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Sonatine
SummarySeveral yakuza from Tokyo are sent to Okinawa to help end a gang war. The war then escalates and the Tokyo drifters decide to lay low at the beach.

Directed By:Takeshi Kitano

Written By:Takeshi Kitano

Sonatine

Metascore
Generally Favorable
73
User score
Mixed or Average
5.9
My Score
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Metascore
Generally Favorable
86% Positive
19 Reviews
9% Mixed
2 Reviews
5% Negative
1 Review
  • All Reviews
  • Positive Reviews
  • Mixed Reviews
  • Negative Reviews
100
Chicago Tribune
Writer-director-star Takeshi Kitano's 1993 Sonatine, a brutal, brilliant crime thriller about an aging gangster at the center of a maze of double-crosses and vendettas, gives us another look at a remarkable Japanese film artist. [17 Apr 1998, p.N]
80
Los Angeles Times
In his sleek, punchy and altogether captivating Sonatine, Japan's fabled writer-director-tough guy star Takeshi "Beat" Kitano makes it seem as if we've never seen such a tale on the screen. In doing so, Kitano creates one of the most effectively anti-violence violent movies since The Wild Bunch. [10 Apr 1998, p.F10]
User score
Mixed or Average
38% Positive
3 Ratings
38% Mixed
3 Ratings
25% Negative
2 Ratings
  • All Reviews
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  • Mixed Reviews
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Apr 5, 2022
8
ACE_96
[SPOILER ALERT: This review contains spoilers.]
Sep 26, 2024
6
drqshadow
Given the opening chapter's focus on internal Yakuza machinations and street-tough theatrics, it would be easy to reflexively brand Sonatine as just another dose of dirty criminal intrigue. But then, when an inauspicious job goes sideways and the little crew of posh mobsters and crass underlings are forced into hiding, it takes a hard left and becomes something entirely different. Whiling the days and weeks away in an abandoned beach house, we explore the duality of these lives and soften their outer veneer. In that sense, the internet-famous cover photo of writer/director/star Takeshi Kitano grinning broadly while holding a gun to his head is a precise depiction of the film's themes. These gangland thugs might be all business when they're intimidating store owners or trading bullets with a rival gang (nary an eyelash is batted when Kitano and company dunk a victim for too long and accidentally drown him), but on their down time, they need to cut loose, have a few laughs and make human connections, too. The really interesting points are where those two opposite modes meet, a jolting transformation when light amusement slams into stone-serious reality and all the easy smiles melt. There's always a momentary hesitation where we can't be certain which way the scales will tip, and that's dangerously exciting. Those key moments take time to develop, though, which leads the plot to really sag in the middle. Kitano performs very well as the central figure, a stark dichotomy of incompatible moods, but he can't be on-screen at all times and isn't always surrounded by the best supporting talent. A strong thematic concept, one which evidently developed live in the field as the script was extremely bare bones, but not especially well-executed. Loaded with promising ideas, much of Sonatine’s ephemeral potential depends upon what you, the viewer, are willing to bring to the table.
80
Time Out
Challenging, witty, adventurous and utterly singular.
75
New York Post
The violence in the existential gangster poem Sonatine is as flat and matter-of-fact as the antihero's face. Kitano, the Japanese Harvey Keitel, is a bullplug of a man whose very presence has gravity. [10 Apr 1998, p.048]
75
Chicago Reader
Kitano has his problems; for instance, he hasn't quite figured out how to create fully dimensional, interesting women. But at a time when action movies typically hand us a canned experience, his pictures carry a charge of originality.
67
Austin Chronicle
If you feel hostile toward art that not only confuses you but then also suggests that your confusion is precisely the point, you'll probably want to pass on Sonatine. But if disciplined, minimalist storytelling, formal innovation, and contemplation of mystery for its own sake appeals to you, a real feast awaits you in the films of Takeshi Kitano.
25
San Francisco Chronicle
Sonatine eliminates the one virtue American action films can legitimately claim -- vitality -- and replaces it with fake- existential claptrap wrapped in an inept narrative.
See All 22 Critic Reviews
May 28, 2021
0
Excalibur427
[SPOILER ALERT: This review contains spoilers.]
See All 3 User Reviews
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  • Bandai Visual Company
  • Shochiku
  • Yamada Right Vision Corporation
Apr 10, 1998
1 h 34 m
R
His mob boss double-crossed him. Now it's payback time!
Awards of the Japanese Academy
• 1 Win & 1 Nomination
Japanese Professional Movie Awards
• 1 Win & 1 Nomination
Cognac Festival du Film Policier
• 1 Win & 1 Nomination
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