- Ease
- Great first watch Good first watch: Great first watch
- Genre
- Drama
- Movement
- Japanese Samurai Cinema
The guide
Harakiri dismantles the honor claimed by samurai institutions through a story of poverty, performance, and revenge. Hanshirō Tsugumo arrives at the Iyi clan manor requesting permission to die, then uses the ritual setting to expose what happened to another desperate ronin. Masaki Kobayashi’s precise widescreen compositions make armor, courtyards, and formal posture appear stable until testimony reveals the cruelty beneath them. Tatsuya Nakadai’s controlled performance sustains enormous tension, while Tōru Takemitsu’s score sharpens every movement. The film remains one of the genre’s strongest critiques of codes that protect reputation while abandoning people.
How to ease in
The film unfolds through extended testimony and flashback before action arrives. Treat the slow disclosure as an investigation of the clan’s official story. Formal language, seating, and ritual objects matter because Hanshirō is fighting over who controls the meaning of honor, not merely whether he can defeat armed opponents.
Heads-up
Where to go next
Want a gentler, shorter, or stranger next film? Ask Momo for something like this →
A ronin requests ritual suicide and calmly opens a clan’s polished history.
Open the note ↓
The clan displays armor as proof of continuity, but Hanshirō brings memory into the room. His calm is more disruptive than anger because he accepts the ceremony’s form while replacing its meaning. By the time steel moves, the institution has already been defeated by testimony.
— Momo