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entertainment
5 min read

The Brutally Honest Truth About "Shogun" That Nobody Wants to Hear

Staff Writer
June 17, 2026

Let me start by acknowledging what you already know: Shogun is objectively a technical achievement. The cinematography is immaculate. The production design makes you feel like you've time-traveled to 1600s Japan. Hiroyuki Sanada deserves every award nomination he's getting. I get it. I'm not arguing.

But here's what nobody's saying out loud: this show has a pacing problem that would make a Victorian funeral seem like a rave.

I watched all ten episodes. Not because I was riveted—though moments absolutely were riveting—but because I was waiting for the payoff to justify the 58-minute runtime of an episode that could've told the same story in 42 minutes. Episode 4 is a masterclass in how to film a conversation about a conversation about a betrayal that might happen. It's shot beautifully. Every frame is gorgeous. It's also a test of whether you own a phone with a battery that lasts longer than your attention span.

Here's the thing that gets me: the show knows it's doing this. It's deliberately paced like Shakespeare—all anticipation and subtext and meaningful glances. That's not accidental. That's a choice. And if you're the kind of person who watches Succession for the power dynamics and can sit through 15 minutes of two characters negotiating a deal using only their eyes, then Shogun is your religion.

But if you're also the kind of person who enjoys, say, narrative momentum, you're going to spend a lot of time staring at gorgeous shots of fog while nothing happens. Which is fine! Different strokes! But let's not pretend the emperor is wearing clothes when he's basically wearing a 58-minute meditation video with subtitles.

The action sequences that do happen? Absolutely worth it. The final episodes hit different. The performances are career-defining. And yes, the ambition is refreshing when most prestige TV plays it safe. I'm not saying don't watch it. I'm saying go in knowing you're signing up for a sushi dinner where half the courses are just sea salt and contemplation.

FX made a show for people who've read Shogun the novel and want to experience every single page adapted faithfully, even the pages that are just descriptions of weather. That's a valid audience. That's just not, and has never been, me.

Worth your time? Absolutely—if you know what you're getting. Hype it up as peak television? No. It's a gorgeous, deliberate, sometimes glacial masterpiece that respects your intelligence and demolishes your evening plans.

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