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Darkside Blues

Original title: Dâkusaido burûsu
  • 1994
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
610
YOUR RATING
Darkside Blues (1994)
AnimeActionAnimationDramaFantasyHorrorSci-Fi

A mysterious man attempts to save "The Dark Side of Tokyo" from the control of a land-hungry corporation.A mysterious man attempts to save "The Dark Side of Tokyo" from the control of a land-hungry corporation.A mysterious man attempts to save "The Dark Side of Tokyo" from the control of a land-hungry corporation.

  • Director
    • Yoriyasu Kogawa
  • Writers
    • Yuho Ashibe
    • Hideyuki Kikuchi
    • Mayori Sekijima
  • Stars
    • Akio Ôtsuka
    • Hideyuki Hori
    • Kotono Mitsuishi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    610
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Yoriyasu Kogawa
    • Writers
      • Yuho Ashibe
      • Hideyuki Kikuchi
      • Mayori Sekijima
    • Stars
      • Akio Ôtsuka
      • Hideyuki Hori
      • Kotono Mitsuishi
    • 13User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos32

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    Top cast20

    Edit
    Akio Ôtsuka
    Akio Ôtsuka
    • Kenzo
    • (voice)
    Hideyuki Hori
    • Guren
    • (voice)
    Kotono Mitsuishi
    Kotono Mitsuishi
    • Mai
    • (voice)
    Kôichi Yamadera
    Kôichi Yamadera
    • Enji
    • (voice)
    Masako Katsuki
    Masako Katsuki
    • Tamaki Hazuki
    • (voice)
    Maya Okamoto
    Maya Okamoto
    • Selia
    • (voice)
    Akira Natsuki
    • Darkside
    • (voice)
    Nozomu Sasaki
    Nozomu Sasaki
    • Katari
    • (voice)
    Keizo Horiuchi
    Keizo Horiuchi
    • Delirium
    • (voice)
    Hiroshi Yanaka
    • Jingo
    • (voice)
    Maki Kachisa
    • Tamaki
    • (voice)
    Jon Avner
    Jon Avner
    • Guren
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    • …
    Scott Cargle
    Scott Cargle
    • Kenzo
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    Stacia Crawford
    Stacia Crawford
    • Tamaki Hazuki
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    Dan Green
    Dan Green
    • Enji
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    • (as Jay Snyder)
    Matthew Harrington
    • Darkside
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    Kathleen Kern
    • Selia
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    Rachael Lillis
    Rachael Lillis
    • Prisoner
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    • …
    • Director
      • Yoriyasu Kogawa
    • Writers
      • Yuho Ashibe
      • Hideyuki Kikuchi
      • Mayori Sekijima
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    5.4610
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    Featured reviews

    3callide

    a mixed bag

    Viewers preferring a straightforward story and/or closure may find this movie tough to take. Conversely, those who dig hidden meanings and symbolism might enjoy rooting through this film's convoluted nature.

    Being a lover of both when done well I found Darkside Blues yo-yoed from obvious imagery to ridiculous obscurity. One viewing was enough to tell me I lacked the patience to sit through another attempt to clear up some minor confusion. This film tries hard to be profound and almost hits, but something within the deliberate obscurity falls short. The one saving grace to this film is its support characters. While protagonist Darkside is an empty focal point who is easily disregarded following his first few lines, the growth and depth of Mai, Selia, and Tatsuya is relatively decent given the plot's short time span and this almost balances the story's lackluster qualities.

    In the end many plot holes are evident. Most questions are left unanswered. And, there's no true conclusion in sight. What one is offered is the turning point for a new era, not a resolution.
    4ChungMo

    Metaphysical Head Scratcher

    This is a tough one to review. There are bits and pieces that are really striking and a dreamlike quality to the whole proceeding. Actually the film resembles a bizarre dream one might wake from and go, "what was that about?" and then when you try to remember it later you can't.

    A strange futuristic city not unlike other anime future cities. Weird mutant humans who can shoot rays from their hands. Mysterious moody strangers with super-powers. Cute teenage girls with mega-fighting abilities. Sound familiar? Well it is but it's not as derivative as it could have been. The design is very good and the characters are all fascinating but...

    I watched it with the hope that it would all somehow come together but it never did. A number of important plot points are hidden in vague dialog references. As other reviewers have mentioned, it's like we are in the middle of some larger story. It's an interesting world that deserved better treatment. However it's not as bad as a number of other pretentious animes and you might enjoy it, just expect a disappointing ending.
    1lady-dinobug

    If you liked Demon City Shinjuku, BioHunter, and Wicked City...you won't like this.

    Oh my God.

    What a pile of unexplained crap.

    This movie is one of those where I'm sure the creator knows the secrets and meanings behind everything...and he think he can get away with leaving the unexplained to people and that maintaining their interest...but he's wrong.

    Darkside Blues begins in a state of confusion and while you expect an answer, it ends in exactly the same point.

    It's like watching the middle of a movie. You get the meat...but you never know how it started or what ends up happening.

    Maybe the MANGA is better. I'd try that.

    Avoid this movie. It is a waste and just utterly useless.
    7Nephilim-6

    Good, but:

    This anime has a lot going for itself. Great character design(darkside is uber cool), atmosphere and it's pretty stylish altogether. There is only one problem. It isn't finished. Yes the main characters awaken to their part/role in the world but they should have expanded on that and finished the whole Persona Century story. Now we see great revolutionaries awaken to their task yet there it ends.

    I liked this movie a lot. I honestly did but I just wish that they would tell a more complete story and not a small section of it.
    7I_Ailurophile

    Overall well done and enjoyable, though the writing needed to be tightened

    One expects great things of anime. Though the quality is sometimes variable, far more than not one can rely on Japanese animation for beautifully detailed backgrounds and landscapes, realistic and expressive character designs and animation, marvelously imaginative designs for creatures, effects, and other active elements, and superb texture, lighting, shading, and more. Ranging from on-par with to being vastly superior to animation from the United States or elsewhere, I'd hedge my bets with Japanese studios any day alongside or over the likes of Disney or Pixar. And so it is here, as 'Darkside blues' treats us to a veritable wonderland of visuals. Even with the gloom, grit, and violence of a dystopian sci-fi world it's impossible not to be dazzled with what J. C. Staff whipped up based on Ashibe Yuhuo's manga illustrations: alluring characters, gorgeous (if often grim) settings, fluid and exciting action and effects, and so on. It's everything we hope for out of anime, and if to any degree we might say it's "lesser than," it's only in comparison to how the medium has continued to advance in all the time since.

    Yes, the creativity in the visuals stuns, and the hard work, skill, and intelligence that went into them. But that's just one part of the equation. Gratifyingly, the remainder is broadly just as excellent. Screenwriter Sekijima Mayori and filmmaker Furukawa Nobuyasu tread in familiar narrative spaces in adapting Kikuchi Hideyuki's manga: a ruined world under almost complete the control of immensely powerful corporate interests, cruel and amoral dynastic leadership of that corruption, a small resistance movement - and naturally, additional elements of science fiction and fantasy, including high-tech weapons, monsters, superhuman abilities, other dimensions, and more. For any comparisons we may draw, though, the doing is very capably well written entirely on its own merits, and in turn engaging and compelling as the story focuses on a few select figures, including a mysterious man who enters the scenario seemingly from out of nowhere. I can't claim any knowledge of the manga, admittedly, but that puts me in a position to judge its adaptation purely on its own merits, and I find it to be actively fascinating and very entertaining, with flavorful plot and scene writing, and some sharp character builds. Really, what more could we ask for?

    Well, maybe this: I'll grant that some of the dialogue is a bit clunky, and the storytelling isn't always perfectly focused. Moreover, while not necessarily an abject fault, it's well worth observing that the scenes and overall narrative are written in a manner that throws us headlong into their world, as if viewers are anticipated to already be familiar with concepts herein. Case in point, we never specifically find out who or what "Darkside" is, and the resolution of the plot in the last minutes, such as it is, feels like a curiously inchoate half measure. Maybe that means that one would be well-served by reading the manga first, or maybe it simply means that the anime is a little less sure-footed than it should be on its own legs as we have to just take some ideas and beats at face value. Still, all these are a lot of scrutinizing words that belie the fact that 'Darkside blues' is a terrific genre blast, with touches of horror spicing up the sci-fi and fantasy. To whatever extent we may reasonably critique some facets, more than not the feature is a lot of fun, and fabulously well made. This includes some nice music on the side - some blues, some prog rock, some more subtle and atmospheric pieces, and so on - and adept voice acting that ably meets the needs of any given scene. The movie only wants to provide a good time, and it definitely does just that.

    It may not wholly demand viewership, yet with outstanding animation, earnestly engrossing writing, and bigger themes and notions that are all too despairingly relevant to real life, there is much to love in these eighty-odd minutes. Even if we say that the writing could have been tightened - and it absolutely could have, the one most discernible shortcoming here - the sum total is handily absorbing, enjoyable, and satisfying, and it didn't have to be flawless to otherwise be thusly worthwhile. Don't go out of your way for 'Darkside blues,' but if you like anime, and the composite of action, sci-fi, and fantasy, then this deserves a look if you have the chance.

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    Related interests

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    Animation
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    Drama
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    Fantasy
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    Horror
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    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The Darkside Blues manga was written by Hideyuki Kikuchi, with art done by Yuuho Ashibe. It was published in 1988. It was published by Akita Shoten in Japan and licensed by ADV Manga in the USA and Canada.
    • Quotes

      Kenzo: Just who are you?

      Mai: Oh, thank you, he's from around here. Uh, What's your- What's your name?

      Darkside: What is the name of this place?

      Mai: Kabuki-cho in Shinjuku. It's known as the dark side of Tokyo.

      Darkside: Then that will be my name.

      Kenzo: Darkside?

      Darkside: Is there a good place to stay around here?

      Mai: If you go south for two blocks there's several. Pretty cheap if you plan to live around here.

      Darkside: I thank you.

    • Connections
      Featured in Anime Abandon: Darkside Blues (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      Paradise Lost
      Lyrics by Mitsuko Shiramine

      Music by Takeshi Ike

      Arranged by Kazu Sotoyama

      Performed by Natsuki Ou

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    FAQ1

    • What are the lyrics to the song Darkside Blues?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 8, 1994 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Languages
      • Japanese
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Azul oscuro
    • Filming locations
      • Yurakucho, Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan
    • Production companies
      • Akita Shoten
      • J.C. Staff
      • Toho
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 23m(83 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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