By its close, Grand Ciel offers no escape. The site consumes its workers, the rest march on resigned to their fates. There are no uprisings, no whistle-blowing, no miracle waiting at the end. Instead, Hata leaves us staring at the machinery of progress—still humming, still indifferent. There is only the recognition that the “futuristic district” is not a utopia but a tomb. If anything, Hata’s film—a grim story about the horrors or perpetual, almost cancerous, progress—insists that we look down into the dust, that we acknowledge who disappears, so that others may ascend.