Hyper box office earning "Bayside Shakedown" franchise to come to an end in 2012
Thursday, January 5, 2012
by Chris MaGee
There have been a lot of successful TV to movie spin-offs at the Japanese box office in the past decade or so. "Boys Over Flowers", "Rookies" and "Liar's Game" are all good examples, but there have been few TV to movie success stories like the "Bayside Shakedown" films. The behind-closed-doors police department adventures of Detective Shunsaku Aoshima began on FujiTV back in 1997, and now, 15 years later, they will conclude with "Bayside Shakedown: The Final", set to be released in Japanese theatres in September of this year.
According to this post at Tokyograph the details of the film, directed by Katsuyuki Motohiro, are being kept under wraps at the moment, but apparently the story takes place two years after the events of "Bayside Shakedown 3" and involve an investigation taking place around a three-day energy summit.
While the "Bayside Shakedown" films may not have earned themselves a place in Japanese film history as shining examples of cinema, but they have earned themselves a place in Japanese film history nonetheless. Over the feature film franchise's 14-year history "Bayside Shakedown" earned an astounding ¥42.79 billion and sell 31.27 million tickets. Toho has never hurt for box office revenue, but we can easily imagine that after this last pay day there will be more than a few studio executives wondering how they will ever replicate this kind of success.
There have been a lot of successful TV to movie spin-offs at the Japanese box office in the past decade or so. "Boys Over Flowers", "Rookies" and "Liar's Game" are all good examples, but there have been few TV to movie success stories like the "Bayside Shakedown" films. The behind-closed-doors police department adventures of Detective Shunsaku Aoshima began on FujiTV back in 1997, and now, 15 years later, they will conclude with "Bayside Shakedown: The Final", set to be released in Japanese theatres in September of this year.
According to this post at Tokyograph the details of the film, directed by Katsuyuki Motohiro, are being kept under wraps at the moment, but apparently the story takes place two years after the events of "Bayside Shakedown 3" and involve an investigation taking place around a three-day energy summit.
While the "Bayside Shakedown" films may not have earned themselves a place in Japanese film history as shining examples of cinema, but they have earned themselves a place in Japanese film history nonetheless. Over the feature film franchise's 14-year history "Bayside Shakedown" earned an astounding ¥42.79 billion and sell 31.27 million tickets. Toho has never hurt for box office revenue, but we can easily imagine that after this last pay day there will be more than a few studio executives wondering how they will ever replicate this kind of success.