If you loved Lupin III : La Brume de Sang de Goemon Ishikawa, try Lupin III : Mine Fujiko no Uso
Un pont entre un film que tu as déjà vu et un que peu de gens ont croisé. Voici ce qu'ils partagent, et ce que le second fait que le premier ne fait pas.

Lupin III : La Brume de Sang de Goemon Ishikawa

Lupin III : Mine Fujiko no Uso
Ce qu'ils partagent
Both films are directed by Takeshi Koike, and they both carry the neon soaked mood tag, and they sit in Action / Animation / Crime / Drama territory. If that's the register that drew you to Lupin III : La Brume de Sang de Goemon Ishikawa, the second film will land in a comparable space — through a different lens.
What Lupin III : Mine Fujiko no Uso is
You walk into a dim neon bar where Fujiko slices through shadows with a smile. Then the boy shows up with a map to buried revenge and a killer follows his scent. The camera lingers on her shifting eyes, calculating the odds of giving him up or keeping the prize. Takeshi Koike stages the heist as pure style—every steal feels like a second skin.