logo
Inside the eerie abandoned hotel in Japan - which once used to be a religious-themed amusement park

Inside the eerie abandoned hotel in Japan - which once used to be a religious-themed amusement park

Daily Mail​a day ago
An explorer who visited Japan 's largest abandoned resort has shared fascinating footage of the decaying complex - including the remnants of what would have been a five-star, 1000-room hotel.
Josh, a YouTube content creator from the United States, regularly delves into some of the world's spookiest abandoned sites, including The Paris Catacombs and Pripyat, a 'ghost' town located in Chernobyl.
In a recent video uploaded to his channel, @ExploringWithJosh, in July, the adventurer travelled to Ishikawa, Japan, to take a closer look at Utopia Kaga.
The resort, also known as Kaga No Sato, was a religious-themed amusement park that had opened in 1987, before it was abandoned and torn down in 2005 following the Japanese bubble economy collapse in the early 1990s.
Once a thriving attraction, the 28 billion yen (£141M) resort featured temple halls, rollercoasters, a golden pagoda and a 240ft statue of Kaga Daikannon.
But over four decades on, nothing remains of the park's past glory after being left to the elements due to high demolition costs.
Though the towering golden statue still overlooks the lush green landscape, much of the resort is in ruins, with scenes from Josh's video showing dilapidated buildings, crumbling cars and overgrown vegetation.
In one scene, Josh and his crew can be seen heading into the Raken Hall, which is home to 1000 Buddha statues with unique expressions.
Blown away by the set-up, he commented: 'I've never seen anything like this. This is a surreal place. The decay of the ceiling... all of the statues in a row... This is something in a dream.'
He then moved on to explore the resort's sprawling, five-star hotel, which was initially designed to allow hundreds of visitors to experience a 33-temple pilgrimage in a single day.
In scenes captured by Josh, the hotel, which was finally vacated around 2012, astonishingly appears frozen in time.
Most of the largely empty rooms in the building can be seen with broken glass windows and tattered curtains and carpets.
However, wooden hangers are seen perfectly hung in wardrobes, while duvet covers remain folded on top of beds and fridges lay intact and unplugged nearby.
Tatami rooms remain untouched, with calendars still on walls, while toy dispensers continue to spill out toys.
One of the hotel's 'main areas' is shown strewn with old wooden furniture, a fully functional keyboard, and even an old crumbling Cadillac parked inside.
Josh commented that the classic car had been 'preserved pretty well' despite its condition.
Meanwhile, multiple onsen - Japanese hot spring bathing facilities that use geothermal waters - across the complex feature baths overtaken by creeping greenery and surrounded by broken porcelain and debris.
In a bizarre twist to the visit, Josh stumbled across an entire building that contains what appears to be a model of a Middle Eastern land, complete with a floor made of sand, miniature camels and tiny palm trees.
Concluding his visit, Josh said: 'Our mouths are completely dry. This is one for the books. One of the coolest places in Japan.'
Though the park is in ruins, it now stands as an attraction where visitors can interact with free-roaming rabbits and engage in activities like feeding them and participating in craft workshops. There is also a museum displaying sculptures and lacquerware.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New Rambo star is finally revealed... and it's not the successor Sylvester Stallone wanted
New Rambo star is finally revealed... and it's not the successor Sylvester Stallone wanted

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

New Rambo star is finally revealed... and it's not the successor Sylvester Stallone wanted

The surprising new Rambo has been revealed and the acclaimed actor is not Sylvester Stallone 's first choice. Noah Centineo, 29, will portray the iconic musclebound soldier in origins film, John Rambo, following successful turns in Black Adam, Netflix show To All the Boys I Loved Before and The Recruit. Per Deadline, the film will follow a young John Rambo during the Vietnam war. Sisu director Jalmari Helander is set to direct from a screenplay by writing duo Rory Haines and Sohrab Noshirvani. Sources told the publication production is hoped to begin in early 2026 in Thailand, with Lionsgate said to be the frontrunner to land the film. When it was released in 1982, the first Rambo movie, First Blood, was a huge commercial success despite ambivalent critical reviews. That success led to four sequels with the Vietnam War veteran, Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985), Rambo III (1988), Rambo (2008) and Rambo: Last Blood (2019). Despite the franchise's incredible legacy, insiders said Stallone is aware but not involved with the project - but he has 'been alerted' to Centineo's casting. The Daily Mail has contacted representatives for Stallone and Centineo for comment and has yet to hear back. Last year Stallone revealed he wanted Barbie star Ryan Gosling to play Rambo during a candid chat on Jimmy Fallon's The Tonight Show. He said of Gosling: 'I met him at a dinner and obviously we're opposites. He's good-looking — I'm not. That's how it works. 'But he goes, "I was fascinated by Rambo, and I used to go to school dressed as Rambo and people would chase me away and I still didn't stop". 'He just kept saying that he had a lot of affiliation with Rambo, and I thought, this is interesting. If I ever pass the baton, I'll pass it on to him because he loves the character.' Noah shot to fame portraying Peter Kavinsky in the To All the Boys I've Loved Before film series starting in 2018, establishing himself as a teen heartthrob. He has also starred in the The Recruit, playing a CIA lawyer entangled in a dangerous world. Noah's most recent roles include Black Adam and Warfare. The actor has also appeared in Charlie Angles, The Fosters and Sierra Burgess Is A Loser. The film news comes six years after Rambo: Last Blood was slammed by critics, fans and even the creator. Bestselling author David Morrell, who wrote First Blood in 1972, took to social media to reveal his true thoughts about the then- just-released movie, Rambo: Last Blood. 'I agree with these RAMBO: LAST BLOOD reviews. The film is a mess. Embarrassed to have my name associated with it,' Morrell tweeted on the flick's premiere day. In Rambo: Last Blood, Stallone's titular character travels to Mexico to rescue his friend's granddaughter from the hands of cartel sex traffickers with blood results. Morrell told Newsweek that he had spoke with Stallone, who co-wrote the movie, over the phone early on in the script writing process. The author said that he hoped the film would showcase a 'soulful' Rambo, whose actions in the movie included finding a missing child and defending a family that he himself lacked. Not long after their conversation, Morrell and Stallone apparently stopped talking with each other and Stallone went on to finish writing the script with Absentia TV series creator and writer Matt Cirulnick. 'I felt degraded and dehumanized after I left the theater,' Morrell told Newsweek, adding that 'Instead of being soulful, this new movie lacks one. 'I felt I was less a human being for having seen it, and today that's an unfortunate message,' he said.

Noah Centineo to star as character made famous by Sylvester Stallone
Noah Centineo to star as character made famous by Sylvester Stallone

The Independent

time3 hours ago

  • The Independent

Noah Centineo to star as character made famous by Sylvester Stallone

Noah Centineo, a former Disney Channel actor, is reportedly attached to star in a prequel to the Rambo franchise. Centineo is set to portray a younger version of John Rambo, the character made famous by Sylvester Stallone. The film, titled John Rambo, is expected to begin shooting in Thailand later this year. Sylvester Stallone, who originated the Rambo role, is not involved in the upcoming prequel but has been made aware of Centineo's casting. Stallone's most recent film, Alarum, received a 0 per cent critical score on Rotten Tomatoes, making it his lowest-rated film in a five-decade career.

I watched KPop Demon Hunters with my kids. They were terrified (I was hooked)
I watched KPop Demon Hunters with my kids. They were terrified (I was hooked)

Times

time6 hours ago

  • Times

I watched KPop Demon Hunters with my kids. They were terrified (I was hooked)

It has been something of a shaky summer for Hollywood. The new efforts from the big franchises — Marvel's The Fantastic Four: First Steps, Jurassic World Rebirth, Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning — have all made less money than previous instalments and, in some cases, struggled to earn more than their enormous budgets. In June Pixar had its lowest opening weekend with Elio. Everywhere you look, you sense that the film industry is scrambling to discover what people actually want to watch. The answer is staring them right in the face. What people want to watch is a squadron of animated Korean pop singers punching a load of monsters. KPop Demon Hunters — an animation released quietly on to Netflix in the middle of June — has slowly become a colossal hit. It is the platform's most watched animation, with 158.8 million views. Over the next few weeks it will most probably overtake Red Notice, the streamer's biggest film to date. Its soundtrack is the biggest of the year, surpassing even Wicked. One of its songs, Golden, hit No 1 here and in the US. What's more, Saja Boys, the fictional boyband who operate as the film's antagonists, are now officially Spotify's highest-charting K-pop group. It's an enduring success too. Whenever it seems like KPop Demon Hunters is about to fall out of Netflix's top ten, it roars back up to No 1. It's there now. This points to both strong word-of-mouth and repeated viewings. You sense that this one film is single-handedly sustaining thousands of households through a long and tedious summer holiday. Unfortunately our household is not one of them. And, believe me, I'm as surprised as anyone about this. Visually, the film — made by Sony, and directed by the relative newcomers Maggie Kang and Chris Appelhans — is gorgeous. Similar in style to the groundbreaking Spider-Verse movies, KPop Demon Hunters dazzles and explodes in every frame. The story of a once-in-a-generation girl group tasked with battling soul-eating monsters, some of whom come in the form of a deliberately naff boyband, the film is pacey and funny, full of vivid characters and dialogue. There's a good message about self-acceptance. And the songs are genuinely great, all managing to drill deep inside your brain with surgical precision. It is also incredibly smart in how it depicts its culture. KPop Demon Hunters comes almost exactly at the peak of hallyu, or the Korean Wave, a decades-long government-backed effort to take Korean pop culture international. What this means is that we now live in a world where the world's biggest show (Squid Game) and musical act (Blackpink), plus The New York Times's best film of the 21st century (Parasite) are all Korean. And this is driven by an enthusiastic, territorial and obsessive fandom; something that Demon Hunters has cleverly managed to tap into. Spend any time online and you'll find no end of fan-made videos and illustrations inspired by the film. However, there's something equally aggressive about how K-pop acts are treated. They're clinically put together, trained like soldiers and worked to the bone by teams of managers and executives who reportedly enforce restrictive diets and forbid them from being in relationships. The whole thing is X Factor with the training wheels removed. Four K-pop stars — members of the groups Shinee, f(x), Kara and Astro — have taken their own lives in the past decade. This too is hinted at in the film: the central girl group, Huntr/x, literally have to fight demons while presenting a perfect façade to the public. So the film is good. And, what's more, we should have been a perfect fit for it. I lived in South Korea for a couple of years in my twenties and have spent the past decade systematically indoctrinating my children in the wonders of the country's culture, to the extent that my ten-year-old now almost exclusively listens to K-pop, with a particular fondness for Twice, I-dle and Le Sserafim. Looking at it logically, we really should have spent the past weeks watching this film on a loop. I can attribute the fact that we didn't to one thing: KPop Demon Hunters is also a little bit scary. It is, as the title suggests, literally about people fighting demons. And although the design of the demons themselves smartly navigates the line between cartoonish and frightening, my children (seven and ten) may be a smidge too young for the scene where one of the singers decapitates a demon, albeit in silhouette. That happens early in the film, and it is also the moment they decided to bale. We've been tripped up by this before. Every Saturday in our house we have a movie night where we take turns to pick a film to watch. My wife is notorious for choosing films from her childhood that accidentally traumatise our kids because she's forgotten that, for instance, there's a dead body five minutes into Raiders of the Lost Ark. • The 28 best cartoons for grown-ups — ranked! That film was a PG, as is KPop Demon Hunters. Both contain scenes that are slightly more distressing than what our children prefer to consume, which is endless YouTube footage of people playing Minecraft. I'm refusing to give up. My suspicion is that, once they go back to school in September, so many of their classmates will be talking about the film that they'll crack and try again. And if that doesn't happen, there's bound to be more. One of the most surprising elements about the success of KPop Demon Hunters is the fact that it is an original property. It isn't a sequel, or a spin-off, or a live-action remake. This is that rarest of things in 2025: a film comfortable enough to present its audience with a new idea. But the film's popularity means that all of this is definitely coming. Netflix has already said that it is 'excited to explore what could be the next adventure' for Huntr/x, which means it's better to look at KPop Demon Hunters as the first stage of a new franchise rather than a standalone film. There's something slightly depressing about this, especially when this summer's lacklustre box office essentially resembles a parade of franchises long since milked to death. But let's worry about that a decade from now. • Read more film reviews, guides about what to watch and interviews When the sequels — or spin-offs, or even the rumoured live-action remake stage musical — come flooding in my children will be just that little bit older, and hopefully more prepared for the sight of a decapitated demon. And once that barrier has been crossed, there'll be no stopping them. Until then, I'll just keep watching it after they've gone to bed. KPop Demon Hunters is on Netflix Love TV? Discover the best shows on Netflix, the best Prime Video TV shows, the best Disney+ shows , the best Apple TV+ shows, the best shows on BBC iPlayer , the best shows on Sky and Now, the best shows on ITVX, the best shows on Channel 4 streaming, the best shows on Paramount+ and our favourite hidden gem TV shows. Don't forget to check our critics' choices to what to watch this week and browse our comprehensive TV guide

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store