Action 2005 — Initial D Live

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to go pour a water cup into my passenger footwell and drive to the nearest 7-Eleven.

But honestly? It’s better than CGI. You can feel the rubber on the road. You know what you don’t hear in this movie? "DEJA VU!" initial d live action 2005

If you grew up in the early 2000s, the name Initial D triggered a very specific chemical reaction in your brain. It wasn’t just an anime about tofu delivery; it was a cultural tsunami of silky drifts, blurry guardrails, and a soundtrack of high-octane Italian disco. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to

Purists hated this. It changes the tone completely. The anime is manic; the movie is cool and brooding. However, if you treat the film as its own "gangster drift" universe (which makes sense given the Infernal Affairs directors), the industrial beats work. It’s less "running in the 90s" and more "stalking in the night." Let’s be real: The romance subplot in the anime (the "Mercury" arc with Mogi) was awkward. In the live-action, it’s even weirder. You can feel the rubber on the road

The bad news: The speed. To make the drifting "safe," the cars drive relatively slow. To fix this, the editors used fast cuts and blur effects. Sometimes it works; sometimes it looks like a music video from 2005. It lacks the visceral terror of the anime’s "POV from the gutter" shots.