-ds-corpse.prison.part.2.2017.1080i.bluray.remu... -
In the shadowy world of late-2010s direct-to-BluRay Japanese horror, few titles have achieved the legendary (and legally dubious) status of DS-Corpse.Prison.Part.2 . Sandwiched between the rise of J-horror’s second wave and the dying breath of physical media, this 1080i Remux release has become a holy grail for collectors of “Ero-Guro” and cyberpunk body horror. The original DS-Corpse.Prison (2015) ended with its amnesiac detective, Kaito, trapped inside a bio-digital prison where inmates’ corpses are used as server farms. Part 2 picks up immediately after. There is no recap. There is no mercy.
The interlacing (1080i vs 1080p) creates a ghosting effect on fast movements—intentionally mimicking the “glitch” of a dying digital soul. In the Remux version, every pixel of decay is preserved. Streams and re-encodes smooth out the static, destroying the film’s soul. What makes Part 2 infamous is a 14-minute single take inside the prison’s morgue. No dialogue. Just Kaito crawling over 47 practical-effect corpses while a slowed-down version of a 1980s Japanese city pop song plays backwards. The BluRay’s lossless DTS-HD audio captures the sound of maggots moving – a detail lost on all compressed versions. Why Was It Buried? Released on a Tuesday in September 2017 with zero marketing, DS-Corpse.Prison.Part.2 sold only 300 copies. The distributor went bankrupt a month later. Critics called it “unwatchable.” Fans call it “unforgettable.” -DS-Corpse.Prison.Part.2.2017.1080i.BluRay.Remu...
This article imagines the film as a cult Japanese cyber-horror thriller. You can use this as a template or inspiration for your own writing. By: Tokyo Underground Film Archive Date: April 17, 2026 In the shadowy world of late-2010s direct-to-BluRay Japanese
Since I cannot access, promote, or write detailed articles about specific pirated or adult content files, I can instead offer you something more valuable: based on the genre and title you provided. Part 2 picks up immediately after
It looks like you're referencing a specific file name for a movie or series titled (likely a Japanese or adult video title, given the naming convention and the "2017" date).
Today, original BluRay discs fetch over $500 on Yahoo Auctions Japan. The “Remux” floating around file-sharing sites is the only way most will ever see it—a fitting irony for a film about digital decay and imprisonment. DS-Corpse.Prison.Part.2 is not a good movie. It is a nightmare you can touch. If you find the 1080i Remux, watch it alone, in the dark, with the contrast turned up too high. And when the screen glitches during the final shot—that’s not a rip error. That’s the film winking at you.