[This story contains spoilers from season two, episode eight of Tokyo Vice, “The Noble Path.”]
In many ways, the eighth episode in the second season of Max’s Tokyo Vice could be an extension of the prior episode. And it sets the audience up for the final two installments that promise to be a violent conclusion on power, corruption, loyalty, truth and betrayal within the underside of Japanese culture, the organized crime syndicate known as the yakuza.
But toward the end of this latest hour, viewers may feel some déjà vu from the series premiere, as the events circle around to where the series began. Jake Adelstein (played by Ansel Elgort), the aggressive American journalist who writes for Tokyo’s largest daily newspaper, and Japanese Organized Crime Division Detective Hiroto Katagiri (Ken Watanabe) have their lives threatened by Yabuki (Kazuya Tanabe), the enforcer of Shinzo Tozawa (Ayumi Tanida), who has risen to be the most powerful and deadliest of all the yakuza crime lords.
In many ways, the eighth episode in the second season of Max’s Tokyo Vice could be an extension of the prior episode. And it sets the audience up for the final two installments that promise to be a violent conclusion on power, corruption, loyalty, truth and betrayal within the underside of Japanese culture, the organized crime syndicate known as the yakuza.
But toward the end of this latest hour, viewers may feel some déjà vu from the series premiere, as the events circle around to where the series began. Jake Adelstein (played by Ansel Elgort), the aggressive American journalist who writes for Tokyo’s largest daily newspaper, and Japanese Organized Crime Division Detective Hiroto Katagiri (Ken Watanabe) have their lives threatened by Yabuki (Kazuya Tanabe), the enforcer of Shinzo Tozawa (Ayumi Tanida), who has risen to be the most powerful and deadliest of all the yakuza crime lords.
- 3/22/2024
- by Demetrius Patterson
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The Max potboiler Tokyo Vice is finally back February 8 for a second season of warring gangs, comely lounge hostesses, and Ansel Elgort speaking perfect Japanese. Here, executive producer Alan Poul addresses the delay between seasons, what big story Jake Adelstein plans to work on next, and whether Tozawa’s facial spider veins will get any worse this year.
Deadline: The series last aired in 2022. Why has it taken so long for season 2 to begin?
Alan Poul: it was due to a lot of things. Remember, the first season was shot in the middle of Covid. Just when the show was airing, Warner Brothers Discovery was going through a reshuffling. Nobody wants to make a lot of decisions while everybody’s still figuring out how the chips are going to fall. So all the pickups were put on hold until the new landscape was more clear. So we aired in...
Deadline: The series last aired in 2022. Why has it taken so long for season 2 to begin?
Alan Poul: it was due to a lot of things. Remember, the first season was shot in the middle of Covid. Just when the show was airing, Warner Brothers Discovery was going through a reshuffling. Nobody wants to make a lot of decisions while everybody’s still figuring out how the chips are going to fall. So all the pickups were put on hold until the new landscape was more clear. So we aired in...
- 2/7/2024
- by Lynette Rice
- Deadline Film + TV
Kate Trailer — Cedric Nicolas-Troyan‘s Kate (2021) movie trailer has been released by Netflix. The Kate trailer stars Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Woody Harrelson, Miku Martineau, Tadanobu Asano, Jun Kunimura, Miyavi, Kazuya Tanabe, and Michiel Huisman. Crew Umair Aleem wrote the screenplay for Kate. Nathan Barr created the music for the film. Lyle Vincent crafted [...]
Continue reading: Kate (2021) Movie Trailer: Poisoned Assassin Mary Elizabeth Winstead searches for Revenge in her Last 24 Hours...
Continue reading: Kate (2021) Movie Trailer: Poisoned Assassin Mary Elizabeth Winstead searches for Revenge in her Last 24 Hours...
- 8/5/2021
- by Rollo Tomasi
- Film-Book
[Editor’s Note: The following article contains spoilers for “The Terror: Infamy” Episode 5, “Shatters Like a Pearl.”]
On “The Terror: Infamy,” everyone thinks they know how to identify the enemy. For the American military, it’s anyone of Japanese descent, but more specifically, those who answer “no” to two key questions on a loyalty questionnaire. For Chester Nakayama (Derek Mio), it’s the Japanese who are at war with America and the yurei who has been haunting him.
On Monday’s episode, Chester is stationed at Guadacanal, translating Japanese and breaking codes for the American military. “His whole motivation for going over there was not just to prove his loyalty like [his father] says to do at the end of Episode 1, but Chester’s thinking that he’s going to draw this thing away from his girlfriend and his family,” Mio told IndieWire.
Chester feels he can make a big difference when a Japanese Pow is brought in for questioning and pays more attention to Chester than his superior officer.
On “The Terror: Infamy,” everyone thinks they know how to identify the enemy. For the American military, it’s anyone of Japanese descent, but more specifically, those who answer “no” to two key questions on a loyalty questionnaire. For Chester Nakayama (Derek Mio), it’s the Japanese who are at war with America and the yurei who has been haunting him.
On Monday’s episode, Chester is stationed at Guadacanal, translating Japanese and breaking codes for the American military. “His whole motivation for going over there was not just to prove his loyalty like [his father] says to do at the end of Episode 1, but Chester’s thinking that he’s going to draw this thing away from his girlfriend and his family,” Mio told IndieWire.
Chester feels he can make a big difference when a Japanese Pow is brought in for questioning and pays more attention to Chester than his superior officer.
- 9/10/2019
- by Hanh Nguyen
- Indiewire
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