Sumo Movie ((new)) «Best Pick»
It is visceral, exhausting, and genuinely moving. When Kenji finally executes a perfect uwatenage (overarm throw), you may find yourself standing up in your living room. It is one of the best-acted sports sequences of the year. Rating: ★★★½ (3.5/5)
Seeing not just Kenji’s bulk but a flicker of desperate fire, the master offers him an ultimatum: join the stable, live under brutal discipline, and train to become a professional sumo wrestler—or be turned over to the police for a petty theft Kenji just committed. Reluctantly, Kenji enters a world of 5:00 AM wake-up calls, endless chanko-nabe stews, and thigh-crushing leg stomps. Where Sumo Movie excels is in its authentic, almost documentary-like depiction of the sport. Director Kurosawa (no relation to Akira) spends real time on the rituals: the salt purification, the squatting stance, the terrifying charge known as tachi-ai . You will learn why sumo wrestlers can’t drive cars and why the topknot is sacred.
Sumo Movie is not a masterpiece of originality. It borrows heavily from the sports drama playbook, and its side characters (especially the love interest) feel underwritten. However, what it lacks in surprise, it makes up for in soul. The film treats sumo not as a joke or a curiosity, but as a profound, painful, and beautiful art form. Ryohei Otani’s performance is a physical and emotional triumph, and Ken Watanabe reminds us why he’s the zen master of gravitas. sumo movie
Viewers allergic to training montages, or those hoping for a violent Shogun -style bloodbath. This is a gentle giant of a film.
The training montages are refreshingly anti-glamorous. Instead of pumping rock music, we hear the grunts, the slap of flesh, and the heavy breathing of men pushing a 400-pound wrestler into a sand pit. Otani, who reportedly gained 60 pounds for the role, is a revelation. He plays Kenji with a perfect mix of shame and stubborn pride. His transformation from a whiny millennial into a focused athlete feels earned, not magical. It is visceral, exhausting, and genuinely moving
Sumo Movie doesn’t reinvent the ring, but it dominates it with grace, humor, and a whole lot of chanko-nabe . Go for the body slams; stay for the quiet moment where a broken man finally bows to his master with genuine respect.
Fans of Warrior (2011), The Wrestler , or anyone who has ever felt like a loser in need of a second chance. Rating: ★★★½ (3
Director: Masayuki Kurosawa (fictionalized for this review) Starring: Ryohei Otani, Ken Watanabe, Mieko Harada Genre: Sports Comedy / Drama Runtime: 118 minutes