The lm that changed the way westerners watch Japanese anime is above all an exercise of extreme precision. Style and design applied to narration. The story is, of course, highly evocative. Set in 2019 Neo-Tokyo, the city was reconstructed after the third World War of 1988, with results far from any futuristic utopia; brutalist concrete giants span its skyline, reflecting the same desperation that animates its inhabitants.
Extraordinarily high skyscrapers – crooked, constructed without any sort of urban planning, one on top of the other – stand out from behind the coloured lights.
The crude aesthetics of these modern buildings, which bring us to think of the beginning of the twentieth century rather than the twenty- rst, perfectly endorse the idea of a dead- end prison metropolis. Or better, one with only one way out: destruction. The catastrophic nuclear event that eliminated the old Tokyo had created another city. A dark version of the Japanese capital, born with the death of the old one, and consequently destined not to have a future.
Cosmic nihilism, in short. The same that animates Kaneda, Tetsuo, Kaisuke and Yamagata, young bikers and members of this science ction version of a boˉsozoˉku gang, a sub-culture that was most widely diffused in Japan during