Asides

Something to watch tonight: Monday 21 July

By July 21, 2025No Comments
Asides

Something to watch tonight: Monday 21 July

By July 21, 2025No Comments

Giri/Haji (Barton, 2019)

Kelly Macdonald and Tekehiro Haji in the 2019 thriller series Giri/Haji

Monday would nor­mally be the day I cov­er new releases but – like last week and next – I’m pri­or­it­ising those for RNZ At the Movies with the occa­sion­al early draft of his­tory on RNZ Nights. Links and extracts will be pos­ted here on Thursday.

In the mean­time, I want to cel­eb­rate the “to watch” list which proved use­ful last week as I real­ise that six years was long enough for Giri/Haji to lan­guish there. The show was a Netflix/BBC co-production (which was a bit of a fash­ion at the time) and was first broad­cast by the BBC in October 2019 before land­ing on Netflix in the rest of the world in early 2020.

We’re suck­ers for Japan-themed thrillers here at F&S and Giri/Haji is a very decent one. Tokyo detect­ive Kenzo (Takehiro Hira) is in a funk after his broth­er goes bad and is pre­sumed dead at the hands of one of the loc­al Yakuza clans. His dad is dying of can­cer, his teen­age daugh­ter is almost out of con­trol and his wife and mother-in-law appear to be per­petu­ally dis­ap­poin­ted in him.

A murder in London with a Yakuza sword – a short blade but no less sym­bol­ic than a Samurai sword – leads Kenzo’s boss to think that the broth­er, Yuto (Yōsuke Kubozuka), might not be as dead as every­one assumes. In order to avert a Yakuza war, Kenzo is sent to London unof­fi­cially to try and bring Yuto back before the clans or the Metropolitan Plod track him down.

In London, Kenzo meets loc­al detect­ive Sarah (Kelly Macdonald) and half-Japanese and half-British rent boy Rodney (Will Sharpe) who both get embroiled in the increas­ingly tur­bu­lent plot. The show flicks back and forth between London and Tokyo as ten­sions look like get­ting out of con­trol and sev­er­al char­ac­ters take turns to become the pro­ver­bi­al ‘fish out of water’.

There are two things I want to high­light after we breezed through the eight epis­ode lim­ited series. Firstly, the plot becomes less import­ant as we go along and the themes of inter- (and intra) gen­er­a­tion­al dis­ap­point­ment grow. Everyone in the show seems to be fail­ing to live up to expect­a­tions some­how, but unable to break free from those expect­a­tions and live a dif­fer­ent, but more authen­t­ic, life.

The second obser­va­tion is that Giri/Haji appears to have been the launch­pad for sev­er­al big careers. The look on our faces when we real­ised that the Will Sharpe so authen­tic­ally inhab­it­ing the sar­cast­ic Rodney is also the dili­gent tour guide in Jesse Eisenberg’s A Real Pain was, I’m sure, some­thing to behold. He went from Giri/Haji to the second sea­son of The White Lotus (which I haven’t seen) and is now back on Netflix in Lena Dunham’s new com­edy Too Much.

I’ve been around long enough that I shouldn’t be sur­prised when act­ors dis­ap­pear into roles like that but it’s still a minor mir­acle when they do.

Takehiro Hira went from this to Monarch: Legacy of Monsters and Shōgun, as did Wellington-born Anna Sawai, although she added a power­ful turn in the Apple TV+ show Pachinko.

Kelly Macdonald is like Melanie Lynskey in that she improves everything she is involved with – I must write some­thing about her remark­able career at some point – but the most fun per­form­ance in the show is Charlie Creed-Miles as the East End gang­ster Abbott, steal­ing every scene he’s in.


Funerals & Snakes is a reader-supported pub­lic­a­tion. To receive new posts and sup­port my work, con­sider becom­ing a free or paid subscriber.


Where to watch Giri/Haji

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Worldwide: Streaming on Netflix

Giri/Haji (Barton, 2019)

Kelly Macdonald and Tekehiro Haji in the 2019 thriller series Giri/Haji

Monday would nor­mally be the day I cov­er new releases but – like last week and next – I’m pri­or­it­ising those for RNZ At the Movies with the occa­sion­al early draft of his­tory on RNZ Nights. Links and extracts will be pos­ted here on Thursday.

In the mean­time, I want to cel­eb­rate the “to watch” list which proved use­ful last week as I real­ise that six years was long enough for Giri/Haji to lan­guish there. The show was a Netflix/BBC co-production (which was a bit of a fash­ion at the time) and was first broad­cast by the BBC in October 2019 before land­ing on Netflix in the rest of the world in early 2020.

We’re suck­ers for Japan-themed thrillers here at F&S and Giri/Haji is a very decent one. Tokyo detect­ive Kenzo (Takehiro Hira) is in a funk after his broth­er goes bad and is pre­sumed dead at the hands of one of the loc­al Yakuza clans. His dad is dying of can­cer, his teen­age daugh­ter is almost out of con­trol and his wife and mother-in-law appear to be per­petu­ally dis­ap­poin­ted in him.

A murder in London with a Yakuza sword – a short blade but no less sym­bol­ic than a Samurai sword – leads Kenzo’s boss to think that the broth­er, Yuto (Yōsuke Kubozuka), might not be as dead as every­one assumes. In order to avert a Yakuza war, Kenzo is sent to London unof­fi­cially to try and bring Yuto back before the clans or the Metropolitan Plod track him down.

In London, Kenzo meets loc­al detect­ive Sarah (Kelly Macdonald) and half-Japanese and half-British rent boy Rodney (Will Sharpe) who both get embroiled in the increas­ingly tur­bu­lent plot. The show flicks back and forth between London and Tokyo as ten­sions look like get­ting out of con­trol and sev­er­al char­ac­ters take turns to become the pro­ver­bi­al ‘fish out of water’.

There are two things I want to high­light after we breezed through the eight epis­ode lim­ited series. Firstly, the plot becomes less import­ant as we go along and the themes of inter- (and intra) gen­er­a­tion­al dis­ap­point­ment grow. Everyone in the show seems to be fail­ing to live up to expect­a­tions some­how, but unable to break free from those expect­a­tions and live a dif­fer­ent, but more authen­t­ic, life.

The second obser­va­tion is that Giri/Haji appears to have been the launch­pad for sev­er­al big careers. The look on our faces when we real­ised that the Will Sharpe so authen­tic­ally inhab­it­ing the sar­cast­ic Rodney is also the dili­gent tour guide in Jesse Eisenberg’s A Real Pain was, I’m sure, some­thing to behold. He went from Giri/Haji to the second sea­son of The White Lotus (which I haven’t seen) and is now back on Netflix in Lena Dunham’s new com­edy Too Much.

I’ve been around long enough that I shouldn’t be sur­prised when act­ors dis­ap­pear into roles like that but it’s still a minor mir­acle when they do.

Takehiro Hira went from this to Monarch: Legacy of Monsters and Shōgun, as did Wellington-born Anna Sawai, although she added a power­ful turn in the Apple TV+ show Pachinko.

Kelly Macdonald is like Melanie Lynskey in that she improves everything she is involved with – I must write some­thing about her remark­able career at some point – but the most fun per­form­ance in the show is Charlie Creed-Miles as the East End gang­ster Abbott, steal­ing every scene he’s in.


Funerals & Snakes is a reader-supported pub­lic­a­tion. To receive new posts and sup­port my work, con­sider becom­ing a free or paid subscriber.


Where to watch Giri/Haji

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Worldwide: Streaming on Netflix