TOKYO REVENGERS
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
24
RELEASE
September 19, 2021
LENGTH
24 min
DESCRIPTION
Takemichi Hanagaki is a freelancer that's reached the absolute pits of despair in his life. He finds out that the only girlfriend he ever had in his life that he dated in middle school, Hinata Tachibana, had been killed by the ruthless Tokyo Manji Gang.
The day after hearing about her death, he's standing on the station platform and ends up being pushed over onto the tracks by a herd of people. He closes his eyes thinking he's about to die, but when he opens his eyes back up, he somehow had gone back in time 12 years.
Now that he's back living the best days of his life, Takemichi decides to get revenge on his life by saving his girlfriend and changing himself that he'd been running away from.
(Source: Crunchyroll)
CAST
Manjirou Sano
Yuu Hayashi
Ken Ryuuguji
Tatsuhisa Suzuki
Takemichi Hanagaki
Yuuki Shin
Chifuyu Matsuno
Shou Karino
Keisuke Baji
Masaaki Mizunaka
Takashi Mitsuya
Yoshitsugu Matsuoka
Kazutora Hanemiya
Shunichi Toki
Hinata Tachibana
Azumi Waki
Naoto Tachibana
Ryouta Oosaka
Seishuu Inui
Junya Enoki
Souya Kawata
Kengo Kawanishi
Nahoya Kawata
Kengo Kawanishi
Shuuji Hanma
Takuya Eguchi
Emma Sano
Yumi Uchiyama
Hakkai Shiba
Tasuku Hatanaka
Atsushi Sendou
Takuma Terashima
Hajime Kokonoi
Natsuki Hanae
Shinichirou Sano
Masaya Matsukaze
Rindou Haitani
Hiro Shimono
Ran Haitani
Daisuke Namikawa
Tetta Kisaki
Shoutarou Morikubo
Takuya Yamamoto
Yuuya Hirose
Kazushi Yamagishi
Shouta Hayama
Ryouhei Hayashi
Yukihiro Nozuyama
Makoto Suzuki
Shunsuke Takeuchi
EPISODES
Dubbed
RELATED TO TOKYO REVENGERS
REVIEWS
Lownar
75/100protag time travels back n forth to help change the lives of gangsters for the better in order to save his xgirlfriendContinue on AniListRead to the end because I really like this show eventually!
I came into this show having expectations that did not serve me well, and it's first half went in a very different direction than I thought we were going. More often than not we would go spend time hanging out with friends, or go chillax with Hina and I would feel frustrated with the scenes bc I thought Takemichi should be solving a mystery we didn't understand from the future, or protecting an important character who' life was in danger. To be frank, I personally struggled to connect with our protag most of the time. I was not able to understand why he would act courageous sometimes during inconsequential moments, but never when he needed to the most. Honestly I can def see why getting to relive your life a second time would make you want to indulge in activities you did as a kid, or enjoy relationships you no longer have, as much as you possibly could. This makes sense to me, but if that is what the author wanted me to think Takemichi was doing, it wasn't very clear. Maybe doing something like showing a few timejump trips back to Naoto without achieving progress, and seeing Naoto' frustration mirror the audience' frustration, would have conveyed this to me so much better. Takemichi has the ability to go back and forth but it was very underutilized. But without getting an explanation of his behavior, the way most scenes read just had a glaring unexplained disconnect between the seriousness of the situation and Takemichi' attitude towards the situation. That is until the moment when it becomes too late to act, ..then Takemichi seems to remember what he was supposed to be doing. It made the oldest character in the show look the least mature, and it was hard to understand and watch sometimes. Also the romantic Hina stuff did not hit for me. And I was too dense for some of the early comedy.
But during Bloody Halloween my opinion of the show started going in the other direction. The Baji/Kazutora stuff was so unexpected and so real and each turn of the reveal of their backstory was an entertaining way to get me to understand how we got to this point. Its hard to forgive Kazutora, but its hard to hate him either, and that really shows wonderful writing of a realistic character. Baji' sacrifice was so memorable, he was an amazing friend, and sometimes it feels like some of the gangster backstories are based on real events. I wish we could have started to meet the founders of Toman before the second cour. I think the author' talents are most obvious when we are exploring Mikey' crew. Draken is probs the best written gangster imo but there are a lot of other interesting ones too. The more gangster stuff we do the more I want to see. If the plot stays with the enegery of the second half then I will most likely enjoy the rest of the story. And I thought that Takemichi' friends joining Toman under him or with him was really dope, because he sure could use their help. I hope we see more of Akkun and crew in S2. I really like Naoto' and Chifuyu’ relationship with Takemichi and I have really become attached to Draken (author you better not kill Draken). Some people shit on the animation but I think it does the job well. Finale was maybe the best episode of the season. Invested in the story and looking forward to a well funded s2.
Magenta
48/100A story rife with wasted potential that comes very close to glory, only to get fall due to the weight of its problems.Continue on AniListThis review contains full spoilers. _Before the review proper starts, there is going to be a prelude that mentions the many plot holes and questions that I had about the time travel involved in this series. This isn’t part of the actual bulk of the review, because an argument based solely around plot holes is a bad argument. However, the plot holes here are big enough that it would feel weird to not point them out. They may also get solved by later parts of the series, but I haven’t read through those parts as of this moment._ _How did Takemichi get sent to the past when Naoto is supposed to be dead in the completely unaltered timeline? Why does Naoto remember everything that happens after Takemichi changes things in the past despite no one else remembering?_ _With the exception of the final episode, how does Takemichi keep on getting sent to his same dead-end life whenever he goes back to the present?_ _Why does the butterfly effect in general not as present as it really should be?_ _Does the past version of Takemichi retain the memories of the present version when Takemichi goes and vice versa?_ _Okay, now with that out of the way…_ What disappoints me about Tokyo Revengers the most is that its problems do not make the series irreversibly broken beyond repair. I wouldn’t even say that this series even has multiple problems with its story, rather that it only really has one singular problem. There are other bad series that I’d say are slightly better than Tokyo Revengers whose story problems are far more ingrained into the core of the show in a way that can’t be fixed without a total overhaul of the story. However, Tokyo Revengers's case is far more saddening due to how much good there is in it. On paper, the series has an intriguing story, likable characters, intense moments of suspense, and enough of a tinge of the emotional heart. This one singular problem ends up being so detrimental to its own story, that it manages to affect the quality of the series in a way that strips the series of most of the strengths that it otherwise normally would have. It leaves what otherwise would have been a good series into one that leaves a very bad impression. The one singular bad problem that Tokyo Revengers suffers from is that it heavily struggles with introducing its characters. Contrary to the problems of the wider series itself, the reasons as to why Tokyo Revengers has trouble with introductions are more of just separate problems with the individual characters rather than a unifying concept that affects everyone. The only way to truly extrapolate this is to go through each character one by one. However, I would say that the sloppy introductions get more and more apparent as it goes on as they get more and more egregiously bad.
Takemichi Takemichi as a protagonist fits into an archetype of protagonist where the viewer can easily self-insert themself in his position. While he isn’t a fish out of water type protagonist, he mostly experiences the events of the plot along with the audience. With his relatively fresh position in the context of the story, he doesn’t need any long-winded introduction, since he more so is just a vassal for other characters to introduce themselves. Even though protagonists of this nature have been overdone to oblivion at this point, it always manages to work in the right context. And for Takemichi, it works, at least in the beginning. His established connections to Hina, Mikey, and even Naoto to a certain extent are pretty well done, all things considered. Before the plot moves into a direction where we need to care about Takemichi’s relationship to characters early on, the series has already done a good job at showing why we should even care in the first place. However, this character work becomes undone at the end of Episode 4. At the end of episode 4, Takemichi vows that he wants to save Akkun and Draken in the past after the present Akkun commits suicide. Takemichi in an instant loses his classification as an audience surrogate. While Takemichi’s relationship with Akkun is fully justified in the story both practically and emotionally, Draken had barely even a few lines of dialogue with Takemichi by Episode 4. It is reasonable to assume that Takemichi may want to save Draken from a purely moral standpoint, but his wanting to save Draken doesn’t work from a story or emotional standpoint. This moment starts a general trend of Takemichi caring about characters that he wants to save, while the story does no further justification as to why these characters should matter to the audience. Since the character introductions of this series get worse and worse, it harms Takemichi due to him being a vassal for those characters. As a result, he drifts more and more away from relatability.
Draken As said earlier, Draken doesn’t get the same type of emotional establishment that would make an audience care about him. He was introduced to Takemichi’s motivations as a character at a premature time. Draken was always going to be handicapped when it came to being portrayed as someone to get attached to. He was never going to have the same kind of character development as any of the other characters. However, Draken’s characterization takes continuous missteps that are more confused than developed. One example that sticks in my mind the most is when Draken took the responsibility for the rape and assault of Pah-chin’s girlfriend to her parents and made Mikey take responsibility for it too. While it is supposed to establish Draken as the more calm and pragmatic counter to Mikey’s brashness, it is completely snuffed away by the fact that Draken admitted to a serious crime that he didn’t commit. Just the fact that Draken admitted to something like this throws off all of the development that this scene was intended to make. Probably the instance of failed characterization that is most detrimental to Draken, and even Mikey, is in the second half of Episode 7 and the beginning of Episode 8. After Pah-chin stabs Osanai, Mikey and Draken are supposed to have a rift that eventually leads to the corruption of Toman if not stopped. Instead of showing the actual rift itself, the series instead fakes out that the two of them were fighting, unfakes itself out by pretending that they will fight, and then just fully fakes out the fight anyway. Throughout, there is a tinge of bad comedy that shatters any serious tone that there probably would’ve been otherwise. This is the point where Draken and Mikey each should go through an impactful character arc surrounding their friendship and eventually amend their bond to be stronger than ever. However, the series treats this potentially impactful moment as a big joke.
_he brought a watermelon and they are about to eat_ Baji To be honest, I never really understood anything about Baji’s character. His motivations and actions contradict each other so much that he becomes incomprehensible in the story. He is introduced to the story by his betrayal of Toman and the joining of Valhalla. This turn in the story seems like it would be a great avenue for interesting drama around Baji’s relation to Mikey and the rest of the founding members of Toman. However, it is revealed by Chifuyu that Baji only pretended to betray Toman, and just pretended to betray them to investigate Kisaki. However, he doesn’t act like he has betrayed Toman until the last moments of his life at Bloody Halloween. All of the drama surrounding Baji’s character is centered around this fake betrayal, but this fake betrayal at its core doesn’t make much sense. What does Baji have to gain from not telling Mikey and the other members of Toman that he is still loyal to them? From my perspective, Baji has no reason to take the actions he does. His actions are counterintuitive to what his motivations are. It is a complete non-issue. What this nonsensical plot point accomplishes is delegitimize Baji’s character as well as making much of Bloody Halloween feel completely avoidable. To have a climax centered around a character built from duck tape and glue makes the climax feel way less impactful than it should.
Kazutora Just like Baji, Kazutora is built from the contrived drama that feels illogical in the greater context of the story. The introduction of his main motivations in the flashback to explain why he betrayed Toman doesn’t make any well-made assertion as to why he did it. When his trust in Mikey isn’t being challenged by anything, he flips on a dime and changes allegiances just like that. His change against Mikey isn’t gradual like it probably should’ve been, but rather it was completely instant. This type of instant change happens again at Bloody Halloween when he betrays Baji. These spontaneous betrayals don't paint him like he is a character, but as a plot device who goes through bouts of insanity when it is convenient for the plot to progress.
_kill mikey, more like, kill my sanity_ _i am sorry that was awful_ Chifuyu Out of all of the characters in this series, I don’t think that Chifuyu is a bad character. He is one of the better ones when there is full context. The important thing to note here is the “full context” part of that statement. When Chifuyu is introduced, he is framed as a friend of Baji that cares for his well-being. However, there is no further development or explanation for why they are friends until Episode 23. However, by that point, Baji had already died, and Chifuyu had already said his goodbyes to him. That final scene with Chifuyu and Baji fell completely flat due to their relationship not being established at all. This makes it even more baffling when the establishment of their friendship is placed after that relationship had fully concluded. The flashback would’ve made the final scene where Baji is dying on Chifuyu’s lap have its intended effect. The viewer would care about these two characters, and there is no compromise. While this isn’t the worst example of character writing in this series, this is the one that confuses me the most since fixing Chifuyu’s character involves the simplest fix.
The botching of character introductions and the subsequent characterization is detrimental to this series in a unique way. Fights like The Battle of August 3rd and Bloody Halloween are weighed down heavily by the poor development of those involved. It isn’t the fights themselves that are bad. Many parts that further the development of characters is quite good in a vacuum. However, when you evaluate a series, it is very important to take in the whole picture. Even if a character’s development progressed in a good direction, the character isn’t going to magically be in a good place when the quality of their introduction was immediately in the gutter. This principle applies to most of the characters in Tokyo Revengers. While I appreciate the strides made in improving characters, it isn’t even close to enough to recover from their poor start. The thing that would benefit Tokyo Revengers the most is if it introduces characters well from the start. If a character has a good start, then what developments would come after that has much greater value. With good introductions, Tokyo Revengers's story problems would vanish all at once. There is one character that provides that perfect window.
Hina Out of every character in Tokyo Revengers, the only character that had a well-executed introduction in this season was Hina and the aspects of Takemichi’s character that involved Hina. In just the first two episodes, the series manages to establish the relationship between Hina and Takemichi efficiently enough so that the audience could care about the two of them. Since they aren’t caught up in the interlocking world of the gangs, the love story between Hina and Takemichi is simple yet tragic. This simplicity leads to the possibility of screwing up a character introduction going way down. In the end, Hina has the best character introduction out of all of the characters in the entire show, and this leads to something different happening to her compared to every other character when the story gets an emotional climax. In Episode 12, the subplot involving Hina and Takemichi’s relationship hits a point of high stakes, tension, suspense, and weight. However, instead of it falling flat like nearly every other climax like it thus far, this time, it soars. The emotional impact hits like it is intended to, and it makes for probably the best episode of the entire series and maybe even one of the best episodes of the entire year of 2021 in anime. What is truly interesting is that Episode 12 as a climax isn’t that different from a quality standpoint from what The Battle of August 3rd and Bloody Halloween has to offer. The main difference is however that Episode 12 had enough context to stand on its own, while the Battle of August 3rd and Bloody Halloween were left out in the dust. What Hina and Takemichi’s subplot of Tokyo Revengers provides is a window into a world where Tokyo Revengers didn’t screw up its introductions. A world where every character got the proper context needed for them to be well written. Hina’s storyline stands out, not because it is all too different from what had already partaken, but because the path was properly paved all the way through.
Conclusion A lot of the episodes of Tokyo Revengers never really had the chance to send the proper impact that they might have. The genuinely good moments of it would always be dampened by the poor quality of content that would have come previously. It didn’t help that the poor anime adaptation’s animation gives everything a distinct level of cheesiness that the manga didn’t even bear a trace of.
this image describes my thoughts on the anime adaptation better than any words can Tokyo Revengers relies on the care that the audience has for its characters most of the time. It very well could work, but the series doesn’t properly get to that point where the audience can care. A sturdy structure can only be strong if it has a good foundation, otherwise, it will topple very easily. However, even if I didn’t even enjoy Tokyo Revengers for the bulk of my time watching it, I found myself finding appreciation in what it did right when thinking back on this series while writing this review. Even though I didn’t find a lot of it enjoyable when watching it, looking back on what Tokyo Revengers did right paints a more textured picture. I still have a tinge of hope for what is to come after this though. When I read ahead in the manga for this review, I got unexpectedly sucked into the series, even with all of its problems plaguing it at that point. It shows that this series can pull off engaging storytelling at times. The future of Tokyo Revengers relies upon if it can somehow rise past its poor character introductions and create something that can overshadow the problems that those introductions brought with it. I may be a bit too hopeful for what is to come, but honestly, there is enough that Tokyo Revengers that did right there is still sufficient room for amazing content to come. As it is though, Tokyo Revengers in its current state is still very broken. It is a series dragged so down by its problems that there is very little room to show its actual strengths. It is a case of a story. that could’ve lived up to what it could’ve been if it set itself up in a better way. It is a series that was so close to absolute glory, but it fell at the worst time. It is an opportune story thrown away when it never really needed to be. It is the absolute epitome of wasted potential.
Thank you for reading to the end of the review if you did. I really appreciate the willingness some of you have to get to the end of a review that probably disputes your own opinion. If you have any criticisms with how this review was made, you are free to message me or to comment in this activity to critique what I had to say.
Also, please don’t like or dislike the review without reading it.
Ultra
95/100A perfect example of how a solid storyline can make up for anything else an anime may lack many times overContinue on AniList#__Tokyo Revengers__ Fresh off of watching The Quintessential Quintuplets 2, which became my all time favorite, I wondered when or if I would ever come across an anime that could possibly one up quints. Never did I imagine that I would find such an anime so soon in the form of Tokyo Revengers. Tokyo Revengers is an anime that has something to offer to everyone. Whether it be its incredible storyline, gang wars, time travel or even the relationship between Takemichi and Hina and I would highly recommend watching it. #__Story__ __(10/10)__ When it comes to story, Tokyo Revengers is truly an immersive experience with a captivating storyline. Each episode leaves you on the edge of your seat and eagerly anticipating what would happen next. This is one of the best, if not, the best part about the anime. The storyline easily makes up for anything else the anime lacks many times over (will cover those later on). Although the first 2-3 episodes felt kinda slow but otherwise overall, the amazing story is what mainly kept people hooked to the show and I look forward to what happens ahead, that is, if a sequel is ever announced (which i'm 100% sure it will). Another thing is that the studio did an amazing job adapting the story as they adapted pretty much 100% of the manga up until the end of the bloody halloween arc. Not just that, but they even went as far as adding anime original scenes to give the story more depth and help us understand things a bit more. This is something you rarely or almost never see in anime adaptations so they did an incredible job with that. #__Characters__ __(10/10)__ Tokyo Revengers offers a strong cast of characters which range from personality to fighting skills to looks. Hanagaki Takemichi, the main character is someone I would most definitely look up to, even though he can be a crybaby at times. He is initially shown to be a weak character, both physically and mentally which changes over time. As the story progresses and Takemichi is put into many unfavorable situations, he strengthens his resolve and develops a lot as a character. In order to save his ex girlfriend and loved ones from being killed by the Tokyo Manji Gang, he would also have to change the way he does things and so he did, and he did a great job in doing so. Moving on from the main character, we have the other significant characters of the show, specifically being Mikey, Draken, Baji, Mitsuya, etc. Mikey is a character that has gone through a lot in his life but he is still shown to be a cheerful and positive character. He is shown to be childish at times but at the same time is shown to be a very responsible leader who can lead a big gang really well. Though he will not hold back if anyone messes with his friends and this has been shown throughout both the arcs. Even though his eyes are shown to have no life in them, he is a character that will always offer you a smile no matter what. Draken is definitely one of the most mature characters in Tokyo Revengers. Being brought up in a tough situation like he was, that's a given. He acts as Mikeys right hand man and makes sure Mikey never strays in the wrong direction with his ambition, which makes him an extremely essential character in the series. As for Kisaki, he's a character i've really come to hate. But even so, one thing I can't deny and i'm sure many would agree with is that he is a criminal mastermind. He lays out everything and creates situations in a way which will end with him profiting off of it. He makes sure that no matter what happens, everything will go his way and even if he is hindered in the process, he will still try to make the most out of whatever he has left. Another thing I really admire is the relationship between the Tokyo Manji Gang members. They are shown to have a very special relationship and treat the gang as their most precious thing. The authorities of the gang, who have mostly known each other since their childhood days, are brought together by their shared ambition to bring in a new age for delinquents and are shown to be extremely close to each other. #__Animations__ __(8/10)__ As a diehard Tokyo Revengers fan, even I have to say that the animation did not do justice to the manga though it’s not bad at all by any means. Lidenfilms did quite an amazing job with the animations but when it came to fights, Bloody Halloween in particular, the quality drastically dropped which can be prominently seen in the Draken vs Hanma fight and I feel like they could’ve done a better job with that like they did with the Moebius arc. Not sure if it was because of low budget, time constraints or if this is how they usually roll, but I truly do hope that they realize how big Tokyo Revengers is as a series and put more effort into their animations in the near future for any sequels. #__Soundtrack__ __(10/10)__ Tokyo Revengers' soundtrack, the OP and EDs in particular is definitely something to write home about. The soundtrack was one of the best parts of this anime with each of them being a banger. I absolutely love the OP and EDs and I listen to them on a daily basis on loop (hey wait, I feel like i've written something like this before.....nah it must be my imagination). When it comes to the background music, they perfectly fit in with any situations that occur in the anime and add a lot more intensity to the scenes. #__Conclusion__ In conclusion, Tokyo Revengers is a series which has made into my top animes, being at #1. This is a series which has left a lasting impression on me and I eagerly look forward to any sequels that may be released in the coming future. As for animations, I truly do hope that either Lidenfilms does a better job next time (again, no hate to them they did a decent job) or let another studio adapt the remaining arcs. I would highly recommend watching this anime and even reading the manga because both are insane. #__Please feel free to message me with feedback, constructive criticism or any opinions you have about the series or my review :D __
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SCORE
- (3.85/5)
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Ended inSeptember 19, 2021
Main Studio LIDENFILMS
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Favorited by 12,436 Users
Hashtag #TOMAN_ANIME