City Hunter: Shinjuku Private Eyes

2019 [JAPANESE]

Action / Animation / Comedy

Plot summary

Ryo Saeba works the streets of Tokyo as the City Hunter. He's a "sweeper" and with his sidekick Kaori Makimura, he keeps the city clean. People hire the City Hunter to solve their dangerous problems, which he does with a Colt Python. When Ryo's not working on a case, he's working on getting the ladies, and Kaori must keep him in check with her trusty 10 kg hammer.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
July 30, 2022 at 07:39 PM

Top cast

Daman Mills as Golden Gai Boss
Amber Lee Connors as Shinji Mikuni
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
921.2 MB
1280*720
Japanese 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 40 min
Seeds 1
1.85 GB
1920*1080
Japanese 5.1
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 40 min
Seeds 4

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by I_Ailurophile 6 / 10

Passively enjoyable, but not the best representation of the franchise

The last TV movie in the franchise aired in 1999, and before that, the last theatrical release was in 1990. That's a long time between features, but it wasn't for nothing. The production values in general are a considerable step up from prior iterations, and the animation, specifically, is unquestionably more advanced, pretty well right on par with kindred contemporary fare. The aesthetics are fundamentally the same, but crisper, more vivid, and more vibrant in their color, detail, and texture. From beautiful backgrounds and environments of every stripe, to fetching character designs and other active elements, and from fluid action to dazzling effects, 'City Hunter' has never looked better. The sound design is also unfailingly robust, providing a feast for our ears, too, with the excellent voice acting, sharp sound effects, and Iwasaki Taku's fantastic, dynamic, flavorful original music. From a technical standpoint all the pieces are in place to make 'Shinjuku private eyes' the best presentation to date of Hojo Tsukasa's signature sweeper saga.

However, I don't think it is. The flick is enjoyable, but while we get everything we want out of the franchise, it feels terribly hollow, a soulless simulacrum.

The villain could have been interesting, but he's instead just a dull, unthinking tech bro obsessed with "Might Makes Right" power who flies off the handle with regards to any personal matter. Protagonist Saeba Ryo has never been more untouchable or unflappable, and he's never been less interesting - neither where action is required, nor where he is required to interact with his friends and allies. We see once again that Falcon is a tough guy with a heart of gold, but there is no development in the script for illustrating his inner softie; when at the climax he declares with all due machismo that "this one still has to pay," it's in reference to a henchman that neither he nor the audience has actually met, and we're no more than glimpsed him. Our heroes cause untold destruction while mostly barely breaking a sweat, while the antagonists are lucky to ever inflict a single paper cut. Too much of the dialogue is empty rubbish, whether invoking unconvincing dramatic lines or employing tiresome meta humor (i.e., "that's what's supposed to happen in fiction, so why isn't that happening now?"). From the characterizations, to dialogue, to scene writing and the narrative at large, it comes across not that scribe Kato Yoichi was revitalizing these characters and this setting for an earnest new installment of 'City Hunter,' but that they were working from a checklist of what 'City Hunter' should include. The dramatic components are wanting or flimsy, the comedy is surprisingly sparing, and there are never any stakes felt in the action.

Maybe I'm being overly kind by saying that I don't think 'Shinjuku private eyes' is altogether bad. Maybe that's the label it truly deserves. But for as light as this is, and passively entertaining - the full-length, adult-oriented equivalent of a "Saturday morning cartoon" - it's still entertaining. I would speak more highly of it if the movie didn't put me to sleep, but all the same I can't say I actively disliked it. It's just that this is simply not the best representation of the characters, and the action-comedy, that we know and love. I'm glad for those who get more out of it than I do, and it's decent enough to warrant checking out on a lazy day, yet if ever I were to revisit one of the CH films, I wouldn't be particularly inclined to rewatch this one.

Reviewed by / 10

Reviewed by keikoyoshikawa 5 / 10

Not a remake or a reboot, but not that good either

The City Hunter anime series from the late 1980s and early 1990s are a genre on their own. They were fun and silly, and for that time period the animation and storyline were perfectly fine.

Unfortunately, trying to make another series for the 21st century just doesn't work. Sure, the animation is modern and arguably better. But the characters and situations don't fit as well.

The Good: The main characters Saeba Ryo and Makimura Kaori have not changed. Their antics and relationship remain the same. While that is in a way good, this time it feels more like a lost opportunity.

The Bad: I think it can be argued that having an older Ryo with a bit more maturity, and Kaori's relationship with him advancing beyond simply bashing him in the head could have made for a better City Hunter.

The fans who watched City Hunger 30 years ago have grown up, and the series needs to do the same. Many aspects that made the series entertaining should be kept, of course; but others need to change.

In the end, I don't think we needed yet another City Hunger; I think we needed a believable progression of the main characters keeping with the times and the core audience.

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