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Gozu

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Critics' Reviews

88
NEW YORK POST: V.A. Musetto

The film is less violent and bloody than much of the director's work, but the absurdity level is sky high. Takashi Miike is at the top of his game, loving every minute of his surreal visit to the twilight zone.

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80
Village Voice: Dennis Lim

Splendidly entertaining.

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75
Boston Globe: Ty Burr

The latest and most creatively unhinged film from director Takashi Miike.

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75
Boston Globe: Ty Burr

The latest and most creatively unhinged film from director Takashi Miike.

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70
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kevin Thomas

The film unfolds as if it were a dream in which taboo subconscious urges surface symbolically as in a Dali painting, yet everything takes place in everyday settings.

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70
Washington Post: Michael O'Sullivan

It somehow feels richly, hilariously real, even -- at its most bizarre -- familiar.

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70
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kevin Thomas

The film unfolds as if it were a dream in which taboo subconscious urges surface symbolically as in a Dali painting, yet everything takes place in everyday settings.

Read Full Review »
70
Washington Post: Michael O'Sullivan

It somehow feels richly, hilariously real, even -- at its most bizarre -- familiar.

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70
Variety: David Rooney

Unclassifiable cult figure Takashi Miike's films invariably have their share of weirdness and perversity, but Gozu arguably outweirds all previous efforts in the prolific Japanese director's eclectic canon.

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60
The New York Times: Dana Stevens

Mr. Miike is best known in the United States for horror films like "Audition" and "Ichi the Killer." Gozu, for all its extremity, is a more relaxed, less disturbing picture. Its dreamy disconnection is reminiscent of David Lynch's "Mulholland Drive," but it is, if anything, even more hermetic and dissociated.

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See all Gozu reviews at metacritic.com »
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