• Network: Netflix
  • Series Premiere Date: Jan 9, 2025
Metascore
89

Universal acclaim - based on 5 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 5 out of 5
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 5
  3. Negative: 0 out of 5

Critic Reviews

  1. Reviewed by: Margaret Lyons
    Jan 30, 2025
    100
    “Asura,” a seven-episode Japanese drama on Netflix (in Japanese, with subtitles, or dubbed), is the full package: a detailed, human-scale domestic drama with plenty to say, fascinating characters to say it and the stylishness to make it sing. The downside is that other shows feel paltry and thin in comparison. The upside is everything else.
  2. Reviewed by: Geoffrey Bunting
    Jan 23, 2025
    100
    2025 is less than a month old, but we may have already seen the best show of the year. .... The Takezawa sisters’ rebellion against the stillness that Japanese society forces upon them is gentle but profound. If Kore-eda can be a little indulgent in exploring this, it is only to better highlight the subtle, often understated ways these characters begin to reverberate with his signature humanism through the smallest gestures.
  3. Reviewed by: Nick Schager
    Jan 8, 2025
    90
    The year’s first grand television surprise, and additional confirmation that few filmmakers are as empathetic, nimble, and masterful as Kore-eda.
  4. Reviewed by: Liz Kocan
    Jan 9, 2025
    80
    Asura doesn’t depict this family’s secrets as melodrama or a bustling mystery to be unraveled, it slowly and methodically lets us get to know these well-drawn characters. The family is not dysfunctional in an unrelatable way, like the Roys on Succession or Yellowstone‘s duplicitous Duttons, what’s so engaging is the fact that their problems, and the emotions that spill out as a result, are entirely possible and could happen to any of us.
  5. Reviewed by: Brian Tallerico
    Jan 10, 2025
    75
    His [Hirokazu Kore-eda's] gentle touch with character holds together a project that sometimes feels longer than it needs to be. Still, that extended runtime allows Kore-eda to come at his complex characters from multiple emotional angles, and for us to see ourselves a bit in all of them.