Tokyo Rampage (1998) poster
7.0
Your Rating: 0/10
Ratings: 7.0/10 from 74 users
# of Watchers: 219
Reviews: 1 user
Ranked #64327
Popularity #19052
Watchers 74

A young man decides one day to start killing yakuza. After he kills his first two he gets roped into helping a wannabe gangster and his bumbling underlings to perform a hit. While things work out in the beginning, this young psychopath quickly becomes more trouble than the gang expected. Will they be able to rid themselves of him, or will they be his next victims? Edit Translation

  • English
  • Deutsch
  • magyar / magyar nyelv
  • dansk
  • Country: Japan
  • Type: Movie
  • Release Date: Oct 10, 1998
  • Duration: 2 hr. 18 min.
  • Score: 7.0 (scored by 74 users)
  • Ranked: #64327
  • Popularity: #19052
  • Content Rating: Not Yet Rated

Cast & Credits

Photos

Tokyo Rampage (1998) photo
Tokyo Rampage (1998) photo
Tokyo Rampage (1998) photo
Tokyo Rampage (1998) photo
Tokyo Rampage (1998) photo
Tokyo Rampage (1998) photo

Reviews

Completed
Maggi64
1 people found this review helpful
May 19, 2023
Completed 0
Overall 9.0
Story 10
Acting/Cast 9.5
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 10

It's Got a Certain Hipster Nihilism, But It Works

Let it be said that "Tokyo Rampage" is largely about style. Now, this could easily mean that a movie is superficial. However, the style here is slickly appealing and, moreover, part of the movie's theme about socio-cultural vacuity. In short, it works.

As for the story itself, there's a certain hipster nihilism which would -- just like the movie's surfeit stylishness -- seem a negative element. Yet, no, it's actually handled in a way that's purposeful and, hence, intriguing. Indeed, I enjoyed the ride because I had decided early on that the inscrutable, psychopathic lead's maddeningly repeated line, "Not needed," made him the homicidal cousin to Bartleby in Herman Melville's famous short story, "Bartleby the Scrivener." I am referring, of course, to the inscrutable Bartleby's maddeningly repeated line, "I prefer not to."

Like Bartleby, this character is a blank, and his mission to murder every "Not needed" person in his path does not make us hate him, because one cannot hate a blank space. Meanwhile, the audience is intended to empathize with the other lead, the psychopath's boss (the one sympathetic character in the whole movie), and for the boss the line, "Not needed" eventually begins to register as an existential crisis.

The viewer, just as the boss, begins to squirm under the same frustrating fear and bewilderment each time they hear the line, "Not needed." It's when you realize that you are just as effected by this line as he is that you also realize, son of a bitch, this bizarre, disturbing movie worked. In other words, it achieved precisely what it had set out to achieve.

Oh, and watch for the visuals -- such as the bathes of tomatoes, the swooping down of death crows, and the falling of knives. But especially the falling of the knives. That scene is worth the whole movie alone.

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Details

  • Movie: Tokyo Rampage
  • Country: Japan
  • Release Date: Oct 10, 1998
  • Duration: 2 hr. 18 min.
  • Content Rating: Not Yet Rated

Statistics

  • Score: 7.0 (scored by 74 users)
  • Ranked: #64327
  • Popularity: #19052
  • Watchers: 219

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