Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueHongo Takeshi awakens to discover he has been transformed into a grasshopper-hybrid cyborg. Becoming the Masked Rider, he must fight the mysterious evil organization SHOCKER to protect all o... Tout lireHongo Takeshi awakens to discover he has been transformed into a grasshopper-hybrid cyborg. Becoming the Masked Rider, he must fight the mysterious evil organization SHOCKER to protect all of mankind.Hongo Takeshi awakens to discover he has been transformed into a grasshopper-hybrid cyborg. Becoming the Masked Rider, he must fight the mysterious evil organization SHOCKER to protect all of mankind.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Prix
- 1 nomination au total
- K
- (voice)
- Kumo Augment-01
- (voice)
Avis en vedette
Shin Kamen Rider is a silly piece of nostalgic cheese that might not be for everyone. Hideaki Anno's straight-faced direction will come off as a quirky spin exclusively for fans who grew up on the old Kamen Rider shows. However, first-timers may feel completely alienated trying to get in on the joke.
At its two-hour runtime, the script is episodic, equivalent to roughly four 30-minute episodes on TV, each complete with its villain.
The deadpan acting style that Hideaki Anno has maintained through these 3 Shin films remains an odd choice; the actors seem to be performing experimental theater or in a Yorgo Lanthimos film.
Every feeling the characters have is blatantly stated out loud, and as a result, the film feels more told than shown, focused on the plot, not the characters. I don't recall the acting in old Tokusatsu shows being this way, so it's not a matter of tribute. It's as if Anno is stripping these established cultural icons to their bare skeleton and just presenting them through chilled museum glass.
This cold bland performance style does work better here for Kamen Rider than in Godzilla or Ultraman. Anno builds in quiet meditative moments of the Kamen Rider contemplating his power and responsibilities that worked well. If deconstruction was indeed Hideaki Anno's goal, this is the closest he's achieved it.
The magic kicks in during the action sequences. The old-school special effects, monster makeup, and the theme song all work together and in these short moments, I was whisked away back to my childhood. It was a simpler time when watching actors don silly masks and fight stuntmen dressed in rubber monster costumes on TV was sufficient entertainment.
Once it gets going, it doesn't matter that it's cheesy, the effects are shoddy, or that Kamen Rider uses the same technique to finish off the monsters every time. Those moments are quite fun.
Everything else in between, however, is quite the endurance test.
This movie is directed by Hideaki Anno (Shin Godzilla) and stars Sôsuke Ikematsu (The Last Samurai), Minami Hamabe (Let Me Eat Your Pancreas), Tasuku Emoto (And Your Bird Can Sing) and Shin'ya Tsukamoto (Tokyo Fist).
The characters and universe for this picture are perfectly set up. The action scenes initially are great with fantastic kill scenes, gore, flying body parts, everything you'd want from a Kamen Rider picture. The villain had potential too. Unfortunately the content gets a bit too over the top, a bit too over done, and ran out of gas for me. I did enjoy watching it unfold, but it didn't have the same magic as Shin Godzilla.
Overall, this movie had enough worthwhile elements to make it worth a watch but isn't as good as Shin Godzilla. I would score this a 6/10 and recommend watching it once.
There's some flaws for sure.. like the pacing, some actions feels a little off, and how a certain character(no spoilers) pretty much carried the later parts of the movie. But it really captures how a Kamen Rider should be, Ilove the visuals, and I don't mind the violence because if you read the manga that's how it is, how strong the rider. And it's obvious this movie isn't for kids unlike the tv shows. All in all it feels like a love letter to us old fans.
Those who watched the original series and read the manga will definitely love this, to me it's everything it needs to be. Ishinomori sensei would be proud.
Here's hoping for a sequel, perhaps with V3 being introduced.
The secret to Anno's success here can be summed up as "just go for it." We're thrown headlong into the plot from the very start with one big action scene, then an even bigger one, and then loads of exposition, all within the first twenty minutes or so. This flick has no care for grandiosity, emphasis of snarky humor, or nods to the past; it is unflinchingly direct and straightforward, offers subtle, cheeky wit only occasionally and in passing, and charges ahead without looking back. Partnerships are formed without question, and information is divulged without blinking; lines are delivered very drily, fundamental movements are executed with cold-eyed precision, and stunts and actions are performed flawlessly. And through it all, the picture carries an unyielding deadpan tone - like John Carpenter's 'Ghosts of Mars,' but without the winking sensibility. Rather, this is the devil-may-care, fun-loving, yet nevertheless carefully crafted equivalent of a flustered worker forthrightly discharging their responsibility by throwing it at their superior, in this case the audience: "You want Kamen Rider? This is what you want? Fine, have it. It's all yours."
Such thoughts quite extend to or are reflected in everything in these two hours. We meet our two primary characters right from the start, too, and while Hongo Takeshi may be the superhero, leading lady Midorikawa Ruriko is the one who is ALWAYS prepared, and has an answer to every problem. In turn, star Ikematsu Sosuke is allowed to demonstrate some human emotion, while co-star Hamabe Minami is as unwaveringly straitlaced and brusque as Anno's writing and direction. Often elaborate stunts, fight choreography, and practical effects look fantastic; visuals rendered in post-production range from "decent," on the high end, to "I dare you to hate this," and always with a thousand-yard stare. And the latter verbiage readily applies to most all else, including the cinematography, editing, costume design, hair, makeup, sound effects, and music. Scenes that in another title would be played up or drawn out for dramatic effect sail past smoothly and quickly with the effortlessness and confidence of seeing the enemy was defeated and the story beat recorded. Appearing as Scorpion-Aug, Nagasawa Masami is an especial joy because she is so enthusiastically unhinged in her ham-fisted performance. And so on, and so on.
Whether Anno's approach to this reboot is something that one can remotely get behind depends completely on personal preferences; I can understand how it will not appeal to all. Yet even as the movie embraces abject, unfettered, ham-handed outrageousness - well in keeping in its own way with the spirit of classic tokusatsu, truthfully - it knows exactly what it's doing, and 'Shin Kamen Rider' really well made such as it is. Every last trace of the screenplay might be dispensed with the dead-eyed, curt efficiency of a shark pursuing its prey, but there are deliciously flavorful, imaginative ideas all throughout that are ripe for cinematic storytelling. The costume design, hair, and makeup erally are sharp and fetching across the board. Iwasaki Taku's varied, dynamic original score goes hard, supplying the wholehearted (and over the top) vitality that is broadly, deliberately withheld from the proceedings otherwise. The cast give committed, spirited, admirable performances even within the tenor of unabashed, tersely dispensed nonsense, including Hamabe; Nishino Nanase, portraying Wasp-Aug with a sly playfulness, is a definite highlight. I repeat that all tangible goods and action sequences, including the production design and art direction, really are swell; every now and again the digital artists worked extra hard to make a specific moment look good, and they ably do so if and when they want to.
It's a wild, somewhat peculiar ride, alternately artful, artistic, and artless; clever, and brazen. In the latter half 'Shin Kamen Rider' finds a little time to even try a bit of earnestness amidst all the stone-faced bombast - and still that slant is foremost, informing the whole from beginning to end. For those who are open to what it's doing, though, it's also splendidly entertaining, to the extent that I wouldn't mind if there were more to come. It's hardly the sort of film that demands viewership, but if you're at all receptive to the space it plays in, this is worth checking out and I'm glad to give it my recommendation.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe film's first trailers are based on the title sequence of Kamen Raidâ (1971).
- Citations
Kumo Augment-01: Truly, you are Midorikawa's masterpiece. It's incredible that you escaped unscathed, Batta Aug.
Takeshi Hongo: No. My name is... Rider. Call me Kamen Rider!
- ConnexionsRemake of Kamen Raidâ (1971)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Shin Kamen Rider?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Shin Masked Rider
- Lieux de tournage
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 15 800 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 15 835 414 $ US
- Durée
- 2h 1m(121 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1