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The daily commute. The same corridors. The same conversations. The same routines that slowly blur one day into the next until time itself begins to feel meaningless. It is a concept that philosophers, writers and filmmakers have explored for centuries, perhaps most famously through the Greek myth of Sisyphus, condemned by the gods to endlessly push a boulder uphill only for it to roll back down again.
In many ways, Exit 8 feels like a modern horror interpretation of that ancient tale.
Directed by Genki Kawamura, this adaptation of the cult video game takes a deceptively simple premise and transforms it into a tense psychological puzzle box. A lone man finds himself trapped within an endless sterile subway passageway. The rules appear straightforward: continue walking if nothing seems unusual, turn back if you discover an anomaly, and eventually find Exit 8. Fail to spot even the smallest irregularity and you are sent back to the beginning.
Simple.
At least in theory.
What unfolds is an increasingly unnerving descent into paranoia, where the audience becomes just as invested in spotting the abnormalities as the protagonist himself.
The Horror of Observation
One of the film’s greatest strengths is its ability to weaponise the mundane.
The subway corridor is almost aggressively ordinary. Fluorescent lighting illuminates spotless walls. Posters line the passageway. Commuters occasionally pass by. Nothing screams horror.
Yet that normality becomes the film’s greatest source of tension.
Every frame invites scrutiny.
Did that sign move?
Was that man always standing there?
Has the corridor become slightly longer?
Kawamura understands that true suspense often emerges not from what is present but from what feels subtly wrong. The audience quickly finds themselves scanning every inch of the screen, searching for details that might reveal the next anomaly.
The experience becomes strangely interactive.
Like the protagonist, viewers are trapped inside an endless game of observation.
The Curse of Repetition
The film’s strongest thematic thread lies in its exploration of repetition itself.
Like Sisyphus eternally rolling his boulder uphill, the protagonist repeatedly finds himself returned to the beginning despite making apparent progress. The endless corridor becomes a metaphor for routine, anxiety and the human desire to find meaning within seemingly endless cycles.
There is a distinctly existential quality to the narrative.
The further the protagonist travels, the more uncertain both he and the audience become regarding whether escape is even possible. The goal remains visible, yet perpetually out of reach.
It is a simple concept executed with surprising depth.
Breaking the Cycle
To its credit, Exit 8 recognises the dangers of becoming trapped by its own premise.
The film occasionally suffers from the very repetition it seeks to explore. There are stretches where the narrative momentum slows and the structure risks becoming predictable. Audiences may find themselves wondering whether the concept has enough substance to sustain its running time.
Fortunately, Kawamura repeatedly finds ways to reinvigorate the experience.
Particularly effective are the moments where the film shifts perspective and broadens its focus beyond the central character. These narrative pivots arrive at precisely the right moments, offering fresh emotional context while preventing the film from becoming trapped within a single repetitive rhythm.
Each shift subtly alters the audience’s understanding of what is happening and why, transforming what could have become a one-note exercise into something considerably richer.
Minimalism as a Strength
Much like films such as Cube, The Platform or Vivarium, Exit 8 demonstrates how a limited setting can become a fertile playground for ideas.
The minimalist approach forces attention onto performance, atmosphere and concept rather than spectacle. Kawamura never relies on elaborate visual effects or excessive scares. Instead, he allows uncertainty and anticipation to do the heavy lifting.
Not because of shocking imagery, but because it taps into something universally relatable: the fear of being trapped within a system whose rules we only partially understand.
The Prognosis:
Exit 8 is a clever, unsettling and surprisingly philosophical piece of genre filmmaking that transforms a deceptively simple premise into an absorbing exploration of repetition, observation and existential dread.
While the narrative occasionally slows under the weight of its cyclical structure, Genki Kawamura consistently finds inventive ways to pull audiences back into the mystery through clever shifts in perspective and an ever-present sense of uncertainty.
Like Sisyphus pushing his boulder uphill, the protagonist’s journey may appear repetitive on the surface, but each attempt reveals something new about the nature of the labyrinth he inhabits—and perhaps about ourselves as well.
Tense, thought-provoking and quietly haunting, Exit 8 proves that sometimes the most terrifying journeys are the ones that never seem to end.
- Saul Muerte
Home Entertainment Release:
Australian audiences can experience Exit 8 at home through Umbrella Entertainment’s Collector’s Edition release, available here:


