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Sumo Movies -

When you think of martial arts movies, what comes to mind? Usually, it’s Bruce Lee’s lightning-fast punches, the wire-fu of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon , or the gritty realism of The Raid . Sumo—the ancient Japanese sport of two giant wrestlers in diapers pushing each other—rarely makes the list.

That is a mistake.

Great sumo movies understand this tension. They don’t stretch the fight; they stretch the moment before the fight. sumo movies

But the true masterpiece is the 1995 documentary-fiction hybrid, When the Last Sword Is Drawn . Okay, it’s not just a sumo movie, but its depiction of the rikishi (wrestler) as a stoic, suffering warrior redefines the genre. It shows that sumo isn’t a fight; it’s a 1,500-year-old ritual of Shinto purity. What makes a sumo bout work on screen? Unlike boxing, where the hero can dodge and weave for twelve rounds, a sumo match often ends in three seconds. When you think of martial arts movies, what comes to mind