Bro the fact that my favorite video game creator also loves my favorite movie creator (Akira Kurosawa) is something which brings me so much shock and joy.
Hideo Kojima is a filmmaker at heart, who CHOSE to bring his perspective of film and storytelling to the games medium. And on top of that, he's an incredible gameplay designer. He's absolutely up there with Shigeru Miyamoto, Hidetaka Miyazaki, and so many other contemporaries. His games are a breath of fresh air in the industry. I will play anything this man makes for the rest of his life.
Same my dude. I think his stories are absurd and often make little sense and feel very silly at times. I’m rolling my eyes half the time playing his games but I love it.
From what I've read, he did it cause he needed a job and couldn't get into film making, so I don't know if "CHOSE" is the best word lol. Eventually, they just kept paying him too much for him to turn it down, so he abandoned film making at one point and went all-in on games.
@@KillerLettuce There's a reason for that Metal Gear was originally going be an over the top action game in the same vain as Capcom's Commando. That was what Konami wanted, but Kojima felt that an action game would be too difficult on the MSX, so it become a stealth game instead.
Please have him come back for a round 2. Kojima is such a great curator, his book is literally about what books he would recommend you read and it is an absolute page turner. How I could be so enthralled about material that I’m no t even reading just reading someone else’s love for is wild.
For those wondering, the book is called "The Creative Gene" and it's a great read even for those who don't know a single thing about the books and films he talks about in each chapter. Great read!
the list is presented on screen at 5:46. But here it is as well, Akira Kurosawa - High and Low Yasujiro Ozu - Late spring Yasujiro Ozu - Tokyo Twilight Mizoguchi - Ugetsu Kwaidan Harakiri Nobuo Nakagawa - Jigoku Kaneto Shindo - Onibaba Tegahara - Woman in the Dunes
Bro the fact that my favorite video game creator also loves my favorite movie creator (Akira Kurosawa) is something which brings me so much shock and joy.
Kojima makes a great point about film and streaming today. A friend of mine pointed out that, unless it's a classic, the vast majority of content on streaming platforms is from the 80s and later. Once you get into the 70s and earlier, it's much harder to find something that isn't already incredibly well known.
So true, and the main reason I still buy physical copies. Sometimes "genre" movies (a term I'm not in love with) are easy to find, but anything else besides classics is unobtainium.
@@laughingBun Yup, highly recommend, guy is a movie fanatic, unsurprisingly. Not just Japanese movies either, and he loves to break them down and point out the artistic parts that stand out to him in particular.
For people who don’t know, Kojima has always been a lifelong cinephile and his original goal was to become a filmmaker, but saw Nintendo's Famicom and thought of joining the video game industry. Kojima's love of movies is noticeable in his games where he pays homage through his stories and characters, such as in Snatcher. He cited a contrast between films and games as while in his games he intends to portray violence like in a movie, in the game it is up to the player to decide. Anyone who’s played any of Kojima’s games will tell you that Kojima’s style breaks the barrier between cinema and games. In a way, he’s a film director but he uses video games to tell the story.
of note: he knows very well that videogames are not movies, so barring MGS4 and its long cutscenes, he always works and experiments with the medium and its possibilities, whereas a number of other such movie fans making games just try to make the game a playable movie for better and for worse
@@Minority119 Couldn't agree any more! Adding on he's an experimentalist person, always navigating through various mediums just to tell an exciting and interactive story. His recent game like Death Stranding (dubbed by many haters as a walking simulator!?) which I disagree but I get the point as instead of playing it I just love to see the game walkthrough & navigating the story. Really excited for DS2, OD, & PHYSINT!!! P.s. What I like even more about him is that the man appreciates the value of physical medium. I love physical mediums be it Movies, TV shows, Music, Video Games, Books, etc. In this age of streaming platforms (which has its own pros, i wont deny) does not validate the sense of ownership be it in digital medium let alone physical. I like to own stuff, makes that retro in my heart even if its just 5 years old.
Did I see this right? Criterion inviting Hideo Kojima for Closet Picks!!! This seriously made my day. His 'Metal Gear' series have very cinematic cutscenes and to have invited him, it was so cool to see what were his influences. I've never seen an interview with him just talking about film. Criterion you guys are killing it!!
Yes- Mind blowing. 🤯 Someone in the game/film industry absolutely Must have him discuss his influences for each of his interactive masterpieces! ☝️🤓🎞️✨👾
Kojima is a genius of an artistic mind, but he makes it more clear to me than anyone else: Genius artists are inspired by genius art. The cycle of repetition is unavoidable, in paying tribute to what you love, you almost have to rip it off or copy it. But it's how you do it, and how open you are about it, that spreads the love, by getting new people into it. I love Kojima for how he's always been very open and obvious about where his inspirations come from. The man is a living legend. I will always appreciate how creatively fresh he is with the way that he works.
The more I learn about him, the more I love him. Death Stranding is the first game I’ve played since being able to sit up after four years battling long covid. His game touched me and inspires me to keep working and recovering and making connections. Thank you!
Death Stranding's core emotional narrative doesn't work without the gameplay and social aspects - a pure film from Kojima would be something else entirely, although the cinematics in that game are obviously GOATED. @@jacksquatt6082
I saw "High and Low" on TCM when they did the marathon for Akira Kurosawa's birthday and it's one of my favorites still. It was such a great (and eye opening) time capsule for early 60s Japan and the cast was nothing short of superb. I recently found out that Tsutomu Yamazaki, the actor that played the blackmailer, starred in the live action version of Space Battleship Yamato as the captain.
For anyone who wishes to hear more of Kojima‘s favorites: There is an article he wrote in the mid 2000s (translated by none other than Marc Laidlaw) where he lists his 30 favorite films of all time - including the ones that were a heavy influence on the Metal Gear series - with many more on the side, ranging from Japanese to Western and even animated ones. It’s a fantastic read and shows a diverse array of films that he loves, with a little inside on each listing. I highly recommend it and would link it here but I think RUclips wouldn’t let me, but it’s not hard to find on your own!
Onibaba absolutley floored me the furst time I watched it! I went into it not really thinking much just assuming it was gonna be a little more “scary” than most Japanese films. But it wasn’t just scary it was absolutely terrifying! It scared me even though I’m 18 and more grown then when Kojima watched it. Some of the best and most carefully crafted scares I have ever seen! I contribute most of that to the absurdly good lighting used in the film. It’s probably the best use of lighting I have ever seen in a movie! With the lighting film is able to create these dark shadow areas and use them for scares. The scares are never super fast and jumpy most of them are just something slowly emerging and walking out of a shadow. Which made it all the more terrifying. All that isn’t including it’s brilliant themes and tellings of grief and indirect effects of war!. So well made and wish more people saw it! It’s absolutely brilliant!
This man has excellent taste in movies, and his Japanese movie recommendations are spot on. Anyone new to Japanese classics can just take the directors introduced here as an excellent starting point... I was attracted to Japanese film by the likes of Koreeda and Beat Takeshi, but I only started truly loving and admiring it when I ventured into Ozu, Mizoguchi, Kurosawa. It is interesting that he points out High & Low, because that was also my first exposure to Kurosawa and it remains one of his most memorable films for me.
@@4444POWER Oh yes, I watched my fair share of Takashi Miike and in my teenage years I surely scarred some friends with a Visitor Q movie night. :) Do you have any specific recommendations for Sion Sono? I only watched Love Exposure and Suicide Circle. LE blew my mind at the time.
That period of Japanese film ranks with the greatest waves of films in world cinema history. All absolutely incredible... highly recommend every single one!
So cool to see someone picking films from a specific time and place, and I love that he's especially encouraging young people to try older foreign films. Some of these are personal favorites of mine, so I would encourage everyone too!
As someone who studied Japanese cinema in college, it is like watching my worlds collide hearing Kojima-san speak of the films I consumed and picked apart so intently and passionately. I would kill to spend some time speaking film with him. 🧡🧡🧡
This was awesome! That said, this does kind of show how limited the range of Japanese films the Criterion Collection has is. All classics, of course, and Kojima made some really good picks (especially Jigoku. That crazy surrealistic depiction of hell at the end is one of the most amazing things ever put on celluloid) but I would love it if a company like Arrow Films, who release a lot of the more contemporary Japanese classics, had their own criterion closet style series and brought him on. For instance, I just bought a Shinya Tsukamoto boxset from them, and I would love to hear Kojimas opinion on something like Tsukamotos Tetsuo the Iron Man or Battle Royale or Pulse or really any other of the tons of modern Japanese classics that I think probably inspired Kojima's work and, in some cases, were inspired themselves by Kojimas work.
I think the movies you used as example of what to include are still so very easy to get nowadays. Even when i was growing up in the 90s I could easily purchase Tetsuo and Battle Royale (as a matter of fact, i did haha) and nowadays those are still very easy to get. I think the Criterion Collection focuses on licensing and publishing movies that are hard to get mainstream.
This was such a nice surprise. I think they should do this more often and get some other creators to do this. I would love to see Suda 51 or Shinji Mikami on here and see what kind of movies they consider amazing or a must watch.
One of my biggest movie watchlists came when I was 16, playing Metal Gear Solid 3. As Snake, you could call a young lady on the radio at random times and talk about film recommendations with her. I watched some of my favorite American classics that way, and ironically got into Criterion through that. Awesome that Hideo Kojima is going into classic Japanese films, since I don't usually see him talk about them! Even happier I know and own most of them.
This is the absolute most excited I’ve ever seen Kojima. It just goes to show that we all love him for MGS, but at heart he will always just be a movie guy.
I saw him post a pic on his Instagram a while ago, and I was really hoping for this to happen. To see a man who is mostly made of movies in the Criterion closet brings me joy.
Those 50’s and 60’s Japanese films in the criterion collection continually surprise me, cause they are always awesome. Safest bet as far as blind buying is concerned.
Oh my god he mentioned Harakirki! Hands down one of the best Japanese films. Every single shot is a painting. And the pacing is brilliant, not a second wasted
@@bigboss-yv2nr "When a ronin requesting seppuku at a feudal lord's palace is told of the brutal suicide of another ronin who previously visited, he reveals how their pasts are intertwined - and in doing so challenges the clan's integrity." - from IMDB. It's an exploration of samurai culture/tradition with some cool sword fighting and fun twists
@@bigboss-yv2nr if you’re into the kind of scary, artistic and weirdy stuff? Then yes, and no better than to be recommended by an old school Otaku like Hideo Kojima too lol
I've been wanting this to happen for years now. Kojima has such a keen eye & genuine love for cinema, you can feel it in each of his creations. I love reading his thoughts about film on Twitter. Such a perfect match, glad it finally happened!
You can't help but love the man's excitement. Kojima is one of the greatest video game creators there is. Playing his games you can see that he wanted to be a filmmaker. His games ended up becoming his films. The man essentially made cinematic story telling in video games the norm that we take advantage of today. Big fan of his work, always looking forward to what he will do next, as he is always taking chances that tend to move video games forward in creativity.
@@cartoonvideos5 attention seeking troll right here ladies & gents Also keep your shitty opinion to yourself kid, no one wants to hear about your skill issue problems in the game
I love Setsuko Hara and Ozu as well. Late Spring is one of my favorite films of all time. Setsuko's presence in that film is astonishing. And yes, the bicycle scene is so great that it was mimicked in Millennium Actress which is an anime loosely based on Setsuko Hara's life. An absolute amazing film!!!
It’s surreal watching two worlds collide between video games and cinema. Kojima is the greatest video game auteur to ever live and I hope he can make his own film one day.
Kojima is like the gamer and movie enthusiast who made it bigtime. He never settles for anything less than perfection, never copypasting other games just for the sales. He's hands down my favorite developer, and one of my favorite people on the planet, he's basically the reason I'm still a gamer to this day.
Just watched Seven samurai, throne of blood, yojimbo, sanjuro and some others recently and mannnnnn japan was way ahead of their time. Those movies are masterpieces. The seven samurai and yojimbo soundtrack still hasnt left my head.
@@thecluckingassassinbut honestly doesn’t anybody? It generally comes from things people have watched. There are those who create things I’ve never seen before but it’s difficult.
@@llort7771 @thecluckingassassin565 You're both delusional. Hideo can wake up in the morning, take a shit and the turd would have more originality than your weak opinion.
Bro the fact that my favorite video game creator also loves my favorite movie creator (Akira Kurosawa) is something which brings me so much shock and joy.
There's a good argument to make that Japanese film is in the top 2 or 3 all time of any country's film output. Ugetsu, High & Low, Harakiri, Tokyo Story, Onibaba, Woman In The Dunes, Kwaidan & Jigoku are all perfect examples of Japanese mastery. All among the greatest films of all time!
Thank you so much for having Hideo Kojima reveal some of his favourite films. He is so adorable, can he come back for more? Let's say once a month? I could listen to Hideo talk about his film choices for hours, he even succeeded in arousing my husband's interest in these movies, so thank you Hideo Kojima.
As someone who only recently discovered the joy of Ozu movies having heard his name many times, I wholeheartedly agree with Kojima's point. There is a real charm to his movies that in many ways we miss today, and perhaps those sentiments from the 50s and 60s are exactly what young people need to hear.
Perfect! Kojima-sensei always put on his creations the inspirations he took from movies, I still remember the very first time I played Metal Gear Solid on PS1 and I saw the intro cinematic and got blown away by how the submarine first appearance, I thought " wow, that's very cinematic style!".
For me Kojima embodies the love for cinematic storytelling, the art of showing and not telling and using the language and history of the visual arts (predominantly movies) to create new stories with multiple layers of interconnectivity. In short, dude fucking rocks and is an awesome storyteller.
Metal Gear Solid (1998) is the greatest video game of all time, in my opinion. Thank you Hideo Kojima for making my childhood wonderful. Also, it's great to see everyone from all generations coming into the Criterion closet and seeing their tastes. The beauty of it all is knowing they're the ones who understand you when majority of people don't, especially when it comes to film history. Excellent picks!
I agree Metal Gear Solid 1998 is the greatest video game of all time. Also the ending of Metal Gear Solid 2 when the AI is speaking to Raiden essentially describes our world today perfectly. Hideo Kojima is a genius.
I dont know a lot about Kojima, but still happy too see that i have all the films he picked, in my own collection. Late Spring is my favorite Ozu film.
I think he did a great job as an ambassador, considering his taste also includes a lot of western films. Did not expect to see Kojima here. Still have to watch a few of these to complete the recommendations.
i like how kojima talks in that *director* fashion where hes like "yeah so everyone knows dave blungus everyones watched secret of blunky hill and bilbos dildo but PERSONALLY i like his earlier works like skunky avenue and beach of fuck. i feel like he really *came into his own* with these movies theyre very surreal experiences"
Bro the fact that my favorite video game creator also loves my favorite movie creator (Akira Kurosawa) is something which brings me so much shock and joy.
50s and 60s Japanese films are absolutely peak cinema for me. Thrilled Kojima agrees (although I shouldn't be surprised). Onibaba and Woman in the Dunes are two of my all time favorites.
I’ve tried a few times to get into ozu, what am I missing it just seems so boring and dry😂 Haven’t seen tokyo story but I watched late spring and autumn afternoon.
The Cinema Cartography video was the one that got me into Ozu, so I'd highly recommend it. For me it's a few things, he creates these gorgeous worlds and gives them time to breathe. Every frame is so carefully constructed it's almost as if watching a series of moving paintings. You could call Ozu contemplative cinema or slow cinema but for me he finds beauty in the everyday and never vies for your attention, his movies just are. @@jimreplicant
Also his stories and dialogue are so deeply human. The way he frames his dialogue sequences. The camera, aside a few choice examples, almost never moves. It also feels like a contemplation on what it means to be Japanese. The period of history that was seen in Ozu's career oversaw huge changes both for Japan domestically as well as foreign influence beginning to come in.
High and Low just floored me when I realized how playfully the master Kurosawa was composing the scenes. Brilliant and innovative in a way that even some of the most creative film makers have not caught up to him to this day.
I'm not hugely familiar with old Japanese films, so I was surprised by how many of these I had already seen, and I have to admit, Kojima-san has great taste. I especially recommend both High and Low and Kwaidan.
Death Stranding is a masterpiece. As a cinephile, I still can't believe the cast of Death Stranding is even real...Mads Mikkelsen, Léa Seydoux, Norman Reedus, Nicolas Winding Refn, Guillermo Del Toro?! I mean come on...And Part 2 is going to have Elle Fanning in it as well!! The story and the cutscenes are absolutely amazing. It's so cool to see Hideo Kojima on here!! Can't wait for Death Stranding 2 💛
If Death Stranding had been released during the pandemic, it would've blown up. The themes really fit that period (isolation, importance of delivery personnel, building literal and figurative bridges, cooperation, etc.) Just goes to show how Kojima is ahead of his time. My husband and I spent hundreds of hours in that game, sometimes just walking around and building roads 😅 One of the best soundtracks too! ❤
@@geralt-of-rivia-z6f I think so too! And you're right, the soundtrack is absolutely amazing!! Especially BB's theme at the end!! Oh my god, I got so emotional! And Almost Nothing by Silent Poets was another great one! Also, all the instrumental pieces which play during the cutscenes are amazing as well :)
I love him and these picks are, to no one's surprise, fire as hell. With all his interest in horror it's exciting he's finally getting to make his own horror masterpiece !!
Hideo Kojima & Quentin Tarantino should meet each other. They are probably the biggest movie fanatics I can think of that would make an awesome collaboration on a game or a movie.
Films picked in order:
- High and Low (1963) - Akira Kurosawa
- Late Spring (1949) - Yasujirō Ozu
- Eclipse Series 3: Late Ozu - Yasujirō Ozu
- Ugetsu (1953) - Kenji Mizoguchi
- Kwaidan (1964) - Masaki Kobayashi
- Harakiri (1962) - Masaki Kobayashi
- Jigoku (1960) - Nobuo Nakagawa
- Onibaba (1964) - Kaneto Shindō
- Woman in the Dunes (1964) - Hiroshi Teshigahara
Bro the fact that my favorite video game creator also loves my favorite movie creator (Akira Kurosawa) is something which brings me so much shock and joy.
👍
I've watched all of these and couldn't agree more, all masterpieces across the board
Thanks man, for your time in organizing this for us, it's going to help me a lot in finding some movies I haven't seen yet.
@@mingyuhuang8944 I love that he also picked High and Low! Such an underrated gem that more people should check out! Love Kojima for that!
Kojima is like "And this one traumatized me as a kid... and this one also traumatized me as a kid... oh and also this one!"
Not to mention the ones that have ghosts in them.
Now we know why his games can be traumatic to us. These damn movies.
Traumatized by Hideo Kojima
😂😂😂
"They said I could take this with me."
What a treasure this man is.
Everytime he puts something in his bag, he acts as if he is shoplifting. It cracks me up.
@@dmgice 🤣😂 LOL why you did that? It became so cringy for me now...
I would too! That closet is cinematic Valhalla!
he could buy an entire truck of that DVDs,
but he still giggle excitedly from getting that one dvd
every japanese is like this
I love this guy, I wonder if he will ever make video games
hAHAHAHhahhaehaehaaaa1! leul you original funny big boy pants jokester hobo
@@puckered6036No no, he made ONE decent game then rode on its coattails
@@gunsharckthat’s just false as hell
Policenauts was great and popular in Japan and zone of Enders was big as hell in the mecha genre.
only fedex simulators.
@@marciocouto3543 "only fedex simulators xDDDDddddDD" respectfully, find a stool.
Hideo Kojima is a filmmaker at heart, who CHOSE to bring his perspective of film and storytelling to the games medium. And on top of that, he's an incredible gameplay designer. He's absolutely up there with Shigeru Miyamoto, Hidetaka Miyazaki, and so many other contemporaries. His games are a breath of fresh air in the industry. I will play anything this man makes for the rest of his life.
I totally agree, people dunk on him saying that he just wants to make movies but his games are so well designed in very medium specific ways.
Same my dude. I think his stories are absurd and often make little sense and feel very silly at times. I’m rolling my eyes half the time playing his games but I love it.
MGS being so absurd is why I love it
From what I've read, he did it cause he needed a job and couldn't get into film making, so I don't know if "CHOSE" is the best word lol. Eventually, they just kept paying him too much for him to turn it down, so he abandoned film making at one point and went all-in on games.
@@KillerLettuce There's a reason for that Metal Gear was originally going be an over the top action game in the same vain as Capcom's Commando. That was what Konami wanted, but Kojima felt that an action game would be too difficult on the MSX, so it become a stealth game instead.
Please have him come back for a round 2. Kojima is such a great curator, his book is literally about what books he would recommend you read and it is an absolute page turner. How I could be so enthralled about material that I’m no t even reading just reading someone else’s love for is wild.
For those wondering, the book is called "The Creative Gene" and it's a great read even for those who don't know a single thing about the books and films he talks about in each chapter.
Great read!
The Creative Gene is such a phenomenal book.
Yes, i'm interested in his non Japanese picks
The dude is a voracious reader it's crazy how much he's read.
100% agree with this commenter, have him back for a part 2!
I know there have been big stars and filmmakers in the closet but to me, this feels like the BIGGEST event
How sad for you.
@@vittoriostoraro Lighten up Francis
@@vittoriostoraro🤡
Good god...
@@vittoriostoraroL
For those who may be wondering, all of these are available for streaming on the Criterion Channel.
❤
it would be really dumb to put them on this video and not have them available
unfortunately, not for the UK people
Not in Europe…
@@andersb80you can use it with VPN
the list is presented on screen at 5:46.
But here it is as well,
Akira Kurosawa - High and Low
Yasujiro Ozu - Late spring
Yasujiro Ozu - Tokyo Twilight
Mizoguchi - Ugetsu
Kwaidan
Harakiri
Nobuo Nakagawa - Jigoku
Kaneto Shindo - Onibaba
Tegahara - Woman in the Dunes
The man's got good taste, no doubt.
thanks a lot!
can you please add behind if that particular film got him traumatized as a kid please?
Thank you.
Bless you, you’re a saint!
Five minutes of Kojima shoplifting 👏
Him repeatedly saying that he's allowed to take these leads me to believe otherwise.
@@RickR69 that's exactly what a shoplifter would say
Isn't he quite rich?
@@salmonking1960 He does it for the thrill. With darkness and silence through the night...
@@RickR69 A thrill indeed. Though he was really searching for these movies, like they melted into him.
Quickest I’ve ever clicked for one of these. Love this guy, a truly unique voice in the industries of both Cinema and Video-games
same. Man a damn legend.
His games are ESSENTIALLY movies with interactable parts in between scenes.
Agreed. Snatcher is probably my all time favorite game. Highly underrated.
Bro the fact that my favorite video game creator also loves my favorite movie creator (Akira Kurosawa) is something which brings me so much shock and joy.
Same here man, I had a quick response clicking the play button! hahaha
Kojima makes a great point about film and streaming today. A friend of mine pointed out that, unless it's a classic, the vast majority of content on streaming platforms is from the 80s and later. Once you get into the 70s and earlier, it's much harder to find something that isn't already incredibly well known.
I have found Shudder to be pretty good for hosting older genre films. Kanopy added a boatload of lesser known blaxploitation films earlier this year.
So true, and the main reason I still buy physical copies. Sometimes "genre" movies (a term I'm not in love with) are easy to find, but anything else besides classics is unobtainium.
This is why I sail the seas. So many lost media because of digital-only and streaming.
@@geralt-of-rivia-z6f Oooh, there is nothing like checking out a used media shop in a foreign country. Have your region-free player ready!
Live as a pirate cause pirates are free.
I love how much of a movie fan Kojima is; you see his passion for film in every game he's worked on.
His instagram is basically just movies he likes, If anyone is interested.
@@laughingBun Yup, highly recommend, guy is a movie fanatic, unsurprisingly. Not just Japanese movies either, and he loves to break them down and point out the artistic parts that stand out to him in particular.
Well he is made up of 70% movies!
@@trask9100 Unless it's a movie he didn't like. Then he'll just point out how he watched it and nothing more lol.
So movie like that you can set down the controller for 90% of each of his games and still complete them. Genius of game design.
For people who don’t know, Kojima has always been a lifelong cinephile and his original goal was to become a filmmaker, but saw Nintendo's Famicom and thought of joining the video game industry.
Kojima's love of movies is noticeable in his games where he pays homage through his stories and characters, such as in Snatcher. He cited a contrast between films and games as while in his games he intends to portray violence like in a movie, in the game it is up to the player to decide. Anyone who’s played any of Kojima’s games will tell you that Kojima’s style breaks the barrier between cinema and games. In a way, he’s a film director but he uses video games to tell the story.
of note: he knows very well that videogames are not movies, so barring MGS4 and its long cutscenes, he always works and experiments with the medium and its possibilities, whereas a number of other such movie fans making games just try to make the game a playable movie for better and for worse
@@Minority119 Couldn't agree any more! Adding on he's an experimentalist person, always navigating through various mediums just to tell an exciting and interactive story.
His recent game like Death Stranding (dubbed by many haters as a walking simulator!?) which I disagree but I get the point as instead of playing it I just love to see the game walkthrough & navigating the story. Really excited for DS2, OD, & PHYSINT!!!
P.s. What I like even more about him is that the man appreciates the value of physical medium. I love physical mediums be it Movies, TV shows, Music, Video Games, Books, etc. In this age of streaming platforms (which has its own pros, i wont deny) does not validate the sense of ownership be it in digital medium let alone physical. I like to own stuff, makes that retro in my heart even if its just 5 years old.
imagine if you replace the cine with P E D O oooooooooh
imagine if you replace cine with P £ D 0 oooooooooooh
His passion required finances that Konami wasn't willing to risk. MGSV could have been game of the decade if Kojima was allowed to cook
This by far my favorite of these closet picks. Genuine enthusiasm and just an amazing creative mind. It's nice to see what inspires him.
i think Kojima's passion for the art of film making is why he's one of the best storytellers in videogaming
Kojima originally wanted to be a filmmaker but he could not enter the movie industry.
The storytelling in his games are convoluted and stupid.
@@Emma-Bos bait used to be believable
@@yes-io3vt I like how you can't refute me at all.
@@Emma-Bos not all stories need to be told to you like a children's book
Full body chills when the GOAT Kojima pulled out my favorite Kurosawa film of all time first 😭
gonna love him more as ever with his post on Instagram 🙆♂
Why
Can't wait to watch it for the first time
It's one of Criterion's which is not available in the UK. That didn't stop me from importing it though. Great watch! It's up there with Seven Samurai.
I was similarly impressed. But my favorite is Red Beard.
Did I see this right? Criterion inviting Hideo Kojima for Closet Picks!!! This seriously made my day. His 'Metal Gear' series have very cinematic cutscenes and to have invited him, it was so cool to see what were his influences. I've never seen an interview with him just talking about film. Criterion you guys are killing it!!
Yes-
Mind blowing. 🤯
Someone in the game/film industry absolutely Must have him discuss his influences for each of his interactive masterpieces!
☝️🤓🎞️✨👾
Film is definitely some of his biggest influence.
You should really give Death Stranding a chance if you have not already. It's a masterpiece.
Kojima is a genius of an artistic mind, but he makes it more clear to me than anyone else: Genius artists are inspired by genius art. The cycle of repetition is unavoidable, in paying tribute to what you love, you almost have to rip it off or copy it. But it's how you do it, and how open you are about it, that spreads the love, by getting new people into it. I love Kojima for how he's always been very open and obvious about where his inspirations come from. The man is a living legend. I will always appreciate how creatively fresh he is with the way that he works.
The more I learn about him, the more I love him. Death Stranding is the first game I’ve played since being able to sit up after four years battling long covid. His game touched me and inspires me to keep working and recovering and making connections. Thank you!
This is amazing. I hope Kojima-san will one day write and direct a feature film. Thank you, Criterion.
He did. It's called "Death Stranding."
Death Stranding's core emotional narrative doesn't work without the gameplay and social aspects - a pure film from Kojima would be something else entirely, although the cinematics in that game are obviously GOATED. @@jacksquatt6082
He won’t direct any movies. He’s too busy making cinematic games. He wants to stay independent and doesn’t want to deal with movie studios
@@stevemuzak8526 as if Sony wasn't an adult ass studio. Independent? my ass.
@@stevemuzak8526oh who’s directing the new Death Stranding movie? Or has one not been attached to the project yet?
What he said at 0:09-0:22 was so true!!! Very grateful for Criterion!!!
Also Woman in the Dunes is a masterpiece!!!!
Women in the Dunes is the real deal!!!!!
Yes! Very atmospheric. Same with the Face of another. Loved the cerebral horror of the book/film respectively.
aggre I was jump for joy when he pick woman in dunes on the last :)
Alternative title: "Hideo Kojima tells us about his childhood trauma"
I saw "High and Low" on TCM when they did the marathon for Akira Kurosawa's birthday and it's one of my favorites still. It was such a great (and eye opening) time capsule for early 60s Japan and the cast was nothing short of superb. I recently found out that Tsutomu Yamazaki, the actor that played the blackmailer, starred in the live action version of Space Battleship Yamato as the captain.
For anyone who wishes to hear more of Kojima‘s favorites:
There is an article he wrote in the mid 2000s (translated by none other than Marc Laidlaw) where he lists his 30 favorite films of all time - including the ones that were a heavy influence on the Metal Gear series - with many more on the side, ranging from Japanese to Western and even animated ones.
It’s a fantastic read and shows a diverse array of films that he loves, with a little inside on each listing. I highly recommend it and would link it here but I think RUclips wouldn’t let me, but it’s not hard to find on your own!
Hey that sounds interesting! Do you know the name?
@@tofidu just type in “Hideo Kojima’s favorite films,” and it should be the first result, JunkerHQ
Onibaba absolutley floored me the furst time I watched it! I went into it not really thinking much just assuming it was gonna be a little more “scary” than most Japanese films. But it wasn’t just scary it was absolutely terrifying! It scared me even though I’m 18 and more grown then when Kojima watched it. Some of the best and most carefully crafted scares I have ever seen! I contribute most of that to the absurdly good lighting used in the film. It’s probably the best use of lighting I have ever seen in a movie! With the lighting film is able to create these dark shadow areas and use them for scares. The scares are never super fast and jumpy most of them are just something slowly emerging and walking out of a shadow. Which made it all the more terrifying. All that isn’t including it’s brilliant themes and tellings of grief and indirect effects of war!. So well made and wish more people saw it! It’s absolutely brilliant!
We are one step closer to having Hideaki Anno in the closet.
That would be awesome, Hideaki Anno is such an entertaining guy whenever he does interviews or other similar things
This man has excellent taste in movies, and his Japanese movie recommendations are spot on. Anyone new to Japanese classics can just take the directors introduced here as an excellent starting point... I was attracted to Japanese film by the likes of Koreeda and Beat Takeshi, but I only started truly loving and admiring it when I ventured into Ozu, Mizoguchi, Kurosawa. It is interesting that he points out High & Low, because that was also my first exposure to Kurosawa and it remains one of his most memorable films for me.
Japan cinema is amazing! I recommend for you to check out Kobayashi's *Human Condition* Trilogy
@@NyolateAMVHuman Condition is a masterpiece by Kobayashi. A great movie.
Do you like Sion Sono and Takashi Miike?
@@NyolateAMV Thank you very much, I was not aware of these films yet and put them right on the shortlist!
@@4444POWER Oh yes, I watched my fair share of Takashi Miike and in my teenage years I surely scarred some friends with a Visitor Q movie night. :)
Do you have any specific recommendations for Sion Sono? I only watched Love Exposure and Suicide Circle. LE blew my mind at the time.
This is massive. Holy. What an incredible idea to include him.
I watched Seppuku maybe two years ago and there really is a reason why it won so many awards.
That period of Japanese film ranks with the greatest waves of films in world cinema history. All absolutely incredible... highly recommend every single one!
So cool to see someone picking films from a specific time and place, and I love that he's especially encouraging young people to try older foreign films. Some of these are personal favorites of mine, so I would encourage everyone too!
One of the finest creative minds of his generation and still as witty and charming as ever. This might be criterions biggest get for this series.
As someone who studied Japanese cinema in college, it is like watching my worlds collide hearing Kojima-san speak of the films I consumed and picked apart so intently and passionately.
I would kill to spend some time speaking film with him. 🧡🧡🧡
This was awesome! That said, this does kind of show how limited the range of Japanese films the Criterion Collection has is. All classics, of course, and Kojima made some really good picks (especially Jigoku. That crazy surrealistic depiction of hell at the end is one of the most amazing things ever put on celluloid) but I would love it if a company like Arrow Films, who release a lot of the more contemporary Japanese classics, had their own criterion closet style series and brought him on. For instance, I just bought a Shinya Tsukamoto boxset from them, and I would love to hear Kojimas opinion on something like Tsukamotos Tetsuo the Iron Man or Battle Royale or Pulse or really any other of the tons of modern Japanese classics that I think probably inspired Kojima's work and, in some cases, were inspired themselves by Kojimas work.
I think the movies you used as example of what to include are still so very easy to get nowadays. Even when i was growing up in the 90s I could easily purchase Tetsuo and Battle Royale (as a matter of fact, i did haha) and nowadays those are still very easy to get. I think the Criterion Collection focuses on licensing and publishing movies that are hard to get mainstream.
This was such a nice surprise. I think they should do this more often and get some other creators to do this. I would love to see Suda 51 or Shinji Mikami on here and see what kind of movies they consider amazing or a must watch.
Mikami for sure
Fumito Ueda and Jenova Chen would be amazing as well, their games have such a strange vibe, so I would love to know what inspires them
escially suda51 haha we can maybe draw some inspiration then as to how he made his craft
Suda would be amazing.
The collaboration we didn’t know we needed! THANK YOU!
One of my biggest movie watchlists came when I was 16, playing Metal Gear Solid 3. As Snake, you could call a young lady on the radio at random times and talk about film recommendations with her. I watched some of my favorite American classics that way, and ironically got into Criterion through that.
Awesome that Hideo Kojima is going into classic Japanese films, since I don't usually see him talk about them! Even happier I know and own most of them.
小島監督ありがとうございます!
日本の名作を知らない自分にとって小島監督が作品名を上げて具体的におすすめして下さることがとても有難いです!
Japanese movies are the best form of media
This is the absolute most excited I’ve ever seen Kojima. It just goes to show that we all love him for MGS, but at heart he will always just be a movie guy.
So happy Criterion got Kojima on here. He is an inspiration to me and I love him hearing him talk about the art he enjoys. A truly wonderful video.
I saw him post a pic on his Instagram a while ago, and I was really hoping for this to happen. To see a man who is mostly made of movies in the Criterion closet brings me joy.
Those 50’s and 60’s Japanese films in the criterion collection continually surprise me, cause they are always awesome. Safest bet as far as blind buying is concerned.
Oh my god he mentioned Harakirki! Hands down one of the best Japanese films. Every single shot is a painting. And the pacing is brilliant, not a second wasted
What’s it about? Are these old Japanese films worth watching now?
@@bigboss-yv2nr "When a ronin requesting seppuku at a feudal lord's palace is told of the brutal suicide of another ronin who previously visited, he reveals how their pasts are intertwined - and in doing so challenges the clan's integrity." - from IMDB. It's an exploration of samurai culture/tradition with some cool sword fighting and fun twists
@@bigboss-yv2nr Just watched it last week, quite a good movie.
@@bigboss-yv2nr if you’re into the kind of scary, artistic and weirdy stuff? Then yes, and no better than to be recommended by an old school Otaku like Hideo Kojima too lol
I love him for making detailed and delicate games, and his fashion too.
The fastest I ever clicked on one of these videos.
I've been a huge fan of this man's work for 24 years and counting.
Thank you for bringing Kojima! Love his work and his picks, such an unique voice in the world of video games!
I've been wanting this to happen for years now. Kojima has such a keen eye & genuine love for cinema, you can feel it in each of his creations. I love reading his thoughts about film on Twitter. Such a perfect match, glad it finally happened!
You can't help but love the man's excitement. Kojima is one of the greatest video game creators there is. Playing his games you can see that he wanted to be a filmmaker. His games ended up becoming his films.
The man essentially made cinematic story telling in video games the norm that we take advantage of today.
Big fan of his work, always looking forward to what he will do next, as he is always taking chances that tend to move video games forward in creativity.
Every single game I played by him was garbage
@@cartoonvideos5 attention seeking troll right here ladies & gents
Also keep your shitty opinion to yourself kid, no one wants to hear about your skill issue problems in the game
@@cartoonvideos5 That's your opinion. The first Metal Gear Solid was a masterpiece.
@@cartoonvideos5Means you haven't played any of his games.
@@sanjurosama I played MGS3 on Vita, I quit 5 minutes in (not including cutscenes) I hate stealth games
So smart of Criterion to bring Kojima in, his enthusiasm for art and film is just infectious!
I love Setsuko Hara and Ozu as well. Late Spring is one of my favorite films of all time. Setsuko's presence in that film is astonishing. And yes, the bicycle scene is so great that it was mimicked in Millennium Actress which is an anime loosely based on Setsuko Hara's life. An absolute amazing film!!!
It’s surreal watching two worlds collide between video games and cinema. Kojima is the greatest video game auteur to ever live and I hope he can make his own film one day.
A lot of great films in here. Surprised that he didn’t pick one by Seijun Suzuki. The cross up of style and insanity just works so well.
Kojima is like the gamer and movie enthusiast who made it bigtime.
He never settles for anything less than perfection, never copypasting other games just for the sales.
He's hands down my favorite developer, and one of my favorite people on the planet, he's basically the reason I'm still a gamer to this day.
Just watched Seven samurai, throne of blood, yojimbo, sanjuro and some others recently and mannnnnn japan was way ahead of their time. Those movies are masterpieces. The seven samurai and yojimbo soundtrack still hasnt left my head.
“High and Low” is my favorite Kurosawa too! Good man :D
i hope people understand how important this man is to my generation.
He just makes games that steal the plot and ideas from movies he likes lol maybe one day he'll have an original idea
@@llort7771it's true he has no original ideas
@@thecluckingassassinbut honestly doesn’t anybody? It generally comes from things people have watched. There are those who create things I’ve never seen before but it’s difficult.
@@llort7771 @thecluckingassassin565
You're both delusional.
Hideo can wake up in the morning, take a shit and the turd would have more originality than your weak opinion.
@@llort7771 bro doesn't understand kojima
Revolutionized story telling and video games by merging Film and videogames. He will be very highly spoken about in the future.
High and Low is one of my personal favourites. Super good story and interesting play on popular tropes
I love how he finds a film, picks it and then in the bag. I did not know you could take that many. This was nice to watch in such a bad day as this.
"70% of my body is made of movies."
Never been so excited for one of these. Kojima is a legend
Kojima really loves movies, especially Japanese classics from the 1950s and 1960s.
Golden Era of Japanese film.
Bro the fact that my favorite video game creator also loves my favorite movie creator (Akira Kurosawa) is something which brings me so much shock and joy.
@@mingyuhuang8944 Kurosawa is top 5 of all time, imo... _High & Low_ is an absolute masterpiece.
What gave it away?
There's a good argument to make that Japanese film is in the top 2 or 3 all time of any country's film output.
Ugetsu, High & Low, Harakiri, Tokyo Story, Onibaba, Woman In The Dunes, Kwaidan & Jigoku are all perfect examples of Japanese mastery. All among the greatest films of all time!
Best closet visit ever! Hideo Kojima is 60 years old btw. I'd like to look as young as him when I'm 60.
You can clearly see that he was happy being there looking and selecting his favorites. Physical media is so important and it should be preserved.
He's a pedophile, that's why David Hayter left.
No way... this WAY! Thank you for having him in your closet! What a treat and a treasure Hideo Kojima is
I clicked this so fast.
Thank you so much for having Hideo Kojima reveal some of his favourite films.
He is so adorable, can he come back for more? Let's say once a month? I could listen to Hideo talk about his film choices for hours, he even succeeded in arousing my husband's interest in these movies, so thank you Hideo Kojima.
As someone who only recently discovered the joy of Ozu movies having heard his name many times, I wholeheartedly agree with Kojima's point. There is a real charm to his movies that in many ways we miss today, and perhaps those sentiments from the 50s and 60s are exactly what young people need to hear.
Perfect! Kojima-sensei always put on his creations the inspirations he took from movies, I still remember the very first time I played Metal Gear Solid on PS1 and I saw the intro cinematic and got blown away by how the submarine first appearance, I thought " wow, that's very cinematic style!".
For me Kojima embodies the love for cinematic storytelling, the art of showing and not telling and using the language and history of the visual arts (predominantly movies) to create new stories with multiple layers of interconnectivity.
In short, dude fucking rocks and is an awesome storyteller.
Metal Gear Solid (1998) is the greatest video game of all time, in my opinion. Thank you Hideo Kojima for making my childhood wonderful.
Also, it's great to see everyone from all generations coming into the Criterion closet and seeing their tastes. The beauty of it all is knowing they're the ones who understand you when majority of people don't, especially when it comes to film history.
Excellent picks!
I agree Metal Gear Solid 1998 is the greatest video game of all time. Also the ending of Metal Gear Solid 2 when the AI is speaking to Raiden essentially describes our world today perfectly. Hideo Kojima is a genius.
It's The Last of Us.
@@thomasnielsen5580lol
Im looking forward to the xbox exclusive game he is working on 🎉, I hope not a boring Walking simulator
@@thomasnielsen5580It’s the dudes opinion.
I wish he would've been more personal but he really saw this as an opportunity to educate which is admirable
tbf all the movies that scared him as a kid probably were big inspirations for his games
I dont know a lot about Kojima, but still happy too see that i have all the films he picked, in my own collection. Late Spring is my favorite Ozu film.
I think he did a great job as an ambassador, considering his taste also includes a lot of western films. Did not expect to see Kojima here. Still have to watch a few of these to complete the recommendations.
I'm so glad he highlighted Woman in the Dunes and Harakiri
The best surprise was the Late Ozu Eclipse set. I miss Eclipse.
He's so pure and wholesome 😊
His list shows a love of both fantastic cinema and social realism as well as the combination of the two genres (as in Ugetsu Monogatari)
i like how kojima talks in that *director* fashion where hes like "yeah so everyone knows dave blungus everyones watched secret of blunky hill and bilbos dildo but PERSONALLY i like his earlier works like skunky avenue and beach of fuck. i feel like he really *came into his own* with these movies theyre very surreal experiences"
By Akira Kurosawa:
🎥 "High and Low"
🎥 "Rashomon"
🎥 "Seven Samurai"
🎥 "Yojimbo"
By Yasujirō Ozu and Others:
🎞 "Late Spring" (by Ozu)
🎞 "Tokyo Twilight" (Tokyo Boshuko) (By Ozu)
🎞 "Kawaita hana" (by Mikio Naruse)
🎞 "Closer" (by Ozu)
By Lesser-Known Films:
📽 "Ugetsu" (by Kenji Mizoguchi)
📽 "Kwaidan" (by Masaki Kobayashi)
📽 "Harakiri" (Seppuku) (by Masaki Kobayashi)
📽 "Kyūketsuki-ga" (by Nobuo Nakagawa)
Horror and Fantasy:
👹 "Jigoku" (by Nobuo Nakagawa)
👹 "Ghost of Yotsuya" (by Nobuo Nakagawa)
👹 "Onibaba" (by Kaneto Shindō)
👹 "Woman in the dunes" (by Teshigahara)
👹 "The face of another" (by Teshigahara)
Very good sir
Kojima the GOAT
Bro the fact that my favorite video game creator also loves my favorite movie creator (Akira Kurosawa) is something which brings me so much shock and joy.
@@mingyuhuang8944 he post more on Instagram, mostly pop cultures
he works with Microsoft on a Xbox Exclusive 🎉
50s and 60s Japanese films are absolutely peak cinema for me. Thrilled Kojima agrees (although I shouldn't be surprised). Onibaba and Woman in the Dunes are two of my all time favorites.
The first strand type criterion closet video
やっぱり小島さんのチョイスはめちゃくちゃ良い!
『砂の女』観たいけどレンタルもされてないしマジで観る機会がないんですよォ😂
どこかのミニシアターで再上映されるのを切に願ってます…
i'm a young person and i ll watch all these japanese movies from the 50s and 60s u recommended, i got your back kojima, keep rocking it!
Terrific closet picks. Added the ones I haven't watched to my watchlist. Thank you, Kojima-san.
I can't wait for Metal Gear Solid 4 to hit the Criterion!
I just want it to hit PS5! I'm dying to play that game again
Of all the games of his you could have picked, you picked the worst?
@@Hysteria98that's the joke, because of all the cut scenes
I need to talk about movies with him so bad. Love to see where his inspiration bleeds into his work…
His passion for Japanese movies put a couple tears into my eyes. Thank you Mr. Hideo Kojima.
Man, myth, legend.
Late Spring by Ozu is a masterpiece.
True, Setsuko Hara always makes me tear up in that film
I’ve tried a few times to get into ozu, what am I missing it just seems so boring and dry😂 Haven’t seen tokyo story but I watched late spring and autumn afternoon.
The Cinema Cartography video was the one that got me into Ozu, so I'd highly recommend it. For me it's a few things, he creates these gorgeous worlds and gives them time to breathe. Every frame is so carefully constructed it's almost as if watching a series of moving paintings. You could call Ozu contemplative cinema or slow cinema but for me he finds beauty in the everyday and never vies for your attention, his movies just are. @@jimreplicant
Also his stories and dialogue are so deeply human. The way he frames his dialogue sequences. The camera, aside a few choice examples, almost never moves. It also feels like a contemplation on what it means to be Japanese. The period of history that was seen in Ozu's career oversaw huge changes both for Japan domestically as well as foreign influence beginning to come in.
@@jimreplicant I've struggled a bit with Ozu too. His film "Floating Weeds"(1960's version) is good though.
You guys chose someone so cool! I hope he can direct a film in the future. This guy is a visionary!
High and Low just floored me when I realized how playfully the master Kurosawa was composing the scenes. Brilliant and innovative in a way that even some of the most creative film makers have not caught up to him to this day.
I'm not hugely familiar with old Japanese films, so I was surprised by how many of these I had already seen, and I have to admit, Kojima-san has great taste. I especially recommend both High and Low and Kwaidan.
loved his picks! high and low and tokyo twilight are truly masterpieces
Death Stranding is a masterpiece. As a cinephile, I still can't believe the cast of Death Stranding is even real...Mads Mikkelsen, Léa Seydoux, Norman Reedus, Nicolas Winding Refn, Guillermo Del Toro?! I mean come on...And Part 2 is going to have Elle Fanning in it as well!! The story and the cutscenes are absolutely amazing. It's so cool to see Hideo Kojima on here!! Can't wait for Death Stranding 2 💛
Guillermo del Toro was just scanned, someone else voiced him
One of my favourites too
If Death Stranding had been released during the pandemic, it would've blown up. The themes really fit that period (isolation, importance of delivery personnel, building literal and figurative bridges, cooperation, etc.) Just goes to show how Kojima is ahead of his time. My husband and I spent hundreds of hours in that game, sometimes just walking around and building roads 😅 One of the best soundtracks too! ❤
@cherrypiepikachu It was so immersive that I genuinely found those gangs of BT's pretty scary sometimes with the voidouts 😂
@@geralt-of-rivia-z6f I think so too! And you're right, the soundtrack is absolutely amazing!! Especially BB's theme at the end!! Oh my god, I got so emotional! And Almost Nothing by Silent Poets was another great one! Also, all the instrumental pieces which play during the cutscenes are amazing as well :)
I love him and these picks are, to no one's surprise, fire as hell. With all his interest in horror it's exciting he's finally getting to make his own horror masterpiece !!
Hideo Kojima & Quentin Tarantino should meet each other. They are probably the biggest movie fanatics I can think of that would make an awesome collaboration on a game or a movie.
This is an epic crossover I never expected
One of the best closet picks ever!!! THANK YOU!!!