Kamen Rider: The First

2005
6.4| 1h30m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 05 December 2005 Released
Producted By: Toei Company
Country: Japan
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Takeshi Hongo is a man of extraordinary intellect, but his promising future is about to be maliciously snuffed out by and evil secret society known as Shocker. Reinvented against his will and transformed into a powerful experimental cyborg, Hongo will forever be known as Kamen Rider The First.

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Director

Takao Nagaishi

Production Companies

Toei Company

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Kamen Rider: The First Audience Reviews

Cubussoli Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!
Mjeteconer Just perfect...
BoardChiri Bad Acting and worse Bad Screenplay
Scarlet The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.
alucard_castlevania86 When I first saw the cover of this film, I was really surprised with it since but also extremely happy since it was like a dream come true for me. Kamen Rider has been childhood hero since I was 6 and I'm still very fond of themTo get to this film, I have to stay that it was good but everything just seemed to be like going just too fast and it was more like the creators were focusing on Hongo more than Ichimoji rather than having both of the riders fight along side by side together most of the time. Apart form that, there were also a lot of parts which were not explained in the film like Kamen Rider 2's background, where did he get his bike and what was his real connection to Katsuhiko However, these flaws did not stopped KR : THE FIRST from being a great movie. The love triangle plot between Hongo, Asuka and Ichimoji was great and I really liked the part when Kamen Rider 1 saved Asuka from the spider monster defeating him in the process. The final fight was also great and I really like the choreography crew who worked out so well in making the fights very entertaining. The ending with KR 1 carrying Asuka in his arms on the beach in the end was really romantic indeed (as well as the one when they were riding together on Hongo's bike Overall, Kamen Rider THE FIRST is a great film and should be enjoyable for all the fans and its even better than its sequel THE NEXT. Its definitely something for the fans to enjoy
toyguy First of all, the negative review(s) you might read here definitely do not reflect the opinion of all die-hard fans of the classic Kamen Rider series. You can see that their review 'usefulness rating' are very low anyway, meaning most people don't agree with their baseless reasons for bashing something new.I watched the original Kamen Rider series as a kid back in the 70s, and it was really good entertainment for the time. Rewatching these classics about 30 yrs later, I feel the nostalgia, but understandably not too impressed with the old fashion FX and fight choreography. So, pulling this franchise into the 21st century is a very good idea to me. I just couldn't get into the other "Rider" series because the story isn't about Hongo. And the Riders only look derivative of the original and therefore not as good.It really brought back fond memories when the classic title theme was played at the beginning of The First. I totally love the introduction of Kamen Rider 1. Since the character is introduced during the night, the light-up eyes effect was an excellent idea! The use of CG effects in the movie was well...very effective. Some good examples include: when Kamen Rider 1 jumped off the building landing on the ground with all the broken window glass around him. Also when Kamen Rider 1 and 2 are fighting each other, the concrete busting punches and kicks are really powerful looking. These are not just eye candy FX but used very effectively to show the invincibility of these super-human characters.As for the villains, the intricate wire-work was very well done. I especially liked the battle with 'The Spider' where high-flying moves are done in conjunction with speeding motorcycles and among trees. The original series (if watched today) lacked some of these FX scenes to thoroughly convince me that Kamen Riders have any real special powers. Well, other than the big kick that ends the show every time. But for a youngster in the 70s, that was enough to keep me role-playing "Kamen Rider" endlessly with my friends during recess. One other cool idea in this new franchise: we can see that the "grasshopper" heads of the Riders after transforming is really just a helmet. They can take it off to reveal their real human faces. This allows the actors a much greater range of emotions while they are Riders. It also confirms for me that the Rider transformation is just changing into the suit, not changing into another being like Ultraman. For Kamen Rider, I rather like the idea that they are still human inside.Overall if you were a fan of the original, I think The First is a must see, but still good entertainment if you just happen to like superheroes and anime. I hope that I'm not offending any fans of the other 'Rider' series when I say that they're just not the same as Kamen Rider. But "The First" successfully captures that magic from the past, and relaunch it with modern film production values. 9/10
le_chooche Continuing Japaense movie industry's recent exploit of classic tokusatsu (casshar, Tetsujin 28), here comes the (yet another) remake of the Kamen rider series. On the plus side, the cinematography is wonderful. there are quite a few brilliant ideas: Shocker is like a modern Costa Nostra, forcing converts into living a double life. A stable of potentials are kept in a secret hospital for later material. The 2 riders both performs questionable actions as criminals. The creepy agent from Shocker. The taking off of the mask. These are all ideas that could have made up a great script. But sadly the scrip-writer failed to deliver on this one.This could be a great movie, if only the script didn't spent half of the running time on predictable romances by paper cutout characters and badly written cliché' ridden rumination about life, On the other hand this movie offers plenty of unexplained plot lines that just fizzled out, and, Oh, unanswered questions:1) Who got pick for conversion? Why? 2) Do the Inhumans have free will? Or not? What do they got in return for having their body altered? 3) How did Hongou Takeshi beat the need for blood transfusion? 4) WTF did Hongou do to earn him a BRAND NEW bike as a GIFT?I did force myself to sit through it. But boy, it wasn't fun.
jmaruyama Next to Ultraman, Godzilla and possibly Tetsuwan Atom, Kamen Rider is probably one of the most recognized of the Japanese heroes. Ever since his debut in 1971, Ishinomori Shoutaro's insect-themed, motorcycle riding, "bug-eyed" hero has become an almost iconic character to millions of fans not only in Japan but also across the world. The original Kaman Rider series ran for an amazing 98 episodes and spawned a long running franchise which lasts to this day. Nagaishi Takao's "Kamen Rider: The First" is the first attempt to revisit the original hero in nearly two decades (although several "new" Kamen Riders have appeared since). While "Kamen Rider: The First" does a good job at attempting to reinvent and update the original Kamen Rider character for a 21st Century audience, it also tries its hardest to appease fan boys of the original 1973 series (who are now probably now in their early 30s) . The resultant movie is however an odd hybrid that doesn't quite know what it wants to be – tribute, redo or reinterpretation? By looks alone it would seem that director Nagaishi wanted to go with a tribute to original TV story. The subtle changes to the Kamen Rider costumes for example are not striking and stay very true to the original costume designs of the hero characters. The global evil organization "Shocker" is back again as the main antagonist with even one of its original leaders, Shinegami Hakase portrayed by the late, great Amamoto Hideo making an appearance (interestingly Nagaishi's decision to use stock footage of Amamoto in character in the movie parallels Bryan Singer's similar decision to use stock footage of Marlon Brando in the upcoming "Superman Returns" film). There are also other casting winks at the franchise with several actors from other Kamen Rider TV series playing parts in this movie, the other most notable cameo being Miyauchi Hiroshi (who portrayed Kamen Rider V3) portraying Rider mentor Tachibana Tobei.Yet as with Kitamura Ryuhei's recent "Godzilla: Final Wars", KRTF is also quite a bit different from the original (not all for the best). While the original Kamen Riders #1 and #2 were cyborgs, these new "Hoppers" are alluded to be biologically altered humans with no cybernetic enhancements (quite possibly to make them more akin to "Spider-Man"). In fact, much emphasis is placed on the fact that these Kamen Riders needed to undergo periodic "blood transfusions" in order to survive (although it quickly becomes forgotten towards the ending half of the movie).While the opponents are updated variants of his past villains albeit with more modern touches, they are revealed to be just elaborately costumed humans with genetically enhanced bodies, unlike the TV series in which they were altered human fused with the DNA of animals and given cybernetic weaponry.As with some recent Hollywood adaptations of superhero characters ("Daredevil", "Fantastic Four") a lot of the more fantastical elements that made the Kamen Rider TV series so endearing to viewers (the grand conquest schemes, the diabolical costumed monsters, the cheesy SFX, the tongue-in-cheek banter) all seem to be purposely suppressed in favor of more "adult drama" and realism. Unfortunately as was the case in "Fantastic Four", KRTF also suffered from the tweaking. The Shocker organization of the movie seemed more like a criminal cartel or mob than a global menace. I missed the likes of the Ex-Nazi reject Col. Zoru, and the flamboyant, whip wielding crazy Ambassador Hell and the sneering despot Black Shogun. As young and attractive as both Sada and ISSA are they made Shocker look more like the "Brat Pack" than a terrorist threat.There were some missed opportunities with the story as well that I wish were explored further.One of the most interesting aspects of the film was Shockers' exploitation of the characters of Haruhiko and Miyoko. Shocker used their terminal conditions as a meaning of recruiting them into their organization with the promise to ending their suffering. I wish this angle could have been expanded and elaborated further as it brought an interesting dimension to the story. What if Shocker had used the hospital as a front for its sinister recruitment and abduction plans? "Cobra" and "Snake" while not seen much in their "kaizou" (altered) forms are much more interesting if not ultimately tragic villains. In fact their stories made them even more sympathetic characters than the heroes. Nagaishi must have felt a connection with their plights as he devoted almost as much screen time to them as he did the main protagonists (which unfortunately made the heroes even more one-dimensional). It would have been interesting if similar back stories could have been applied to not only Hongo and Hayato but perhaps even to both "Bat" and "Spider", who unfortunately were just relegated to atypical shadowy movie ghouls.The overall acting from all the principals was passable if not undistinguished and the action was serviceable but not extraordinary given other similar films like "Cutie Honey" and "Casshern". I was halfway expecting the almost titanic struggles that faced the original Kamen Riders in their Toei movies of the 70's but alas this newest movie left me somewhat under whelmed and disappointed with its somewhat low key approach.