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Cure Ending Explained, The Birth of a New Hypnotist

Cure (1997) by Kiyoshi Kurosawa is acclaimed for its disturbing portrayal of human vulnerability and chilling atmospherics. The film follows Kenichi Takabe, a Tokyo police detective, as he investigates a baffling series of murders.

Each crime is committed by an ordinary person, spouses, workers, citizens, who carves a large X into the victim’s neck or chest. There’s no clear motive, and the perpetrators confess without knowing why they acted.

Takabe’s private life is in turmoil due to his wife Fumie’s worsening mental health. She suffers from schizophrenia, sometimes vanishing from home and leaving Takabe stressed and exhausted.

As the number of killings grows, Takabe and his colleague, psychologist Sakuma, search for patterns among the murderers. The only connection: all had encounters with a mysterious man named Kunio Mamiya.

Mamiya is introduced as a wanderer with supposed amnesia, frequently repeating questions and acting vacant. Under police custody, he proves impossible to interrogate.

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Instead, he asks personal questions, revealing uncanny knowledge about Takabe’s life and probing into his insecurities. His sly demeanor hints at a calculated manipulator rather than a confused drifter.

As the investigation deepens, it becomes apparent that Mamiya uses hypnotic techniques sparked by repetitive sights like water movement or a lighter’s flame to override people’s free will and implant homicidal commands.

The process is subtle and almost supernatural; his power seems to exploit the hidden cracks in each person’s psyche, bringing their resentment or suppressed rage to the surface.

Peel Back the Layers: Hypnosis, Evil, and the Shattering of Self

Takabe and Sakuma discover that Mamiya has a background in psychology, specifically mesmerism and the history of hypnosis. A crucial clue appears in an old film reel and books found in Mamiya’s possession.

The materials reference a historic mesmerist, Suejiro Bakuro, who performed “spiritual healing” but was rumored to drive patients to homicide. The recurring motif of the X isn’t just a grisly calling card; it’s part of the hypnotic ritual that prompts murder.

As Takabe struggles to break free from Mamiya’s influence, his situation deteriorates. He becomes unable to control his emotions, especially following an apparent vision in which his wife’s fate mirrors the previous victims. In panic, Takabe commits Fumie to a hospital, but by now, the psychological pressure is overwhelming.

Sakuma, meanwhile, succumbs to Mamiya’s insidious reach. After reviewing evidence and a hypnotic videotape, he unconsciously paints an X on his wall, experiences violent hallucinations, and is soon found dead, handcuffed to pipes, another unexplained tragedy attributed to Mamiya’s indirect control.

Mamiya is placed under tighter security following these events, but escapes after hypnotizing a guard to his death. The method of escape remains unclear, but the implication is that Takabe’s latent vulnerability may have played a role, either by accident or subtle compulsion.

Cure (Credit: Prime Video)

The final confrontation occurs in an abandoned mental hospital. Takabe, at his wit’s end, tracks Mamiya down and, after an intense faceoff, shoots him. Before dying, Mamiya wordlessly gestures an X in the air, as if passing a torch.

Takabe explores the setting and finds a creaking phonograph. The device emits a male voice, likely Bakuro delivering hypnotic instructions, confirming that the occult tradition predates Mamiya and hints at something systemic, ancient, and endlessly recurring.

Shortly afterward, Fumie’s body is found bearing the same X, matching the earlier victims. The scene devastates Takabe, blurring the line between victim and perpetrator.

Final Act: The Cycle Continues, Evil Finds a New Vessel

The film closes in a brightly lit restaurant where Takabe sits, finished with his meal. The camera lingers on his serene but empty expression. He answers a phone call, possibly related to a new crime scene.

As Takabe lights a cigarette, the scene subtly shifts perspective: a waitress, previously cheerful and ordinary, is approached by her manager and then glides over to pick up a large kitchen knife.

The film cuts to black as the music swells, letting implications hang in the air. The audience is left with the image of Takabe, calm and composed, yet transformed.

This closing moment suggests a terrifying revelation. Mamiya’s true achievement was not merely causing individual acts of murder through hypnosis; it was to transfer his power and mission to someone new.

The “cure” referenced in the film’s title is a dark, ironic twist: the only way for Takabe to rid himself of anguish was to accept, or inherit, Mamiya’s ability.

The detective, once a seeker of justice, now demonstrates that same sinister, hypnotic influence. When the waitress lifts the knife, it’s clear the killing will continue, and Takabe has become the new missionary for this corrupted force.

Deeper Meanings: Human Potential for Violence and Loss of Identity

On one level, Cure is a complex thriller about crime and detection. On a deeper level, it’s a commentary about the universal fragility of identity.

The line separating an ordinary person from an abuser or murderer is distressingly thin under the right set of influences; anyone could be made to act out the darkest impulses, especially when their repressed rage is exposed.

Takabe’s journey is tragic: his attempts to bring rational order to irrational circumstances instead lead him to embody the very evil he sought to eradicate. As the “cure” spreads from one host to another, the film exposes the horror at the core of human nature, the possibility that who we are can disappear in an instant, subjugated by a power we don’t understand.

Kurosawa’s ambiguous storytelling ensures that the film’s meaning remains unsettlingly open. Whether Mamiya’s influence is supernatural, psychological, or both, the results are harrowing: violence infects like a virus, and its hosts can be anyone, even those tasked with stopping it.

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