Nagasaki, 1964: Following the death of his yakuza father, 15-year-old Kikuo is taken under the wing of a famous kabuki actor. Alongside Shunsuke, the actor’s only son, he decides to dedicate himself to this traditional form of theatre. For decades, the two young men grow and evolve together – and one will become the greatest Japanese master of the art of kabuki.
Ratings
Curator score: 7.7/10
IMDb: 7.6/10
Letterboxd: 3.84/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 94%
Metacritic: 80
TMDB: 7.9/10
Director
Sang-il Lee
Production
TOHO, Aniplex, Myriagon Studio, CREDEUS, AMUSE, Lawson
Cast
Ryo Yoshizawa, Ryusei Yokohama, Mitsuki Takahata, Shinobu Terajima, Soya Kurokawa, Keitatsu Koshiyama, Min Tanaka, Ken Watanabe, Nana Mori, Takahiro Miura, Ai Mikami, Masatoshi Nagase, Kyusaku Shimada, Emma Miyazawa, Kumi Takiuchi, Misa Wada, Nagiko Tsuji, Tateto Serizawa, Yusaku Mori
Curator Review
Verdict
A sweeping, visually rich prestige drama about devotion to art, rivalry, identity, and the cost of mastery. It sounds especially rewarding if you like performance-centered epics and stories that treat tradition as both beauty and burden, though its long runtime and time-jump structure may feel uneven to some viewers.
Best for
fans of ambitious character epics
viewers interested in Japanese culture and kabuki
people who like rivalry-and-brotherhood dramas
audiences drawn to performance, discipline, and obsession
viewers who don't mind a long, contemplative runtime
Skip if
you want a tightly plotted story with constant momentum
you dislike time jumps and cradle-to-grave storytelling
you prefer female characters to be strongly developed
you want a light or emotionally straightforward drama
Overview
Kokuho is the kind of film that treats artistic mastery as a lifelong vocation, one built from ritual, sacrifice, and bruised ego. Its strongest appeal is the sense of immersion: the kabuki sequences, stagecraft, and physical discipline give the film a grandeur that can feel almost devotional.
Worth noting
The central relationship has real dramatic force, especially as friendship, rivalry, and inheritance blur together over decades. The film seems most alive when it observes how identity is shaped by performance, and how the pursuit of greatness can become indistinguishable from self-erasure.
Bottom line
It is not without friction. The broad, years-spanning structure can make the emotional throughline feel compressed, and some viewers may find the writing too soap-operatic or the women underwritten. Still, for viewers who respond to prestige melodrama and art-as-obsession narratives, this is a striking and often moving experience.
Top Letterboxd reviews
eli (4★) · 1464 likes
in another life, i would have really liked just doing kabuki and taxes with you
Pablo Honey ✨ ₊˚ ☾. ⋅ 💫🌌 (4★) · 1266 likes
Nothing pisses an asian guy more than another asian guy as good as him in his area of expertise. And i think that's beautiful.
Jomari Bashin (4★) · 933 likes
It’s the kind of film that makes you fall in love with it in spite of its flaws and issues.
Even though I only understood about 80 percent of it because of the Kansai dialect, I could still tell the movie was trying too hard to be complex, throwing in scenes and plot points that don’t really make sense and adding subplots that don’t always drive the main narrative. I haven’t read the source material, so I can’t say how… more
Natalie (1★) · 707 likes
I wrote a piece for a festival back in October about the queer cultural legacy of Farewell My Concubine, where I stated that I was extremely excited to watch Kokuho. So it pains me to say that Lee Sang-il affirms himself as one of my most detested filmmakers with this film. Firstly, because this was one of my most anticipated films of the year and secondly, I have not seen such flagrant misogyny and justification of the patriarchy displayed in… more I wrote a piece for a festival back in October about the queer cultural legacy of Farewell My Concubine, where I stated that I was extremely excited to watch Kokuho. So it pains me to say that Lee Sang-il affirms himself as one of my most detested filmmakers with this film. Firstly, because this was one of my most anticipated films of the year and secondly, I have not seen such flagrant misogyny and justification of the patriarchy displayed in… more
Edwin 🦦 (3.5★) · 564 likes
I was fortunate enough to catch Kokuho on IMAX for one night only, and what a spectacle this was. It follows a young man from a yakuza background who gets pulled into the world of kabuki theater, rising through decades of intense training, rivalries, and personal sacrifice. It’s a deep dive into the life of an onnagata (male actors who specialize in female roles), and it feels like a love letter to the art form itself.
The movie tackles some… more