In a traditional gangster movie, the phrase, "This means all-out war" triggers a
very specific set of expectations about what's to follow. But Japanese director Takeshi
"Beat" Kitano doesn't truck with conventional wiseguy dramas. So, while a requisite
number of Versace suits do get ventilated by 9mm slugs in the course of this story,
and while various stock characters and situations do come into play, little else
about Kitano's fourth film (shot in 1993 but just now seeing U.S. release) belongs
in the same conceptual or attitudinal galaxy as The Public Enemy or The Godfather.
Instead, as in his most recent film, Fireworks, Kitano seems far more interested
in the arbitrary, ritualistic aspects of criminal society than the macho sturm und
drang that generally animates the genre. The underworld portrayed in Sonatine is
as rigidly patterned and deterministic as an ant colony. Protagonist Murakawa (Kitano),
a mid-level Tokyo yakuza functionary, has lost his zest for the job but can't imagine
a way out. When his boss packs him and a hastily recruited band of young punks off
to Okinawa to help an allied gang in a local skirmish, he suspects a setup. Yet,
bound by a code that supersedes every consideration of common sense (saving one's
hide, etc.) he takes the assignment anyway. Once in Okinawa, Marakawa and company
find the rumble at an impasse and wind up cooling their heels in a cozy beach house
waiting for the other side to make its move. The energy intended for wasting their
rivals is now redirected into a bizarrely whimsical series of games and rituals involving
everything from firearms to Frisbees -- with little apparent recognition of their
qualitative difference. During this long middle act, the gang war is all but forgotten.
Time passes as if in a dream, albeit one with an absurdly structured feel. The dead-souled
Murakawa, already staring into some kind of personal void, is pushed even closer
to the brink by these experiences, which force him toward an inevitable day of reckoning.
This is the existentialist spin Kitano seems to enjoy putting on his stories. And
in many ways Sonatine feels like a rehearsal for the richer, more visually and thematically
rewarding Fireworks. Kitano, a hydra-headed cultural phenomenon who also dabbles
in standup comedy, literature, painting, and journalism, is a filmmaker with a clear,
ever-evolving vision. Based on what I've seen of his work, he appears not to give
a rat's ass about genre traditions, narrative convention, or the alleged necessity
of providing big emotional payoffs for the audience. 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.
--Russell Smith
Capsule Reviews
Sonatine 
Sonatine 
Other Films by Takeshi Kitano
Violent Cop 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels 
Two Days in the Valley 
Suicide Kings 
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