Tokyo: The Last War (1989) Poster

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6/10
The Return of Kato
bobgray20001 November 2005
For those very few of you who have seen "Tokyo: The Last Megalopolis" (or the more renowned anime version "Doomed Megalopolis") and enjoyed it, you might be interested in seeking out this continuation of the story. Apparently IMDb got things mixed up here, and they're displaying the "Tokyo: The Last Megalopolis" cover in the section for "Teito Taisen" ("Tokyo: The Last War"), which is the official sequel to the aforementioned movie. Somebody needs to fix this quick! Right now, I'm reviewing "Tokyo: The Last War", not "Last Megalopolis".

Alright, I admit that this film has not been subtitled, and I don't understand Japanese. So how do I know what's going on in here? Repeated viewings and lots of translated summaries. However, even if you don't know Japanese, this film has just enough action and scenery to make it worthwhile.

The story starts out at the end of World War II. Tokyo lies in ruins due to repeated fire-bombings from the American army. However, one surviving magic-user brings together a new group of mystics. His plan is to "turn defeat into victory" by using spiritual psychic powers to assassinate the evil world leaders from a distance (I know Hitler's involved). Unfortunately, the surge of spiritual energy along with the repeated horror of all those who endured the nightmare of the fire-bombings, rouses up all the souls of the dead, whose resentment and anger come together and revive...Yasunori Kato. Now it's up to a young apprentice of the psychic magic user to stop Kato before the evil sorcerer ruins their plans for victory. Kato also seems intent on torturing and gaining revenge on Yukiko (his "daughter" from the previous story), whose all grown-up now and works as a nurse in a hospital.

It should be noted that this is the only film that I've seen that Takagise Ichise (the producer of "Ringu", "Ju-On", and "Dark Water") directed, and it definitely shows in the style. "Tokyo: The Last Megalopolis" was going for an exotic fantasy atmosphere, while this movie aims to be more of a dark and gory horror movie. The silly creatures that Kato summoned in the original film have been completely dumped here. The only magic he really uses in this movie is throwing stuff around with psychic energy like Darth Vader. He even acts differently, coming off more like a slow-moving and leering "Terminator" rather than the more dynamic way he was portrayed in the original. Strangely enough, the sets aren't as varied as they were in "Last Megalopolis" either. Everything's dark and brooding, putting a greater emphasis on the grim historical setting. The beginning of the film felt like a docudrama or just some historical war movie. It's not until Kato arrives that the film begins to explore it's fantasy roots more.

I liked this movie. The story is easily more comprehensible than its predecessors, the characters are better defined, and the production just feels more taut this time around. But I can only enjoy it as a standalone production. When viewed as a sequel to "Last Megalopolis", it's an incredible disappointment. "Tokyo: The Last Megalopolis" was a very unique production in that it was a genre bender of a film: an epic that was equal parts fantasy, horror and historical fiction. This film feels more like some commercial horror film in a historical setting. It didn't even try to follow up the promises of its predecessor (for example, many plot threads left hanging at the end of that film are not resolved here). From an entertainment perspective, it's decent, but not in the same way.

Two years later, Rintaro would take the story of "Last Megalopolis" and the dark atmosphere of this film and make the anime "Doomed Megalopolis". Ironically, since the atmosphere between the latter production and "Last War" is more consistent, "Last War" serves as a better sequel to the anime than "Last Megalopolis".
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6/10
Occult Japan
BandSAboutMovies24 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Teito Monogatari (The Tale of the Imperial Capital) was the first novel to popularize onmyodo - a system of natural science, astronomy, almanac, divination and magic that developed independently in Japan based on the Chinese philosophies of yin, yang and the five elements - and fusui mythology - Japanese feng shi of the energy flow and exchange both within and external to our bodies - in modern Japanese fiction. It's also written by natural history researcher and polymath Hiroshi Aramata and re-imagines the 20th century of Tokyo as influenced by the occult. It also has ties to mythology and the story of Taira no Masakado, a 10th-century samurai warlord who has since become something of a demigod thanks to his stand against the central government. However, his malevolent spirit must constantly be looked after and as such, the cities of Edo and Tokyo have felt a debt to keep him happy even a thousand years after his death. His shrine remains well-maintained, even as occupies some of the most expensive land in the world and faces Tokyo's Imperial Palace.

A sequel to Tokyo: The Last Megalopolis, this is an adaptation of the eleventh book (Great War in the Capital) in the series. In its center, we discoer Yasunori Kato, a mysterious former lieutenant of the Imperial Japanese Army, killed twenty years ago but just like Taira no Masakado he's become a vengeful oni. Yet he is devoted to the destruction of Tokyo*.

There's also an anime adaption called Doomed Megalopolis.

In 1945, American forces are unleashing bombs over Japan and to stop this, the Buddhist shaman Kan'nami Kouou has been given the mission of cursing the Allied leaders through magic, but that's when the innocents killed in the war combine their souls and reincarnate Yasunori Kato, who wants the war to continue and Tokyo to finally be destroyed, and must battle the psychic Yuko Nakamura, who is empowered by the love of a nurse, Yukiko Tatsumiya, who was abused in her youth by Kato.

Obviously, a multi-book epic that draws on centuries of Japanese history is not going to be an easy watch for American audiences. That may be why the second adaption of these stories stays away from the more occult-based magic and sticks to ESP and psychic powers.

And yes, M. Bison from Street Fighter was based on Yasunori Kato, as well as Eagle Cape from Riki-Oh.

*The movie is different than the book, where Kato is still alive and never destroyed. The target of his spiritual assassination is not Hitler, but Franklin Roosevelt, who is cursed with polio which allows Truman to become President and drop the bomb on Tokyo.
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