Like so many memorable yet hard-to-describe movies, Why Don't You Play in Hell? takes a ridiculous concept and commits to it fully. You might laugh with surprise or shriek in horror — both, most likely — but you certainly won't dismiss it.
Mostly, the film's very funny, Sono displaying a sense of how to frame and time a visual gag that feels positively Zucker-ish. But there are real stakes, and bursts of real feeling too.
What a zany little movie. Featuring some performances, a quirky script and pleanty laughs, this is one of the better movies I've seen this year. I reccomend it highly.
It is also the post-punk writer/director Sion Sono's most accessible film: a middle-aged filmmaker's tribute to the kind of epic-sized gangster-romance he used to fantasize about making.
Refusing to mourn anything, displaying a Futurist-style disdain for the past, Sion Sono imagines a world in which static adherence to old ideas leads directly to doom.
Alternately exhilarating and tedious, Why Don’t You Play In Hell? is Sono’s tribute to moviemaking—specifically an elegy to 35mm film, though the tone could hardly be called mournful.
It’s a self-reflexive tour de force, laugh-out-loud in its outrageousness, a true gift from the Movie God, who, if not Tarantino, is in this case probably Sam Peckinpah. You just have to endure 90 minutes of inanity to get to enjoy it.
Wholesome and inspiring in it's own messed up way, Sono's "Why Don't You Play in Hell" manages to perfectly balance comedy, drama and over the top violence in the best way possible. If you're a Sion Sono fan or just curious, you should definitely give it a chance.
I am usually a big fan of japanese movies, but I was quite disappointed in this one. It is neither interesting nor funny. Acting is terrible, the comedy just fails. The movie is also way too long and nothing really happens.