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The cinematography, led by Benoît Debie, renders Tokyo as a vibrant, disorienting "city symphony" filled with staggering visual depth and psychedelic sequences.
Gaspar Noé’s film is famous (and infamous) for its experimental cinematography. Shot primarily from a or a hovering, "disembodied soul" POV, the movie attempts to simulate a psychedelic experience and the transition into the afterlife. Enter.The.Void.LIMITED.720p.BluRay.x264-REFiNED.BOZX
Described by the director himself as a “psychedelic melodrama,” the film is less a conventional narrative and more of an immersive, 161-minute sensory assault set in the neon-drenched underbelly of Tokyo. [12†L5-L7] It follows Oscar, a small-time American drug dealer, who is fatally shot by police. What follows is a ghost’s-eye-view of Tokyo as his soul hovers above the city, witnessing the consequences of his death, reliving childhood trauma, and traversing the hallucinatory terrain between life and death. [11†L23-L27] The cinematography, led by Benoît Debie, renders Tokyo