Fukada contrasts understated realism with haunting, dreamlike images. Unsettling and morally complex.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
The actors navigate their uncertain motivations with finesse — especially Asano, who captures not just the shell-shocked daze of someone trying to readjust to life on the outside but also a carefully, unnervingly suppressed wellspring of resentment.
Throughout Harmonium, writer-director Kôji Fukada works in a rapt and lucid hyper-textural style that suggests a merging of the sensibilities of Alfred Hitchcock and Yasujirô Ozu.
The Hollywood Reporter by Deborah Young
It’s hard not to leave the film shaken.
Harmonium builds to something peculiar and unusual by its close, and has a melancholic, discordant, uneasy sustain that lingers long after.
The Guardian by Leslie Felperin
Although the story unfolds at a steady pace over two hours, the filmmaking is sufficiently elegant and metronomically efficient as to make every minute gripping, especially after the tragic twist halfway through the story.
Shot in a meticulous yet unmannered style, the film provides the veteran cast with an ideal framework to mount masterful performances.
Screen International by Sarah Ward
The film’s insights into the isolation evident in the relationships most take for granted — marriages, parent-child connections and long-term friendships — don’t merely hit their targets; they smash them with a sledgehammer.
Time Out London by Tom Huddleston
This is a provocative, intelligent movie for those with a strong emotional constitution.