Starring Toshihiko Seki, Emi Shinohara, Akira Kamiya, Urara Takano, Hiroya Ishimaru, Kaneto Shiozawa, Seizo Katou, Atsuko Takahata, Takaya Hashi
Directed by Akiyuki Shinbo
Twilight of the Dark Master follows the tradition of earlier grisly demon anime such as Demon City Shinjuku or Wicked City. It tells a similar tale of conflict between good and evil in a dismal future setting invaded by demons. In terms of adult content, it lies somewhere between those other two. It has a good deal of disturbing sexual content, but it is more subtly delivered than Wicked City‘s full-frontal insanity.
The plot is too convoluted for me to summarize here. Not because it is too complex, but because it drip feeds even the basic information over the course of the film, leaving you wondering just what is going on for the first half. This makes it difficult to give much information without spoiling things, so I’ll only give you the most basic premise. It’s about a newly engaged woman named Shizuka getting mauled (and perhaps raped) by a giant demon. Shizuka then sets off on a quest to find and kill the monster that attacked her. Along the way she enlists the aid of a mysterious wizard whose job is to hunt down demons.
While this worked marvelously during the hunt for the demon, the film starts to lose steam towards the end. A lot of this is because it gradually shifts focus onto the wizard, who was far less interesting a character. But an even bigger part of the problem comes from the action. The subdued tone of the film sticks around even when the action starts hitting fast and fierce, and the same mood that worked so well in the beginning doesn’t work at all for the climactic battles at the end. They too feel dry and emotionless, even thought the film clearly intended to make them dramatic. All the concern and attachment I had for Shizuka simply bled away in the apathetic storytelling of the film.
What the film also lacks is some good creativity. The monsters are rarely more than simple big-muscled guys. The magic is impressive, but never unique. And the plot once it reveals all its secrets is little beyond the generic. It has none of the downright disturbing elements that (for good or bad) made Demon City and Wicked City so unique and memorable. As much as it tries, Twilight of the Dark Master just can’t live up to the power of those films it tries to emulate. These problems became more apparent as the film wore on, and by the end I was ready for the credits to roll.
It’s not a bad film by any stretch, but even though it started mysterious and intriguing, it just couldn’t live up to what I had hoped for from a dark magic, demonic invasion anime. It has some great style, but unfortunately it doesn’t have much substance underneath.