The 10 Best Live-Action Anime Movies
Much has been said already about the new live-action remake of Ghost in the Shell. Allegations of whitewashing and a general disregard for the source material have dogged the film’s production for over the past year, raising concerns in the ongoing debate as to whether American filmmakers are equipped at all to the task of adapting foreign cultural properties with respect to their origins. The thought process and motivations behind such productions seems easy enough to grasp. After all, with superhero and comic movies dominating the zeitgeist of mainstream entertainment and earning some of the highest-grossing turnouts of the past two decades, why shouldn’t the same be true for anime movies?
At least, that’s what some of Hollywood’s biggest studios are thinking, as evidenced by the announcement of not only Ghost in the Shell but several other anime-to-live-action productions just within the past year. With Robert Rodriguez’s Alita: Battle Angel slated for release next summer, Adam Wingard’s Death Note remake premiering via Netflix in August, James Wan’s Robotech gearing up for pre-production, and Warner Bros. and Lionsgate respectively in the process of optioning rights to a remake of Attack on Titan and a live-action Naruto movie, it looks as though a new wave of anime and manga adaptations will become the latest trend in American entertainment. Not to mention Warner Bros.’ long postponed and much maligned attempt at an American Akira remake, whose nebulous production status looms heavy over fans of the 1988 original like some vague, ominous threat. The box-office success or failure of Rupert Sanders’ Ghost in the Shell may prove to be an inadvertent weathervane of sorts, pointing to either the continued support or premature mothballing of this nascent string of live-action productions. Attempts to translate anime to film however are anything but new, with Japan having long since gotten the jump on America by several decades with plenty attempts at adapting the country’s most prolific cultural export to the silver screen.
In preparation for Ghost in the Shell’s release, Paste has curated a list of ten of the best live-action anime and manga movies to date, ranging from some of the genre’s more fledgling efforts to films that managed to shuffle the burdensome schtick traditionally attached to genre fare and ingratiate themselves into the canon of popular modern cinema, period.
10. Guyver II: Dark Hero (1994)
Director: Steve Wang

If David Cronenberg was asked to direct a Super Sentai-style action flick at the height of his “body horror” phase, it might have looked something like The Guyver. Adapted from Yoshiki Takaya’s 1980 manga series, Guyver: Dark Hero is the direct sequel to the much-maligned 1991 adaptation, a movie championed for its impressive visual effects courtesy of co-director Joji “Screaming Mad George” Tani though panned by critics and fans for its stilted acting and cornball mishandling of the manga’s otherwise dark and violent subject matter. Guyver: Dark Hero is an improvement, though not by much, switching out the perpetually awkward Jack Armstrong for the infinitely more approachable (though still kind of cheesy) David Hayter in the role of Sean Barker, a young man whose body hosts a bio-organic alien device capable of transforming him into an superpowered living weapon known simply as “The Guyver.” Guyver: Dark Hero is noticeably darker than its predecessor, doubling down on the depiction of Sean’s deteriorating psyche as he fights subconsciously to fend off the Guyver unit’s invasive bloodlust while fighting crime at night as a vigilante. After destroying the nefarious Cronos organization in the first film, Sean is stirred by mysterious visions to travel to a hidden archaeological site in search of a means to find peace with the Guyver. As expected, things go awry, and it’s up to Sean to contend with a new host of vicious “Zoanoid” creatures as he struggles to accept his role as the Guyver. To be frank, even when compared to the original, Guyver: Dark Hero feels like a comedy of movie-making errors, with hammy dialogue, stiff fight scenes, and an ill-fitting soundtrack of over-aggressive synth scores combined with at one point, I shit you not, auto-tuned cat screeches. That said, the film has something of a cult following among fans of lowbrow superhero movies, and it does manage to possess a sort of earnest charm about it that eludes the glut of other, more poorly handled live-action treatments of anime.
9. Riki-Oh: The Story of Ricky (1991)
Director: Lam Ngai Kai

Where does one even begin to describe Riki-Oh: The Story of Ricky? For starters, it’s an adaptation of Masahiko Takajo and Tetsuya Saruwatari’s martial arts manga, set in a post-apocalyptic world circa 2001, where every prison on Earth has been privatized by a cabal of corrupt businessman. Louis Fan is Ricky Ho, a kind-hearted music student with Tommy Wiseau hair sentenced to ten years in a max security facility for murdering the man who orchestrated his girlfriend’s death. Antagonized by malicious inmates and a conniving hook-handed assistant warden, Ricky must use his martial arts mastery and superhuman ability to disembowel human beings with his bare hands to dispatch the notorious Gang of Four and win his freedom. Riki-Oh is a cult classic, combining tone-deaf performances with profoundly weird fight scenes and comically excessive gore. From the cyclopean assistant warden who keeps mints in his false eye to the head warden who resembles a man poorly cosplaying as Judge Doom from Who Framed Roger Rabbit, the movie never fails to top its own absurdity, perpetually keeping the viewer on their toes while waiting until the next indiscriminate act of ultra-violence spills out across the screen. The film’s prosthetic gore effects are equal parts laughable and effective, with just enough scenes that hit the sweet spot of gasp-worthy shock to make up for the majority of low-budget kitsch. Mind you, it’s not what you would call a “good film” by any traditional metric, but a morbidly satisfying one that does enough to assert its own peculiar claim to existence. In short, it’s a great movie to knock back a few beers to and watch with a like-minded group of cornball action aficionados. Riki-Oh might make you cringe, it might make you laugh—hell, it might even make you cry from laughter. But what’s undeniable is its appeal to entertain anyone with a taste for the lowbrow.
8. Gantz (2011)
Director: Shinsuke Sato

Kei Kurono is a craven and selfish high-schooler with little regard for anyone other than himself. But when he and his estranged childhood friend Masaru are killed in an act of courage during a grisly subway accident, the two are resurrected in a room filled with other recently deceased people by a mysterious black orb that charges them with the task of exterminating alien invaders masquerading on Earth. Shinsuke Sato’s 2011 Gantz and its follow-up Perfect Answer are near beat-for-beat remakes of Hiroya Oku’s sci-fi action horror manga, faithfully realizing the hyper-violent premise with few if any deviations from the source. Sato’s previous work as a videogame designer suits him well here, as much of Gantz’s premise boils down to a threadbare gamification of seinen archetypes and tropes as the protagonists are shuffled from one arbitrary one-off adversary to the next. That’s not to say that the movie is unenjoyable. The creature effects and gore are as good as they’ve ever been in a Japanese adaptation, and the cast’s initial one-dimensional personalities play off of one another well as the film progresses. What’s unfortunate about the movie is that it does nothing to improve upon the original’s shallowness or its unflattering depiction of women. Diligence to source material is more often than not rewarded by fans, but a failure to delve inward and correct on the series’ missteps frames this film as an enjoyable if inessential appendage of the original series.
7. Rurouni Kenshin (2012)
Director: Keishi Otomo

Keishi Otomo’s Rurouni Kenshin trilogy enjoys a rather sterling reputation among critics and fans of Nobuhiro Watsuki’s original manga, and for good reason. Evocative set pieces, bristling fight choreography, and a more-or-less well-casted selection of principal characters combine to make the Rurouni Kenshin films some of the most visually entertaining anime films to date. And yet … something feels, well, “off” about them. Take for example the first movie, released in 2012. Every one of Rurouni Kenshin’s core strengths is offset by a lackluster, sometimes even glaring counterpoint. When the action gets heavy, poor cinematography throttles otherwise engaging swordplay, robbing the choreography of its kineticism and rendering the action choppy and hard to follow. And while the actor portrayals are for the most part enjoyable and defer to the source material, often the overblown theatricality of their introductions and later performances have all inadvertent comedy of a musical that somehow forgot to include music numbers. Condensing a multi-volume chanbara series into a trilogy of film is an understandably daunting task, and much of the aforementioned eccentricity uncharacteristic of the source material could be forgiven had the film only bothered to smooth out its many cutting-room floor inconsistencies. The role and appearances of many of the characters from the original series are significantly truncated or conflated into one another, and as a result the motivations behind their actions become inadvertent casualties in the move to live-action. Why does Udon Jin-e use the Kamiya life-avowing sword technique to impersonate the Battosai, when he has no personal reason to hold a grudge against the Kamiya dojo? Your guess is as good as mine. This and more questionable inconsistencies spring out of the initial installment and peter out through the rest of the trilogy. All that said, Rurouni Kenshin is still a serviceable adaptation with strong portrayals and solid wire-fu action that could have done with a more thoughtful approach to editing and script revision.
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