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Brother
Actors: Takeshi Kitano, Kuroudo Maki
Director: Takeshi Kitano
Number of Items: 1
Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen
Format: Color, Widescreen, Closed-captioned, Dolby
Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Running Time: 113 minutes
Studio: Columbia/Tristar Studios
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Region Code: 1
Product Group: DVD
Release Date: 2002-01-02

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"The BEST!!!"
I think this movie was really really good! i love it so much! i recommended this movie to all my friends and family and they all loved it!!! in the beginning you wonder what the hell is going on? but if you pay attention you will understand the whole movie! i thought it was the best yakuza movie i had seen so far...



"Did I miss something?"
Seemed like some things in this movie wernt explained much. You can follow whats going on, what happened, etc but it seemed like it had many holes. The direction is only there half the time. It had some cool scenes in it but it could have been a much better movie



"Obtuse, synthetic, and silly albeit very stylish nonsense"
I had to smile when in the second-last scene a character's dialogue (subtitle) include the word "inscrutable". That is the term I had been contemplating since about 10 minutes into this vapid two hour flic.

I'm really stunned by some other reviews saying things like "Japanese version of The Godfather" and "accurate portrayal of the Yakuza". The only Godfather this might compare to, on rating alone, would be Godfather III which was a bomb. And this is a valid portrayal of Yakuza gansters only if your average Yakuza is a suicidal halfwit with the emotions and intellect of a delinquent street urchin.

"Brother" has a stylish light-jazz soundtrack, very hip art direction and a cool aesthetic look which are enough to make you want to like the film.

Unfortunately, that's a tall order. The dialogue is juvenile (at least the english subtitling anyway), perhaps the Japanese language is better. The characters are plastic and one dimensional. The script is ludicrous, not the slightest grasp on reality of gangster society. Law enforcement is virtually non-existent in this movie since the gangster can slaughter each other in non-stop extravagant violence and almost never encounter the police. Killing is wanton and practically without any character motivation or response much of the time ... you're just left wondering. Compared to other gangster flics, there is almost no credibility in any part of this story.

This movie is optimized aesthetic silliness, with mindless two-second murders by the dozen, all committed to a jazzy sax soundtrack. At the midpoint, I was pondering whether to continue watching as the movie descended into the abyss. I only persisted to the end in order to see how low would actually sink.

This movie is as bad as "Knock Off", "The Negotiator", and "Showdown in Little Tokyo", probably worse.

If you really want to see an ultra-hip, stylized, aesthetics-over-plot film, try "The Odd One Dies" (Hong Kong, 1997) or "Fallen Angels" (1995), both with Takeshi Kaneshiro. Or an equally obtuse and bizarre film, but nonetheless very stylized action pulp noire, try Seijun Suzuki's classic "Branded To Kill" (1967). Or better yet, try "The Big Hit" (1998) with mark Wahlberg and Lou Diamond Phillips, which is another mindless but entertaining killing spree which doesn't take itself too seriously.

"Brother" is a disappointment. It is very nicely art-directed, and not much else. This is not the "Godfather" of the Yakuza genre. I am not flying solo in my critical view, the 69 reviews on RT have it at 51% thumbs down. One reviewer summed up my feelings well in his comment: "Rarely has such an artful aesthetic been used to craft such sadistically violent junk."...



"Very quick review"
I'll get around to writing a better review eventually. I liked the movie, and just wanted to point out that Denny revenge scene wasn't too light because he wasn't finished. Because of the ending events happened differently then he thought they were going to.



"Brother Doesn't Let You Down !"
Take it for what it's worth !!! It's clean and explosive visual and aural action ! One cannot get confused or lost with the plot (not much of a twist to it but still suffices)...For those who liked La Femme Nikita (original 1990 French version) and Leon/The Professional will definitely find themselves hooked on this film from the lead actor to it's cinematic/somewhat classical score ! A friend of mine said the musical score did not fit this movie;he's wrong ! The soundtrack avoids making the stereotypical cliche of using cheap synthesized pulsating pop music...The score gives the film it's dramatic edge without getting campy.Actor/director Takeshi Kitano does a suave yet brutal portrayal as a yakuza leader from the "old school" who begins to clean house and claim territory from other rival mobs and gangsters.

On the dvd audio/video technical side, the video transfer is clean and the digital surround is mind-blowing ! Special off screen sound effects pan around the room convincingly and effectively.The bass produced by the explosions and weaponry used is simply an adrenalin induced experience...






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