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Takeshi Kitano

Author of Zatoichi [2003 film]

63+ Works 560 Members 10 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Rita Molnár (Cannes, 2000)

Works by Takeshi Kitano

Zatoichi [2003 film] (2003) — Director; Actor — 80 copies, 2 reviews
Boy (2007) 68 copies, 5 reviews
Asakusa Kid (1999) 67 copies, 2 reviews
Fireworks [1997 film] (1997) 37 copies
A Guru Is Born (2005) 32 copies, 1 review
Kikujiro (2000) 30 copies
La Vie en gris et rose (1995) 23 copies
Sonatine [1993 film] (1998) 19 copies
Violent Cop [1989 film] (1999) 19 copies
Brother (2013) 18 copies
Boiling Point [1990 Movie] (1990) — Director, Screenwriter, Actor — 14 copies
Outrage [2010 film] (2014) 14 copies
Dolls (2003) 13 copies
"Beat" Takeshi Kitano (1999) 12 copies
Kitano par Kitano (2010) 5 copies
Kikujiro e Saki (2012) 5 copies
Araki (2000) 4 copies
Die Welt hasst mich (2006) 4 copies
あのひと (1994) 2 copies
少年 (新潮文庫) (1992) 2 copies
午前3時25分 (1993) 2 copies
落選確実選挙演説 (1996) 2 copies
Fireworks (Hana-Bi) (2000) 2 copies
Outrage Coda 2 copies
教祖誕生 (1994) 2 copies
Sonatine [film] (1993) 1 copy
Ecco perché mi odiano (1995) 1 copy
Boiling point (1990) 1 copy
Gonin 1 & 2 1 copy
Broken Rage 1 copy
悪口の技術 (2003) 1 copy

Associated Works

Ghost in the Shell [2017 film] (2017) — Actor — 232 copies, 1 review
Battle Royale [2000 film] (2000) — Actor — 159 copies, 3 reviews
Merry Christmas, Mr Lawrence [1983 film] (1983) 75 copies, 2 reviews
Taboo [1999 film] (1999) — Actor — 24 copies
Battle Royale: The Complete Collection (2012) — Actor — 10 copies
While the Women are Sleeping [2016 film] — Actor — 1 copy, 1 review
Arakimentari (2004) — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Kitano, Takeshi
北野 武
Other names
Beat Takeshi
Birthdate
1947-01-18
Gender
male
Occupations
actor
television presenter
director
screenwriter
author
poet (show all 9)
painter
video game designer
comedian
Nationality
Japan
Places of residence
Japan
Associated Place (for map)
Japan

Members

Reviews

13 reviews
This was written and published by Takeshi Kitano in 1987. That's a few years after he starred in Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence, and a few before he directed his first film. It contains three short stories, originally collected in Japan under the title Shonen, about young boys doing what they do: competing in school sports, contemplating running away, experiencing their first taste of interpersonal frisson with a girl.

The question of how any of these innocents grows up to be one of the tough show more guys in Kitano's movies lends the book an extra dollop of emotional heft. show less
I got this book as an ARC a couple of years ago at BookExpo. In the ordinary way, even though it says in big letters on the front of ARCs that they're not to be regarded as final versions, the assumption is that this is as near as dammit the identical text to the one that'll be published. Not so in this instance: the version of the text I was reading is a sort of rough first draft of the translation, complete with obvious errors and clearly sans even the most basic copyediting. Presumably show more everyone was in a rush to get the ARC out in time for BookExpo.

It all sounds like a recipe for a grim read, and if I'd been told in advance the text was in this state I probably wouldn't have begun this collection of three novelettes about youth -- even though I'm a great admirer of its author, the movie director and writer often referred to as "Beat" Takeshi. Surprisingly, though, the stories survive pretty well; I suspect the polished version of the translation is pretty fine.

For my money, easily the best of the stories is "The Nest of Stars", which focuses on the relationship between the narrator and his elder brother, both of whom are having difficulty adapting to the family's move from Tokyo to Osaka after Dad's death. The boys are bonded by their love of amateur astronomy, inherited from their father; but will that be enough to pull them through? What's poignant about the story is the younger boy's slow, then sudden, realization that his big brother's claim to have settled in just fine is just a facade, assumed out of duty.

(The story is slightly marred by the fact that Takeshi knows less about Sirius than his narrator would. Even though there's an old Arab nickname for the star to the effect that it has a thousand colours, this is a misnomer; quite likely, later interpreters applied the nickname to the wrong star, because Sirius doesn't look like that at all . . . yet our narrator describes it as doing so when seen through his small telescope.)

"The Champion in a Padded Kimono" is again about brotherhood. Now adult, the narrator reminisces about a school sports day, and about his elder brother who, by contrast with himself, was lousy at sports. The story's a great read that leaves one frustrated because two of its plot strands (the school athlete of the title, the supposedly magic chocolate the kids get hold of) peter out into nothing, as if the author forgot them. "Okame-san" is about a much older boy who goes from Tokyo to spend a couple of nights in Kyoto doing historical research, about how he gets ripped off by bikers, and about the gal who makes it all worthwhile. It's a nice coming-of-age story.

All in all, I'm very glad I picked up the ARC. I must keep an eye out for a copy of the final version for my shelves.
show less
Three short, sensitive stories about boys from the renaissance man of Japan. If you think you know him from his films think again and prepare yourself to a whole new and amazing experience...

Awards

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Statistics

Works
63
Also by
8
Members
560
Popularity
#44,619
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
10
ISBNs
62
Languages
9

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