Toei's
Kamen Rider (
Masked Rider) superhero franchise has been riddled with shamefully bad writing over the course of the past few years and some of the series' staple scribes have become something of a parody of themselves (looking at you, Inuoe). After I'd nearly given up on the modern riders entirely, 2009's
Kamen Rider W ("Double") was a surprising breath of fresh air, coming across as far more solid effort on several levels, apparently thanks to the efforts of newcomer producer Hideaki Tsukada. I don't know how well
W did in the ratings but it was apparently received well enough to merit the production of two direct-to-DVD movies after the series had ended, released under the joint title
Kamen Rider W RETURNS. The first of these was this one,
Kamen Rider Accel, which moved the focus away from the series' primary heroes to focus on Accel, its secondary Rider.
It is awesome.
Kamen Rider W was ostensibly modeled as a crime drama/film noir sort of series but it generally took a pretty light-hearted approach to the material. This was something that rubbed me the wrong way for a little while and I constantly lamented how we'd probably never see a darker, more noir-like approach to the material. LE SIGH, etc. I got over it and eventually came to love the show - score! But
Kamen Rider Accel is exactly that! The switch from national television to "V-Cinema" allowed director Koichi Sakamoto (the darling director of the fandom ever since his feature film debut with
Ultra Galaxy Legends) to take a considerably darker route with the plot and go a lot more intense with the action. The result is one of my favorite entries into the Rider series. The plot is nothing terribly original, mind you, but Sakamoto's works tend to be balanced more towards balls-out action and style so it's nothing surprising. What makes it so fun is that while it may be cut from the standard crime drama fabric, the typical cop framed for murder can transform into an armored superhero and the criminals he chases are mad monsters. It's pretty great and the action and cinematography are top-notch.
On a more somber note, this was the final role of Minoru Tanaka, a fantastic character actor who committed suicide just days after the release of this film. R.I.P.