Ghoul(2017) | Tokyo

Anime(?) Review: Tokyo Ghoul (2017) — I Hunger! | Standing

: Portraying Kaneki’s descent from a timid student to a desperate predator is no small feat. Reviewers on Rotten Tomatoes praised the acting, noting that it captured the emotional weight missing from many other live-action adaptations.

The film follows Ken Kaneki (played by Masataka Kubota), a shy, book-loving university student whose life is upended after a date with the beautiful Rize Kamishiro. It turns out Rize is a "ghoul"—a creature that looks human but survives solely on human flesh. Following a freak accident that kills Rize, Kaneki receives an emergency organ transplant from her, effectively turning him into the first known half-human, half-ghoul hybrid .

: Unlike some adaptations that deviate wildly from the source material, this film stays relatively faithful to the early chapters of the manga, focusing on the tension between the ghouls and the CCG (Commission of Counter Ghoul) agents. The Verdict: Watch or Skip?

The "live-action anime" curse is a real thing, but every so often, a film manages to break through the skepticism. Released in Japan on July 29, 2017, Tokyo Ghoul (2017) takes Sui Ishida's dark, visceral manga and brings it to life with surprising grit and emotional weight. Whether you're a die-hard fan of Kaneki’s tragic journey or a newcomer to the neon-lit, blood-soaked streets of Tokyo, this adaptation directed by Kentarō Hagiwara demands attention. The Story: A Date Gone Horribly Wrong

: Critics from Horrornews.net and Psychocinema highlight the high-quality CGI used to create the kagune (the ghouls' predatory organs used as weapons).

Tragedy and Transformation: Is the Tokyo Ghoul (2017) Live-Action Worth Your Time?

Anime(?) Review: Tokyo Ghoul (2017) — I Hunger! | Standing

: Portraying Kaneki’s descent from a timid student to a desperate predator is no small feat. Reviewers on Rotten Tomatoes praised the acting, noting that it captured the emotional weight missing from many other live-action adaptations. Tokyo Ghoul(2017)

The film follows Ken Kaneki (played by Masataka Kubota), a shy, book-loving university student whose life is upended after a date with the beautiful Rize Kamishiro. It turns out Rize is a "ghoul"—a creature that looks human but survives solely on human flesh. Following a freak accident that kills Rize, Kaneki receives an emergency organ transplant from her, effectively turning him into the first known half-human, half-ghoul hybrid . Anime(

: Unlike some adaptations that deviate wildly from the source material, this film stays relatively faithful to the early chapters of the manga, focusing on the tension between the ghouls and the CCG (Commission of Counter Ghoul) agents. The Verdict: Watch or Skip? The film follows Ken Kaneki (played by Masataka

The "live-action anime" curse is a real thing, but every so often, a film manages to break through the skepticism. Released in Japan on July 29, 2017, Tokyo Ghoul (2017) takes Sui Ishida's dark, visceral manga and brings it to life with surprising grit and emotional weight. Whether you're a die-hard fan of Kaneki’s tragic journey or a newcomer to the neon-lit, blood-soaked streets of Tokyo, this adaptation directed by Kentarō Hagiwara demands attention. The Story: A Date Gone Horribly Wrong

: Critics from Horrornews.net and Psychocinema highlight the high-quality CGI used to create the kagune (the ghouls' predatory organs used as weapons).

Tragedy and Transformation: Is the Tokyo Ghoul (2017) Live-Action Worth Your Time?