MOVIE REVIEW : ‘Akira’: High-Tech Hokum From Japan
“Akira” (at the Westside Pavilion), a Japanese animated feature based on Katsuhiro Otomo’s popular comic books about a teen-age motorcycle gang, is a compendium of the worst cliches of Japanese animation--two hours of chases, laser attacks, machine-gun battles, spilled stage blood, computer-animated backgrounds and hokey dialogue.
Buried in the morass is a story of sorts, but anyone who isn’t well-grounded in the Akira comics, which are set in post-apocalypse Tokyo, circa AD 2030, will be hopelessly lost by the end of the first half-hour.
Otomo, who wrote and directed the movie, has told interviewers that he set out to “make a film that would be a jumble of images, instead of just showing the highlights of each scene,” and on that score, he succeeded. “Akira” is a jumble of high-tech visuals that will appeal only to hard-core Japanese animation fans. Viewers in search of a coherent narrative or polished animation should look elsewhere.
More to Read
Only good movies
Get the Indie Focus newsletter, Mark Olsen's weekly guide to the world of cinema.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.