Yakuza: Like A Dragon Already Has A Live-Action Adaptation That Nails The Game’s Madcap Vibes

As with most live-action video game adaptations, Amazonā€™s Like a Dragon: Yakuza show announcement came with its fair share of anxiety from a vocal fandom, which built up even more as they heard about the production of the series thatā€™s due out this October. Details like its actors being discouraged from playing the games, the show lacking the franchiseā€™s famous quirkiness, andā€”arguably worst of allā€”the first seasonā€™s omission of Yakuzaā€™s iconic karaoke scenes, all saw fans grow ever more worried about whether the series would capture the spirit of the games that inspired it. In my view, concerns over Amazonā€™s original series being too serious and missing the unorthodox mix of melodrama and comedy that the series is known for arenā€™t worth losing sleep over, seeing as itā€™s not out yet and has a very real chance of being a good show. After all, Amazonā€™s rousing success with the Fallout TV showā€”a show whose breakout star, Walton Goggins, didnā€™t play the games and got a Golden Globe nominationā€”lends credence to the streamerā€™s ability to make a good video game series.

Suggested ReadingTotal Recall: Why Yakuza Is So Much More Than A Japanese GTA

Suggested ReadingBut whether the Amazon original series plays the seriesā€™ operatic melodrama too seriously or not, it wonā€™t take away the fact that fans already have a madcap and camp live-action Yakuza to fall back on: visionary Japanese director Takashi Miikeā€™s 2007 film, Yakuza: Like a Dragon.

Read More: Amazonā€™s New Like A Dragon Show Is Being Made By People Who Really Get The Games

Yakuza: Like a Dragon, by the director behind Ichi The Killer, Audition, and the live-action Ace Attorney film, is a 2007 film that broadly recreates the major plot points of the first game. It follows former yakuza member Kiryu (played by Kazuki Kitamura) fresh out of prison and quickly reacquainting himself with the criminal underworld of Kamurocho. In quick succession, he meets an orphan named Haruka desperately searching for her mother, and his long-lost loveā€”Yumi; is hunted by rival and fellow yakuza member, Goro Majima; and is a suspect in a police case investigating 10 billion missing yen.

Let me say right out of the gate, Miikeā€™s Yakuza: Like A Dragon film is by no means perfect. The hour-and-fifty-minute film is best viewed in the same light as the Ember Island Players episode in Avatar: The Last Airbenderā€”it covers the broad strokes of the first Yakuza game while skipping over the resonating emotional beats and character arcs of its major players. Among its glaring omissions are the harrowing backstory of how Kiryu came to meet Haruka in a gunned-down bar, fleshing out Kiryu and Yumiā€™s tragic romance, Kazama dying, and fish-enthusiast Akira Nishikiyamaā€™s entire character arc. Yes, Miikeā€™s film does Nishiki-heads dirty.

Other niggling inaccuracies include Detective Dateā€™s actorā€”who is jarringly young and handsomeā€”towering over Kiryu in every fleeting scene they share, shootouts playing a major role in what would otherwise be bare-knuckle brawls, and the entire last fifteen minutes of the film making absolutely no sense. Charitably, Miikeā€™s version of Yakuza is an uneven SparkNotes recap that a non-Yakuza fan would assume accurately captures what the series is about. That isnā€™t to say the film doesnā€™t have its merits, though. Itā€™s got the sauce when it comes to nailing the Yakuza touchstones that the fandom covets.

Read More: The Yakuza Live-Action Movie is Black Comedy Gold

Key among the filmā€™s high marks is the fact that the movie is tailor-made for Majima sickos like me, and actor Goro Kishitani is chewing through the scenery of every scene heā€™s inā€”even if his eye patch is covering the wrong eye. Not only does the movie Majima match the video game Majimaā€™s freak with tonal whiplash-infused scenes of him slugging baseballs at hapless thugs and interrogating masochistic information brokers, but the film also goes the extra mile by leaning into his totally heterosexual infatuation with Kiryu.

The film also adequately balances the gameā€™s knack for comedy and melodrama in a way that keeps the nearly two-hour film from dragging. For example, the film follows the odd kinship between would-be bank robbers and hostages, something that doesnā€™t take place in the games. Throughout the film, they become a comedy act where the robbers bicker over suboptimal knitted masks in the sweltering Kamurocho heat, and the hostages convince them to take advantage of their stalemate with the copsā€”who couldnā€™t be bothered to do their jobsā€”by negotiating an expensive take-out order for everyone. If thatā€™s not a Yakuza substory plotline, I donā€™t know what is. Likewise, the filmā€™s side story of two teens going on a robbery spree is every bit as over-the-top and surprisingly heartbreaking as the gameā€™s best substories. The film even includes the seriesā€™ weirdest long-running trope of a character being a secret Korean all along. While itā€™s a weird inclusion given everything else Miike cut from the source material, itā€™s certainly a key trope in the franchise, though mostly for the worse.

While Miikeā€™s version of Yakuza isnā€™t a slam dunk of an adaptation, it deserves far better than the so-bad-itā€™s-good stamp other live-action projects often receive. If anything, this schlocky action drama makes for the perfect palate cleanse in the unlikely event that Amazonā€™s original series shits the bed in attempting to nail the showā€™s weirdo energy. Unfortunately, watching the film will require fans to go on a substory-esque adventure through internet archives to find it online.

Reviews

0 %

User Score

0 ratings
Rate This

Leave your comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *