If you loved Like a Dragon: Prologue, try Ley Lines
A bridge between a film you've already seen and one most people haven't. Here's what they share, and what the second one does that the first one doesn't.
What they share
Both films are directed by Takashi Miike, and they both carry the outsider mood tag, and they sit in Crime / Drama territory. If that's the register that drew you to Like a Dragon: Prologue, the second film will land in a comparable space — through a different lens.
What Ley Lines is
Shinjuku neon hums past midnight on cherry-blossom pollen. Three kids flee rice fields, cigarettes clenched, cash sewn inside lining. They latch onto a Shanghai girl with hollow eyes and a knife shaped like a question. Yakuza tail-lights circle once, twice, then the streets forget how to let go. A Miike fever dream at the end of the nineties.

