Brother
A Japanese Yakuza gangster's deadly existence in his homeland gets him exiled to Los Angeles, where he is taken in by his little brother and his brother's gang.
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- Cast:
- Takeshi Kitano , Omar Epps , Claude Maki , Susumu Terajima , Masaya Kato , Lombardo Boyar , Ryo Ishibashi
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Reviews
Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!
Pretty Good
How sad is this?
For having a relatively low budget, the film's style and overall art direction are immensely impressive.
Exiled from Japan, Yamamoto, a member of the Yakuza, arrives in Los Angeles. Here, his brother is the leader of a small-time multi-racial gang, and Yamamoto encourages them to expand by taking over the local drug trade.Brother really struck a chord with me because of what it shows regarding race relations. It shows something I believe in very deeply and that is when forming relationships (be it love or friendship) with people, their character and principles should be the prime consideration and race should not factor into it.Why? One reason is that it makes more sense to affiliate with people based on character and principles rather than race, because character and principles can change but race cannot; if I refuse to be friends with a person of race X, then that person cannot ever be friends with me as long as he does not change his race. Additionally, if race is the prime consideration, then it is possible one may disregard or overlook positive qualities in a person to prevent the creation of a relationship with them, and even more dangerously, one may disregard negative character traits just so they can connect with someone.These are not conjectures, rather they are observations I have made in the almost thirty years I've been alive. Unfortunately, they're observations I have made much too often, starting from my formative years all the way to the somewhat cynical adult I am now. It really hurts me to see people from two countries detest each other over something that happened between their respective countries decades ago, even though these individuals had nothing personally to do with that event. Heck, I've met many of these people, whose default position is that they hate individuals from a certain country.Not often does a film come along that so eloquently speaks to me about issues that I care very much about. This is why I've somewhat unintentionally gone off on a tangent.The Yakuza members in this film are portrayed as ruthless individuals who carry out despicable acts and have no qualms about murdering innocent people to fulfil their needs and the needs of their (Yakuza) brothers, thus it is rather ironic that they do have some admirable qualities. One of those is that they consider the brotherhood between Yakuza members to be of more importance than familial relations (that is meant to be the ideal). Having seen this in the movie, I cannot help but think how much better it would be if we could apply a similar principle to our dealings with the people we meet every day (for good causes, of course, not criminal!).While many of the characters in this film are deeply flawed in many ways, such as the blind loyalty they show to their bosses, they are also shown to be very human. To pass the time, they play cards and basketball and various other games; they laugh and they make jokes; they give each other gifts; they have people they care about and they care about each other. Depictions of leisure time and activities to portray the humanity in characters we might traditionally hate is a great strength of Takeshi Kitano the director, and is present in his other films (Boiling Point and the masterpiece Sonatine come to mind). The resulting effect is that it is impossible to hate the characters, no matter how much you may want to.As in all Kitano films, there is a lot of humour, including some laugh out loud moments, and none of it feels out of place. As well as humour, many of Kitano's other trademarks are present, including off-screen violence (although there is much on screen violence as well, some of it eye-watering), lingering shots that continue after the scene has ended and ellipses, which is the technique of jumping from one scene to another and leaving what happened in between to the imagination.Regular Kitano collaborator, Joe Hisaishi, provides the score, and what a beautiful and pensive score it is. Someone who has not watched the film might feel the score would be out of place in a gangster film, however, it fits perfectly. As I write, the track "I love you Aniki" is playing on my CD player, and thinking about the themes and characters in the film, I feel, at the risk of sounding unmanly, choked up.Takeshi Kitano brings Japanese style and sensibility to a gangster film set in America, and this was, based on an interview, his intention. This decision works very well and results in a poignant crime drama with likable and well-drawn characters. I did not appreciate Kitano's work five years back, however, he is now one of my favourite directors. I have not yet seen all his films but out of the ones I have, I highly recommend Kikujiro, Sonatine, Hana-Bi, Violent Cop, Dolls, Boiling Point and Zatoichi. I urge you to seek out and watch them, as well as Brother, of course.
I like gangster movies. I like Japanese movies. You see that Beat Takeshi stars, directs and edits the movie and you may fear that he's an egomaniac and the film will be self-indulgent. It's not. It's got a unique point of view. It's got nobility. Takeshi's character is noble. One of his followers is noble. One would say that the family feeling in this movie is sweet, if it would not be weird to talk about the sweetness of a movie as blood-spattered as this one is. And this one is blood-spattered. My wife, whose taste in movies is usually much more sanguinary than mine, stopped watching it before it was over, so violent were the obeisances made to show faithfulness. This movie would be utterly unsuitable for children because of blood and guts and language. But it's funny. It's funny and honorable people gain moral victories and family members as well as people unrelated by blood show each other brotherly love. I fear for this culture-- our world culture-- that the only movie where I have seen honor and brotherly love lately is this film filled to overflowing with buckets of blood.
I rarely write reviews here and like a previous reviewer of this film I had never heard of this movie until it randomly came on HBO. I am a big fan of Japanese movies and I really like Kitano so I watched with interest and it payed off big time. While this is an extremely violent gangster movie I can't help but think of it as an art film. There is more said during the long silences than the bursts of dialog and the relatively brief amount of dialog becomes all the more important and impactful because of its scarcity. I really never thought I could see a thought provoking artistic delivery of a mob movie but here it is. Kitano delivers a true gem that I didn't think could exist. 11/10!
I know my friends here in IMDb that this is an strange question and also is very illogic because well, Kitano is much older than Quentin in films question but also in age and also Quentin release a Kitano film in his Rolling Thunder Collection: Sonatine (1993) ...but this question is the tag line of the BROTHER DVD here in Mexico City, the DVD says: Brother (El Capo): A film by Takeshi Kitano "The new Tarantino" This is for laugh to all the KItano fans........but for me was really helpful because i never knew about Takeshi KItano (sorry for that) and of course i knew about Quentin and when i saw this film in DVD with this tag line, well i buy it very fast and saw it the same afternoon.Later i start to investigate about who is Kitano, and i found this surprise: Takeshi Kitano is like a influence for Tarantino and is one of the most important films maker of Japan.And well right now i'm trying to buy all the films of Takeshi Kitano but is a little hard here in Mexico City because not many people Knows about Takeshi Kitano.ABOUT THE FILM BROTHER: The reason why i started to investigate about Kitano was that i really enjoy and love this excellent film.This is not the common film about gangsters that we already know........this is a very original and great history about a gangster of Japan who need to move to the US for questions of his work.There in US, this gangster (Takeshi Kitano) show to the little gang of his young brother that what they need to grow up in the matter of business is a leader like him.Very soon this gang start to take the control of LA and finally they need to fight against the most powerful gang in LA: The Italian mafia.The story is,for a lot of people and critics, very common but for me KItano make this story very original because he put elements that never were released in another film about gangsters.This elements are of course, the character that plays himself because he can't talk English but still can control the gang of his brother. Other elements are the excellent scenes like the one were he cut the face of a black guy that latter is in his gang and well the performances (all) are excellent and also the direction is great.BROTHER (2000) is an excellent film and well: Takeshi Kitano is not the new Tarantino...OK???