Ghost Dog - The Way of the Samurai

 

Ghost Dog – The Way of the Samurai (2000)

NEUTRAL
Amazon, iTunes, Vudu, Google Play, YouTube, Microsoft Store, FandangoNOW, HBO Max, DirecTV, Redbox, AMC+, Apple
Movie Reviews88%
R
1999, Crime/Drama, 1h 56m
RT Critics’ Score: 83% (UNBIASED)
RT Audience Score: 86%
Awards & Nominations: 1 win & 8 nominations

 

Critics Consensus

Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai is a cinematic masterpiece that seamlessly blends traditional notions of honor, loyalty, and professionalism with a stylish and ironic pastiche inspired by the likes of Melville and Suzuki. Jim Jarmusch’s film is a sly and dreamy comedy about role-playing that freely mixes and matches Bushido philosophy, Mafia and samurai flicks, Ryunosuke Akutagawa, and lo-fi hip-hop. The calculated weirdness of the film creates a simultaneous sense of something ending and beginning, making it a rare oddity that is very much of its period yet absolutely timeless. Ghost Dog is not just a film, it’s a work of art that captures the cool, the quirk, and the profundity of Jarmusch’s unique vision.
 

Audience Consensus

Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai is a film that’s as cool as a cucumber and as quirky as a cat wearing a top hat. It’s a mastermix of Bushido philosophy, Mafia and samurai flicks, and lo-fi hip-hop that somehow manages to be both sly and dreamy. Jim Jarmusch has created a film that’s highly original, insightful, and funny, while also paying tribute to traditional notions of honour, loyalty, friendship, and professionalism. It’s a head-scratcher of a film that’s worth the wear on your fingernails, and it’s definitely one of Jarmusch’s coolest features.
 
Movie Trailer

Movie Info

Storyline

A hitman who lives by the code of the samurai, works for the mafia and finds himself in their crosshairs when his recent job doesn’t go according to plan. Now he must find a way to defend himself and his honor while retaining the code he lives by.

 
Production Company(ies)
Cinema ’84 Euro Film Funding, Hemdale
 
Distributor
Artisan Entertainment
 
Release Type

 
Filming Location(s)
New York, USA
 
MPAA / Certificate
Rated R for strong violence and language
 
Year of Release
2000
 

Technical Specs
  • Color:
    Color
  • Sound mix:
    Dolby Digital
  • Aspect ratio:
    1.85 : 1
  • Runtime:
    1h 56m
  • Language(s):
    English, French
  • Country of origin:
    United States
  • Release date:
    Release Date (Theaters): May 18, 1999 Original
    Release Date (Streaming): Aug 15, 2000

 
Genre(s)
Crime/Drama
 
Keyword(s)
starring Forest Whitaker, John Tormey, Cliff Gorman, Henry Silva, Isaach De Bankolé, Tricia Vessey, directed by Jim Jarmusch, written by Jim Jarmusch, Crime, Drama, $3.3M box office, R MPAA rating, reviewed by Kambole Campbell, Geoff Andrew, Xan Brooks, Liam Lacey, Glenn Kenny, Mark Morris, Jonathan Ringen, Forest Whitaker as Ghost Dog, John Tormey as Louie, Cliff Gorman as Sonny Valerio, Henry Silva as Ray Vargo, Isaach De Bankolé as Raymond, Tricia Vessey as Louise Vargo, Richard Guay produced, Artisan Entertainment distributed, Surround sound mix, Dolby Digital sound mix, Scope (2.35:1) aspect ratio
 

Box Office Details

Worldwide gross: $9,380,473
Worldwide gross (inflation-adjusted): $16,269,640
Worldwide gross ranking (inflation-adjusted): 1,792
Worldwide tickets sold (est.): 1,774,225
 
US/Canada gross: $3,308,029
US/Canada gross (inflation-adjusted): $5,737,498
US/Canada gross ranking (inflation-adjusted): 1,769
US/Canada opening weekend: $166,344
US/Canada opening weekend (inflation-adjusted): $288,510
US/Canada opening weekend ranking (inflation-adjusted): 1,552
 
Budget and Earnings Details
Production budget (est.): NA
Production budget (inflation-adjusted): NA
Production budget ranking: NA
Marketing and distribution budget (inflation-adjusted est.): NA
Box office net earnings to date (inflation-adjusted est.): NA
ROI to date (est.): NA
ROI ranking: NA

 
Movie Cast & Crew

Cast & Crew

Forest WhitakerJohn TormeyCliff GormanHenry SilvaIsaach De Bankolé
Forest Whitaker
John Tormey
Cliff Gorman
Henry Silva
Isaach De Bankolé
Ghost Dog
Louie
Sonny Valerio
Ray Vargo
Raymond
Forest Whitaker – Ghost Dog
John Tormey – Louie
Cliff Gorman – Sonny Valerio
Henry Silva – Ray Vargo
Isaach De Bankolé – Raymond
Tricia Vessey – Louise Vargo

 

Jim JarmuschJim JarmuschRichard GuayJim Jarmusch
Jim Jarmusch
Jim Jarmusch
Richard Guay
Jim Jarmusch
Director
Writer
Producer
Producer
Producer

Director(s)
Jim Jarmusch
 
Writer(s)
Jim Jarmusch
 
Producer(s)
Richard Guay, Jim Jarmusch

 
Movie Reviews & Awards
Film Festivals

 
Awards & Nominations
1 win & 8 nominations
 
Academy Awards

 

Top Reviews
Kambole CampbellGeoff AndrewXan BrooksLiam LaceyGlenn Kenny
Kambole Campbell
Geoff Andrew
Xan Brooks
Liam Lacey
Glenn Kenny
One Room With A View
Time Out
Sight & Sound
Globe and Mail
Premiere Magazine
GHOST DOG: THE WAY OF THE SAMURAI
 All Critics (101) | Top Critics (34) | Fresh (84) | Rotten (17)
 Even when aware of all the strange, disparate elements, it still surprises.
 
 August 25, 2018
 
 Kambole Campbell
 One Room With A View
 TOP CRITIC
 At once a tribute to traditional notions of honour, loyalty, friendship and professionalism, and a stylish, ironic pastiche inspired by the likes of Melville and Suzuki, it’s very funny, insightful, and highly original.
 
 June 24, 2006
 
 Geoff Andrew
 Time Out
 TOP CRITIC
 This is a picture by turns amusing and melancholic, sweet-centred and dark-edged.
 
 December 2, 2002
 
 Xan Brooks
 Sight & Sound
 TOP CRITIC
 A handsomely shot, cool-sounding head-scratcher of a film that probably isn’t worth the wear on the fingernails.
 
 April 5, 2002 | Rating: 2/4
 
 Liam Lacey
 Globe and Mail
 TOP CRITIC
 Less a pastiche than a mastermix from a cinematic DJ at the height of his formalist powers, Ghost Dog is pretty ill — but it’s not evil.
 
 September 10, 2001
 
 Glenn Kenny
 Premiere Magazine
 TOP CRITIC
 it’s original, sharply funny, and rather moving
 
 April 17, 2001 | Rating: 3/5
 
 Mark Morris
 BBC.com
 TOP CRITIC
 The film’s calculated weirdness can’t redeem a stale story.
 
 May 27, 2022
 
 Jonathan Ringen
 Out Magazine
 Ghost Dog is one of Jim Jarmusch’s coolest features in an oeuvre featuring some of the slickest characters ever. We may not need to understand everything we see, but that’s exactly the point.
 
 July 27, 2021
 
 David Harris
 Spectrum Culture
 Another Jim Jarmusch title, another opportunity to add some eccentric twists to a fairly ordinary story.
 
 November 27, 2020 | Rating: 3/4
 
 Matt Brunson
 Film Frenzy
 Freely mixes and matches Bushido philosophy, Mafia and samurai flicks, Ryunosuke Akutagawa, and lo-fi hip-hop into a sly and dreamy comedy about role-playing.
 
 November 24, 2020 | Rating: 8/10
 
 Chris Barsanti
 PopMatters
 Ghost Dog has retained all of the cool, the quirk, the profundity it captured in a bottle in 1999… One gets the sense that never before Ghost Dog could this film have been possible, and, never since.
 
 November 21, 2020
 
 Ed Travis
 Cinapse
 The film is a rare oddity in that is very much of its period, yet is absolutely timeless. It’s not just that the poetry Jarmusch pulls from Hagakure … it’s that the film constantly creates a simultaneous sense of something ending and beginning.
 
 November 11, 2020 | Rating: 4.5/5
 
 Douglas Davidson
 Elements of Madness…

 
Movie Plot & More
Plot
A hitman who lives by the code of the samurai, works for the mafia and finds himself in their crosshairs when his recent job doesn’t go according to plan. Now he must find a way to defend himself and his honor while retaining the code he lives by.
 
Trivia

 
Goofs / Tidbits
There is no goofy or funny or odd comment about the film on Fresh Kernels.
 
Movie Links Wikipedia and Rotten Tomatoes

Links
Wikipedia: Go to Wiki
Rotten Tomatoes: Go to RT

 
Where to Watch

 
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