Stranger (1991) – Shunichi Nagasaki.
A beautiful, consciously isolated Taxi driver (Yuko Natori) enigmatically works the night shift, pointedly avoiding intimacies with male colleagues, she nonetheless becomes the violent obsession of an anonymous stalker, whom she bravely confronts, culminating in a brutally suspenseful climax. As a dynamic exercise in breathless tension, Stranger remains a paranoid, razor-edged, cold steel masterclass in suburban terror, referencing Duel, Taxi Driver and Hitchcock, with the grittily tenacious Kiriko courageously enduring excruciatingly oppressive ordeals of stalk and slash. Directed with muscularity, and consummate skill, the meticulously orchestrated vehicular action and close-quarter peril are especially memorable. The viewers sympathy for the sinisterly beleaguered Kiriko is profound, her bloody, increasingly combative confrontations with her shadowy nemesis are unsettling, providing exquisite moments of almost unendurable tension! Shunichi Nagasaki's exemplary, frequently intense metropolitan shocker is not only a high benchmark for Asian film fanatics, it should prove no less enthralling to those who simply appreciate a prodigiously suspenseful thriller with a supremely capable heroine!









































