Brother review

Why you can trust 12DOVE Our experts review games, movies and tech over countless hours, so you can choose the best for you. Find out more about our reviews policy.

The gun goes off. Blood sprays across the frame. What next? Do we laugh all the way to Jimmie’s and scrape Marvin’s brains from the window, as was the Tarantino approach in Pulp Fiction? Or do we sit in stunned silence, shocked by the violence? With Takeshi Kitano at the helm, expect the latter – even when black humour is part of the mix.

The man behind Sonatine and Hana-Bi knows a thing or two about stopping an audience dead in its tracks. International acclaim has been growing steadily ever since Kitano added directing to his many talents (as well as acting in his movies, you’ve seen him in Merry Christmas, Mr Lawrence and, ahem, Johnny Mnemonic). And, in his first feature away from home soil, Tokyo’s most famous workaholic continues to prove why he’s one of the most remarkable film-makers working anywhere in the world.

You could argue, however, that Kitano the actor is the same in every one of his movies: utterly still, virtually mute, with only the tiniest hints of human warmth buried deep beneath his stony exterior. What he has created, and refined here to the point of perfection, is the embodiment of “silent but deadly” – the calm eye of a storm that unleashes mayhem on everyone else. Kitano’s immobility, coupled with his directorial style, is what keeps the film tense, edgy and compulsively unpredictable.

Scenes of noble sacrifice and hari-kiri connect this contemporary crime flick to a past age when codes of honour defined the behaviour of heroes and villains alike. As excessive bloodletting allows orphaned brothers to rediscover each other and create a new dynasty, we realise this is more Jacobean revenge tragedy than John Woo bullet-fest. You could even say this is Kitano’s Godfather, as he lures a well-worn genre down a dark alley, slaps it about a bit, and proves that screen violence still has the power to shock and disturb.

Painting LA in a steely blue, Kitano gives Brother a look that's as cold and passionless as its central character. Loyalty has lethal consequences as he bleeds these blood brothers dry, making this a slow but undeniably stylish crime movie.

The Total Film team are made up of the finest minds in all of film journalism. They are: Editor Jane Crowther, Deputy Editor Matt Maytum, Reviews Ed Matthew Leyland, News Editor Jordan Farley, and Online Editor Emily Murray. Expect exclusive news, reviews, features, and more from the team behind the smarter movie magazine.