Tokyo Vice
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Tokyo Vice
Summary
Tokyo Vice is a television series[1]. It ranks in the top 4% of television_series entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,418 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Tokyo Vice is the creator of J. T. Rogers[3].
- Tokyo Vice's instance of is recorded as television series[4].
- Tokyo Vice was directed by Michael Mann[5].
- J. T. Rogers wrote the screenplay for Tokyo Vice[6].
- Tokyo Vice's composer is recorded as Saunder Jurriaans[7].
- Tokyo Vice's genre is crime television series[8].
- Tokyo Vice's genre is drama television series[9].
- Tokyo Vice's based on is recorded as Tokyo Vice[10].
- A cast member of Tokyo Vice was Ansel Elgort[11].
- A cast member of Tokyo Vice was Ken Watanabe[12].
- A cast member of Tokyo Vice was Rachel Keller[13].
- A cast member of Tokyo Vice was Hideaki Itō[14].
- A cast member of Tokyo Vice was Shō Kasamatsu[15].
- A cast member of Tokyo Vice was Rinko Kikuchi[16].
- A cast member of Tokyo Vice was Ella Rumpf[17].
- A cast member of Tokyo Vice was Tomohisa Yamashita[18].
- Tokyo Vice's production company is recorded as Fifth Season[19].
- Tokyo Vice's production company is recorded as WOWOW[20].
- The original language of Tokyo Vice was English[21].
- The original language of Tokyo Vice was Japanese[22].
- Tokyo Vice's Commons category is recorded as Tokyo Vice (TV series)[23].
- Tokyo Vice was distributed by video on demand[24].
- Tokyo Vice's original broadcaster is recorded as HBO Max[25].
- Tokyo Vice's color is recorded as color[26].
- Tokyo Vice's country of origin is recorded as United States[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Tokyo Vice was directed by Michael Mann[5]. J. T. Rogers wrote the screenplay for it[6]. Cast members include Ansel Elgort[11], Ken Watanabe[12], Rachel Keller[13], Hideaki Itō[14], Shō Kasamatsu[15], and Rinko Kikuchi[16]. It is the creator of J. T. Rogers[3].
Publication
Original languages include English[21] and Japanese[22]. Genres include crime television series[8] and drama television series[9]. Tokyo Vice was distributed by video on demand[24].
Subject and Themes
Tokyo Vice's main subject is Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department[28].
Adaptations and Inspiration
Tokyo Vice's after a work by is recorded as Jake Adelstein[29].
Why It Matters
Tokyo Vice ranks in the top 4% of television_series entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,418 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 16 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[30]