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The International Writers Magazine:Anime
Memories
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Classic Anime- DVD Review
Dan Schneider on the work
of Japanese animators Otomoto, Morimoto and Okamura 1995
I
had long suspected that the American geeky infatuation with Japanese
animation (aka Japanimation or anime) stemmed from the same impulses
that veered Western Intellectuals into the Eastern Mystical religions.
To me, anime was merely the new name for the poorly animated cartoons
that proliferated in this country back in the 1960's wave of cartoons
that began with such fare as Gigantor the Space Age Robot, Kimba
the White Lion, and Speed Racer. By the 80's and 90's the filmic
equivalents had spawned such classics like Akira,
and Princess Mononoke. I was wrong.
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The
man responsible for Akira is Katsuhiro Otomo, the Orson Welles
of the genre, and the mastermind of this intriguing triptych of
short films. In the mid-1990s he released this follow up, called
Memories, based on some famed Japanese manga or comic books-
he had written. The title is a bit misleading since it only obviously
ties in to the first of the 3 films - Magnetic Rose. This is a magisterial
film, the longest of the three, that borrows elements from such
sci fi classics as 2001: A Space Odyssey and Solaris. It is directed
by Koji Morimoto, who also contributed to the Animatrix compilation
DVD. |
The tale follows
a space salvage crew of the ship Corona, in 2092 that stumbles on a
haunted derelict spaceship in the middle of a magnetic asteroid belt,
and reluctantly follows orders to investigate. Two of the crew - Heintz
and Miguel - are sent to investigate and find a palatial estate in space
- or rather a hologram of one, filled with the romanticized memories
of a famous female opera star who disappeared decades earlier, that
seems not only to be able to materialize things, but play with the minds
of the astronauts like the ocean on Solaris. The lush visuals
and musical score alone can make this small film a gem, but the story
never veers into predictability. Miguel gets swept up in the romantic
fantasy of the sentient holograms wish to relive its long dead
owners life over again, but better, while Heintzs mind and
emotions are toyed with by the sadistic hologram, which plays off feelings
of guilt he has for leaving his family behind on his long voyages. Rare
is such human characterization achieved in film - animated or not, and
with such spare strokes. The films ending, where the title is
manifested, is one of those ends that leaves you truly thinking.
The
second film in the piece has almost no bearing on the overall films
title, save that it may be assumed a memory that is told from a
future point in time. Its the weakest film of the three- a
tale called Stink Bomb, directed by Tensai Okamura, about
a moronic lab worker named Nobuo Tanaka, who mistakes a biological
weapon in pill form for cold medicine. He soon becomes a living
mega -Typhoid Mary whose body odor kills anything that comes near
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He is ordered to
return to his companys Tokyo headquarters, but soon becomes a
target for the Japanese and American military as anywhere he travels
becomes a biological disaster area. This is intended as farce, since
the corporate and military leaders are deliberately shown as cartoonish
imbeciles who cannot even kill Nobuo, who evades them with a simple
moped. At films end he succeeds in accidentally wiping out a good
portion of Japan- fade to black.
The
last piece- Cannon Fodder - is Otomos own film. It
has a visual sensibility far different from the first two pieces-
sort of a more lush version of the Eastern European animation of
the 1960's and 1970's, typified by the sci- fi classic Fantastic
Planet, and like that film is almost pure allegory. There is
also not a single break in the track of the film as its iris glares
relentlessly at a fictive dystopian city-state in a perpetual war
with an unseen enemy beyond its walled borders. |
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The society is very
fascistic and reminiscent of the silent film classic Metropolis. The
daily duty seems to be loading huge cannons, reminiscent of those in
another sci fi classic, Things To Come, to be fired at an unseen
enemy - a fact which is blissfully never questioned by the citys
inhabitants, yet which the viewer sees is nonexistent in the desert
beyond the city. The moral being that once a power has defeated all
its enemies it must manufacture its own lest fall of its own weight.
It is the memory of a former enemy that drives this state- this the
subtle tie to the overall film title. The ostensible character focus
of the film is a presumably typical plebeian clan whose father works
a dreary job as a cannon loader, and whose gung ho son longs to one
day do his duty for the cause. Its ending is enigmatic as the first
films was. The boy goes to bed and we see what may be the light
of bombs flash several times outside his blindered window. Artistically,
the first and last piece should have been switched, and the middle piece
needed a bit more fleshing out, as well as a tie to the overall title.
The DVD has a terrific widescreen anamorphic transfer, with yellow subtitles,
and extras, including three short pilot episodes of each segment. It
also has a featurette with the three directors, called Making
of Memories. But, it is heartening to see a film of such daring,
even when it fails, getting made and released in Japan, as well frustrating
to note that no American animators would dare pick up the gauntlet this
film drops- opting instead for numbingly simpleminded Disney fare, which
is far more like the watered down Mysticism I expected from this anime
film. Instances like this are those times I love being proved wrong.
In fact, I only hope my artistic presumptions are more routinely proved
wrong. I strongly recommend this DVD to both hardcore anime buffs and
mere filmic afficionados. I doubt you will be disappointed.
© Dan Schneider,December 2004 www.Cosmoetica.com
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