“Video Game Adaptation Fails to Fulfil the Promise of its Setup”
Based on the successful video game of the same name, Vertigo are releasing director Genki Kawamura’s EXIT 8 in selected UK and Ireland cinemas this week.
A young man who is never named and simply referred to as ‘The Lost Man’ (Kazumari Ninomiya) is on the underground on his way to a job interview when he is rung by an ex-girlfriend. She tells him she is at the hospital and that she is pregnant. It’s not spelled out but we infer from their conversation that she wants him to help her make the decision whether to keep the baby. Unfortunately when he exits the train he loses both his phone signal and his way, finding himself in a repeating circuit of tiled corridors from which there seems to be no escape.
Except there is, and he soon finds the rules for how to get out literally spelled out for him on a sign: if he sees something anomalous in the corridors he must turn back. If he doesn’t he needs to carry on. As long as he follows the rules he will ascend through the levels, starting at zero, until he reaches Exit 8 and his way out. So off he goes, encountering along the way a number of individuals including a man with a briefcase who keeps walking past him. Every time our lost man gets it wrong he’s sent back to level zero. Will he ever escape?
The opening act of EXIT 8 is excellent. The layout and features of the few corridors our hero has to pass through looks straightforward but as he keeps making mistakes so we, too, learn the features of his route and start looking closely for errors. Unfortunately after this the character of a little boy is introduced and the film becomes far more interested in the relationship between the two and in tying that in to the man’s opening conversation with his girlfriend.
This would not be too much of a problem if a similar degree of attention was paid to trying to challenge him with the anomalies, but it isn’t. In fact, by the time the film is over you will have thought of twenty better, cleverer and more maddening ways for our hero to have been tripped up than the film does. Apparently the little boy isn’t even a part of the video game, and anyone hoping for our hero to meet people trapped in the loop who have been trying to solve it for years, or for our hero to question whether what he is seeing is even real are all ignored in favour of a ‘save the child’ scenario. EXIT 8 offers a tantalising premise for what could have been a taut and suspenseful thriller but ultimately, and disappointingly, it takes the morality play route instead. Here’s the trailer:
Genki Kawamura’s EXIT 8 is out in UK & Ireland cinemas from Vertigo Releasing on Friday 24th April 2026