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Neo Tokyo

Original title: Meikyû monogatari
  • 1987
  • 50m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
4.7K
YOUR RATING
Neo Tokyo (1987)
A trilogy of separate stories. In "Labyrinth labyrinthos", a girl and her cat enter a strange world. In "Running Man", a racer takes on the ultimate opponent. In "Construction Cancellation Order", a man must shut down worker robots.
Play trailer1:37
1 Video
38 Photos
Adult AnimationAnimeHand-Drawn AnimationAdventureAnimationFantasyHorrorSci-FiSport

A trilogy of separate stories. In "Labyrinth labyrinthos", a girl and her cat enter a strange world. In "Running Man", a racer takes on the ultimate opponent. In "Construction Cancellation O... Read allA trilogy of separate stories. In "Labyrinth labyrinthos", a girl and her cat enter a strange world. In "Running Man", a racer takes on the ultimate opponent. In "Construction Cancellation Order", a man must shut down worker robots.A trilogy of separate stories. In "Labyrinth labyrinthos", a girl and her cat enter a strange world. In "Running Man", a racer takes on the ultimate opponent. In "Construction Cancellation Order", a man must shut down worker robots.

  • Directors
    • Yoshiaki Kawajiri
    • Rintarô
    • Katsuhiro Ôtomo
  • Writers
    • Taku Mayumura
    • Masao Maruyama
    • Rintarô
  • Stars
    • Hideko Yoshida
    • Masane Tsukayama
    • Yû Mizushima
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    4.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Yoshiaki Kawajiri
      • Rintarô
      • Katsuhiro Ôtomo
    • Writers
      • Taku Mayumura
      • Masao Maruyama
      • Rintarô
    • Stars
      • Hideko Yoshida
      • Masane Tsukayama
      • Yû Mizushima
    • 17User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:37
    Trailer

    Photos38

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    Top cast17

    Edit
    Hideko Yoshida
    • Shôjo Sachi (segment "Labyrinth*labyrinthos")
    • (voice)
    Masane Tsukayama
    Masane Tsukayama
    • Bob Stone (segment "Hashiru otoko")
    • (voice)
    Yû Mizushima
    Yû Mizushima
    • Sugioka Tsutomu (segment "Kôji chûshi meirei")
    • (voice)
    Iemasa Kayumi
    • Buchô (segment "Kôji chûshi meirei")
    • (voice)
    Jôji Yanami
    Jôji Yanami
    • (segment "Kôji chûshi meirei")
    • (voice)
    Hiroshi Ôtake
    • Robot 444 no 1-gô (segment "Kôji chûshi meirei")
    • (voice)
    Banjô Ginga
    • Zach Hugh (segment "Hashiru otoko")
    • (voice)
    Yûsaku Yara
    Yûsaku Yara
    • (segment "Kôji chûshi meirei")
    • (voice)
    Kazumi Tanaka
    • (segment "Kôji chûshi meirei")
    • (voice)
    Robert Axelrod
    Robert Axelrod
    • Tsutomu Sugioka (segment "The Order to Stop Construction")
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    Cheryl Chase
    Cheryl Chase
    • Sachi (segment "Labyrinth")
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    Barbara Goodson
    Barbara Goodson
    • Mother (segment "Labyrinth")
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    Steve Kramer
    Steve Kramer
    • Chief Technician
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    • …
    Michael McConnohie
    Michael McConnohie
    • Reporter (segment "Running Man")
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    • …
    Jeff Winkless
    Jeff Winkless
    • Zach Hugh
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    • …
    Tom Wyner
    Tom Wyner
    • Walla (segment "Running Man")
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    • …
    Rafael Ferrer
    Rafael Ferrer
    • Reporter (segment "Running Man") (MTV Liquid Television version)
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    • Directors
      • Yoshiaki Kawajiri
      • Rintarô
      • Katsuhiro Ôtomo
    • Writers
      • Taku Mayumura
      • Masao Maruyama
      • Rintarô
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    7.04.7K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    7DonaldDooD

    A Solid Triple Feature

    Is there a connection between these shorts? Do they take place in the same universe? No. Do they share a theme? No. Are they all sci-fi? Well, two are, but the first one isn't. The first two take place at night, but the last mostly during the day. Nothing on the surface is shared, although they each have a similar style and sense of imagination.

    There's not much to say about this short movie. The stories are quite simple, although one is silent and vague. They're just quick glimpses into other worlds. But I liked each one of them. They're interesting, mysterious, and well-animated. There are better anthology films, but this is perfectly fine for a watch. If it interests you, give it a shot. There aren't too many movies like it.
    8db215

    Poetic, snappy, and so much better than Robot Carnival

    I really enjoyed this. It had everything that Robot Carnival did not – vibrancy, humour, charm, originality, and something interesting to offer. It also does not make the mistake of being too long. Though I wouldn't really call the majority of this OAV "experimental", this style of films, with quirky, avant-garde direction tend to get boring and repetitive over time. The three shorts that make up this collection keep it snappy, and sacrifice none of their brilliance for doing so.

    The opening feature, directed by the infamous Rintaro, sets the scene for a child's fantasy, only to twist in a morbid direction near the end to present the following two, darker tales.

    What is it about cats and anime/manga? They must surely be the most common animal/sidekick. The fat black example in this piece reminds me of the bad-ass star of the Legend of the Galactic Pirates, not to mention the brilliant What's Michael manga by Makoto Kobayashi. The piece presents a dreamy neko-fantasy world of childhood imagination and modern art. I was reminded of more of Rintaro and Madhouse's work, for example Doomed Megalopolis or CLAMP's Tokyo Babylon. I liked it a lot, though it did almost seem out of place in light of the second two episodes.

    The middle piece is easily the weakest, though not without it's charm. A well-used scenario in manga and anime forms the basis of Yoshiaki Kawajiri's (The Cockpit, Barefoot Gen) effort – high-speed, deadly races. Think Battle Angel Alita/Ashen Victor, Venus Wars, etc. It is good, however. In fact it is almost terrifying in places. The plot revolves around a seasoned pilot of superstar status. He has stayed alive longer than most, and suffers terrible stress as a result. He also just happens to have extraordinary mental abilities. The idea is stupid and the plot is tired, but bear in mind that this is more than 20 years old now, and the scenery designs are poetic Japanese visions of the future at their best. Characters resemble the best aspects of The Legend of the Four Kings or Golgo 13, and the music is fitting, and good.

    Katsuhiro Ōtomo's short finishes the OAV. A lot of people go mental about this film from what I've read. It is indeed good, but comments like "a shorter Akira!!!" are wrong. The only real similarities are in the designs, and that's what happens when an anime director makes two films, dumbass.

    The Order to Stop Construction, as it is called, concerns another well used concept in Japanese media – the tool becoming independent. Robots are employed to construct an immense complex in inhospitable climes, but someone gets their wires crossed (get it?) and the robotic interpretation of commands is not up for negotiation. Again, the scenery designs are fantastic – intricate and gritty in typical Ōtomo style, and the characters and robots also carry his trademark blocky look. Scenes of rainforest are not often featured in Ōtomo's work, preferring as he does visions of the concrete jungle, but here they are beautiful, and sit comfortably with the huge structures of the project as the endless process of growth and regrowth characterized by the dumb robots as well. So beautiful, in fact, that I'm reminded of Kunihiko Yuyama's awesome Windaria. No small praise indeed.

    I was reminded of the existence of Neo Tokyo whilst researching Robot Carnival. Both are supposed to be "experimental anime" of a similar variety. That is wrong. The only thing the two anthologies have in common is the involvement of Katsuhiro Ōtomo. Robot Carnival sucks.

    Something else which Neo Tokyo achieves which Robot Carnival cannot, is that it hasn't aged. Whilst Robot Carnival had a soundtrack of 80s disco and designs of frumpy 80s Japan, Neo Tokyo has managed to avoid such rubbish, despite being made before the former. One thing it didn't get right, or rather we in the West didn't, was the dubbing. It's bloody awful, and I was thankful for the dual-language file. The acting is bad, and the actors are miscast. Douchebags.
    7bunkumono

    Not as Good as Memories but still worth watching

    I enjoyed these shorts, especially the Otomo one, but the first two were a little too strange for me. I give them extra points for being original and the animation in all three was stellar (I wish more TV anime was as impressive). It just didn't leave as much of an impression as Memories did. But if you're an anime or animation freak, it's worth checking out.
    mxb598

    Neo tokyo cool but weird

    I was lucky enough to obtain this film off an online auctions. And this is my review the film displays three short stories all extremely trippy.

    The first one involves a girl, a circus, a cat and a mirror and a parade of very odd animals. This one makes you feel like your on acid at one point.

    The second on is called the running man about a psionic race car driver who pushes his limits. Very Cool.

    The third one contains probaly the most talking out of all three. itis a grim sardonic comedy about a man who can't stop a robot crew from working. it has a very ironic ending.
    7smoothrunner

    Surrealistic and creepy

    "Labyrinth Tales" is a very peculiar art-house "mini-collection" of three short stories, one of which, perhaps, has become a classic. I won't say that this is the most pleasant and fascinating spectacle, but definitely quite original, not constrained by the clichés of the anime industry. The plot opens with a story in the atmosphere of "Something wicked this way comes" by Ray Bradbury about a girl and her cat who do not listen her mother and fall into an ominous carnival through the mirror. There they are shown two more stories, the first of which, "The Running Man", has taken on a life of its own.

    This story, at one time, was rated as the weakest, but it is still looks the most impressive. First of all, due to its naturalistic cruelty, combined with static and meditativeness. But I would note psychology. The story is sustained in a gloomy cyberpunk style. The unbeaten champion of racing, having lost his former grip, is no longer able to withstand competitors. He is exhausted by the constant tension of the competition. But ambitions doe not let him go - these are all that is left of him. Therefore, he decides to win the losing race at any cost - by simply blowing up the cars of rivals with telekinesis. However, even left alone on the track, he cannot escape from the slavery of his ambitions. He is locked in a labyrinth of his own passions. It begins to seem to him that he is still being overtaken - by the younger ghost of himself. Monitor shows that his heart has stopped and the driver of the car is dead, but the dead man is the first (and only) to cross the finish line, continuing the race with his own ghost to complete self-destruction. The dead racer is driven only by his ambitions, which first made him to "remove the obstacles" to the goal - to murder other pilots - and then murdered him too.

    The second story (Construction Cancellation Order) is more like an ironically absurd story by Robert Sheckley. A Japanese company employee arrives at a flood-damaged, jungle besieged automated construction site in a third world country to investigate what happened to the former site manager and decide to cancell construction or not. However, AI-controlled construction develops according to its own laws. It seems that the machines must withstand the chaos of the jungle advancing from all sides, but they only multiply the chaos themselves, going crazy in an attempt to realize a meaningless task. Ultimately, the new manager has to fight not so much with the life-affirming chaos of nature, but with the meaningless, self-destructive chaos of pseudo-intelligent machines, looking for the central computer in the labyrinth of mechanisms.

    As for the girl and her cat, they themselves become part of the carnival chaos, seemingly never getting out of their labyrinth.

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    Related interests

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    Adult Animation
    Steve Blum and Kôichi Yamadera in Cowboy Bebop (1998)
    Anime
    Jodi Benson, Jason Marin, and Samuel E. Wright in The Little Mermaid (1989)
    Hand-Drawn Animation
    Still frame
    Adventure
    Daveigh Chase, Rumi Hiiragi, and Mari Natsuki in Spirited Away (2001)
    Animation
    Elijah Wood in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)
    Fantasy
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    Sci-Fi
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    Sport

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      After premiering in 1987 the film had its first wide release in its native Japan on video, on October 10 that year. It was only after the success of Akira (1988) that Tôhô gave it a general theatrical release, on April 15, 1989.
    • Alternate versions
      The "Running Man" segment had a different English dub, narrated by Rafael Ferrer instead of Michael McConnohie, when aired on MTV's Liquid Television (1991) program than the Streamline or ADV home video versions.
    • Connections
      Edited from Labyrinth Labyrinthos (1986)
    • Soundtracks
      Gymnopédies
      Written by Erik Satie

      Played during Labyrinth Labyrinthos

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 20, 1992 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Neo-Tokyo
    • Production companies
      • Project Team Argos
      • Madhouse
      • Kadokawa Shoten Publishing Co.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 50m
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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