilt and redemption.

For those who havenโ€™t played The Exit 8, which has attained cult status among gamers since its release in 2023, fear not: Kawamura did the uninitiated a huge favour by outlining its rules on screen from the get-go.

Reading those instructions, displayed on a wall, out loud, โ€œThe Lost Manโ€ (Kazunari Ninomiya) learns that his goal is to look for anomalies in a white, brightly lit passageway featuring simple signage, a few advertising posters, stainless steel doors and an expressionless automaton (โ€œThe Walking Manโ€, played by Yamato Kochi) who walks past the protagonist as if he isnโ€™t there.

For most of the first half-hour of the film the protagonist โ€“ and the audience โ€“ try to make sense of the proceedings as he moves forwards and back through the hallway. The audience plays the same spot-the-difference game as the man while observing his increasingly agitated state, ably conveyed through Keisuke Imamuraโ€™s fluid camerawork and Sekura Seyaโ€™s editing.

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