Gonpachi Nishi-Azabu in Tokyo is a large izakaya restaurant in the Minato district, known for its dramatic wooden interior, open central dining area, staircases, balconies and lantern-lit atmosphere. Located at 1-13-11 Nishi-Azabu, the restaurant has become a major pop-culture stop for film fans because of its close connection to Quentin Tarantinoโ€™s Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003). It is often called the โ€œKill Bill restaurantโ€, even though the actual film scenes were not shot there.

Gonpachi Nishi-Azabu is connected to Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003) as the inspiration for the House of Blue Leaves, the Tokyo restaurant where The Bride fights O-Ren Ishii, Gogo Yubari and the Crazy 88. The real restaurant was not used for filming; the House of Blue Leaves was built as a set at Beijing Film Studio. Still, Gonpachiโ€™s interior layout, especially the balconies, stairways and open central space, clearly shaped the look and atmosphere of the famous fight sequence.

In Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003), the House of Blue Leaves becomes the setting for the filmโ€™s major Tokyo showdown. The Bride, played by Uma Thurman, enters the restaurant to confront O-Ren Ishii, played by Lucy Liu, and the scene builds from a tense arrival into one of the filmโ€™s most elaborate and violent action sequences. The restaurant setting allows Tarantino to stage the fight across several levels, with the Crazy 88 battle moving through the main floor, upper walkways and surrounding spaces before the final duel in the snow-covered garden. Gonpachi Nishi-Azabu is therefore best treated as an inspiration location rather than a filming location, but its connection to the scene is so strong that it remains one of Tokyoโ€™s most famous film-related restaurants.


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Films
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