The most significant change is the tone. The anime is hyper-detailed about suspension setups and engine tuning. The movie is about feeling . It prioritizes the emotional isolation of Takumi and the poetic silence between him and his father over technical jargon. Surprisingly, this works for a 100-minute runtime. It understands that Initial D is not really about cars; it is about talent versus ego, and the quiet moment a boy realizes he is extraordinary. Upon release, Initial D was a box office success across Asia, but received mixed reviews from Western critics. Many found the subtitled drama slow, and the racing scenes, while authentic, less bombastic than Hollywood fare.
For fans of the anime, it is a fun alternate take. For newcomers, it is a stylish, grounded entry point into the world of drifting. And for anyone who has ever loved a beat-up old car that everyone else underestimated, it is a prayer answered.
So, when Hong Kong directing duo Andrew Lau and Alan Mak (fresh off the first Infernal Affairs film, which would later be remade by Scorsese as The Departed ) announced a live-action Initial D movie in 2005, the world held its breath. Would it be a glorious tribute or a cringe-worthy cash grab? The answer, surprisingly, was somewhere in between—a flawed, charming, and unexpectedly successful adaptation that deserves a second look nearly two decades later. The movie wisely avoids trying to condense the entire manga series. Instead, it focuses almost exclusively on the "First Stage" arc. Takumi Fujiwara (played by Jay Chou, in his second film role) is a quiet, disaffected high school senior who works at a gas station and harbors a secret: for five years, he has been driving his father Bunta’s old Toyota Sprinter Trueno AE86 up and down Mt. Akina to deliver tofu. Without realizing it, he has mastered the art of drifting—transferring the weight of the car to slide through hairpin turns at impossible speeds. Initial D movie
The result is visceral. When the AE86 performs a "guttershot" (dropping its rear wheel into a drainage ditch to cut the apex), you feel it. When it inertia drifts through the five consecutive hairpins of Akina, you believe it. The camera work is tight and low to the ground, emphasizing the real G-forces and the proximity of the cars to guardrails and cliffs. There are no green screens or pixelated tire smoke; just talented drivers sliding real, beautifully battered cars.
The supporting cast, however, is stacked with Hong Kong cinema royalty. Anthony Wong as Bunta Fujiwara is a revelation. He sheds the cartoonish drunkard trope from the anime and plays Bunta as a weary, brilliant, and emotionally stunted father. His quiet pride during the final race, conveyed through a single cigarette and a half-smile, is masterful. The most significant change is the tone
Takeshi Kaneshiro (Ryosuke) and Shawn Yue (Ryosuke’s teammate, Itsuki) provide the charisma and comic relief. Kaneshiro brings a cool, calculated intensity to the "White Comet of Akagi," while Yue’s Itsuki is the perfect lovable loser, yearning for an AE86 but ending up with a gutless AE85. In an era dominated by The Fast and the Furious franchise’s CGI-heavy, physics-defying stunts, Initial D took a radically different approach. The production famously hired real Japanese drift professionals, including the legendary Keiichi Tsuchiya (the "Drift King" himself, who served as the stunt coordinator), to perform the driving.
What the Initial D movie does better than almost any other racing film is capture the loneliness of driving. There are long shots of the AE86’s headlights cutting through the fog, the interior lit only by the green glow of the dashboard, Takumi alone with his thoughts and the road. That meditative quality—the reason we love driving at night—is something the anime touched on, but the movie, through its widescreen cinematography, perfectly embodies. Is the 2005 Initial D movie a great film? No. The dialogue is occasionally stilted, the romance subplot feels rushed, and Jay Chou’s inexperience shows in emotional scenes. But is it a great adaptation ? Yes, and a deeply sincere one. It prioritizes the emotional isolation of Takumi and
The AE86 may be old, but the legend never fades.