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The entire Sato storyline this episode of
Tokyo Vice feels very very North Jersey.
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This was a nice-looking episode of
Tokyo Vice, even by the show’s own neo-noirish standards.
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There’s a lot to be bullish about here overall.
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...plus One Day on Netflix, the Prime Video original Upgraded, the Super Bowl + More!
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This premiere episode (“Don’t Ever F***ing Miss”) picks up right where the
Season 1 finale left off.
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As it returns for its second season, Tokyo Vice should be on your list for appointment television.
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Here's what to watch while you're waiting for more episodes in Season 2!
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It’s the job of a journalist to tell the truth, and sometimes that truth is ugly indeed.
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What is this show about, in the end?
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This episode delivers a Godfather-worthy meeting of yakuza bosses.
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Some debts cannot be repaid with money alone.
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This is a stylish crime drama in a fancy and exotic milieu, which makes for extremely watchable television.
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Wait, was "I Want It That Way" by the Backstreet Boys about THAT?!!?
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The show is at its most interesting at its most granular; the details matter as much as the big picture.
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Suddenly we know a lot more, about a lot more people, than we knew at the end of the premiere.
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The real star of the premiere (titled "The Test") is director Michael Mann.
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Tokyo Vice follows the story of an American crime reporter in the heart of Japan, but is it based on reality?
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Ansel Elgort and Ken Watanabe star in Tokyo Vice, where the city is a noirish landscape of crime reporters, cops on the job, and yakuza mobsters operating in the shadows.
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The long-awaited return of Michael Mann is finally upon us.
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The American auteur makes the horror of being a man look good.