Bodyshop 2022
1h 29m | Drama, Fantasy | Release date: April 7, 2023 (Taiwan)
Storyline:
The ghost of a young soldier, who bids farewell to his mother and travels the world to see his transgender sister. By possessing living bodies, he meddles with the romances of unfaithful lovers along the way in Taiwan, Japan, Spain and Thailand. He meets a soul mate amid the massive protests of Hong Kong and they take shelter in a disguised garage, where human bodies are treated in a way beyond moral limits.
User review:
We are thrown into the deep end within the first few minutes of the film. A young man is caught spying on two naked men having a shower in a changing room. They grab him and throw him into the cubicle before both brutally rape him. Later that evening the distraught man is walking home through a park when another two men assault him, tie him to a pole, and gets raped again. Distraught by these events the young man later commits suicide.
He becomes a ghost, a naked ghost at that, and attends his own funeral. He also develops the power to possess other people. After his funeral he decides to go and visit his trans sister in Hong Kong. His trip takes him via Taiwan, Spain, Thailand, and Japan. As he passes through each country he possesses the bodies of other people, mostly beautiful gay men, causing mayhem with their sex lives. The resulting chaos is quite hard to follow but scene after scene of hot completely naked men in crazy high production-value situations makes the film easy to watch. There is more full-frontal male nudity in this film than in any other film ever I imagine.
An intriguing subplot is the Bodyshop of the film’s title. This is an establishment in Hong Kong where dead bodies can be taken and carved up. A dinner of the body parts is then prepared and different body parts are served up to nominated friends and relatives of the deceased. Quite a unique, albeit horrific, idea although I wasn’t sure how this story linked into the rest of the film’s narrative.
This is a crazy, sexy film – very easy on the eye, somewhat harder on the brain. Food for thought though and I’m glad I watched it.
Director: Scud
Writer: Scud
Stars: Adonis He, Joe Leung, Daniel Benjamin
Country of origin: Hong Kong
Languages: English, Japanese, Mandarin, Spanish, Thai
Format : MPEG-4
Format profile : Base Media
Codec ID : isom (isom/iso2/avc1/mp41)
File size : 2.63 GiB
Duration : 1 h 29 min
Overall bit rate : 4 225 kb/s
Links: iMDB | NFO | Screenshots backup
Download: Nitroflare
Hi, cannot download since file is too big. can you use different site?