However, the two are separated halfway through and Aya is knocked out by Takashi, the mentally handicapped brother of the school nun, Mayumi Aso. Michi decides to kiss the photo to put herself into the curse and chains herself to Aya so the latter can save her should she be in danger. Aya then admits to Michi that she is haunted by the guilt of letting a fellow orphan of hers die in front of her. She also tells a story about a couple who was doomed when one of them refused to commit suicide, causing her to be haunted by her lover for the rest of her life. They search help in Kazumi "Mary" Kusanagi, an eccentric photographer, who keeps photos inside her studio of lesbian girls who made a suicide pact by drowning themselves at a lake, which is now closed, due to society's intolerance towards same-sex couples. When Michi attempts to kiss the photo, Aya stops her and reveals that she is not responsible for the curse, as the photo is not hers. Except for Risa, who is later found dazed but alive, all of them are eventually found dead at a nearby river. Aya's photo is taken to the attic by Sakuya Itsuki and Risa for safekeeping, but the two alongside three other girls are enticed to kiss the photo. Her disappearance is quickly attributed to a supposed curse that affects girls who kiss the photo of the person they admire at midnight. Her admirer, Kasumi Nohara, kisses her photo at midnight and suddenly disappears with her friend Michi as a witness. Plot Īya, the most popular student of a Catholic all-girls school, suddenly shuts herself in her room. Gekijōban Zero premiered in North America on July 28, 2015, at the 19th Fantasia International Film Festival. Zero: The Movie), also known as Fatal Frame: The Movie, is a 2014 Japanese horror film directed by Mari Asato, starring Ayami Nakajō and Aoi Morikawa, and based on a novelization by Eiji Ōtsuka of the Fatal Frame video game series. Gekijōban Zero ( Japanese: 劇場版 零 ( ゼロ ), romanized: lit.
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