Folklore Season 3 Release Date, Plot, Cast & More

Folklore Season 3 Shaped by Singaporean director Eric Khoo, the six-episode series features stories grounded on Asian superstitions and national folkloric myths, with apiece episode helmed by a director from a different country.

The West tends to bump horror from East and Southeast Asia into one basic but preventive category. Because of this, someone might write off an entire land’s contributions to the genre grounded solely on a few popular movies with similar schemes and executions.

However, Eric Khoo’s sequences of Folklore highlight not to discuss celebrate the differences that make respectively episode’s depicted culture so unique. That’s not to say there isn’t a complete theme here. This anthology show emphasizes a commonality amid its stories; every tale of terror draws from the supernatural. Each self-contained episode is based on local practice, myth, or superstition. And as the second season validates with both flair and potency, defying the past and ignoring tradition has grave consequences.

Folklore Season 3 Release Date

Folklore Season 3 Release Date
Folklore Season 3 Release Date

Two of six series episodes had a world premiere at the 2022 Tokyo International Film Festival as part of “The TIFF Series”. Woodford’s “The Excursion” and Matsuda’s “The Day the Airstream Blew” were screened at Humantrust Cinema, Yūrakuchō, on November 4, 2022!

Folklore Season 3 Plot

Folklore Season 3 Plot
Folklore Season 3 Plot

Like other compilation series, there is no specific order when watching the episodes. Skipping everywhere is surely an option, though the sophomore season legitimately opens with Liao Shih-han’s The Rope. The Taiwanese entrance straddles the line between life and passing as a bride gets lost on her wedding day. The ritual is incidentally held near an emetic rite for the dead. After Vivian Sung’s sceptical character gets caught up in the pageant that same night, she wakes up with no recollection of by what method she even got home.

Her strange experience chiefs to suspicions about her good-on-paper new partner (Wu Kang-ren), who hasn’t been entirely forthcoming about his preceding relationship. Luxurious production values and an almost strong sense of dread help conceal flaws in this predictable story.

Idol-turned-actor Seiko Matsuda (Drop Dead Gorgeous) leads and co-writes the Japanese episode The Day the Wind Blew. While she acknowledges that she doesn’t enjoy classic horror, Matsuda delivers a brisk story unlike anything else shown in the series. The episode, labelled as “romantic horror”, centres around smitten schoolgirl Mika (Haori Takahashi) and the object of her fondness, a popular singer named Ken (Win Morisaki). When the plot jerks to parallel that of a cheesy J-drama, Matsuda organizes the unthinkable and turns this serendipitous love story into a rather achingly bittersweet one. Nothing quite scary here, but that doesn’t mean there’s nothing to be scared of.

Superannuation homes were once taboo in Asia, but times have transformed, and these places are gaining popularity. In the Indonesian episode Grandma’s Kiss, Billy Christian sightsees this idea, where a descendant temporarily moves her mother (Lydia Kandou) into a senior community until their home overhauls are completed. As the mother begins to suspect this is an everlasting arrangement, the other residents fear a monster called a Palasik. The director uses the supernatural to communicate suffocating parent-child relationships, but the theme eventually becomes lost in its symbol.

Folklore Season 3 Cast

Folklore Season 3 Cast
Folklore Season 3 Cast

Alike to Season 1, Season 2 of Folklore has an Asian-wide cast. A few of the stars in the lineup remain: 

  • Kazuki Kitamura Bront Palarae Aimee Saras Eric Fuzi Aric Hidir Amin Marissa Anita
  • Vivian Sung, Kang Ren Wu

Where To Watch Folklore Season 3

Where To Watch Folklore Season 3
Where To Watch Folklore Season 3

Many people in Asia are very spiritual and believe in the supernatural, and this vantage point influences their work. You’ll surely escalate the six tales in Folklore if you’re a fan of Asian horror movies, but you may have trouble discovering approximately new ones. But this is a great place to start if you’ve never seen an inland genre film. You can wristwatch this on HBO.

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