Alt Name: | Multiple Personality Detective Psycho – Kazuhiko Amamiya Returns |
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Based On: | Multiple Personality Detective Psycho by Eiji Ōtsuka |
Screenplay: | Eiji Ōtsuka Gichi Ootsuka Yumi Sirakura |
Director: | Takashi Miike |
Starring: | Naoki Hosaka Tomoko Nakajima Ren Osugi Sadaharu Shioda Yoshinari Anan |
Theme Music Composer: | Tsugutoshi Gotô Yumi Shirakura |
Country: | Japan |
Language: | Japanese |
Num Episodes: | 6 |
Producer: | Naoki Abe Yoshihisa Nakagawa Toshihiro Satô |
Cinematography: | Naosuke Imaizumi |
Runtime: | 56 minutes |
Company: | Excellent Film Kadokawa Shoten Publishing Co. MPD Psycho Project Pony Canyon Toskadomain Co. Ltd WoWow |
Network: | WoWow |
MPD Psycho (full title Multiple Personality Detective Psycho – Kazuhiko Amamiya Returns) is a 2000 Japanese six-episode horror crime television series based on the manga of the same name and directed by Takashi Miike. It originally aired on 2 May 2000. It has a surrealist bent, and, according to Jim Harper, the author of Flowers from Hell, "bears little similarity to the average made-for-TV detective thriller".
The plot is similar to the beginning of the manga series but does not relate to the incidents of Lucy Monostone and the Gakuso Company. The story takes place in the final days of the Shōwa Era. Yosuke Kobayashi, a detective assigned to a homicide unit, saw his wife killed by a serial killer, Shinji Nishizono. From the shock of the incident, he suffers from multiple personality disorder and becomes Kazuhiko Amamiya. Soon after, he manages to hunt down and kill his wife's murderer. Now a series of murders has started and the suspect is claiming to be Shinji Nishizono.
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The series contains several visual distortions which, mistaken by some to be censorship, are of non-explicit images and have been seen instead as a jab against Japanese censorship.
DVD Talk called it a "difficult yet fascinating" series that "wraps you up in its nightmarish dreamscapes", writing, "its unending complications will put off many, but for fans of Miike's catalogue or other similarly intentionally dense, style-over-substance material, there's enough here to delight and horrify".[1]
The series was first released on DVD by Pony Canyon in Japan.[2]
It was subsequently released on DVD in Australia in 2008 by Siren Visual Entertainment.[3]