Tokyo Vice is an American crime drama television series created by J. T. Rogers and based on the 2009 memoir of the same name by Jake Adelstein. It stars Ansel Elgort, Ken Watanabe, Rachel Keller, Hideaki Itō, Show Kasamatsu, Ella Rumpf, Rinko Kikuchi, Tomohisa Yamashita, Miki Maya, and Yōsuke Kubozuka. The series centers on Adelstein (Elgort), an American journalist investigating the yakuza in Tokyo.
The first season of Tokyo Vice premiered on April 7, 2022, on HBO Max, and the second season premiered on February 8, 2024, on Max. The series received generally positive reviews, with praise for its setting, aesthetic, and characters.
Premise
In 1999, American investigative journalist Jake Adelstein relocates to Tokyo and secures a job at a major Japanese newspaper, becoming their first foreign journalist. Taken under the wing of a veteran detective in the organized crime squad, Adelstein delves into the dark and dangerous world of the yakuza whilst living under the city's (and the newspaper's) official line that "murder does not happen in Tokyo".
Cast and characters
Main
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 spendthrift hostess at the Onyx Club with Samantha. A kind-hearted but naive young 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
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
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
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
Season 1 (2022)
Season 2 (2024)
Production
Development
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. 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. In October 2019, Michael Mann was hired to direct the pilot episode and also serve as an executive producer of the series. On June 7, 2022, HBO Max renewed the series for a second season.
Casting
In addition to his executive producing announcement, Ansel Elgort was also set to star. In September 2019, Ken Watanabe was added to the cast. In February 2020, Odessa Young and Ella Rumpf were added to the cast. In March 2020, it was announced that Rinko Kikuchi joined the cast, and that shooting began the previous month in Tokyo. In October 2020, Rachel Keller was cast to replace Young. 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. In November 2022 Aoi Takeya and Takayuki Suzuki were announced to be cast.
Filming
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. Production resumed on November 26, 2020, and concluded on June 8, 2021. Production for the second season started in November 2022 in Tokyo and concluded in August 2023.
Release
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. The second season premiered on February 8, 2024 and concluded on April 4, 2024.
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 and Starzplay in select European markets including the UK and Ireland. The BBC purchased second-window rights to the series in the UK, and began to air it in November 2022 on BBC One, with all episodes available for six months on the BBC's iPlayer service.
Tokyo Vice season 1 has been released on Blu Ray.https://www.blu-ray.com/news/?id=33428
Reception
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." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 75 out of 100 based on 27 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
For the second season, Rotten Tomatoes reported an approval rating of 93% based on 14 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." Metacritic assigned a score of 78 out of 100 based on 9 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".