Bunshinsaba 2 - Watch Legally and Safely
Beijing, the present day. After two years in the US, Nana returns and looks up old friend Song Qian, now taking a postgraduate course in psychology. Nana asks her about others from their group at university: ambitious You Feng now works in a technology company and is due to marry the daughter of the chairman, Yu-fei is now an up-and-coming actress, and Yang Zheng is now a journalist after wanting to become a film director. Nana especially wants to know about Hongrui, whom she always fancied, and learns his father went bankrupt and he himself is now lame from an accident and works on a building site. Nana, who was rumoured to have had mental treatment in the US, tells Song Qian that another member of the group, Xiao Ai, who committed suicide at college, is haunting her. (Her belief in ghosts goes back to her childhood in the countryside, when a school friend, Yuhan, gave her a weird doll.) When Nana visits her old friends, they all react angrily to her mentioning Xiao Ai. Nana remembers how, back in 2010, it was she who befriended Xiao Ai, a Chinese literature student, and brought her into the group. To her annoyance, Hongrui had fallen for Xiao Ai, and when misfortunes started to happen Nana had blamed Xiao Ai as an evil influence. To settle the problem, the friends had played the ouija board-like game of bĭxiān, which revealed the name of Yuhan. After Nana had exposed Xiao Ai as the grown-up Yuhan, Song Qian had walked out, appalled; that evening, Xiao Ai had thrown herself off a college building. Back in the present day, members of the group now start getting killed by a ghostly presence.
How to Watch Bunshinsaba 2 Legally and Safely
If you want to stream Bunshinsaba 2 through reputable and legal services, there are a few good options depending on where you are. Subscription platforms like HBO Max, Disney+, Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and Apple TV+ sometimes carry Bunshinsaba 2 films or related DC titles—though availability depends on your country.
If you’d rather not commit to a subscription, there are ad‑supported, free (but legal) platforms such as Tubi, Pluto TV, Peacock or Crackle (where available in your region) that occasionally host superhero films.
Lastly, don’t forget about library‑linked streaming options like Kanopy or Hoopla (if your library or university is registered), and official uploads by film distributors on YouTube—these can also give you legal access to classic movies.