Plex Pro Week is happening now
Learn from the pros and redeem your exclusive offer.
See More
Find Movies & TV
Home
Live TV
On Demand
Discover
Explore
Movies & TV Shows
Most Popular
Leaving Soon
Categories
Action
Animation
Comedy
Crime
Descriptive Audio
Documentary
Drama
En Español
Horror
Music
Romance
Sci-Fi
Thriller
Western
Explore
Browse Channels
Featured Channels
ION
BET x Tyler Perry Comedy
MythBusters
Categories
Hit TV
Drama TV
True Crime
Reality
News
Sports
Game Shows
History & Science
Comedy
Daytime TV
Movies
Sci-Fi & Action
Chills & Thrills
Classic TV
Food & Home
Black Entertainment
Kids & Family
Lifestyle
Music
Nature & Travel
Anime & Gaming
En Español
International
Sign In
Tokyo Vice
Season 1
Add Show to Watchlist
A first-hand account of the Tokyo Metropolitan Police beat following Jake Adelstein, an American journalist who embeds himself into the Tokyo Vice police squad to reveal corruption. Based on Jake Adelstein’s non-fiction book of the same name.
More
Where to Watch Season 1
Max
Subscription
Max Amazon Channel
Subscription
8 Episodes
The Test
E1
The Test
Episode 1
Kishi Kaisei
E2
Kishi Kaisei
Episode 2
Read the Air
E3
Read the Air
Episode 3
I Want It That Way
E4
I Want It That Way
Episode 4
Everybody Pays
E5
Everybody Pays
Episode 5
The Information Business
E6
The Information Business
Episode 6
Sometimes They Disappear
E7
Sometimes They Disappear
Episode 7
Yoshino
E8
Yoshino
Episode 8
Cast of Season 1
Ansel Elgort
Jake Adelstein
Ken Watanabe
Hiroto Katagiri
Rachel Keller
Samantha Porter
Hideaki Ito
Jin Miyamoto
Show Kasamatsu
Akiro Sato
Ella Rumpf
Polina
Rinko Kikuchi
Eimi Maruyama
Shun Sugata
Hitoshi Ishida
Season 1 Reviews
RogerEbert.com
Nick Allen
The unwritten rules are different in this underground, and Tokyo Vice orchestrates a special thrill in trying to get them on paper.
The Daily Beast
Nick Schager
Its prime focus is on its characters' navigation of an environment rife with mysteries buried under layers of rituals and codes of conduct...
Chicago Sun-Times
Richard Roeper
One of the best shows of the year so far.
TIME Magazine
Judy Berman
In an overabundant genre where story lines tend to follow the familiar beats of an investigation, viewers have to care about the hero. And that's tough when his inner life is given minimal attention.
Slant Magazine
Anzhe Zhang
At its best, the series sketches out a detail-rich portrait of Japanese society and the criminal world that operates in its shadows.
ABC News
Peter Travers
Michael Mann, who directed the sensational pilot episode of this fact-based series about an American reporter (a terrific Ansel Elgort) covering the crime beat in Tokyo, shows you how thrilling action can be when a world-class talent is calling the shots
USA Today
Patrick Ryan
For all its visual pleasures, "Tokyo Vice" is guilty of sidelining its most fascinating characters. And with so many other streaming shows fighting for our attention, that's a punishable offense.
Wall Street Journal
John Anderson
"Everybody pays" is a line heard several times. They do. I'm as eager as anyone to find out how much.
San Jose Mercury News
Randy Myers
"Tokyo Vice" is made with style and attitude, and should easily become your next streaming addiction.
Los Angeles Times
Robert Lloyd
It is so far an intriguing mix of familiar flavors and unusual spices. How it finishes we will learn together, but so far, so very good.
NPR
John Powers
Although Tokyo Vice is not wholly innocent of exoticism and cliché, the series does a nifty job of taking us around Tokyo back during the heyday of the yakuza.
New York Times
Mike Hale
Worth the investment, at least if you're inclined to enjoy leisurely neo-noir.
Newsday
Verne Gay
After that first episode ends, and Mann hands off the show to other directors, an impression starts to build that the best "Vice'' has to offer is behind it.
New York Magazine/Vulture
Roxana Hadadi
It's Watanabe and the show's other Japanese actors... whose performances and character backstories are compelling enough to overcome the slightly repetitive dialogue and sometimes workmanlike direction.
The Playlist
Brian Tallerico
The show slowly comes into its own, becoming richer and more interesting with each one. Its a program that will demand patience, but that increasingly feels like it will be worth the effort.
Hollywood Reporter
Daniel Fienberg
[Kept] me consistently engaged, while at the same time making me wish that this latest entry in a long-outmoded genre might find some way to go a little deeper instead of hovering on the surface of something and someplace fascinating.
AV Club
Matt Schimkowitz
At its best, Tokyo Vice drags the viewer's arm through the bars, alleys, offices, and homes of the city's many classes and communities, providing a rounded picture of a place that leaves room for the thrill of exploration and discovery.
Rolling Stone
Alan Sepinwall
This is a decent show, but one that feels like it would be much better if it were willing to be more Japanese.
Variety
Daniel D'Addario
Mann's sense for the visual language of temptation -- conveying vice both as a scourge to be eliminated and as a decadent pleasure -- enriches Tokyo Vice. So, too, does his understanding of hierarchies, within both the criminal and legitimate worlds.
indieWire
Ben Travers
Anyone familiar with Michael Mann's knack for off-center close-ups, who trusts in his steady excavations of unsavory men, should find Tokyo Vice a compulsive watch, even after the Miami Vice auteur exits the director's chair.
Watch Season 1 Videos
Tokyo Vice: Season 1
Tokyo Vice: Season 1
Trailer
Take Plex everywhere
Watch free anytime, anywhere, on almost any device.
See the full list of supported devices
Home
Live TV
On Demand
Discover