I get exactly what this soundtrack is doing, and I respect the craft — but as a standalone listen, it doesn’t fully hold me. Yamaoka’s language is instantly recognizable: brittle piano figures, industrial hiss, low-end dread, melancholy suspended in fog. In the context of the film, this works perfectly. Outside of it, though, the album feels overextended and function-first. There are moments that pull me in, but too many tracks exist to sustain tension rather than transform it. I admire the atmosphere more than I feel compelled by it. Pros Strong signature identity – Classic Yamaoka mood: unease, sadness, and industrial decay are immediately legible. Effective horror atmosphere – Drones, silence, and restrained melody do exactly what they’re supposed to do. World-building consistency – The album maintains a coherent sonic space from start to finish. Cons Overlong and diffuse – At this length, the material blurs; many cues feel interchangeable. Too scene-dependent...