Kikujiro (1999) Poster

(1999)

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8/10
A Bittersweet Symphony
It is summertime, and Masao is a lonely boy living with his grandmother in Tokyo. One day, he finds an address supposedly belonging to his long-lost mother, and decides to try and find her. His grandmother's friend insists that her husband, Kikujiro, accompany Masao, and the two set out together; despite not knowing each other well. On their long journey, Kikujiro and Masao engage in many adventures, meeting colourful characters along the way and forging a bond stronger than that between parent and child. Whether or not their friendship withstands the test of time- and if they find Masao's mother- remains to be seen in the dramatic powerhouse that is Takeshi Kitano's 'Kikujiro.'

Kitano's eighth feature film, 'Kikujiro' is a delightfully funny and poignant road movie sure to warm the cockles of any viewers' heart. A simple story about friendship and connection, the trip Masao and Kikujiro undertake contains subtle power and emotional depth, whilst also being frequently hilarious. The characters are all well-drawn and the escapades they engage in both wildly entertaining and affecting. The relationship that develops between Masao and Kikujiro is realistic and heart-warming, and the film's exploration of those considered 'outsiders' is one most intelligent and subdued. Much like Kitano's previous 'A Scene At The Sea,' the film's power is of the low-key and naturalistic variety; and 'Kikujiro' will surely linger in the mind long after the credits have rolled.

'Kikujiro' reunites Kitano with cinematographer Katsumi Yanagishima, for their sixth out of sixteen collaborations. Yanagishima's muted work is undeniably powerful and beguiling, lending the film and its' story additional beauty and depth. His is not pretentious or needlessly hectic cinematography, it is steady and sure work that produces sagacious, artful and distinct results. That Kitano has utilised Yanagishima's immeasurable talents for every one of his movies bar 'Violent Cop' and 'Hana-Bi' proves just how effectively the two men work together; and the visuals borne of their partnership for 'Kikujiro' are unforgettable.

The same can be said of another frequent collaborator of Kitano's, composer Joe Hisaishi: his score for 'Kikujiro' is catchy and evocative. The fifth film of Kitano's Hisaishi has worked on, his melodies are haunting and delicate. The theme, 'Summer,' is particularly beautiful, and like an earwig worms it's way into one's subconscious, establishing itself as a tune one will find it most difficult to forget. Hisaishi frequently plays the 'Kikujiro' soundtrack while touring, and the enduring popularity of the music shows just how moving and ineffaceable it is.

'Kikujiro' also boasts highly detailed costume design from Fumio Iwasaki that lends additional dimension to characters, as well as echoing past works from Kitano's cinematic canon (most notably through the short sleeved Hawaiian shirts featured so prominently in 'Sonatine'). Also of note is Ryôji Kasumi and Michio Miyauchi's work in the makeup department and Tatsuo Ozeki's rich set decoration; which adds further believability to the proceedings.

'Kikujiro' stars Kitano in the titular role and Yusuke Sekiguchi as Masao, making his big screen debut. Sekiguchi is a fine actor who remains understated throughout, crafting in Masao a character both believable and compelling. It could be argued that he has the least to do in the cast- certainly he has relatively little dialogue or any large displays of emotion- and that many other young boys could have played the role as effectively. However, that is to do a serious discredit to the subtlety of his acting. Though he only has one other film role to date, Sekiguchi has left an indelible imprint on cinema through his brilliant performance as Masao.

Kitano is terrific as Kikujiro, making him a slightly unhinged comedic force of nature, as well as a profoundly complex man. His relationship with Masao forces him to examine his own life, which he finds wanting; and Kitano's performance is powerfully understated and wildly entertaining. It is assumed that Kikujiro is a facsimile of Kitano's own father, and the fondness and exuberance with which he approaches the role betrays a great respect, admiration and love for the man. Kitano's Kikujiro may be one of his finest performances from his storied career; and is certainly his warmest and most heartfelt.

The supporting cast is populated with talented actors like Kayoko Kishimoto and Akaji Maro, both of whom steal their too few scenes as Kikujiro's wife and a seedy fellow Masao encounters in a park, respectively. All the secondary performers do admirable work, with Nezumi Imamura, Gurêto Gidayû and Rakkyo Ide impressing and entertaining the most as a travelling writer and two bikers Masao and Kikujiro befriend along the way. From the smallest role to the titular one; everyone in the film is perfectly cast.

'Kikujiro' is a powerful, funny and genuinely moving film from Takeshi Kitano that impresses on every level. Strongly acted, well-written and featuring stunning cinematography from Katsumi Yanagishima; the movie is entertaining and memorable both. With an atmospheric Joe Hisaishi score and detailed costume and set design; there is little to fault with the film. In short, 'Kikujiro' is a bittersweet symphony of unaffected profundity and voluminous emotional depth that hits all the right notes.
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9/10
Beat Takeshi's Audacious, Edgy and Heartwarming Road Movie
EUyeshima13 December 2005
In the title role of this highly original 1999 road movie, Beat Takeshi - with his twitching eye and bow-legged shuffle - looks and acts like a cross between Mickey Rourke and Harvey Keitel with a heavy dose of Walter Matthau's sourpuss demeanor (circa "The Bad News Bears") for good measure. He creates a truly memorable character - cynically profane, unapologetically insulting, childishly manipulative and somehow likable. As the director and screenwriter of said film, Takeshi Kitano - the same guy - has fashioned something quite unique from a tired premise - a boy's search for his mother and the gruff man who begrudgingly helps find her. What could have been a predictable and sentimental wallow, especially with the indiscriminate use of angels as a pervasive symbol, is instead an idiosyncratic, emotionally adroit film that sometimes simmers on the cusp of violence.

Yet it becomes ultimately affecting almost in spite of itself. In fact, Kitano does such a resolutely offbeat job that at certain times, the film reminds me of the narrative ellipses and low steady shots that were the trademark of Yasujiro Ozu's home dramas, intermingled with a surprisingly intense Quentin Tarantino-like, in-your-face edginess. The protagonist of the film is really the latch-key nine-year old, Masao, who is on a quest to find the mother whom his grandmother says is "away working". With his sad eyes and cherubic face, Yusuke Sekiguchi is perfectly cast as Masao providing the moral compass for the story. Whether he is running with his arms flailing or forlornly playing soccer by himself, he is poignant without being saccharine and completely natural. It is Masao's scrapbook that provides the framework for the film lending each chapter a descriptive title. Every chapter has a distinct character that is, in various turns, playful, hilarious, disturbing, surreal and heartbreaking. Case in point: Kitano is not afraid to use a child molester as first an uncomfortable source of black humor and then as the subject of Masao's nightmare. My favorite scenes come toward the end when Kikujiro organizes a motley crew of misfits to play games with Masao and have them masquerade as Indians, aliens, marine life and even watermelons. The variety in tone between chapters makes for unexpected tonal shifts, but somehow it works and adds to the greater context of the story.

That Kitano is able to manage a consistent film-making style with a strong visual sense is a credit to the talent behind the camera - not only Kitano's direction, script and film editing but also his artwork showcased throughout the movie, Katsumi Yanagishima's sharply rendered cinematography and Joe Hisaishi's evocative Windham Hill-like score. There are some funny sideline performances from Gidayu Great and Rakkyo Ide as Fatso and Baldy, two bikers who turn out to be the Abbott and Costello of soft-hearted slackers; Nezumi Mamura as a free-spirited drifter; Fumie Hosokawa as a relentlessly perky girl with a talent for juggling; and in the opening sequence, Kayoko Kishimoto as Kikujiro's take-no-prisoners wife. Kitano, however, elicits the most laughs if only for the film's central conceit that he gets away with his infantile gangster behavior. One would think the story would climax when Masao comes upon his mother, but Kitano confounds expectations with every new scene. The DVD really has no extras other than a couple of trailers not related to the film (not coincidentally, one is for Walter Salles' "Central Station" which has a similar story structure). I know this film has its detractors, especially among fans of Kitano's bloodier work, but I find it intriguingly ambiguous and thoroughly enjoyable.
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7/10
The lighter side of Takeshi Kitano - childhood summer memories in abundance
ruby_fff15 October 2000
Vignettes of childhood memories - possibly Kitano's own childhood experiences and impressions, "Kikujiro" is not like the deep or layered deliveries Kitano has in "Fireworks" (Hana-bi) 1997, or "Sonatine" 1994. There are no cops or graphic depictions of violence. There are still some gangster-type characters, but the encounters are simple, requiring no synthesis. Kitano's familiar elements and locales are present: drawings, vignettes, seaside, temple, and angels.

It's really a loving portrayal of one little boy, Masao's, summer, spent with this seemingly eccentric retired gangster "Mister" played by Kitano. We have a pair of comic bikers, a lone van traveler, an arguing truck driver, a fun juggling couple, prankish hitchhiking gags, and a rather extensive betting session at the (bicycle) races. There are occasions for sentimental tears, for instance, when "Mister" took a side trip to visit his own mother; but play is the key operative here. Even though the child appears to be a sulky non-smiling little boy most of the time, a boy will be a boy when it comes to play and open up to lightness of the heart.

If you're the hurrying kind, this film may not be for you. The film is at its own flow and pace. It's Masao's summer vacation adventures, and he's not in a hurry to go home. Joe Hisaishi's theme music for "Kikujiro" certainly is catchy and the score gave Kitano's film its rhythm and accents along this unlikely pair's journey - a grown man, who's become childlike once more while escorting Masao on his quest to fulfill the dream of seeing his mother. Does it matter whether Masao sees his mother or not? He gains a friend, Kikujiro.

Kudos to Sony Pictures Classics for their film distribution selections! At the recent Bravo cable channel's IFC (Independent Film Channel) tenth Gotham Awards, Catherine Deneuve presented the Industry Lifetime Achievement Award to the trio: Tom Bernard, Marcie Bloom, Michael Barker. It was noted: "This award is being created specifically for this year's ceremony to honor the trio for their 20 years of service as champions of independent filmmakers." Besides the theme from Woody Allen's "Sweet and Lowdown", Joe Hisaishi's music from "Kikujiro" was mostly used during the montage of the film clips. Films the trio has co-produced include the popular 1999 Tom Tykwer's "Run Lola Run" (German), Pedro Almodovar's 1999 triumph "All About My Mother" (Spanish), the Brazilian gem in 1998 "Central Station", Hal Hartley's 1997 saga "Henry Fool", John Sayles' 1996 hit "Lone Star", the 1995 French surprise "The City of Lost Children", and as far back as 1971 Vittorio De Sica's "The Garden of the Finzi-Contini".
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10/10
Demonstrates that Kitano is still a master without the violence
simon_booth17 March 2002
By 1999 Takeshi Kitano had quite rightly gained a lot of international recognition for his brilliantly constructed Yakuza/Cop stories, but was apparently dis-satisfied that everybody tended to focus on the violence in them. So he decided to make a movie without any violence to remind people that he was a much more rounded talent than that. "Are you sure about this?", the world asked. "Yes", he replied... and made Kikujiro.

Kikujiro is difficult to adequately describe, but the fact that it was allegedly inspired by the Wizard of Oz is a good starting point. The basic premise is a road trip, where Kitano is the unlikely chaperone for a little boy who wants to go and find his mother. After gambling away all the money his wife gives him to take the kid, they have to improvise their transport across the country. Along the way they meet a small but colourful cast of characters, and get to know each other a little bit too.

I'd hesitated about picking this up for ages, and eventually went for a rental rather than a purchase. Kitano minus violence just didn't seem right! But that was definitely an injustice I was doing him, and Kikujiro is a good demonstration that his talents really are much broader. In fact, after watching it there is no doubt that he is one of the greatest director/actor/writer and editor working in the world today. A brilliantly painted story, full of subtly and quirkiness. Awesome cinematography and an incredible soundtrack... truly world class in every respect. Well, to be fair the child actor was a bit stiff, but it seems mean to hold that against the movie.

Definitely recommended if you haven't already seen it!
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10/10
It is not a film . . .
nizsu4 March 2008
I have heard a lot of people said that this film was not recognized as much as his other films. What a shame! When I saw the tittle of the film, I was surprised. The tittle is Kitano's father name.

In Kitano's biography, it is said that "Kitano's father was an alcoholic and would spend most of the money he earned on alcohol, and when he had been drinking, he would become violent and beat up both his wife and his kids. Eventually, Kikujiro left his family".

I know Kitano Takeshi made this film because he has been tired of violence/gangsters/life&death in his previous film, but what made him writing a story about his father-a man who abandoned his family when Kitano was young. If you read Kitano Takeshi's biography, you should see his childhood memory in Masao. Kikujiro ( in the film) is a corrupted person. But also in the film, Masao eventually respects and loves to play with that childish man who keeps smoking and shouting at people. Does Kitano himself desire a father too much, so he is willing to accept his father's bad habits as long as his father is still at his side.

It is not really a film I'd say, I feel like I am seeing the characters in real life. From the start, Masao has drawn Kikujiro in his diary. The ending is also the beginning. Kitano didn't make a happy ending nor a sad ending. Our 3 hours is just to see the beginning of a father-and-son relationship which would grows by the time. Remember, Masao just knew Kikujiro's name in the end of the film, and Kikujiro said: "Let's do it again some time". The cycle of life in "Kikujiro" go on forever. The feeling is too real. I have forgot that I were watching a movie. There is no simple words that can describe this movie completely, u have to watch it by yourself
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Takeshi Kitano's most underrated movie.
Infofreak22 November 2003
Western audiences basically only know Beat Takeshi for his tough guy persona. Japanese audiences have seen many sides to him for a long time, and probably regard him as a comedian more than anything else. Maybe this is the reason why 'Kikujiro' isn't all that well known. Takeshi wrote and directed this movie as a follow up to his most celebrated work 'Hana-bi', but as it isn't a yakuza crime drama, it seems to have been largely overlooked. And that's a damn shame, because it's a very good movie, and anyone who enjoys Kitano's work will enjoy it. On paper the plot looks very Disney-like (grumpy old coot hits the road with an unhappy kid), but hey, this is Beat Takeshi, so what he does with it is always original and surprising. Much of the movie is playful, but then much of 'Sonatine' was too, only 'Kikujiro' doesn't mix that up with the orgy of violence you might expect from watching Kitano's better known movies. However it does have some dark moments that you would NEVER see in a Hollywood film dealing with similar "heart warming" subject matter, especially the "scary man" sequence featuring Akaji Maro, an actor you might recognise from Tarantino's 'Kill Bill'. I enjoyed 'Kikujiro' a lot, and the more Kitano movies I see, the more I think he is one of the most underrated directors working today.
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10/10
Funny, subtle storytelling
vincent.vega-21 April 2004
Kikujiro is a movie with beautiful calmness that's a great diversity from the fast cut movies today. Takeshi Kitano proofs once and for all, that he's a master filmmaker that will forever be remembered. And even though he dislikes the fame that goes along with his more successful movies (Zatoichi), it's a shame he doesn't get more recognition for his films.

Kikujiro no natsu tells the story of a kid who decides to visit his mother that he never met. Through odd circumstances kikujiro (Kitano), though absolutely unqualified, is forced to lead the kid. But as we see only moments later the boy would be better off alone, as kikujiro's fondness of gambling and (very amusing) way to treat people makes the journey a funny and quite touching odyssee.

What stands out in this movie is the simple comedy. It shows Kitano started off as a comedian, and his dialogue and acting made me almost spill my milk more than a few times. This is certainly one of his best. A great film for a quiet, rainy sunday afternoon.
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10/10
One of the best and most beautiful films about growing love between man and a boy
mateusz-223 October 2004
Maybe Takeshi Kitano remembered his travel with his father (Kikujiro), maybe he just wanted to show his father just like he wanted to see him. Anyway this film, despite of very few words and quite simple dialogue lines, shows so many emotions that after seeing it, sometimes laughing, sometimes sad and full of empathy, i have spent many days thinking of it. How can grown-up simple man witch is not quite good in relationships with people, can spent so much time with little boy. How so violent person can show beautiful world to sad little boy. Takeshi is one of my favorite actor/director/writer. I discovered him just by being bored with all-the-same Hollywood movies. Now, thanks to him, I'm truly in "love" with Asian movies. For those who liked this movie, and wants to see some good others, see the Hana-Bi (little violent, but even more deep) and Dolls (i was crying - one reason was i was touched, second - beauty of the colors and form).....For me its just one word - Outstanding.
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7/10
Sweet contemplative film about friendship
Polaris_DiB2 December 2005
If it wasn't for the perverted old man and the language, this would probably be a really good children's movie. Who knows, maybe it's intended to be...

Anyway, little Masao lives with his grandmother and has never met his parents: his father is dead and his mother ran away. He knows where his mother lives, however, and wants to go visit her over the Summer, so his kindly neighbor conscripts her profligate husband to take him. "Mister", as Masao calls him, doesn't make the ideal companion with his absurd behavior and his verbal abuse, but they go off to adventure anyways and learn to really connect with each other.

The power this film has lies mostly in its contemplative approach. It's very humorous and isn't really slow, but the camera does take the time to linger on locales, faces, and characters. For a few odd parts here and there, it's still really innocent and it seems to show that most people are kind-natured at heart, even when they project an aura of toughness and abusiveness. An interesting aside to analyze that theme would be the carnival scene, where people entrusted with family entertainment turn out to be violent cheaters, whereas even the heavy-metal biker folk are more than willing to go out of their way to help Masao.

The film itself is from Masao's perspective, as a childhood's slightly photographic memory comes into play, mixed a lot with colorful imagination. The humor is the best part, as it is at times really simple but holds itself up well. There's a lot to enjoy in this film.

--PolarisDiB
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9/10
A wonderful, delightful movie
dog_fc2 February 2006
From its hauntingly beautiful soundtrack by Joe Hisaishi to the wonderful characters who inhabit Takeshi Kitano's magical Japan - everything in this movie comes together to make this one of modern cinema's truly underrated masterpiece.

The story involves a petty thug, Kikujiro, who is coerced into accompanying a young boy, Masao, on his cross country journey to find his birth mother. Along the way they meet a whole host of characters. Some friendly, some mysterious, some quirky, some abrasive, but all of them refreshingly human.

A lesser writer or director would have settled for a quick dose of weirdness from the main characters' fellow wanderers, but Takeshi Kitano milks them for all of the depth and endearment that the too few minutes we are graced with their presence allows.

If you enjoyed the whimsical, go-nowhere feel of Lost in Translation, you will LOVE this movie. In my opinion Beat Takeshi's efforts blow Sophia Coppola's out of the water.

Nine out of ten.
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7/10
A Nutshell Review: Kikujiro
DICK STEEL26 October 2006
The last Kitano Takeshi movie for the day, Kikujiro is very much unlike the previous two movies. If anyone would think that Takeshi is only famous for, and can make only violent movies, then this one would make you do an about turn. Even the narrative style is quite different from the limited few of his movies I've been exposed to. Being PG rated (Hana-Bi was NC16), the queue of those expected to watch this film was again snaking, even though most of the (free) tickets were already snapped up.

The story centers on the deep friendship which develops between a quirky, mean and uncouth middle-aged man, and a young boy. It doesn't start off rosy, as Kikujiro (played by Takeshi himself) gets assigned, against his wishes, chaperon duties to assist and ensure that the young boy Masao (Yusuke Sekiguchi) gets to find his mother. So begins a road trip of sorts, with the duo encountering a host of situations and characters (aren't road trips all like that?)

The movie can be seen as two distinct halves, with the first half in my opinion the more superior portion of the film. It centers upon the journey, on the quest to seek out Masao's mother in another county. We get to follow our mismatched duo through various escapades through their hitchhiking adventures, with one involving racing amongst cyclists (in a betting game), which is one of my favourite moments in the story. Everything else afterwards in this half is built up from that one incident, adding much to the comedic aspects that actually, although predictably, bring on some genuine laughs.

The second half is perhaps what disappoints, with its introduction of over the top characters in 2 biker gang type guys, and a farmer. Here, the sequence of events sticks out unconvincingly, even though it's possibly trying to tug at your heartstrings and bring back memories of the days of childhood, where you have adults engaging in children's games, just to keep the children entertained. The play acting with strangers take its toil as it wore on, and became a bit of a drag with repetitive childish scenes of play acting. Takeshi isn't adorable, try as he might, and some may cringe at his "act cute" moments. Somehow Yusuke Sekiguchi, who plays Masao, doesn't seem to act cute at all, and I thought it was kind of mirroring real life - imagine between a baby and an adult, who's the one playing the fool most of the time in their interactions with each other?

Nonetheless, Kikujiro is still an admirable story on friendship, amongst the unlikeliest of couples, with Kikujiro cutting a father like figure to Masao's little child. Come to think of it, it's like a road trip movie between father and son, and the braving of odds to cement some credible ties by the time the end credits come rolling.
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9/10
A sweet family film from Kitano.
Captain_Couth3 December 2003
Kikujiro (1999) is a tale about a little boy who so desperately wants to see his mother. He's accompanied on the trip by an old rascal named Kikujiro. The two make an unlikely pair of traveling companions. It's a sweet film and an interesting change of pace for Takeshi Kitano. He plays

with more of his comedic side in this picture. I enjoyed this movie very much. A fun trip down memory lane. Kitano shows that he can be humorous and light hearted as well as he is hard-boiled and stoic. Recommended.

A
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7/10
Summertime in Japan--a picaresque road trip
KFL11 November 2005
Takeshi Kitano plays Kikujiro, a combative, ne'er-do-well drifter who is badgered into taking a young boy, Masao, from Tokyo to Toyohashi to meet his mother--for the first time ever.

Someone with a little money and with what passes these days for common sense could get there in maybe an hour by bullet train. Kikujiro and Masao take the, umm, scenic route.

Anyone who has spent much time in Japan may be feeling "natsukashii" (nostalgia...well, not quite) well before the halfway point. What would, with a sensible adult guide, be an utterly forgettable day trip, is stretched out into a week or more, and becomes a complete summer vacation for Masao, with all that this entails in Japan--the summer festival, swimming in the ocean, the suika-wari game of blindfolded watermelon-bashing (with an amusing variation here), and so on. The "summer vacation" aspect is emphasized by the intertitles introducing each segment, which are presented as photos, complete with captions, that the boy might have taken on a real vacation.

The basic structure--the adult-child road trip--has been done before, of course (and a trailer for Central Station is included on the DVD). Some of the concerted attempts by the motley collection of adults to amuse Masao in the last quarter of the movie are rather too contrived. But this is, on the whole, a good-hearted movie (...somewhat rare for Kitano) that managed to make all of us smile.

...really, though, the title should have been "Masao no natsu", Masao's Summer Vacation.
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5/10
Poor
zetes5 January 2016
Not one of Kitano's better films, in my opinion. It's supposed to be cute, but I found it rather annoying, not to mention way too long. Kitano plays a cantankerous middle-aged man, possibly mentally retarded in some way, who more or less kidnaps a young, friendless boy one summer and goes on a road trip with him. It starts off as pure selfishness at first - he thinks the boy is good luck when he's gambling. But soon they're friends and he wants to show the lonely kid a good time. The big problem is, Kikujiro (which is Kitano's character's name - he doesn't reveal it until the last minutes of the movie, like I'm supposed to really care) is a gigantic jerk. He's always treating people, even the little kid when's he's trying to be his friend, like garbage. Again, this is supposed to be cute and all in good fun, but I found it all nasty. Kitano is still a good director and there are a lot of good touches throughout. Jo Hisaishi wrote the score, and it makes the film a lot more pleasant than it would otherwise be.
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9/10
Reminds me I'm not the only person who feels alone and let down by life
pixelsdie27 May 2009
I think Kikujiro is mainly about loneliness.

Takeshi's character and the boy, Masao, seem really different on the surface. Takeshi's provokes people, is loud and rude. Masao is quiet and sad.

But they're really the same person: someone whose life is full of disappointment, abandonment. They both feel isolated, like no one could understand. They might be pitied, but no one could understand like they'd been there, like they'd lived that kind of life.

And when you get really lonely like that, I think it makes you bitter. The whole world continues to smile and sing its fortunes while your life seems to get worse and worse, less and less reason to stay living.

Masao is very withdrawn because of this. Over time, as he gets older, I can see him getting more and more bitter about it. Maybe Takeshi's character was like Masao at first, too. Lonely and sad. And then maybe he thought, "why should I be sad? All the world has brought me is misfortune. I should rather be angry!" and then started trying to provoke and anger people on purpose. Why should they be content, anyway? But, all the other characters they meet on the journey are like that, too. Isolates, people on the edge of society, people who might call themselves "countercultural" or something like that.

What I think is really important is how they change over the course of the movie. Like they might have the liberty to sit around all day, smoking and brooding and depressed. Masao is only a child, and all this kind of disappointment is new to him.

In a less realistic film maybe the characters would be, in their characteristic brooding way, like, "Eh, them's the breaks huh kid". In Kikujiro they're people. They can see how much he's like them, how much pain he's in. And they're so jaded because they're still hurting, too.

So they try and cheer him up, play games with him. Show him the kind of love he never got from anyone else in his life, that they never got. And it's so touching because they, especially Takeshi's character, start to see it's not so bad, not so hopeless. That everyone loves, and everyone cries, and just because their lives have been particularly worse than others doesn't mean they can't reach out to and come to an understanding with others.

The film's long takes sometimes feel kinda pointless, like they're just there because that's part of the director's style. But other times they really work, especially in the more emotional scenes. They help say more than any amount of ridiculous sad symphonic music could.

And the music, which is intermittent and plays on a single theme, is really good too. It doesn't feel like some kind of deliberately tragic cliché, but still adds a great amount to the mood of the movie and helped bring me to tears at some points.

Some negative reviews I've read call Kikujiro shallow or emotionally manipulative, but I can't see that at all. The whole thing is very human, and doesn't force any moral down your throat other than that, I guess, that you are not so alone. And it feels like it's coming from someone who has been alone, who has felt this incredible sadness, and also conquered it. And I think, that means more than I can really put into words.
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10/10
"Call me daddy! Say it, you little sh--!"
rooprect3 October 2012
The director/star/editor of "Kikujiro" (Takeshi Kitano) began with stage comedy, then became known for his hyper-violent (yet hypnotically artistic) gangster films, and is now known as a modern master of art cinema. As the story goes, some time in the late 1990s Kitano suffered a near-death motorcycle accident, and immediately following it he made this film... which many fans call his best.

His style is very photographic, meaning each shot is composed carefully like something you'd see on the wall of an art gallery. As such, he doesn't rely too heavily on motion or dialogue, and the effect can be both powerful and hilarious. If "a picture is worth a 1000 words", Takeshi Kitano milks every last syllable.

"Kikujiro" is a beautifully wicked road movie about a cute little kid looking for his momma. What gives it an edge is the fact that the kid gets paired up with the most unlikely "guardian" the world has ever known. Takeshi Kitano plays the guardian: a loud-mouthed, selfish, good-for-nothing troublemaker who decides to exploit the kid for all he's worth. You learn quickly that this is NOT a cutesy Disney flick. Instead, it's an edgy, slightly dark, yet thoroughly charming story about innocence in a not-so-innocent world. I could go on for ages about the clever symbolism and poetic themes, the complexity of Takeshi Kitano's character, the power of the film's final scene... but that's for you to figure out when you watch it, and on your 2nd, 3rd or 4th watch (I've seen this movie half a dozen times myself, and I can't wait to see it again).

The comedy is very quirky, and not everyone will get it. But if you do, you'll be howling in the aisles. It's somewhat surreal, and most of the humor stems from the idea that Kitano's character is so preposterous, and his actions so unrealistic, that you can't help but say WTF. It's even funnier if you realize that Japanese society is quite conservative, and the situations depicted in the movie would be downright scandalous. In that respect it could almost be classed as a surrealist comedy, alongside "Airplane!" and the "Naked Gun" movies. This may be a stretch, but I'd also compare it to the mockumentary masterpiece "This is Spinal Tap", or some of the other great Christopher Guest films.

One last thing I have to mention: The musical score is AMAZING. I've never heard an original score fit a film so perfectly as this. Composed by the great Joe Hisaishi, master of a thousand styles, the music for "Kikujiro" is simple, childlike and majestic at the same time. It's even more uplifting than the "Amelie" soundtrack.

The music, the photography, the gags and the story make this one of my favorite films of all time... definitely one I keep coming back to whenever I need a boost.
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Exactly what you'd hope for when the most insane/creative/unique director on earth decides to make a family film!
clearlydimented29 March 2004
An extremely enjoyable movie!!! It focuses on a kid who lives with his grandmother, trying to go meet his real mother. Takishe is forced to accompany the child in order to ensure a safe trip. Luckily he screwed up & misbehaved in a wide assortment of hilarious situations.

Definitely recommended as an enjoyable movie to watch for everyone. There is enough unique visuals and interesting situations to easily entertain any first time viewer.

The dialog is also extremely light, no 10 minute conversations or useless stuff like that. So dont let the subtitles deter you from viewing the movie.
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8/10
dare I say, 'heartwarming'!
christopher-underwood5 October 2020
Most endearing film with Takeshi Kitano himself staring with Yusuke Sekeguchi, a youngster playing a nine year old, living with his grandmother, who having nothing better to do one summer break from school decides to go search for his mother (and maybe a father too). The slightly odd character that Kitano plays accompanies the child but at times this seems more like two kids on the road. We get glimpses of near deserted countryside and seaside along the way and interaction with various parties along the way. This being a Kitano film, nothing is ever straightforward but potentially disastrous episodes usually turn into something more akin to games and when there is the coming together of two bikers, met along the way, and a return of the hippie in a camper van things get much more like a children's playground than an adult search for a deserting parent. Nobody makes films quite like Kitano and none of his films are quite like the other. Impressive and dare I say, 'heartwarming'!
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8/10
a film about being lonely and different
dromasca12 March 2011
Warning: Spoilers
By one of these coincidences that make you wonder the very day the strongest earthquake in memory hit Japan, a Japanese film festival took place at the cinematheque in my city. 'Kikujiro' which I saw last night is a very special film in the Japanese cinema and in the filmography of Takeshi Kitano.

The fans of Kitano will notice that he is taking the character he usually plays in the gangster movies and creates here a failed version of it. He is dominated by a bad-mouthed wife. His walk is uncertain, closer to Chaplin's than to a well assured yakuza. He does have a scaring tattoo on his back but this becomes just the reason of the bad dreams of his little boy friend. When confronted with a gang of local gangsters he ends by being beaten in a situation in which his self from other movies would have killed his opponents in a fraction of time. All over the film he looks more like inadequate and unadapted to reality.

There is however much more in the character than this. The name - which we learn in the last scene - is the real name of Takeshi Kitano's father which is said to have shared at least some of the vices of the character in the movie like gambling. This is a personal film in which a lonely young kid gradually gains some kind of a father instead of the one he never had. The feelings of the little boy and his permanently sad look may have been inspired by the feelings of kid Takeshi and his disappointments in the relation with his father.

By the time Kitano made this movie the 'grumpy man - lonely kid' films (which had the classic in Chaplin's Vagabond) were making a comeback. In 1996 the Czech 'Kolya' had moved audiences and the Oscar jury with the story of the relation between the Czech musician and a Russian kid in occupied Czechoslovakia. Two years earlier Natalie Portman's first breakthrough was in 'Leon', where she befriended another gangster played by the wonderful Jean Reno. Kitano was not afraid to take over a popular theme which he developed adding to it other dimensions to the merge of mature and childish loneliness. The film speaks about in-adaptation and about the right to be different. It brings on screen characters to illustrate that different people can get together and create beauty from weird. The Poet and the two motorcyclists seem to come out from the Land of Oz in a very different road experience.

The style of the film is inspired by some of the Japanese popular culture techniques and form of art. The kid's dreams look like traditional theater scenes. A toy he receives and starts relating to it as an amulet looks like one of artist's Takashi Murakami gadgets. Acting is excellent and the music belongs to Joe Hisaishi, a composer famous in Japan and author of the soundtrack of more than 100 films. While you need to make a small effort to get into the mood and buy the transformation of the traditional gangster image in Kitano's films, 'Kikujiro' ends by being a very satisfying cinema experience.
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7/10
On a road trip with Takeshi Kitano
RokurotaMakabe5 July 2011
This is the first film that Takeshi Kitano directed after the critically acclaimed "Hana-bi" and it represents a totally different approach from him. Perhaps he wanted to make a movie that didn't have the violent content that characterized his previous work, also trying to prove his versatility as an actor. The result is a film that manages to be funny and touching in the same time and it accomplishes that without relying on the clichés that are usually present in films of this kind.

Little boy Masao decides to go on a long trip in order to visit his mother whom he had never seen, but in order to do that he must be accompanied by an adult. He finds his companion in Kikujiro, a grumpy and loudmouthed middle-aged man who sometimes cannot avoid getting into trouble. They embark on a journey that is filled with adventures, adventures that manage to build a strong relationship between the two characters. Takeshi Kitano rose to fame as a comedian and this is a film where he fully displays his comedic skills. In spite of all his bad habits, Kikujiro is a likable character and that is the merit of Kitano, who proves once again that he is a talented actor. His directing is also precise and he makes great use of the wonderful score from Joe Hisaishi.

With "Kikujiro", Kitano started from a formula that you can also find in Hollywood movies (that of two very different people traveling together), but the final result doesn't look like anything from Hollywood. Kitano managed to make a highly original film by using his unique style and that really paid off in the end.

My rating: 8/10
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10/10
What A Wonderfully Directed Heartwarming Film.
Vivekmaru4512 July 2016
This film sent me down memory lane to when I was a little boy with my little school-bag full of books and some snacks for break-time/recess-time.

But that was a long long time ago. I have grown since then, but my heart I have kept just as innocent as when I was little. This film teaches you a lot. It shows two characters at different stages of life. Kikujiro Takeda's life is over, he hasn't accomplished much he spends most of the time at the tracks and at bars and rarely at home. He is disgusted with the hand that life has dealt him. It can be safe to assume that in the film, Kikujiro has no children with his wife.

His wife, however is a ray of sunshine. She is a real sociable person and a quick talker as generally most Japanese women are.

Then we have a lonely young boy Masao of an undisclosed age maybe six or seven years old. Masao is living with his old grandmother. He has been abandoned by his mother, but hopes one day of reuniting.

One day receives a package, and in looking for a seal finds a photo of his long lost mother. He finds her address in Toyohashi, several hundred miles to the west. Leaving home to see his mother, he meets his grandmother's neighbors, Kikujiro and his wife. Kikujiro's wife forces Kikujiro to accompany Masao on a journey to see his mother, telling Masao's grandmother that they are going to the beach.

Their journey begins. Watch the film and see what happens next. I guarantee you this film will change your outlook of life, and you will not regret the time you have spent on it.
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6/10
A decent movie though there are better Japanese movies to watch
planktonrules25 May 2005
After reading some other comments, I was surprised by how much they liked this movie. I liked it mildly, but just can't understand the glowing reports and scores like "10". It's a nice little movie about a strange, somewhat sociopathic man who helps a little boy to find the mother who abandoned him. The acting is good and the movie this worth seeing but that is all. There are certainly many better Japanese movies (most films by Kurasawa, Happiness of Katakuris, and many others).

If you like Beat Takeshi in this movie, I think you'd likely agree that this is not his best film. I would recommend you view his recent homage to the Zatiochi series (Zatoichi--made in 2003).
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9/10
A meditation
Leofwine_draca19 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
One of Beat Takeshi's most thoughtful and introspective movies. Apparently made as an antidote to his violent yakuza films but there's still plenty of adult themes here so it's not particularly for children. What it is is an exploration of the nature of childhood vs jaded adulthood, and the way one can inform the other. Takeshi is excellent - unsurprisingly - and the humour is quirky, unique, and very funny with it. The ending in particular is a delight. KIKUJIRO might just be one of the auteur's greatest works.
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6/10
Not So Heartwarming
gbheron22 April 2001
"Kikujero" is a comedy, a road-trip movie. It's focus is a young, sullen boy being raised by his grandmother in contemporary Japan. His father is dead, and his mother is incommunicado, working in a distant city. School lets out for summer recess and immediately his pals depart for vacation, leaving him alone. He hits upon a plan to find his mother. Befriended by the local saloon owner, she offers up her shiftless, thuggish husband to accompany him on his quest. The first thing the man does is take the boy's money and lose both the boy's and his funds at the racetrack. Broke, they are left to their devices to finish the trip. The remainder of the movie is a chronicle of their journey across Japan.

Don't get me wrong, this is not a half-assed film; it's very well made. And most of it is enjoyable. But more than a little of the humor was a little off-putting. For example: while pretending to be blind to cage a ride the thug is struck hit-and-run by a car. This was definitely supposed to be funny, but it was lost on me. Episodes like this are sprinkled throughout the long (over 2 hour) movie. You are forewarned.
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5/10
Unsatisfying
mister_bateman4 September 2020
It starts out interesting and charming and there are quite a few low key funny scenes, but in the second half it becomes a boring sequence of random, weird scenes and just makes you look at the clock wondering when it's finally over.
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