![]() After recounting her story, Mitsuko and pals decide to skip class and go to the lake, where they have a pillow fight and tell a story (which involves a crocodile hungrily snapping at the crotch of one of the girls). Things get even crazier when Mitsuko legs it through the woods (providing the film with the first of many upskirt shots) and arrives at school to find her friends still alive and well. The sole survivor of this strange and bloody event is Mitsuko, who runs down the road in a state of shock pursued by the wind, which also bisects anyone that the poor girl meets along the way. The film opens in style with the aforementioned YouTube scene, a great attention grabber but a terrible waste of a bus full of perfectly good Japanese schoolgirls!. Was it worth the wait? Just about, I suppose. ![]() Reviewed by BA_Harrison 6 / 10 Three years later.Īn outrageously splattery clip posted on YouTube - a grisly school bus massacre, with all but one of the occupants sliced in half by a supernatural wind - originally piqued my interest in Tag, but for some reason it has taken me three years to get around to finding and watching the whole movie. ![]() Amid piles of fresh dead bodies, mounds of scorching bullet shells, and rivulets of fragrant young blood, frail Mitsuko must fight to stay alive, before her already messed up day becomes even stranger. It seems that an unstoppable force of nature, a doomed field trip, and a strange case of amnesia can easily coexist in a bizarre parallel universe, where a desperate Mitsuko is always on the run from something inexplicable, intangible, and utterly deadly. As the sole survivor of a horrendous and rather mysterious accident, Mitsuko, a typical Japanese teenager, can safely say that her day has got off to a bad start. ![]()
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