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‘Tokyo Vice’ Season 2 Review — The Plot Thickens in Slick Crime Thriller

Feb 3, 2024


The Big Picture

Tokyo Vice Season 2 continues its neon-lit and blood-soaked tale of two men risking their lives to bring down the yakuza. The season expands the story by introducing new additions to the cast and exploring the personal lives of the show’s main characters. The series remains one of TV’s best-looking shows, with a strong anchor in the “odd couple” pairing of Ansel Elgort and Ken Watanabe.

In Episode 5 of Tokyo Vice’s second season, after a stretch where American journalist Jake Adelstein (Ansel Elgort) and Japanese detective Hiroto Katagiri (Ken Watanabe) have gone their separate ways, a concerned Jake asks Katagiri, “We’re still a thing, right? Starsky and Hutch?” Katagiri ponders the question and asks in return, “Which of us is Starsky?” Jake quickly answers, “Me, obviously.” Katagiri considers that for a moment before firmly replying, “I do not think so.” It’s a good moment, but, more importantly, it’s a legitimately funny moment in a series that rarely finds time for humor. Don’t mistake it for Tokyo Vice loosening up too much, though. Season 2 continues the show’s neon-lit and blood-soaked tale of two men risking their own lives in an attempt to bring down the most dangerous of the Japanese capital’s yakuza gangs.

Also, don’t expect the Max show to hold your hand and ease you back into its story if your memory is a little fuzzy about where we left off nearly two years ago. In fact, Season 2’s first episode feels like it should have been the final episode of Season 1, as it picks up immediately after and mostly concerns itself with the fallout of previous events. We learn that Jake’s friend, the conflicted yakuza enforcer Sato (Show Kasamatsu), has survived being brutally stabbed. Detective Miyomoto, who was working alongside Katagiri while secretly being on the payroll of yakuza boss Shinzo Tozawa (Ayumi Tanida), is found dead. The videotape that was anonymously mailed to Jake and could serve as evidence to put Tozawa behind bars mysteriously burns up in a fire at Jake’s newspaper office. Essentially, everyone pretty much ends up back at square one, which is why the new season’s real start feels like it comes with the second episode, when we jump forward three months in time and all the show’s pieces are reset like a new chapter unfolding.

Tokyo Vice A Western journalist working for a publication in Tokyo takes on one of the city’s most powerful crime bosses. Release Date April 7, 2022 Main Genre Crime

‘Tokyo Vice’ Season 2 Expands the Story in Many Different Ways

Jake’s reset means stepping back from the Tozawa investigation to refocus his reporting elsewhere. He ends up becoming involved with a group of young motorcycle thieves, whose exploits he chronicles, but he gets pulled back into Tozawa’s orbit when he resumes his romantic relationship with Tozawa’s mistress, Misaki (Ayumi Ito). Meanwhile, Katagiri reluctantly joins a newly created task force that finds a novel method for targeting Tokyo’s yakuza gangs. Sato heals up and is back on the job, though he spends most of his time trying to keep his younger brother, one of Season 2’s handful of new characters, off the yakuza’s radar and on the straight and narrow. Samantha (Rachel Keller), the American hostess/club worker who befriends both Jake and Sato, has finally opened her own club, but she quickly learns that operating under yakuza ownership comes with its own pitfalls.

That’s essentially what Tokyo Vice’s main characters are all up to early on in the new season, which, like the first, is set in the 1990s. But the series also finds time to (deep breath) expand on the personal lives of Jake’s two reporter buddies at his newspaper (turns out, one is gay and one likes to bake); create a new blossoming romance between Sato and a hostess friend of Samantha’s who has a young son he bonds with; get more involved in the personal life of Jake’s editor Emi (Rinko Kikuchi), who suspects the newspaper fire was an inside job; and detail the continued infighting between the various yakuza gangs, especially when Tozawa, who suffers from liver disease, goes missing and is presumed by some to be dead.

So, yeah, it’s a lot, and some of the story arcs prove to be more compelling than others. But there’s something supremely appealing about a series that unabashedly tracks such a large group of characters through plotlines that could best be described as labyrinthine. It also helps that Tokyo Vice continues to serve as one of television’s coolest and best-looking crime dramas. It’s tough to say how much executive producer Michael Mann, who directed the series’ first episode, remains involved, but showrunner J.T. Rogers and his team of directors (including Alan Poul, who helmed the season’s first two episodes) continue to effectively ape Mann’s slick style.

Meanwhile, the acting is top-notch across the board. Watanabe remains the series’ MVP, as he struggles with knowing that his ongoing battle with the yakuza puts his rapidly fraying family in more and more danger. Elgort remains goofy yet eager — a fish out of water whose keen journalistic instincts transcend cultural barriers. Tanida makes for a fierce and threatening antagonistic presence as Tozawa, and Keller, continuing her winning streak that started with Fargo and carried over to Legion, finds more layers to her character the more trapped and frazzled she becomes. Kasamatsu… well, his Soto is still just the coolest.

Will ‘Tokyo Vice’ Get Renewed for Season 3?

The first five installments of the 10-episode season provided for review include a huge action set piece that takes a major player off the board and shakes up the show’s universe in a way that propels the season to what should be an exciting second half. However, as much as I enjoy Tokyo Vice (and let me be clear: I really enjoy it), I can’t help but to ponder a couple of questions that hang over the show like an invisible specter. The first is: Does Warner Bros. Discovery care enough about this series to let it grow into the epic crime saga it’s so obviously designed to be — the controversial memoir by the real Jake Adalstein that the show is inspired by spanned 12 years — or are they going to cut it down after this second season? After all, the corporation has been, uh, shall we say… fickle with its content lately, and it’s easy to wonder if Tokyo Vice’s viewership numbers are good enough to ensure it a spot on the streamer for a few more seasons. (Tokyo Vice’s first season never came close to reaching the watercooler-talk heights of Succession or even Barry. But those shows are gone now, so maybe Max could use the consistency a Tokyo Vice renewal would provide.)

My second question is: If Tokyo Vice does get the axe after Season 2, will the series at least finally circle back to its flash-forwarding opening scene? In case you’ve forgotten, Season 1 of Tokyo Vice opened with a scene set sometime in the future where Jake and Katagiri, wearing body armor under their suits, walk into a meeting with Tozawa’s underboss, who gives a threatening ultimatum. Season 1 never caught back up with that scene (which felt structurally odd), and, halfway through, Season 2 has yet to arrive at that point in time. It’s just hanging out there like a promise that the show is going to need to keep if it wants to feel like it’s telling a complete story, whether it reaches a conclusion this season or three seasons down the road. I’ll root for the latter option there, as Tokyo Vice proves captivating in a way that makes it feel like a classic HBO Sunday-night TV show, even if it technically isn’t one. The underbelly of 1990s Tokyo provides an incredibly juicy setting and Tokyo Vice makes the most of it, offering up a sprawling tale of cops, crooks, reporters, and the blurred lines between them.

Tokyo Vice Tokyo Vice continues to be one of TV’s sturdiest crime thrillers in Season 2. ProsTokyo Vice makes great use of its Japanese setting and remains one of TV’s best-looking shows. The sprawling cast is packed with interesting characters, and the series makes time to serve all of them. The “odd couple” pairing of Ansel Elgort and Ken Watanabe provides a strong anchor to the series. ConsThe new season doesn’t worry about easing viewers back in. You may need to read a Season 1 recap before you start watching!

Tokyo Vice Season 2 premieres with its first two episodes February 8 on Max, with new episodes released weekly thereafter.

Watch on Max

Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by filmibee.
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