I’m watching and enjoying season two of Tokyo Vice on HBO’ Max channel.
The series, based on Jake
Adlestein’s true crime book, Tokyo Vice: An American Reporter on the
Police Beat in Japan, is an interesting journalistic thriller about an
American reporter working on Japan’s largest newspaper. The young reporter
covers crime for the newspaper and encounters Japanese yakuza gangsters
and Japanese cops.
Tokyo Vice is laboriously slow at times, but rich in exotic atmosphere and introduces the viewer to some unique characters, such as Jake Adelstein (Ansel Elgort), a nice Jewish boy from Missouri who travels to Japan at 19 to attend college and later becomes the only American to work on a major Japanese newspaper.
Other
interesting characters in the series are a Japanese cop (the great actor Ken
Watanabe) who mentors Adelstein, and a young yakuza gangster
(Sho Kasamatsu).
I’ve long been interested in Japan, having visited Sasebo and Nagasaki in 1971 when I was a young sailor serving on the aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk.
We were relieved from “Yankee Station” in the Gulf of Tonkin where the carrier
launched aircraft for combat sorties against the North Vietnamese, and sailed
into Sasebo for a week’s R&R.
So whether you’ve visited Japan or not, most viewers will be
fascinated with Tokyo Vice, and its fine portrayal of Japanese
culture and Japanese crime.
Note: You can read my Crime Beat column on Jake Adelstein's Tokyo Vice via the below link:
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