Tokyo Vice (TV Series 2022– ) Poster

(2022– )

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9/10
I worked in a Japanese company in Japan
nbutcher-6945811 April 2022
I've walked part-way in Jake Adelstein's shoes. I used to work in a Japanese IT company in Tokyo as the only Japanese speaking caucasian employee. I took hour long trips through the crowded train stations, learning to sleep while standing up, jammed between other commuters. Finally returning home after a late night karate lesson to what can only be described as a hole in the wall. Only to get up again with little sleep and do it all over again.

The scenes in Tokyo Vice are as authentic as I've seen - given it's based on a true story, filmed on location, and advised by Jake himself.

From the English teaching, the casual racism, long hours, the stifling bureaucracy and office culture, to the heavy smoking and drinking, to the Russian girls in the hostess "snack" clubs. The neon wonderlands of Kabuki-cho and Shibuya are here on display, but it's portrayed dark, gritty, and noir given the subject matter. People unfamiliar with Japan will be struck by the seemingly absurdist culture which juxtaposes young men trying to act and look tough in a world surrounded by sexual objectification, neon lights, video games, and cuteness - and a near impenetrable ancient culture.

Viewers might also be struck by the Japanese constantly trying to practice their English on the foreigner all the time - despite his high Japanese fluency. When human relationships are fraught with distrust and are only resolved through transactional quid-pro-quo in Japan - something which this series highlights - getting a freebie language practice opportunity is worth it's weight in yen. It's certainly a lot cheaper than the hostess clubs.

Ansel Elgort's attempt at Japanese is a pretty good one, playing the role of the "gaijin" - the well meaning, Japanese speaking, and learned foreigner who is never taken seriously by the culture he's immersed in.

Ken Watanabe is - well - not much else to say. He's brilliant as usual, and his moody detective certainly plays the part.

Can't wait to see the rest of the series, as the first three episodes are extremely watchable.
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9/10
Really Good!
Rob133130 September 2022
I'm blown away by how much I enjoyed Tokyo Vice. This series not only met my expectations but surpassed them in every way. It was created by Michael Mann (Heat, Ali, Collateral, Miami Vice, etc) and you can definitely tell because it has Mann's gritty style. It follows American journalist Jake Adelstein (Ansel Elgort) as he works with the police to descend in the criminal underworld of Tokyo. Apparently enough people liked it that it got renewed for another season which is fantastic news. I can't wait to see where they take this series next. If you're looking for a good thriller then give this a try. I promise you won't be disappointed!
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9/10
Excellent!
Supermanfan-138 May 2022
Tokyo Vice was so much better than I expected. It looked good to me and I'm a Michael Mann fan and heard he was attached and it still exceeded my expectations. It's based off a true story and shows a realistic view of Japans criminal world. This show is exciting and will keep you on the edge of your seat from the very first episode throughout the series! The entire cast is great and led by especially great performances by Ansel Elgort and Ken Watanabe. I absolutely recommend this show!
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9/10
stranger in a strange land... on steroids
A_Different_Drummer15 April 2022
Irony -- other shows work so hard to create a vibe of tension and potential threat. Here, if you can relate to this wonderfully relatable character, every second of every moment is filled with tension because the Japanese culture is one of the most unique on the planet. And one of the most especially unforgiving towards outsiders. (I have seen thousands of films, submitted almost 2000 reviews here, and yet the most terrifying movie I have ever seen is Japan's 1964 "Woman in the Dunes," which is not even a horror movie!) Excellent and addictive series. ((Designated "IMDb Top Reviewer." Please check out my list "167+ Nearly-Perfect Movies (with the occasional Anime or TV miniseries) you can/should see again and again (1932 to the present))
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9/10
Love it
brett-7626025 April 2022
Finally something new to get behind! I have to say I really love this series. I lived in Japan while on active duty with the Marine Corps and I fell in love with Japan, the culture, the beautiful people, the history and everything else about it. If there is any other country I could live in again, it would be Japan. The culture was so impactful on me as a young Marine, it just has never left me... Anyway This show is extremely well made and gives you a little dose of everything Japan. Great acting, great writing, solid directing it really has it all. Don't screw this up HBO and not give us another season. If you are into crime type dramas, give this a go. And Give it 3 episodes before you make any decisions. You're hooked after that. Tokyo is one of the most unbelievable cities in the world that's for sure so go visit! The city, and the people, will change your life forever! Again give the show a try. You will really enjoy it.
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10/10
Awesome insight for those who don't understand Japan
youdontknowjacque8 April 2022
I'm half Japanese & British American. My dad spoke perfect Japanese, went to Sophia University & was the president of the Foreign Correspondent Club in Japan back in the day. I am ALL IN!

For those who don't understand Japan/Japanese culture, the men speak to him in English because of snobbery and don't consider him an equal, much like Americans and other countries towards immigrants. Most Japanese do study English in school because it's almost universal and no other country speaks Japanese, if you want to do business internationally, you obviously need to be able to communicate. The Japanese culture is steeped in honor, respect, loyalty... and if you can't follow those virtues, you bring dishonor & shame. This show is truly insightful of an outsider's perspective living and working in Tokyo.
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8/10
Enjoyable viewing, worth climbing the barrier to entry
bosporan7 April 2022
Enjoyed the first three episodes, invested in the main characters and keen to discover what happens next. Daunting at first with the skew toward Japanese with subtitles, though the balance has changed and this has eased significantly. Some great direction producing fine imagery through use of cinematography, wardrobe and linguistics. It is clear the story is a whodunnit exploring the contrast between conformity & self and honour & honesty.

Some fine performances from Ansel Elgort (Jake), Rachel Keller (Samantha) who was excellent as Syd in Legion, Ken Watanabe (Katagiri) and Rinko Kikuchi (Eimi). Each of these characters has been well fleshed out and we understand their respective motivations, their relationship to one another and their place and contribution to the plot.
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8/10
Riveting look into Tokyo's (sub)culture and crime world
paul-allaer9 April 2022
As Episode 1 of "Tokyo World" (2022 release; 8 episodes of about an hour each) opens, we are following two reporters, one of which is Jake Adelstein. They arrive at a restaurant, only to find out that their hosts, members of the Yakoza, have moved the meeting to a private room. We then go to "1999, Two Years Earlier", as Adelstein is prepping to take a qualifying exam at a major Japanese newspaper, having moved there from Missouri three years earlier. At this point we are 10 min into Episode 1.

Couple of comments: the series is nominally based on the memoir of the real life Jake Adelstein about his years as the only foreign reporter at a major Tokyo-based newspaper. This mini-series immediately appealed to me for several reasons: it provides a "fish out of water" setting (American reporter at Japanese newspaper), along the way offering a glimpse into Japan's (sub)culture and ultra homogeneous society, and brought in a highly stylish setting. It certainly helps that major talent is connected to this series: from executive producer (and director of the opening episode) Michael Mann to Japanese actor (and executive producer) Ken Watanabe to Ansel Elgort ("Baby Driver") in the lead role (Elgort seemingly learned to speak Japanese for this), etc. Last but not least, the story telling is strong, and I am completely invested emotionally into this series.

"Tokyo Vice" premiered on HBO Max a few days ago, and I've seen the initial 3 episodes. New episodes will be released on Thursdays. How this high caliber/high quality mini-series is showing only on HBO Max (meaning not even on HBO) is a mystery to me. If you are in the mood for a dark-ish crime series set in the underworld of Tokyo, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.

UPDATE 4/16/22 Now 5 episodes into it. This is just getting better and better. One of the best shows I've been watching.
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9/10
Great series
edlc19708 April 2022
Have just watched the first episodes. And they were great. Great acting, fantastic atmosphere, made with style and attitude, and should easily become a must watch, just hoping they will launch a season 2.

It has a feel of Michael Mann's 80s creations, But Tokyo Vice crackles with more intensity, offering up an immersive throwback to a time when the director ruled the roost of cinematic crime dramas. Its great entertainment.
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7/10
I was expecting two more episodes ( Ep 9 & 10 ) before this season ends...
hkstephen29 April 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Yes, it's based on the memoir of the reporter Jake Adelstein with his reporting life in Japan, but then you can't always copy everything into drama series, not because it's not going to be authentic, but it still needs to bring certain entertainments and interesting contents for general audiences to get into the show, which it is successfully bringing that aspect.

And Ansel Elgort and other actors and actresses really brought up the game and learnt Japanese for the show, they put their efforts into the show without a doubt.

So in general, I really like how the show is going and I supposed to rate it 8/10.

HOWEVER, the thing I'm disappointing is that the show was originally promoting from the beginning that there are 10 episodes, UNTIL the episode 8 releases and THEN telling us that this is the SEASON FINALE?!?!! Are you kidding me?! This really hanged me to the throat.

And based on this episode 8 season finale, it's not JUST a cliff hanging me there because I was expecting 2 more episodes, but the storyline didn't bring any closure on anything except giving us little footage of a sub plot on Samantha best friend Polina to what happened to her...AND I'm more expecting the season finale would at least catch up to the same timeline of the opening of Episode 1 where Ansel Elgort and Ken Watanabe meeting up the Tozawa's #2 ranked man, but then it's not even close to that timeline in this season finale...so this season finale only left hanging with all kind of questions to almost every characters in the show to audiences.

Lastly, I feel that they could've given Tomohisa Yamashita a better character role instead of Polina's boyfriend in the Host Club...it's little bit of waste...

so yeah, with all that above, I'll take one star down to 7/10.
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9/10
Tokyo Vice Is Dark, Gritty Filled With Death Stares And Intrigue
talkteav7 April 2022
Tokyo Vice is a dark, gritty drama that builds intrigue from the very beginning. The criminals have deep traditions like the Sopranos. The police and the crimes committed are violent and shocking, similar to The Wire, and the cinematography is dark, like Boardwalk Empire. It's everything you want in a classic HBO Mobster/Gangster story with a very talented ensemble.

As always, if you made it this far, thanks for reading, and if you watch this series, let me know what you think.

Stay Channel Surfing!

Damian at TalkTeaV.
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6/10
Were it not for the Japanese setting, it would be pretty uninteresting
rozi7229 April 2022
The 1990s Tokyo backdrop and the fact that it is based on someone's memoirs make this show worth watching. Oh, and before I forget, I really like the opening credits! Otherwise, the characters are not very interesting (except for Sato and maybe the female boss at the newspaper) and there are lots of things that seem unnatural or unconvincing. I've only watched the first few episodes so far, I'll update my review if the show gets any better.

We learn very little about Jake's motivation related to the Japanese language and working in Japan as a crime reporter. He just happens to speak near-native Japanese (otherwise he would not have been hired as a journalist). Why is he drawn to this culture? What does he want to achieve? There are never any 'meta' conversations about his interest in the Japanese language or culture. He acts pretty much like a drifter, which cannot be true because of all the efforts required to be able to pull this off. The actor is too childish to be credible in this role, even considering that he is a 'gaijin', it is difficult to believe that police detectives and Yakuza leaders would take him seriously. I agree with the reviewer who mentions that it is not explained how he can afford to frequent expensive nightclubs and restaurants.

Samantha's character is not credible, either. She is too intellectual, too independent-minded and her Japanese is too fluent to imagine that she would work as a nightclub hostess. Okay, let's imagine she is motivated by the money, but why? We only learn that she wants to open her own club but what is her motivation?

I also dislike the way the show mixes Japanese and English conversation. If Jake speaks near-native Japanese, it would be more natural for everybody to speak Japanese all the time. Okay, they did not want to do this because it would have been too difficult for the actor to learn all those lines and I know that American viewers dislike reading subtitles. Then again, if we are supposed to feel that when they speak English they actually speak Japanese in real life, they might as well speak English all the time and you know, we would imagine... And finally, if we take the theory that the Japanese would want to practice English with him all the time, then the Japanese characters should speak English like an (Asian) non-native speaker would speak and not like a native speaker, with sophisticated vocabulary, no grammatical errors and perfect fluency, only with a Japanese accent. The conversation with the old Yakuza leader is a typical example for this discrepancy.

The joke about I Want it That Way is hilarious, if you get that far, you will understand!
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5/10
Samantha ruins everything
Ginnysababe3 June 2022
The show is a bit cliche, but it's enjoyable...until Samantha seems to become more and more of a major character. She is so rude, and her storyline is so boring. Her romances are the worst. She really drags the show down. Please find a way to write a better female character.
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10/10
Wow, way better than expected
yooniverse13 April 2022
When I saw Michael Mann's name associated with this, I pictured a "Miami Vice" set in Tokyo. It's also based on a true story, so I didn't have high hopes, as most true-story adaptations tend to be flat. And there's is that tired old theme of a westerner in the Far East, and the history of mediocre U. S.-Japan-cast collaborative films and TV shows. I was wrong!

Jake Adelstein is an exceptional person, as an American who immersed himself in the language, culture and current events and managed to become a reporter at the top Japanese newspaper. The show could have treated him as yet another symbol of western "exceptionalism", a white man who is "smarter" and more clever than the natives, a crusader who brings the superior western perspective to the rigid Japanese way of doing things. This could have easily been overdone, but instead, he is humbled, and at the cusp of failure, if not for the chance encounter and help from a veteran cop. It is mildly reminiscent of Endeavour.

The screenplay does well to depict the intricacies of Japanese culture, the social contracts and constraints among their media, law enforcement, and organized crime. Rather than being portrayed as being inept, negligent, or corrupt, you are given enough to appreciate how Japanese society functions and maintains balance and peace.

As with much of the story so far, the scenes, screenplay and direction are not wasted on unnecessary distractions or digressions. There are many characters and several parallel plots, but the show manages keep the story moving with excellent pacing. A pragmatic blend of English and Japanese dialog keeps the show's "authentic" feel, without making things incomprehensibly difficult to follow. Excellent show!
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8/10
Beautiful 90's Japan.
visionandyouth10 April 2022
Just wow ! I am at ep3 and i already feel Black Rain vibes all over the place. Great acting of Rinko Kikuchi and Ken Watanabe, Lets hope we get to see Season 2 as well !
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9/10
This is Terrific Noir Television
tkdlifemagazine14 April 2022
I can even express how much I enjoyed this 1990's period dramatic thriller based upon a book by the main character I have not read. The writing, the cinematography, and acting are movie quality. This is the story of a young American journalist working and thriving in Japan. He becomes involved in the world of the Japanese underworld and the police as he tries to find his was socially and professionally. Ansel Elgort (Jake), Rachel Keller (Samantha), Ken Watanabe (Katagiri) and Rinko Kikuchi (Eimi) are terrific in this. While this stars Ansel Elgort it is a triumph for Ken Watanabe who is excellent, and also produced this. HBO has treated this one with the seriousness it deserves but it is also endearing and that is based on the depth of the characters. Japan is an additional character in this and she is fascinating. I recommend this highly.
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8/10
Delivered
mwen001-229 April 2022
It took a while for this show to be made but the result is pretty cool! Michael Mann knows how to do interesting thriller and delivers again. Great atmosphere, great camera work and a great cast! Good stuff and shows that HBO is still the gold standard...not Netflix!;)
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9/10
The 6 C's
Ed-Shullivan23 February 2024
Criminals, Cops, Cool, Clever, Communications, and Calculating

Criminals: The simple name referenced as the Yakuza brings fear in the eyes of anyone who dares to stand between this criminal organization. Two rival gang leaders intend to control the underworld to which great wealth and power will be bestowed on the last man standing. Ishida (Shun Sugata) is the reigning Godfather and an upstart smarmy Yabuki (Kazuya Tanabe) the second-in-command of the Tozawa yakuza clan has every intention to take power away from Ishida.

Cops: Two dedicated detectives, Jin Miyamoto (Hideaki Itô) a dog with a bone detective, and his mentor, Hiroto Katagiri (Ken Watanabe) a vulnerable family man with a wife and two young daughters but dedicated to his job and his goal to abolish the Yakuza from Japan.

Cool: One man, one name, "Sato" (Shô Kasamatsu) stands for all that is considered cool. He is third in command in the Yakuza organization the Chihara-Kai, under the Godfather (Shun Sugata) Ishida and Sato reports begrudgingly directly under Hayama when Ishida appoints him as the new Wakagashira of the Chihara-Kai after he served seven (7) years in prison. Sato was a street kid with tons of moxie, handsome, smartly dressed, brute strength and fearlessness but his greatest asset is he has even more smarts and always thinking two steps ahead of any adversary.

Clever: Clever would be an understatement for the many players in this crime/drama TV series who all seem to have a plan for success in their respective fields. Whether it be the pretty blonde American Samantha (Rachel Keller) who works hard in an effort to establish her own hostess bar, or in the newspaper industry Jake Adelstein (Ansel Elgort) who follows both the criminals and the enterprises, and the cops with their thorough investigations, the cops who investigate the criminals, and the criminals growing their criminal enterprises.

Communications: The main star of this series is an American news reporter Jake Adelstein (Ansel Elgort) who speaks fluent Japanese who always seems to be in the wrong place at the wrong time just to get his next breaking storyline. Although Jake is considered an outsider by the Japanese people, he gradually impresses both the cops and criminals with his insight, and his willingness to learn from both the cops and robbers at any cost, and his love for the Japanese culture and its ways.

Calculating: A great series always leave its audience with fresh bait before you witness the next big catch. In this series every episode is a story within itself. But make no mistake about it all the various players in this series have a plan and their lives invariably intertwine. Arrest, wealth, success, romance, and even death are just some of the outcomes from the many plans that are put in place. If you liked the.2002-2008 TV crime/drama series The Wire, then you will love both the characters and the many storylines designed to captivate us the audience in Tokyo Vice. Be prepared though as the series is heavy on the English sub-titles but well worth our undivided attention.

I give the series a very smart and cool 9 out of 10 IMDb rating.
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9/10
I came because of Michael Mann, but I stayed because it went far beyond what I expected.
cgvsluis29 July 2023
Intense, tension filled crime drama thriller!

I had heard this was Michael Mann's latest project, and being a fan I tuned in to check it out. I was blown away. This series is like nothing else I have seen and I am eagerly awaiting season two.

Tokyo Vice is based on a memoir written by the real life Jake Adelstein and loosely follows his life as an aspiring American crime journalist trying to navigate his way through a career in journalism at a successful Tokyo newspaper when he is fresh out of school. Lots of cultural clashing for the gaijin as he fights to first get a job with the newspaper and then to keep it. He also has to find his was both within the social construct both socially and professionally as he interacts with both the police and the criminal element.

Along the way he meets Sato, a newbie to the local Yakuza organization, and Samantha, a fellow American who works as a host in a hostess bar with dreams of opening her own, socially. Professionally he meets a by the book police officer Hiroto and his own persistent boss Eimi, who patiently does the work to finally get a story published about women who have been filing complaints and then been murdered.

This is a rich and colorful story that is filled with traditions, heart and contradictions. The character building is phenomenal as is the cultural sharing. The series is predominantly in Japanese (as it should be, being set in Tokyo) with English subtitles when necessary, which lends to the feeling of immersion into the story. Tokyo itself is almost an additional character in the series.

I have to talk about the acting which really sells this series...I don't think there is a bad actor in the group, but there are some real standouts in Ken Watanabe and Ansel Elgort, who play the police detective Hiroto Katagiri and the young reporter Jake Adelstein respectively. The respect and friendship building between these two is wonderful, as is the portrayal of the difficult positions that they find themselves in...professionally, morally, etc. The big surprise for me has been the actor Shô Kasamatsu, who plays Sato. His soulful portrayal of a young conflicted Yakuza member on the rise is heart wrenching. The fact that he can pull such emotions out of a spectator to his story is a true testament to his skills as an actor.

I don't want to say any more about the story, only to say you should watch it. This is my number one recommendation of what to watch at the moment and cones with my highest level of recommendation. If you like good tv, you will like and appreciate this well written and well acted show. I am very excited to see what's in store for season two.
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6/10
OK series, totally unbelievable source material
Radu_A13 February 2024
As someone who lived in Japan between 1994 and 2001 and worked for NHK, I must say that this seafarer tale of yakuza, bôsôzoku, mizu shôbai and the occasional murder is a borderline racist hodgepodge of stereotypes. Yet it's not a bad series, as long as you don't believe any of this to be true.

Tokyo is a mega-city of about 37 million people and its police force has over 40000 officers, so the suggestion that a foreign reporter would meet the same cops over and over again is utter nonsense. You wouldn't believe this in London or New York, why would you believe this in Tokyo? Yakuza membership was already declining in the early 1990s and then went into free fall from Chinese and Russian competition, decreasing to about one third of what it was, so the lifestyle relishly illustrated here was already a thing of the past - and Japanese films of the era reflect that (i. E. "Sonatine").

Jake Adelstein's book has been debunked as self-glorifying, albeit entertaining trash. Ansel Elgort makes a real effort to make his character work. A lot of us Japan nerds were somewhat like that. But the atmosphere at work was hostile, as a gaijin you are left in the loop, nobody gives you any serious work, anyone "showing initiative" like Jake here would be relegated to become a madoguchizoku, "someone staring out of the window". In a Japanese company, you have to run everything you do by your superiors, a realistic look at this would be the French film "Fear and Trembling". I suspect that this is pretty much what happened to Adelstein, and that his book was his response, a form of revenge on a culture he initially admired and then felt excluded from. That is exactly why the Japanese keep us foreigners outside, which is what the word foreigner literally means ("outside person").

However, once again - the series is good entertainment, well written and condensed, as long as you don't believe anything.
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9/10
Fantastic, solid show in a very well portrayed Tokyo! Tremendous cast!
maria-ricci-19836 May 2022
Kudos to the casting producer!

Ansel Elgort is the perfect choice to play «Aderustainu-san» in one of the most exciting shows of the season! He has the full package: witty, cheeky, earnest, skilled, tenacious, terribly handsome, barely fragile, fresh and sincere.

I also found Sho Kasamatsu a fantastic finding! He is a magnificent Sato indeed, a performance to be remembered! We are familiar with Ken Watanabe's acting as he is a very well-known actor in the West, and he delivers a fine and credible character as usual. The rest of the cast is also fabulous.

Having lived in Tokyo myself, everything felt very portrayed to me. Only a few secondary actors seemed to be more nissei than issei, or even ethnically mixed.

Elgort's effort at Japanese is remarkable (can he really speak it or was it just coaching and memorizing words for the sake of the show? His aikido shomenuchi moves were also enjoyable); I even found it very funny when he fakes on purpose an awful American accent to pretend he speaks a poor Japanese.

The script was precise, interesting, thrilling. And though I ignore how much of the story is authentic and how much is fiction, it really doesn't matter because you are not expecting to watch a documentary. Just a superb story finely directed, set and performed.

The pilot, by the way, has the signature of Michael Mann, who quite probably is the best Action Pilot Director of the last quarter of century, and it sets the tone for the rest of the episodes.

I am looking forward to second season, and I truly hope they will not let this flunk.
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7/10
Strong start, peters out
anthonyjlangford9 June 2022
I feel like I wasted my time with this series. No spoilers.

It starts strong. Like many new series, the opening episode is the best, to reel you in. While always watchable, it's soon obvious that it's stretching out unnecessarily. Events occuring without really pushing the story forward in more than minimal amounts.

What's really frustrating is towards the end of the season it raises more questions rather than tying anything up. So little is resolved that unless you're fully committed to returning to a second season then its a waste of time.

Many series do this now. Rather than delivering high entertainment to make you want to keep watching, they utilize the bait and hook approach, which feels dishonest. Ultimately, its just frustrating.

How do we know they won't do the same at the end of season 2?

I won't know because I won't be back. Entertaining but fails to live up to the high promise of Episode one.
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Love this show
sundevil6728 February 2024
Might be a little biased because of my fascination and love for everything Japanese, but Ken watanabe is brilliant and the characters are all engaging and layered. Adelstein's acting could get better, but all of the complaining about accuracy and racism or cultural appropriation or smoking - give me a break. If you want 100% accuracy watch a documentary. A lot of the same people who say that stuff will also say it about Batman movies. I just hope that it doesn't get cancelled prematurely like so many other smartly written HBO series' because the marketing budget was crap. Sure, it's exaggerated but the story is good, directing top-notch, and the depiction of the Yakuza is more than just fingers getting sliced off. Satos good/bad character playing the criminal you root for ala tony soprano is brilliantly constructed and acted.
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2/10
What ever happened to endings?
bwdude5 July 2022
I really enjoyed watching the show and would probably have given it a 7 or an 8.

But there seems to be a new trend, not to finish anything by the end of a season. In fact, *everything* stays wide open and new plotlines are introduced in the last episode. Not the only series that does this, sadly.

It's like the first half of a season, only you have to wait half a year or longer to continue, when you already have forgotten most of s01.

If you think that makes me want more and I can not wait for season 2, you are dead wrong.

It only leaves a bitter taste and I will definitely NOT watch any more of it.

At the end of a season, I want an ENDING, a season finale. Yes, give me a cliffhanger for the next season.

But watching for over 8 hours and then be left only with more questions is unsatisfactory and unacceptable.
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10/10
Based on memoirs; enjoyable and a peek into Japanese culture.
mrslegume8 April 2022
I lived in Japan during this time, as a foreigner, a lot of the mistrust and prejudice is accurate. The corporate life is fast paced and grueling. I saw some reviews complain about all the smoking portrayed, I would say it's actually pretty toned down. The majority of adult males in Japan smoke, and English is taught from a young age, people in Tokyo especially have some basic knowledge of it. Fascinating glimpse into this world, really enjoy it so far.
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