If you loved Onimasa: A Japanese Godfather, try Goyokin
Eine Brücke zwischen einem Film, den du schon gesehen hast, und einem, den kaum jemand kennt. Das teilen sie, und was der zweite macht, was der erste nicht macht.
Was sie teilen
Both films are directed by Hideo Gosha, and they both carry the dread mood tag, and they sit in Action / Drama territory. If that's the register that drew you to Onimasa: A Japanese Godfather, the second film will land in a comparable space — through a different lens.
What Goyokin is
You’re the last warrior of a disgraced clan, riding across a storm-lashed coast with a bloodstained family crest on your back. When the ship you’re chasing nears harbor, the toll on deck isn’t gold or silk. A single torch from the cliffs ignites the night and everything tilts. Hideo Gosha frames revenge as a shivering coastal ballad, its climax a duel you can almost hear the wind lose before the blade leaves its sheath.

