In future Tokyo, a young woman in the privatized police force tracks down her father’s killer while battling against mutant rebels known as engineers. Tokyo Gore Police (2008)
Tokyo Gore Police (東京残酷警察, Tōkyō Zankoku Keisatsu) is a 2008 Japanese science fiction horror film co-written, edited and directed by Yoshihiro Nishimura and starring Eihi Shiina as Ruka, a vengeful
Police officer.
Tokyo Gore Police was released to several film festivals in North America. It received generally positive reviews, noting that it lives up to its title by being gory, perverse and bizarre.
Plot
In a dystopian Japan, a mad scientist known as "Key Man" (Itsuji Itao) creates a virus that mutates humans into monstrous creatures called "Engineers" that sprout bizarre biomechanical weapons from injuries. To deal with Engineers, the
Tokyo Police Force forms a special squad called "Engineer Hunters." The Hunters are a private quasi-military force that utilizes violence, sadism, and streetside executions to maintain law and order.
Among the Hunters is Ruka (Eihi Shiina), a troubled loner skilled in dispatching Engineers. Besides helping the
Police, she is obsessed with finding the mysterious assassin who killed her father, an old-fashioned officer, in broad daylight. Ruka receives a new case that leads to the Key Man himself. He infects her by inserting a key-shaped tumor into her scar-riddled left forearm before disappearing. Meanwhile, while visiting a strip-club featuring several Engineers as dancers, the
Police Chief (Yukihide Benny) becomes infected. He massacres the main precinct, causing the
Tokyo Police Commissioner (Shun Sugata) to order a city-wide crackdown on Engineers — indiscriminately executing anyone suspected of being one.
Continuing her investigation, Ruka learns that the Key Man was originally a scientist named Akino Miyama, and confronts him at his home. There she learns the truth about their past. Akino's father was a
Police sniper forced to resign after a failed operation resulted in him sustaining a severe leg injury. Desperate to keep his family out of poverty, he agrees to assassinate Ruka's father, who was leading a rally against the privatization of the
Police force. Shortly after gunning down Ruka's father, Akino's father was killed by the
Police commissioner — the real mastermind. Determined to avenge his father's death, Akino injected himself with the DNA of several infamous criminals, turning himself into the Key Man. Realizing they are seeking vengeance on the same man, Ruka slices Akino in half with her katana and heads back to the precinct.
On her way, she witnesses the
Police force brutalizing civilians accused of being Engineers. When her friend, a local bar owner (Ikuko Sawada), is drawn and quartered, Ruka's left arm mutates into an alien-like head with razor-sharp claws before she beheads the officers behind the execution. During her rampage, she is shot in the right eye by one of the officers, but her body quickly replaces it with a biomechanical one. Ruka confronts the
Police commissioner, who admits to her father's assassination, but explains that upon learning of the Key Man and the Engineers, he raised her to become the perfect Engineer Hunter as a form of atonement. Following a grueling sword fight, Ruka dismembers and eventually decapitates the commissioner — effectively bringing down his reign on the
Police force.
The post-credit scene reveals the Key Man is alive, having mended himself back with the help of one of his test subjects.
Cast
Eihi Shiina as Ruka
Itsuji Itao as Akino Miyama/The Key Man
Yukihide Benny as
Tokyo Police Chief Officer
Jiji Bū as Barabara-Man
Ikuko Sawada as Bar Independent Owner
Shun Sugata as
Tokyo Police Commissioner General
Tak Sakaguchi as Koji Tenaka
Keisuke Horibe as Ruka's Father
Shōko Nakahara as Prostitute Club Owner
Cherry Kirishima
Mame Yamada
Marry Machida
Maiko Asano
Ayano Yamamoto
Tsugumi Nagasawa as Alligator Girl
Cay Izumi as Dog Girl
Sayako Nakoshi as Snail Girl
Moko Kinoshita
Production
While working on special effects for Noboru Iguchi's The Machine Girl, Yoshihiro Nishimura was asked by Media Blasters if he wanted to do another film. Nishimura decided to make
Tokyo Gore Police, a remake of an independent film that he made many years before called Anatomia Extinction which received the Special Jury Award in the Off Theatre competition at the 1995 Yubari International Fantastic Film Festival. Shot and completed in just two weeks,
Tokyo Gore Police would be Nishumura's first commercial film.
The fight choreographer for the film was Taku Sakaguchi who Nishimura has worked with previously on the film Meatball Machine. The comical yet satirical television commercial scenes in the film were filmed by Noboru Iguchi and Yūdai Yamaguchi. Yamaguchi suggested this to bring a different flavor to the film to balance out the rest of the film's more dark tone.
Release
Tokyo Gore Police premiered in several film festivals before being released in Japan. The film had its North American premiere at the New York Asian Film Festival on June 21, 2008. The film premiered in Canada at the Fantasia Festival on July 12, 2008. The film has its Asian premiere at the Puchon International Fantastic Film Festival in July 2008.
A Region 1 DVD of the film was released on January 13, 2009 by
Tokyo Shock A Region 2 DVD of the film was released on April 13, 2009 by 4Digital Media.
A straight to video prequel has been announced for release in Japan.
Critical reception
Tokyo Gore Police was received well by American critics on its original release. The film ranking website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 82% "Fresh" rating and an average rating of 6 out of 10, based upon a sample of eleven reviews. Brian Chen reviewed
Police with a score of 3.5/5. He comments, "It's not a horrible film; it's not a great film; it's just everything it tries to be — perverse, grotesque, bizarre — and a little more." V.A. Musetto of the New York Post gave the film three stars out of four calling the film "bloody good". Michael Esposito of the Chicago Tribune gave the film three stars noting the film as "sick, twisted and gory, but surprisingly funny in an adolescent boy fantasy way — Beavis and Butt-head would love it."
Russel Edwards of Variety claimed, "Like
Tokyo Shock's recent "Machine Girl," for which helmer provided
Gore effects, [the] pic[ture] will fleetingly exist in midnight sidebars at fests and much longer on fanboy ancillary." Edwards also said that
Tokyo Gore Police had "occasionally witty moments, but the relentless catalog of mutilations lacks the emotional power of similar fare in pics by, say, fellow Japanese gorehound Shinya Tsukomoto [sic]."
References
External links
Tokyo Gore Police at AllMovie
Tokyo Gore Police at IMDb
Tokyo Gore Police at Rotten Tomatoes
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