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Best Shinji Higuchi Movies

11th Nov 2025
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Get ready to dive into the thrilling and visually stunning world of Shinji Higuchi, a director who has redefined Japanese cinema with his innovative approach to special effects and compelling storytelling. From giant monsters to epic historical dramas, Higuchi's filmography is a testament to his creative vision and ability to bring fantastical narratives to life on the big screen. This curated list highlights some of his most celebrated works, showcasing the breadth and depth of his remarkable career. Now, it's your turn to shape the ultimate ranking! Below, you'll find our selection of Higuchi's best films. We've put them in a suggested order, but we encourage you to personalize it. Use the drag-and-drop feature to rearrange the movies according to your own personal preferences. Create your perfect "Best Shinji Higuchi Movies" list and share your unique cinematic perspective!

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Best Shinji Higuchi Movies

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#5.

Doomsday: The Sinking of Japan (2006)

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Japan sinks! Proving once again that Japan will never cease to find inventive ways to destroy itself on screen, this blockbuster brings apocalypse through tectonics. Based on Sakyo Komatsu's best-selling novel, *Sinking of Japan* was first put on the big screen in Moritani Shiro's 1973 classic. In 2006, director Shinji Higuchi remakes the disaster movie, taking the story to a new generation with a staggering budget and cutting-edge special effects. The film posits a terrifyingly plausible scenario: due to rapidly accelerating plate subduction, the entire Japanese archipelago is discovered to have less than a year before it is pulled completely underwater. The narrative follows a submarine pilot, a rescue worker, and a team of scientists as they grapple with the impending doom, orchestrating a desperate plan to save the nation's people from total annihilation. This film earns its place as one of Shinji Higuchi's best because it is a definitive showcase of his mastery of large-scale, tangible destruction. Long before he unleashed a national nightmare in *Shin Godzilla*, Higuchi used *Doomsday* to hone his unique ability to blend jaw-dropping VFX with the procedural, human-level chaos of a nationwide crisis. The imagery of cities cracking apart and tsunamis swallowing the landscape is rendered with terrifying weight and realism, demonstrating his roots in practical effects and his command of modern digital artistry. The film is a perfect crystallization of his thematic interests—national identity in the face of existential threat, the fallibility of government, and individual heroism amidst overwhelming catastrophe—making it a crucial and spectacular cornerstone of his filmography.

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