Tokyo Vice (TV series)

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Tokyo Vice
GenreCrime drama
Created byJ. T. Rogers
Based onTokyo Vice: An American Reporter on the Police Beat in Japan
by Jake Adelstein
Starring
Composers
  • Danny Bensi
  • Saunder Jurriaans
Country of originUnited States
Original languages
  • English
  • Japanese
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes18
Production
Executive producers
ProducersRalph Winter
Satch Watanabe
Production locationsTokyo, Japan
Cinematography
  • John Grillo
  • Diego García
  • Katsumi Yanagijima
  • Daniel Satinoff
Running time54–63 minutes
Production companies
  • Gerson Saines Productions
  • Grisbi
  • SRO Productions
  • Boku Films
  • Forward Pass
  • Wowow
  • Fifth Season (formerly Endeavor Content)
Original release
Network
ReleaseApril 7, 2022 (2022-04-07) –
present (present)

Tokyo Vice is an American crime drama television series created by J. T. Rogers and based on the 2009 book of the same title by Jake Adelstein. It premiered on April 7, 2022, on HBO Max. It stars Ansel Elgort and Ken Watanabe in lead roles. In June 2022, the series was renewed for a second season, which premiered on February 8, 2024.[1]

Premise[edit]

In 1999, American journalist Jake Adelstein has relocated to Tokyo and must pass a written exam in Japanese to have the chance to join the staff of a major Japanese newspaper. He succeeds in becoming their first foreign-born journalist and starts at the very bottom. Taken under the wing of a veteran detective in the vice squad, he starts to explore the dark and dangerous world of the Japanese yakuza whilst living under the city's official line that "murder does not happen in Tokyo".

Cast and characters[edit]

Main[edit]

  • Ansel Elgort as Jake Adelstein, an American journalist from Missouri who moves to Tokyo. The longer he stays, the more he delves into the corruption of Tokyo's seedy underworld, where no one is as they seem.
  • Ken Watanabe as Hiroto Katagiri, a detective in the organized crime division of the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department. He acts as a father figure to Adelstein and helps guide him through the thin and often precarious line between the law and organized crime.
  • Rachel Keller as Samantha Porter, an American expatriate living in Tokyo and former Mormon who makes her living as a hostess in the Onyx Club of the Kabukicho district, and later starts her own club. Her clients vary from salarymen to high-end clients and yakuza.
  • Hideaki Itō as Jin Miyamoto (season 1; guest season 2), a vice squad detective who is Jake's first contact in the Tokyo police but who is secretly working with the yakuza.
  • Show Kasamatsu as Akiro Sato, an enforcer in the Chihara-kai yakuza clan who collects protection money and is Samantha's handler at the Onyx Club. He secretly has a crush on her and is disillusioned by the yakuza lifestyle which he sees as anachronistic.
  • Ella Rumpf as Polina (season 1; guest season 2), an Eastern European migrant, and a struggling new hostess at the Onyx Club with Samantha. A kind-hearted but naive woman, she came to Tokyo to work as a model but was pulled into the seedy underbelly of Kabukicho.
  • Rinko Kikuchi as Emi Maruyama, Adelstein's supervisor and a senior journalist for the Meicho Shimbun newspaper. Maruyama is a composite of the various colleagues and supervisors who worked with the real-life Adelstein during his career.
  • Tomohisa Yamashita as Akira, Polina's boyfriend who works at a host club.
  • Miki Maya as Shoko Nagata (season 2), a detective from the National Police Agency assigned to Tokyo, who seeks to create a new task force to permanently eradicate organized crime in the city.
  • Yōsuke Kubozuka as Naoki Hayama (season 2), a high-ranking yakuza in the Chihara-kai, who is newly released from a 7-year imprisonment and is appointed as Ishida's second-in-command.

Recurring[edit]

  • Shun Sugata as Hitoshi Ishida, the leader of the Chihara-kai yakuza clan
  • Takaki Uda as Jun "Trendy" Shinohara, Jake's handsome friend and co-worker
  • Kosuke Tanaka as Makoto "Tintin" Kurihira, Jake's witty friend and co-worker
  • Masato Hagiwara as Duke (season 1), the owner of the Onyx hostess club
  • Kōsuke Toyohara as Baku, Jake's by-the-books, racist nationalist boss
  • Masayoshi Haneda as Yoshihiro Kume (season 1; guest season 2), Sato's direct superior within the Chihara-kai who is later revealed to be a mole working for the Tozawa organization
  • Eugene Nomura as Kobayashi (season 1; guest season 2), Ishida's right-hand man and a high-ranking member of the Chihara-kai
  • Kazuya Tanabe as Masamune Yabuki, the second-in-command of the Tozawa yakuza clan
  • Nobushige Suematsu as Gen, a member of the Chihara-kai who has an internal conflict with Sato
  • Koshi Uehara as Taro, a high-ranking member of the Chihara-kai
  • Noémie Nakai as Luna (season 1; guest season 2), the most prestigious hostess at the Onyx club
  • Rosaria Mokkhavesa as Malee (season 1), the most esteemed hostess at Onyx
  • Ayumi Tanida as Shinzo Tozawa, the leader of the Tozawa yakuza clan, a rival organization to the Chihara-kai, who is trying to establish himself in Tokyo while suffering from an incurable health condition
  • Yuka Itaya as Junko Katagiri, Hiroto's wife
  • Chisato Yamasaki as Natsumi Katagiri, Hiroto's elder daughter
  • Kaho Yamasaki as Shino Katagiri, Hiroto's younger daughter
  • Motoki Kobayashi as Haruki Ukai (season 1; guest season 2), a writer and meth user who publishes articles about the Tozawa organization, with their approval
  • Jundai Yamada as Matsuo (season 1), a cultured man who becomes one of Samantha's clients and later reveals that he was hired to track her down
  • Ayumi Ito as Misaki Taniguchi, Shinzo Tozawa's mistress and a former model
  • Bokuzō Masana as Ozaki (season 2; guest season 1), Baku's supervisor and an executive at Meicho
  • Keita as Kei Maruyama (season 2; guest season 1), Emi's mentally ill brother
  • Makiko Watanabe as Kazuko Tozawa (season 2; guest season 1), Shinzo Tozawa's wife
  • Yohei Matsukado as Hagino (season 2; guest season 1), a high-ranking member of the Tozawa organization and a confidant to Kazuko and Misaki
  • Masaki Miura as Funaki (season 2; guest season 1), a senior detective and Katagiri's friend
  • Atomu Mizuishi as Kaito Sato (season 2; guest season 1), Sato's eager younger brother, who seeks to reconnect, despite their parents' qualms
  • Syû Sekimoto as Etsuo (season 2), a low-ranking member of the Chihara-kai
  • Takayuki Suzuki as Masahiro Ohno (season 2), a wealthy architect and one of Samantha's best customers at her new hostess club
  • Hyunri Lee as Erika (season 2), the retired former owner of Club Destiny, where Samantha first worked as a hostess, who goes into business with Samantha
  • Ukyo Nakamura as Daichi (season 2), Erika's son
  • Soji Arai as Shingo Murata (season 2), Emi's lover and an editor for the Tokyo Weekly newspaper
  • Yoshinori Miyata as Kenji (season 2), the barman at Samantha's club
  • Aoi Takeya as Jason Aoki (season 2), a Japanese-American working at the U.S. embassy and Trendy's lover

Guest[edit]

  • Jessica Hecht as Willa Adelstein, Jake's mother
  • Sarah Sawyer as Jessica Adelstein, Jake's sister who sends him audio letters on tapes and has been in mental health treatment
  • Hiroshi Sogabe as Sugita (season 1), the head of the Suzuno insurance company, which manipulates people into debt with the Tozawa organization
  • Nanami Kawakami as Yuka (season 1), a young woman Jake hooks up with while hanging out with Sato, later revealed to be a prostitute
  • Fumiya Kimura as Koji (season 1), Sato's first recruit within the Chihara-kai
  • Renji Ishibashi as Noboru Nakahara, the chairman of the Tozawa organization, and Kazuko's uncle-in-law
  • Toru Shinagawa as Koichi Tanaka, an elderly yakuza sōsai
  • Sotaro Tanaka as Dr. Shimizu, an underground doctor, who treats members of the Chihara-kai
  • Miyuki Matsuda as Inaba, the owner of a host club who pays protection money to the Tozawa organization
  • Hajime Inoue as Jotaro Shigematsu, the Minister of Transport, who gets blackmailed by the Tozawa organization
  • Kojun Notsu as Ide, a police captain and Katagiri's supervisor
  • Akiko Iwase as Rie Sato, Sato's mother
  • Danny Burstein as Eddie Adelstein, Jake's father
  • Nadia Parkes as Claudine (season 2), a classy, but brazen British hostess and Samantha's biggest earner
  • On Nakano as Tats (season 2), the leader of a Bōsōzoku biker gang, whom Jake investigates after a series of motorcycle thefts
  • Hinata Arakawa as Chika (season 2), Tats' younger sister and member of his gang
  • Geraldine Hughes as Lynn Oberfield (season 2), an FBI agent working with the U.S. Foreign Service at the U.S. embassy in Tokyo
  • Kouichirou Kanzaki as Hishinuma (season 2), the elderly leader of the Hishinuma-kai yakuza clan
  • Takao Kin as Ota (season 2), a former member of the Chihara-kai, who was exiled to Nagano
  • Shoken Kunimoto as Ichikawa (season 2), Hishinuma's lawyer
  • Yayoi Sanmi as Sakura Igarashi (season 2), Tozawa's new, younger lover
  • Yuta Koga as Shinjiro (season 2), a former member of the Hishinuma-kai, who is hired by Tozawa for an assassination
  • Vincent Gale as Dean Kudisch (season 2), the senior editor of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in America
  • Marcel Jeannin as Dr. Edward Walker (season 2), the chief of organ transplantation at the Southern Minnesota Metropolitan General Hospital, where he secretly treated Tozawa
  • Shoken Kunimoto as Ichikawa (season 2), the leader of the Ichikawa-gumi, a yakuza organization
  • Kako Kariya as Yayoi Taniguchi (season 2), Misaki's mother
  • Koshiro Asami as Noguchi (season 2), the CEO of Suzaku Financial and an associate of Tozawa's

Episodes[edit]

SeasonEpisodesOriginally released
First releasedLast released
18April 7, 2022 (2022-04-07)April 28, 2022 (2022-04-28)
210February 8, 2024 (2024-02-08)April 4, 2024 (2024-04-04)

Season 1 (2022)[edit]

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal release date
11"The Test"Michael MannJ. T. RogersApril 7, 2022 (2022-04-07)
In 1999, Jake Adelstein is an aspiring American journalist who sits for the entrance test at Japan's largest newspaper, Meicho Shimbun. Despite not answering all the questions, he is hired and assigned the police press department under the taciturn Emi Muroyama. His first assignment is to report on the murder of Mr. Aoki and at the police briefing, he meets Detective Miyamoto. He visits Aoki's house and finds that he was deep in debt to a company that does not seem to exist, however when he includes this in his draft article, he is told to follow the police report and not jump to conclusions. After work, he goes out to a nightclub with Miyamoto and meets the hostess, Samantha, a fellow American migrant, and crosses paths with members of the yakuza Chihara-kai clan. He goes with Miyamoto to Kabukicho to report on an incident. He meets the jaded detective Hiroto Katagiri and they witness a man who commits suicide by self-immolation. Jake visits the suicidal man's wife, who tells him that her husband was also in debt. Muroyama tells Jake she is not interested in a possible connection and instructs him to move on from the story, but Jake seems determined to investigate further.
22"Kishi Kaisei"Josef Kubota WladykaKarl Taro GreenfeldApril 7, 2022 (2022-04-07)
Jake struggles to find a good story to keep his job while he tries to investigate the deaths of the two indebted men. With money earned working as a hostess at Onyx nightclub, Samantha is planning to open her own club but finds many impediments in her way. Chihara-kai's protection racket is challenged by their rival, Tozawa’s gang, but the leader Hitoshi refuses to retaliate because he believes an open war with Tozawa would attract too much police attention. When Jake takes some photographs of an altercation between the gangs, he is spotted by Katagiri, who confiscates the photo and tells him not to report this. However, Jake presses him to meet for another potential story.
33"Read The Air"Josef Kubota WladykaArthur PhillipsApril 7, 2022 (2022-04-07)
Jake visits Katagiri's home, where he reveals the building tension between the Tozawa and Chihara-kai gangs in Tokyo which the police are trying to avoid becoming a gang war. Katagiri invites Jake to witness the arrest of Nakamura and two other members of Tozawa's gang after they disturb the peace, and after his story is published, Jake's standing in the office increases. Jake unsuccessfully tries to press Samantha for information about her background. He pays a visit to Katagiri who tells him he cannot officially give him his case file on the loan company, but then has his daughter 'take' the file, and give it to Jake. The file reveals that Aoki's wife was planning to sue the loan company before he was murdered. Jake gets the registered number of the company, but before he can act he is picked up by members of the Chihara-kai clan.
44"I Want It That Way"HikariNaomi IizukaApril 14, 2022 (2022-04-14)
Jake is taken before Hitoshi Ishida, oyabun of the Chihara-kai clan who surprisingly asks Jake to find the Tozawa informant in his clan who is spreading rumors that he is working with the police. On Jake's return, Maruyama makes a connection with the loan company to a woman's suicide in Machiya and she takes Jake with her to investigate, however it leads to another dead end. Sato appears increasingly dissatisfied with yakuza life and takes Jake to a night out of clubbing and women. Later at an expensive restaurant they encounter Tozawa, and contrary to Sato's advice Jake openly identifies him, furthering his involvement and exposure to the yakuza. Meanwhile, Samantha's plans to open her own club begin unravelling: one of her clients, Matsuo, reveals that he is pursuing her for the money she stole in the past, and one of the girls has revealed her plans for her own club to Duke, the owner of the Onyx hostess club.
55"Everybody Pays"HikariAdam SteinApril 14, 2022 (2022-04-14)
Samantha reveals to Polina that she arrived in Japan as a Mormon missionary five years earlier and that she stole $40,000 when she left the organization to remain in Japan. Katagiri gives Jake the name of the Tozawa mole in the Chihara-kai clan to give to Ishida, warning him not to accept any favors in return. Nevertheless, Jake asks Ishida about the loan shark story he is doing, and Ishida suggests that Jake investigate those who refused to lend to the people desperate for money. Jake tracks down the Suzuno company and loan manager Sugita who admits to sending people to the loan sharks. However, Jake later finds Sugita dead, with a note accepting all blame and not mentioning Tozawa. Meanwhile, Yoshihiro Kume, Sato's direct superior, prepares to discipline him for not controlling Samantha, but he is then called out by Ishida as the Tozawa mole. Ishida orders Sato to kill Kume, but he jumps from the top of the building instead. Sato confronts Samantha about her recalcitrant behavior, reminding her that "Everybody Pays" and they spend the night together. Both Jake and Sato have misgivings about the paths that they have taken. Meanwhile Samantha tries to pay off Matsuo but instead he declares that she is sexually beholden to him, or he will tell on her. Sato returns to Chihara-kai headquarters to find that it has been attacked by Tozawa assassins and helps Ishida fight off the remaining two men. Ishida kills one of them, saving Sato, although Ishida is badly wounded.
66"The Information Business"Josef Kubota WladykaJessica BrickmanApril 21, 2022 (2022-04-21)
Jake tracks down Ukai Haruki, a writer and meth user who has published articles about Tozawa in yakuza fan magazines. He gets a lead on Tozawa's girlfriend, Misaki, however she is uncooperative. At a meeting of the Tokyo yakuza council to resolve the conflict between Tozawa and the Chihara-kai clan, chairman Nakahara forces Tozawa to pay compensation and humbly apologize for his actions. However it is later revealed that Nakahara has been sponsoring Tozawa against the Chihara-kai. Matsuo again pressures Samantha to cater to his needs, also revealing that her father hired him to track her down. Sato takes Jake to Ishida who tells him that a shipment of Tozawa's shabu is arriving by air so he can inform the police and get a scoop. Jake tells Katagiri who is circumspect and refuses to act, so Jake takes the information to Miyamoto. Miyamoto leads a police raid on the suspect airplane with Jake in tow, but they find nothing and Jake has to withstand the ire of Katagiri who later arrives on the scene. To help Samantha, Sato tries to scare off Matsuo but instead Sato loses his composure and kills him. Emi and the editor force Jake to write a story about police incompetence over the failed raid, further ruining Jake's reputation with the police and revealing his rookie status in the information business. Meanwhile, Miyamoto explains to Tozawa how he protected the hidden drug shipment during the raid, and that it was Jake Adelstein who provided the tip-off.
77"Sometimes They Disappear"Josef Kubota WladykaBrad Caleb KaneApril 21, 2022 (2022-04-21)
The body of a mechanic at the airport of the failed drug raid is found floating in the river furthering Katagiri's suspicions that Miyamoto is working for Tozawa and convinces his boss to set a trap to obtain evidence. Emi attends a police briefing announcing the arrest of a man by Miyamoto for the murderer of a young woman, Kaori Shoda, but Emi suspects that there is more to the story. Samantha is concerned for Polina who appears to have disappeared and asks Sato to look into the matter, placing further strain on their faltering relationship. Tozawa attends a function for his 52nd birthday after receiving an injection for his worsening health, but he collapses during the evening and calls for Misaki. On the same night Jake takes Dave Fisch, a friend from Missouri he met earlier in the day, out to a trendy nightclub where he encounters Misaki and they spend the evening together until Tozawa's men arrive and take her away. At police headquarters, Katagiri tells Miyamoto that evidence for his case against Tozawa is stored in the basement, prompting Miyamoto to break into the room after hours to copy it for Tozawa. He only finds an empty evidence box but sees a surveillance camera and realizes that he has been exposed. Meanwhile, Sato finds that Polina has run up a huge debt trying to please her erstwhile boyfriend Akira and has been sent away to service the debt. Sato tells Samantha that "sometimes they disappear", prompting her to go to Jake's apartment for help to find Polina.
88"Yoshino"Alan PoulJ. T. RogersApril 28, 2022 (2022-04-28)
Miyamoto confronts Katagiri over the surveillance footage that confirms his connection with Tozawa, and Katagiri offers him a way to make amends by feeding Tozawa misinformation. Meanwhile, Jake and Samantha offer Ukai Haruki meth in exchange for information on Yoshino which he reveals that Yoshino is a boat which Tozawa uses to entertain his VIP guests, including offering Western women for sex. Miyamoto passes information from Tozawa onto Katagiri that a shipment of drugs is arriving at a port warehouse. Meanwhile, Akira approaches Samantha, saying that Polina's abductors have asked for 10 million yen to release her.However,Akira is in league with them and they take her money, leaving her penniless. Jake is attacked in his apartment by two of Tozawa's men and warned off. Samantha approaches Ishida's moneylenders for a loan to start her own club, and they agree. Sato is put in charge of the operation and tells Samantha, but as he leaves, he is repeatedly stabbed by Gen. Katagiri waits for hours at the port warehouse where he is eventually greeted by Tozawa who threatens to kill Katagiri's family if he interferes in his business and that he has "dealt with" Miyamoto. The next morning, Jake finds a videotape outside his door showing Polina being kicked to death by a member of the Tozawa clan on a boat after refusing the Vice Minister of National Affairs' sexual advances . He takes the tape to Katagiri, who is alone since his family left town.

Season 2 (2024)[edit]

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal release date [2]
91"Don't Ever F**king Miss"Alan PoulJ. T. Rogers & Brad Caleb KaneFebruary 8, 2024 (2024-02-08)
While Sato lays in hospital recovering from his stab wounds, his replacement, Kobayashi, inspects Samantha's club, saying Sato is on holiday. Meanwhile, Chihara-Kai members Taro, Yuta, and Koji arrive at the hospital and take Sato out to a car driven by Gen who now owes a lifetime debt to Sato. Hiroto gets a tip that Jin is in a hotel in Ueno, but when he arrives he finds Jin dead, apparently from a drug overdose which is then officially reported as a heart attack. Jake visits Misaki Taniguchi and tells her the Yoshino boat on which Polina was killed is registered in her name and pressures her to details of Tozawa's current location. However, a fire in the Meicho building destroys the tape, destroying the evidence and killing the story. Ishida learns that Tozawa had left the country and was very ill. Samantha recalls Polina telling a story from her youth when her grandfather saved her from a wolf, saying "Polina, don't ever miss". Hiroto threatens Shigematsu and extracts information that Tozawa wanted assistance to enter the United States but Shigematsu could not help him.
102"Be My Number One"Alan PoulKarl Taro GreenfeldFebruary 8, 2024 (2024-02-08)
Samantha accuses Claudine, her most successful hostess, of stealing from the club and consequently fires her. Emi offers jake a choice of two stories, motorcycle thefts in the region or a possible Yakuza murder and Jake chooses the motorcycle story. Hiroto is held responsible for Jin's death and is taken off criminal investigations, spending his time dealing with minor issues in the complaint department. Naoki Hayama is welcomed back to the Chihara-Kai after spending seven years in Fuchu on the group's behalf and Ishida announces that he will resume his position as wakagashira, so Sato will report to him. Shoko Nagata from the National Police Agency (NPA) approaches Hiroto to work for her in a new task force to deal with the Yakuza crime. With reservations, he accepts the job. Sato reluctantly engages his young brother Kaito to build a website to sell sneakers which he aquired through a loan default, and it proves very successful. Acting on a tip from Samantha, Jake successfully infiltrates a group of bikers led by Tats who steal motorcycles to sell parts on the black market and he gains their trust. Sato tells Samantha that she must rehire Claudine to retain her clients but Samantha refuses, putting her at risk of losing the club. She approaches her highly experienced former boss, Erika, and convinces her to help out at the club in place of Claudine. Samantha entertains the important client herself, architect Ohno, and successfully captivates him. Hayama starts causing problems by beginning to extract money from a club which formerly paid tribute to Tozawa. Misaki and Jake rekindle their affair.
113"Old Law, New Twist"Josef Kubota WladykaFrancine VolpeFebruary 15, 2024 (2024-02-15)
Jake receives kudos after his story about the motorcycles is published. Tozawa learns that Hayama of the Chihara-Kai have been moving in on his territory during his absence. Following a night at Club Polina, Sato drives Erika home and realize they have a lot in common. Emi gives Trendy, Tin-Tin, and Jake invitations to a party by the U.S. Ambassador in his home the following night hoping they are able to cultivate sources. Jake invites Misaki and she reluctantly agrees. Samantha approaches Sato and asks him to stop Hayama disrupting her club and he agrees only if she gets information from client Masahiro Ohno about the location of a new railway station so the group can buy up surrounding land. While the Hishinuma-Kai leader is meeting with Chihara-Kai member Kobayashi to discuss a merger between the two clans, Shoko and Hiroto lead an exploratory raid on the premises making multiple arrests. At the U.S. Ambassador's party, Trendy strikes up a friendship an American embassy official, Jason Aoki, while Misaki spots someone associated with Tozawa and leaves panic-stricken. Chika, Tats' younger sister, asks Jake to help her brother while in prison and so he asks Sato to provide protection for him. Ishida presses Samantha to the information from Ohno and she agrees if he gives her sole ownership of her club.
124"Like a New Man"Josef Kubota WladykaAshley M. DarnallFebruary 22, 2024 (2024-02-22)
At a summit of Yakuza clans to discuss the new police initiative, Tozawa agrees with Ishida's advice that they stay united to avoid being wiped out. However in private, Tozawa expresses his anger that the Chihara-Kai has been encroaching on his territory. Friction between Hayama and Ishida increases as they disagree on what strategy to take with Tozawa. Although he disagrees with their use, Ishidsa sends Hayama and Sato to procure some guns from a dealer in Nagano. Jake and Misaki meet and she warns him to stay away from her as Tozawa has returned, fully recovered from his ill health. Shingo tells Emi that he suspects Baku could have burnt the video evidence to save the Meicho's reputation. Ohno drives Samantha to his spacious house near the ocean where she secretly photographs some documents, but he discovers his briefcase has been touched and confronts her. In Nagano, Hayama and Sato meet the gun dealer Ota, but after a long drinking session, Hayama kills Ota. He and Sato burn down the house containing Ota's body and have to walk back to town through the snow. Meanwhile, Jake has seen Tozawa and follows him in a taxi. Tozawa visits his uncle-in-law Noboru Nakahara, chairman of the Tozawa organization, and suggests that Nakahara step down. Nakahara is furious when his men support Tozawa. While waiting in the street outside, Jake witnesses Nakahara fall to his death.
135"Illness of the Trade"Takeshi FukunagaAdam SteinFebruary 29, 2024 (2024-02-29)
Jake tells Emi he saw Nakahara's death but has no photographic evidence. At his holiday house, Ohno tells Samantha offers her details for another building proposal which Samantha can give to Ishida to fulfill her part of the bargain. Funaki tells a suspicious Hiroto that it will be announced that Nakahara committed suicide because they found a suicide note. Shingo tells Emi that a series of corporations owned by Tozawa, are in his wife's name and that Baku is affiliated with one of the right-wing groups which has received donations from them. Jake gives Tin-Tin information about the Shimbashi Station but he bungles his interview with the Transportation Secretary who announces the details before Tin-Tin can expose any corruption. Jake steals Tozawa's medical file showing he was admitted to a center to treat liver disease - an occupational Yakuza illness called shokugoyo - due to the consumption of alcohol, shabu and use of unsterilized tattoo needles. Ishida invites Sato to a meeting with Ohno and Samantha at her club to get information about another building project. Sato tells Jake that some Yakuza travel to Thailand for blood transfusions to treat shokugoyo which can delay their decline. Ishida confides to Sato that Hayama will become the Oyabun if he dies and Sato must be loyal to him. While they are in the club, two hooded gunmen arrive and begin shooting, killing Ohno among others and fatally wounding Ishida when he attacks one of them.
146"I Choose You"Takeshi FukunagaAnnie Julia Wyman & Joshua KaplanMarch 7, 2024 (2024-03-07)
A flashback explains Sato's loyalty to Ishida as he races the heavily bleeding Oyuban to Chihara-Kai HQ. He whispers something to Sato before he dies. Samantha is questioned by Shoko about the shooting in the club but reveals nothing. Shoko also questions Tozawa who provides an alibi. However, Samantha draws for Jake a tatoo she saw on one of the shooter's wrists. Jake then shows the drawing to Ukai who says that it is from the Hishinuma kai, and two men have the same tattoo. Jake later shows the sketch to Hiroto and Shoko, and Katagiri instantly recalls the men with the tattoo. Meanwhile, Hayama cajoles Kaito into an almost suicidal attempt to kill Tozawa which is later foiled by a furious Sato. That night, Katagiri and Shoko visit a junk yard where they find the battered corpse of one of the gunmen and realize they must find his partner before he is also killed. When a story of the shootout at Club Polina by Tin-Tin links Samantha to the Yakuza, Jake is furious at the divulgence of his source. He storms out and heads to the airport, leaving for Missouri and his father's birthday. Late that night, Katagiri returns home to find the second of the Hishinuma-kai gunman waiting for him.
157"The War at Home"Eva SørhaugBrad Caleb KaneMarch 14, 2024 (2024-03-14)
Jake returns to Missouri and joins his family in celebrating his father's birthday. Back in Japan, Katagiri takes the Hishinuma-kai gunman named Shinjiro to the District Attorney, but while held up in traffic, Shinjiro is assassinated by two men on a motorcycle. Katagiri suspects a Tozawa mole in the department. Samantha does what she can to get her club operational again and keep her girls employed. In Chihara-Kai HQ, Hayama accuses Sato of disloyalty and threatens to kill Kaito if he retaliates, then banishes Sato from the clan, the only family he has known. Katagiri calls Jake and asks him to investigate the hepatology department at SMMC for liver transplants. Jake travels there and blackmails Dr. Walker into revealing a operation on Tozawa. Back in Japan, two men wearing ski masks begin shooting at club run by Tozawa, and as they flee, one is revealed to be Kaito.
168"The Noble Path"Eva SørhaugArthur PhillipsMarch 21, 2024 (2024-03-21)
179"Consequences"Josef Kubota WladykaJen SilvermanMarch 28, 2024 (2024-03-28)
1810"Endgame"Josef Kubota WladykaJ. T. RogersApril 4, 2024 (2024-04-04)

Production[edit]

Development[edit]

Tokyo Vice was initially set up as a movie in 2013, with Daniel Radcliffe attached to star as Adelstein. Anthony Mandler was set to direct, and development was advanced enough to where a production start of mid-2014 was set.[3] In June 2019, the project was repurposed as a television series, receiving an eight-episode order from WarnerMedia to be streamed on its streaming service HBO Max. Ansel Elgort was to be executive producer on the series, with J. T. Rogers writing and Destin Daniel Cretton directing.[4] In October 2019, Michael Mann was hired to direct the pilot episode and also serve as an executive producer of the series.[5] The series premiered on April 7, 2022, with the first three episodes available immediately, followed by two episodes on a weekly basis until the season finale on April 28, 2022.[6] On June 7, 2022, HBO Max renewed the series for a second season.[7] Season Two returned on February 8, 2024.[8]

Casting[edit]

In addition to his executive producing announcement, Ansel Elgort was also set to star.[4] In September 2019, Ken Watanabe was added to the cast.[9] In February 2020, Odessa Young and Ella Rumpf were added to the cast.[10] In March 2020, it was announced that Rinko Kikuchi joined the cast, and that shooting began the previous month in Tokyo.[11] In October 2020, Rachel Keller was cast to replace Young.[12] In September 2021, Hideaki Itō, Shō Kasamatsu and Tomohisa Yamashita were announced as series regulars, with Shun Sugata, Masato Hagiwara, Ayumi Tanida and Kōsuke Toyohara joining as recurring.[13] In November 2022 Aoi Takeya and Takayuki Suzuki were announced to be cast.[14][15]

Filming[edit]

Principal photography on the series began on March 5, 2020. On March 17, 2020, it was announced that production had halted due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Tokyo.[16][17] Production resumed on November 26, 2020, and concluded on June 8, 2021.[18][19] Production for the second season started in November 2022 in Tokyo and concluded in August 2023.[20][21]

Release[edit]

HBO Max and its sibling service HBO Go hold streaming rights to the series in countries where either service is available including the United States, Latin America, and certain European and Asian markets, while Wowow, also a co-producer, holds rights in Japan. Elsewhere, international distributor Endeavor Content has sold broadcast/streaming rights to the series to Crave in Canada, Canal+ in France, Paramount+ in Australia, OSN+ in the Middle East and Northern Africa region, LionsgatePlay in India[22] and Starzplay in select European markets including the UK and Ireland.[23] The BBC purchased second-window rights to the series in the UK, and began to air it in November 2022 on BBC One,[24][25] with all episodes available for six months on the BBC's iPlayer service.[26]

Reception[edit]

For the first season, the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported an approval rating of 85% based on 25 reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "Tokyo Vice's protagonist is its least interesting element, but the intrigue of Japan's underworld and the verisimilitude of its setting make for a seductive slice of neo-noir."[27] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 75 out of 100 based on 27 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[28]

For the second season, Rotten Tomatoes reported an approval rating of 92% based on 13 reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "Fully settled into its dense cast of compelling characters and rich milieu, Tokyo Vice's sophomore season is a riveting crime chronicle."[29] Metacritic assigned a score of 78 out of 100 based on 9 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[30]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "'Tokyo Vice' season 2 first look reveals new characters, new dangers". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on 2023-12-05. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
  2. ^ "Shows A-Z - Tokyo Vice on max". The Futon Critic. Archived from the original on May 18, 2023. Retrieved January 17, 2024.
  3. ^ McClintock, Pamela (November 5, 2013). "AFM: Daniel Radcliffe to Star in Japanese Underworld Thriller 'Tokyo Vice'". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on February 12, 2021. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  4. ^ a b Andreeva, Nellie (June 6, 2019). "WarnerMedia Streamer Orders 'Tokyo Vice' Drama Series Starring Ansel Elgort From Endeavor Content". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on April 13, 2020. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  5. ^ Fleming, Mike Jr. (October 22, 2019). "Michael Mann To Direct Ansel Elgort & Ken Watanabe In Pilot Episode Of HBO Max Series 'Tokyo Vice'". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on June 21, 2020. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  6. ^ Del Rosario, Alexandra (February 7, 2022). "'Tokyo Vice': HBO Max's Ken Watanabe-Ansel Elgort Drama Gets Premiere Date". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on March 4, 2022. Retrieved February 7, 2022.
  7. ^ Mitovich, Matt Webb (June 7, 2022). "Tokyo Vice Renewed for Season 2". TVLine. Archived from the original on June 7, 2022. Retrieved June 7, 2022.
  8. ^ "'Tokyo Vice': When to Expect Return of Max Drama". 9 January 2024. Archived from the original on 10 January 2024. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
  9. ^ Andreeva, Nellie; Petski, Denise (September 12, 2019). "'Tokyo Vice': Ken Watanabe To Star In HBO Max Drama Series". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on February 9, 2022. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  10. ^ Ramos, Dino-Ray (February 19, 2020). "Odessa Young & Ella Rumpf Join 'Tokyo Vice' At HBO Max". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on February 9, 2022. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  11. ^ Blair, Gavin J. (March 4, 2020). "Rinko Kikuchi to Star in Michael Mann's HBO Max Series 'Tokyo Vice' (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on April 13, 2021. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  12. ^ Andreeva, Nellie (October 30, 2020). "Rachel Keller Joins 'Tokyo Vice', Replacing Odessa Young, As HBO Max Series Eyes Return To Production". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on February 9, 2022. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
  13. ^ Grater, Tom (September 15, 2021). "HBO Max's 'Tokyo Vice Adds Hideaki Ito, Show Kasamatsu & Tomohisa Yamashita As Series Regulars". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on 16 September 2021. Retrieved 16 September 2021.
  14. ^ Cordero, Rosy (November 10, 2022). "'Tokyo Vice': Newcomer Aoi Takeya Boards Season 2". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on November 10, 2022. Retrieved November 11, 2022.
  15. ^ Otterson, Joe (November 22, 2022). "'Tokyo Vice' Season 2 at HBO Max Casts Takayuki Suzuki (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety. Archived from the original on November 22, 2022. Retrieved November 23, 2022.
  16. ^ Brzeki, Patrick (March 17, 2020). "Coronavirus: Michael Mann's HBO Max Series 'Tokyo Vice' Halts Production in Japan". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on April 6, 2020. Retrieved June 20, 2020.
  17. ^ Fleming, Mike Jr. (May 15, 2020). "Reopening Hollywood: Michael Mann On Resuming Ansel Elgort-Ken Watanabe HBO Max Drama 'Tokyo Vice'; And What About That 'Heat' Prequel?". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on February 9, 2022. Retrieved June 20, 2020.
  18. ^ White, Peter (November 23, 2020). "Japan's Wowow Boards Michael Mann's 'Tokyo Vice' As Co-Producer As Production Resumes This Week". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on November 23, 2020. Retrieved August 9, 2021.
  19. ^ "Tokyo Vice". Variety Insight. Archived from the original on June 10, 2021. Retrieved July 28, 2021.
  20. ^ Brzeski, Patrick (October 26, 2022). "'Tokyo Vice' Producer Alan Poul Talks Season 2, Why Japan's Capital Is the "Most Difficult" City to Shoot". Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on November 11, 2022. Retrieved November 11, 2022.
  21. ^ Ramachandran, Naman (2023-08-10). "'Tokyo Vice' Season 2 Filming Complete, Terrence Malick 'Very Happy' With 'The Way of the Wind,' Producer Alex Boden Confirms (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety. Archived from the original on 2023-12-02. Retrieved 2023-10-05.
  22. ^ Watch Tokyo Vice in Streaming Online | Shows | LIONSGATEPLAY, archived from the original on 2023-04-20, retrieved 2023-04-20
  23. ^ Middleton, Richard (April 7, 2022). "Canal+, Paramount+ in Oz among buyers of HBO Max & Wowow's 'Tokyo Vice'". Television Business International. Informa. Archived from the original on April 8, 2022. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  24. ^ Goldbart, Max (April 13, 2022). "BBC Buys HBO Max's Ansel Elgort-Starring 'Tokyo Vice' From Endeavor Content". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on April 13, 2022. Retrieved April 13, 2022.
  25. ^ TV tonight: the gritty underworld of 90s Japan in Tokyo Vice Archived 2022-11-22 at the Wayback Machine, The Guardian, 22 November 2022
  26. ^ Tokyo Vice Archived 2022-11-22 at the Wayback Machine, BBC iPlayer. Accessed 22 November 2022
  27. ^ "Tokyo Vice: Season 1". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved July 10, 2023.
  28. ^ "Tokyo Vice: Season 1". Metacritic. Fandom, Inc. Retrieved July 15, 2022.
  29. ^ "Tokyo Vice: Season 2". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved April 16, 2024.
  30. ^ "Tokyo Vice: Season 2". Metacritic. Fandom, Inc. Retrieved April 16, 2024.

External links[edit]