Friday, October 11, 2019

Joker is a brilliantly dark glipse of one man's descent into madness


Property of Warner Bros. Studio


Movie: Joker
Director: Todd Phillips
Starring: Joaquin Phoenix, Robert De Niro, Zazie Beetz

Verdict:
In a sharp break from established superhero franchises, Joker sinks indie sensibilities and a humanizing eye towards the collapse of a troubled man in a callous world on the brink, and despite the controversy its various commentary threads have generated since its release, the pieces of this vexing social puzzle combine into arguably the most insightful and disturbing comic-based movie to grace the silver screen in a long time.

In depth:
Failure is an inherent risk of experimentation, no less on the big screen than in the laboratory. So when director Todd Phillips of The Hangover fame approached Warner Bros. with the idea of creating a series of standalone films inspired by DC comics and molded in a distinctly indie style, starting with an origin story of everyone’s favorite Clown Prince of Crime, most onlookers weren’t sure what to make of it. Despite the recent release of a few flicks aimed at deconstructing the now ubiquitous strain of superhero cinema (think Brightburn) the phrase "superhero art film” sounds about as bloated and pretentious as any ivory tower flatulence, so skepticism understandably ran deep. But as Joker, the first fruit of Phillip’s ambitious vision, revealed more of the considerable care invested in its conception — roping such luminaries as Joaquin Phoenix and Robert De Niro and backed by a series of stark, galvanizing trailers — opinions swayed and reception to the project warmed up. The final test came at the 76th Venice International Film Festival, which it passed with flying colors, netting a Golden Lion Award and cementing its status as an unqualified success. Though the film has no need for my lone voice in the wilderness singing its praises, I’ll join the joyful chorus all the same. Joker is a gritty, unforgiving, and superbly executed take on the villain’s origins, and stands out as a unique vision of the "superhero movie."

Arthur Fleck (Joaquin Phoenix) has had a rough go at life. A poor party clown for hire living in Gotham City’s most abysmal underbelly, he wants to be a comedian, but remains chained by a host of mental conditions, the strain of caring for his sick mother (Frances Conroy) and a general existential malaise. Socially, he feels alone and unhappy, due in part to one among his many neurological conditions that forces him to laugh uncontrollably at the most inopportune moments. But life really takes a turn south after a group of thugs mug him for a sign, leading him down an ever-darkening spiral of unemployment, despair, and, ultimately, a shocking act of violence that takes a city mired in economic anxiety by storm. Though covertly elevated to the status of culture hero by Gotham's self-proclaimed 99%, Arthur wants only validation, and seeks solace from his world through his meager breaks as a comedian, a relationship with a cynical single mother (Zazie Beetz), and the hope of acknowledgement from his idol, late night show host Murray Franklin (Robert De Niro). But even his minor accomplishments soon slip away, and as Gotham sinks deeper into a class war fueled by the mayoral candidacy of billionaire Thomas Wayne (played by Brett Cullen) Arthur spirals further away from reality, threatening to pull an entire city into his madness.

Joker unfurls unlike any comic origin story, twisting expectations and breaking new ground even as it retreads familiar narrative territory. The plot admittedly caught me a bit off guard, as I expected a backstory reminiscent of The Killing Joke. Instead of a regular guy who had One Bad Day, here Arthur Fleck is a troubled, unwell man who gradually gets pushed closer and closer to his limit, his final snap seemingly the instrument of some fatalistic malevolent entity, both irresistible, and inevitable. But this works out even better, as Phoenix, already a maestro in the acting department, gives his all in a chilling, convincing portrait of a man on the edge. He captures vulnerability, rage, and the often futile means by which we cope with them in sharp, brutal relief, and not even the movie’s detractors can argue the point. Phoenix commits to doing as thorough a character study as he can, engendering some measure of sympathy before brutally shredding our misplaced pathos to bits, creating a complex character equal parts sympathetic and reprehensible. Out of his cast mates, Robert De Niro and Brett Cullen stand out, particularly the latter with his portrayal of Thomas Wayne as a disconnected elitist who nonetheless has good intentions for an angry city he doesn't fully understand. Giving a critique of Joker's acting chops puts us in a bind, since so much gets filtered through Arthur's disturbed, delusional psyche, and hence, many of the characters play towards particular "types" that ultimately serve him. Beetz as Sophie Dumond, the young mother who gets romantically tangled with the troubled Arthur, serves as a particularly unnerving example. Taken at face value, their affair looks repugnant under the eyes of every god, a noxious blend of every terrible romance trope, from the loving stalker, to shallow love interest who exists solely to validate Arthur's feelings and wishes. But as the film moves along, we suspect something strange afoot with this woman, and the eventual reveal, wrapped up in a haze of tense music and haunting uncertainty, hits viewers like a mad truck, even those who saw it coming around the corner.

And here, perhaps, strikes at the heart of Joker's brilliance. Phillips builds his narrative in a series of small steps that results in major shocks that completely change how we understand the film’s reality. As Arthur and those closest to him reveal the depths of his delusions, we the audience are left questioning whether anything we see on the screen is real, or part of an elaborate, self-maintaining illusion he upholds to keep some measure of his sanity intact. The revelations, like with Sophie above, are executed with skill and subtlety, and do wonders towards shoring up most of the film’s few shortcomings. I initially didn’t like the entry of the Waynes into the narrative, especially as it raised the possibility of a link between Arthur and the young Bruce Wayne that threatened to derail the story. But Phillips averts the potential plot tumor by tossing Arthur and this particular line into an elaborate, lifelong deception courtesy of his equally disturbed mother, with just enough uncertainty to leave all of us, main character included, wondering what is or isn’t true. Likewise, the uncanny way that a mentally unhinged ne’er-do-well can evade police and shake off car accidents borders on that dreaded and lazy “Joker Immunity” latched firmly in the comics. But seeing the events as the unveiling of a sweeping delusion of grandeur from a very sick man squares these inconsistencies without directly confirming or denying them. It is a grand postmodernist showing Phillips and co. have put together, teasing expectations and our sense of reality while leaving open whether the film reflects anything other than the warped filter of a nihilistic madman.

Complementing the powerful narrative and performance by Phoenix is the brilliant direction all the way through. Phillips knows where and when to point the camera, zooming in to Phoenix’s face for tense closeups, or panning out as he walks the broken streets of his rundown, dilapidated  neighborhood. Icelandic composer Hildur Guðnadóttir crafted a beautiful, mood-fitting score, shooting the tension through the roof in concert with Arthur’s unpredictable and disturbing behavior even as her trademark cello draws out his humanity. The film’s at its height when these elements coalesce, adding low, rumbling strings, flickering lights on a train, and Phoenix’s gaunt, haunted face as he cackles a shrill, nervous laugh in the face of an impending confrontation. These bubbling undercurrents serve to break our focus whenever a sudden surge of violence reaches from below the surface to scare the complacency out of us. In an age when stylistic hyper violence is a standard even in the PG-13 scene, Joker goes for quality over quantity, making the violent acts fewer and more sporadic, but also more jarring due to the nimble combination of realism, tension and sudden, disrupted equilibrium. There’s nothing “cool” about Arthur’s murderous impulses; they’re as random, visceral, and meaningless as real life violence usually is, and leave a greater impact as a result.

Joker swept into theaters on a tidal wave of controversy over its supposed social dimension, something I remained blissfully unaware of until after the fact. Though I may wade a bit later into the muck that has so many critics up in arms, as an artistic accomplishment I have little bad to say about it. It suffers from some ending fatigue, and a few plot contrivances which can't be explained away by appeal to deconstructive reality; but those hardly seem worth nitpicking. Although it threatens to play the tired "insane equals violent" hand, Arthur's gradual slip into violence despite his wishes softens that untrue and dangerous notion though Phillips wisely chose not to put a label to Arthur's psychosis — perhaps in an attempt to avoid unpleasant implications. While it pays homage to the gritty, nihilistic noir flicks of the 70s and 80s like Taxi Driver, it does not, as its critics claim, merely ape those films. It possesses an artistry all its own, born from a unique blend of stirring music, skillful acting, and an experienced director’s discerning eye for horror and humaneness. Above all, Joker stands as a remarkable character study, spinning an alternate view of such a well-known icon, and we can only hope Warner Bros. heeds its success and paves the way for similar films in the future.

Grade: A

Saturday, October 5, 2019

October Releases

October Releases
 

Better late than never.

October brings the heavy Halloween hitters to the box office brawl, not least of which is Warner Bros.'s foray into the dark side of the DC universe with the American premiere of Joker, an experimental first salvo into a proposed line of superhero films with indie sensibilities. If you're looking for monster clowns of a different shade, there's Wrinkle the Clown, an...odd, documentary about a Florida retiree who for a fee will don an unnervingly creepy clown mask and scare rambunctious rugrats straight - and no doubt, gift them with a good helping of life-long coulrophobia.  The animated film version of The Addams Family will debut later this month as well, bringing a Tim Burton-esque vibe to the classic monster family, while Breaking Bad fans dust off their beakers and snappy Heisenberg one-liners in preparation for El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie, a continuation of the groundbreaking series following show deuteragonist Jesse Pinkman as he struggles to claw his way out from the muck of his past deeds.

The small screen sees the return of many TV favorites - like Riverdale, The Flash, and 'verse progenitor Arrow's much-anticipated swan song - along with a few newcomers.  Ruby Rose will reprise her role as the Arrowverse version of the controversial Batwoman in the CW's latest superhero addition, while HBO sets about the herculean task of adapting the legendary Alan Moore's magnum opus Watchmen into an extended series.

For these releases and more across mass media, follow the links below, as always: 


Saturday, September 28, 2019

Depression, Identity, and Fatherlessness in "Please Don’t Come Back from the Moon"




Book: Please Don’t Come Back from the Moon
Author: Dean Bakopoulos
Publisher information: Orlando, Fl: Harvest Books, 2005
Genre: Bildungsroman/Magical realism

Fatherlessness churns and bubbles in the fiction biz, rising to the surface every so often, but few meld the topic with brutal grit, economical prose, and an airy surrealism quite like Dean Bakopoulos in his 2005 debut novel, Please Don’t Come Back from the Moon. Bakopoulos weaves a tale of restlessness and abandonment through the eyes of Michael Smolij and his peers, young boys from a working-class Detroit suburb whose fathers vanish over the course of several weeks with but one hint to their destination: the Moon. As these men slither away from their families, their wives struggle to rebuild in the wreckage while their children, sons especially, try to make sense of the void that now breaks them open. Tailing Michael as he wanders dazedly through adolescence, stumbles into adulthood, and bumbles about the burdensome responsibilities of family and finances hooked readers and critics alike, netting the novelist a few accolades and enough momentum to launch a 2017 film based on the work starring James Franco. But the novel reveals much more than a standard bildungsroman with a few gritty swear words thrown in. In our current, politically charged environment saturated with #metoo agitation and rebellion against perceived gatekeepers to traditional power, it seems easy to dismiss Bakopoulos’s work as an edifice to young, white man-children who know nothing of “real” suffering. But behind the cursing, drinking, and sexual indiscretions lie a piercing examination of the many inescapable spirals that twist our lives on both personal and social scales

Michael, our narrative filter, surveys his increasingly hopeless surroundings with a more discerning eye and expressive vocabulary than most, but don’t think he’s some diamond in the rough. He, his violent cousin Nick, and their peers are ground from the same course flour as the rest of their blue-collar, Eastern European neighborhood, and our protagonist fell into the same pits of vice, vandalism, and compensatory machismo with but a modicum of literary talent and the support of his mother and her second husband to lift him a bit above the tide. Though Bakopoulos displays the rough edges and stilted speech expected of a debut wordsmith, he gives Michael a raw, unfiltered voice that avoids repelling the viewer, while using episodic vignettes of his life - an affair with an older woman, a confrontation with one of his mother’s temporary boyfriends - to explore the sense of loss born out of the fathers’ disappearance. With Michael and his friends caught in cycles of expensive education and low-wage service industry jobs, Bakopoulos captures the sense of listlessness and meaninglessness facing the post-industrial working-class, staring off at the accomplishments of unions past and bitter about their inability to obtain a measure of economic justice in the present. 

But the story’s hallmark lies not in its mocking of modern convention, nor in the exploration of fatherlessness. Dig deeper through the tracks of growing pains and hard drinking working-class youths, and you’ll find a sensitive treatment on male struggles with depression and identity, issues still sparse in our supposed cornucopia of literary diversity. This is where the magical realism elements of the story, subtle but artfully inserted, shine through. We never get a definitive answer on whether any of the town’s men actually went to the Moon, with plenty of evidence to the contrary. But Michael, in one of the most sensitive depictions of a man’s uncertain slide into depression I’ve ever read, suddenly finds himself elevated a few inches off the ground while walking the streets at night. Bakopoulos’s succinct prose and narrow focus on Michael’s point of view prevents us from knowing whether or not he’s imaging things, but as the other young men of his generation, all grown and with problems and families of their own, suddenly show up in one location to stare at the Moon, we feel locked under the same spell as they, unsure what will happen next, but anxious to find out. This skillful threading of the mildly fantastic with a visceral modern realism remains the novel’s pièce de résistance, and mounts the suspense on whether Michael will continue to sink through the same muck of depression and meaninglessness that claimed his father.

If Bakopoulos falters anywhere, it’s with the disjointed blending of some elements of the main story arcs. Some of Michael’s misadventures fell neatly into the bildungsroman playbook, giving insight into how his father’s abandonment left his vulnerable to the dark ministrations of others and shaped who he is. But others meander into reckless youth territory, and could have been excised from the novel altogether. But maybe I’m just splitting hairs.  Please Don’t Come Back from the Moon weaves a sad, solid, slightly surreal narrative that not only squares with the hopelessness left over from Industrial America’s abandonment of their blue-collar rank and file, but also the subtle ways that depression and listlessness can bore holes into our lives.

Thursday, September 19, 2019

Why I'm looking forward to Joker



 
Character belongs to Warner Bros. Pictures

When our friends at Warner Bros. released the final trailer for Joker at the end of August, I admit that it left me a little chilly. Despite the star draw of a colossal talent like Joaquin Phoenix, the trailer looked like a bloated fluff-ball of artistic pretense to me. But upon burying my initial knee-jerk reaction, I opened my eyes to what Warner Bros. was trying to do. As the first in a series of standalones under the newly-minted DC Black label, Joker looks like a breath of fresh air a touch of indie-style creative freedom to flush the commercial muck clinging to the much maligned DCEU. Director Todd Phillips envisioned superhero 'verse climbing out of the MCU's long shadow, with creators committed to bringing strong stories to life unstained by the push to pound them into a multi-film behemoth like mismatched puzzle pieces. And for what it's worth, he looks like he's succeeding. Though the film’s already seen light in Venice, it won’t make stateside until the 4th next month, so in the meantime, I'll list a couple of reasons I think Joker will enrich our appreciation of this pivotal dark fulcrum in the Batman mythos. 

1. It Was Influenced by a Batman Comic Classic 
 Back in 1988, illustrator Brian Bollard teamed up with the incomparable Alan Moore to create Batman: The Killing Joke.  Moore and co. scrapped the criminal mastermind shtick from the 40s and 50s, opting instead to drape the villain’s tale in tragedy: he was now a chemical engineer and failed comedian driven to crime by desperation, culminating in the now quintessential “one bad day” which changed a struggling family man into one of the most notorious killers in comic book history. This solid story has been a guideline for most iterations of the character, directly or indirectly, ever since its inception. It has made headway into Batman animated adaptations, other comics, and even inspired the Nolanverse’s terrifying take on the character. The comic's basic plot works so well because of how it warps the Joker into a fun-house reflection of the Dark Knight himself. Batman remains an evergreen pop culture legend because of how he rose to become one of the most feared heroes in the world just by turning a terrible experience into a singular, obsessive drive. The Killing Joke runs a parallel tale with our demented clown; much as one senseless murder transformed Bruce Wayne from ordinary boy to God-like vigilante, the Joker was just an average Joe whose “one bad day” pushed him into a pitch-black shade of monstrosity that makes even the most eldritch of beings tremble in disgust. It speaks to a deep part of us, both hopeful and fearful, that all it takes to propel us to godhood or sink us to the Black Pit is a choice any normal person can make after just one, life-altering event.

2. It Completes Chritopher Nolan’s Image of the Joker
Though set in a different universe far removed from Nolan’s groundbreaking trilogy, Joker shares a peculiar darkness with Ledger’s take on him. The Dark Knight’s Joker remained a blank from start to finish, less a man than a destructive force of nature — without origin, identification, or particular reason for his insane, nihilistic march. The closest we get to a motivation is the variable backstory he doles out on his scars (another inheritance of The Killing Joke) and his exchange with Batman during the interrogation scene. Otherwise, the man swaddles himself in a fog of Machiavellian manipulation and flat-out sociopathy so thick you can't tell what, if any, truth lies beneath. But Joker offers to lift the veil, to see the man before the monster, and would be the first such major treatment of the character since the one-dimensional mobster portrayal in Tim Burton’s Batman back in 1989. But Joker may just as easily serve as antithesis to his Nolanverse counterpart. Again, Ledger’s Joker embodied a mysterious force of evil, almost tailor-made to sow discord and whisper millions of little devils into the ears of Gotham’s unsuspecting citizenry.  But in Joker, Arthur Fleck is merely a man, one forged by circumstance and bad luck into becoming one of DC’s most notorious monsters. None of that excuses his actions, but it speaks yet again to the wealth of relatability Killing Joke-like stories bring to the table. Ledger’s Joker inspired a combination of fear and awe over his marvelous displays of manipulation and cruelty; but Phoenix’s take on the character will no doubt bring him back down to earth.

3. It’ll Wash the Taste of Suicide Squad Out of Your Mouth
Okay, this one’s subjective, but bear with me. Though I wasn’t especially kind in my review of the movie, I didn’t hate it, either, but even Suicide Squad's most ardent supporters felt cheated with Leto’s minuscule screen time. He was more a prop, a device, than an actual character, and the hullabaloo drummed up about his presence in the film borders on false advertisement. This is a shame, since the little snippets that seeped out from the extensive post-editing left me a little curious for more. But with plans to revive his role for future DCEU films apparently shelved for the time being, we’ll have to rely on this standalone to sate our killer clown fix.

Without question, Joaquin Phoenix will add his own defining stamp to the iconic character, and with its heart-rending backstory and dark feel reminiscent of the celebrated Nolanverse, this may be the film to finally bring the character out of Ledger’s generous shadow.

Thursday, September 5, 2019

September Releases

September Releases

With the bustle of Labor Day weekend behind us, we have a whole slew of fresh films, tantalizing TV shows, and a host of other cool entertainment options to make you wring in the Fall season with a smile on your face.  The biggest blockbuster this month is undoubtedly It: Chapter Two, the sequel rounding up Stephen King's horrific monster wonderland novel.  But it's not the only book-to-screen adaptation hitting the cinema this month; Donna Tartt's Pulitzer Prize-winning bildungsroman The Goldfinch, following the life of a boy who's world is upended by a terrorist attack at a museum when he was thirteen, will hit theaters on the 13th, while Sophie Kinsella's romantic-comedy "chick-lit" Can You Keep a Secret? premiere's the same day.  Lastly, Sylvester Stallone  makes one last grand salvo into the pot of one of his most iconic roles with Rambo: Last Blood, which finds the aged veteran locking horn with a dangerous Mexican cartel over the border.
For the gamer and anime fan in your life, though there's still no word on a release date for One Punch Man: The Hero Nobody Knows, lover's of the stupidly powerful bald hero can cut their teeth on the Road to Hero mobile game to be released on the 16th.
In the world of music, the Goo Goo Dolls continue their apparent 3-year cycle of album releases with Miracle Pill, a record celebrating a life of connections and constant change and growth - a fitting offer from a band who's been around the block for over 25 years. 
For these and other premiere's this month across all mass media, check out the links below, as always:

Sunday, August 18, 2019

Manga Review: Beastars

 (WARNING: This review contains spoilers.  You have been warned)


Copyright belongs to Akita Shoten


Beastars
Created by: Paru Itagak
Status: 2016-present, ongoing


From Reynard the Fox to Watership Down, Bre’r Rabbit to Animal Farm, the tried and true beast fable has weaved enchantment down the millennia with allegorical tales expressing truths on everything from the threat of tyranny to the absurdity of mob mentality. And of the myriad works in this categorical zoo, few in recent memory match the impact and wide appeal of Disney’s 2016 animated film Zootopia. Set in a diverse metropolis where creatures of all kinds live together in a shaky peace, Disney’s Oscar offering blended humor and buddy cop sensibilities with a mature meditation on racial bias and institutional prejudice. With rich world building and some complex characterization, Zootopia made a huge splash with critics and audiences alike. And yet in that same year, Paru Itagak, an unknown mangaka in the Land of the Rising Sun, embarked on her own journey into the question of interspecies community, one closely resembling Zootopia but with a bit of a darker twist. Her work, Beastars, tackles that same quagmire of interspecific living with a touch of charm and a pinch of brutality, and with an upcoming anime set to debut this fall on Netflix, let’s take a peak at this edgy parable full of overlapping layers of meanings.


Plot Synopsis
In a world of civilized anthropomorphic animals, there exist multiple divides extending across and within species lines, but few run deeper than the line between carnivores and herbivores, thanks to entrenched instincts on both sides of the food chain serially poisoning any attempts at achieving true unity. Although predation has been outlawed, the prey drive remains strong in most carnivores, leading them to either suppress their desires, or indulge them on the down-low by purchasing herbivore meat in illegal back-alley markets or, worse yet, cutting loose and actively hunting. These sporadic acts of murder leave herbivores in a perpetual state of high tension, uncertain if or when their carnivore friends and neighbors will snap and make a meal of them. At the heart of one city in this world marked by diversity, communion, anxiety, and mistrust lies Cherryton Academy, an integrated elite high school that stands as a microcosm for the hopes and horrors of life beyond its hallowed walls. Legosi, an oversized grey wolf and stagehand in Cherryton’s drama club, is used to slinking about the margins of social life. With the face of a vicious thug but the gentle soul of a lamb, he faces much fear and hatred, not helped by his social awkwardness, but keeps to himself and tries his damnedest to resist any predatory lurches from his dormant instincts. But his comfortable world fractures when a member of his club turns up murdered in a tragic act of predation. As suspicion falls on him and other carnivores in the school, a fateful encounter with a dwarf rabbit and fellow social outcast named Haru forces Legosi out of the shadows and into the limelight, where his courage, strength, and empathy may yet propel him further to the most coveted rank in their society: the Beastar, a mark of noble distinction conferred upon only the most worthy of animals. 


Story
It’s way too easy to pigeonhole this series as “dark Zootopia,” when in fact it’s so much more. Though classified as a shounen manga — and hence, a supposed cousin of such battle staples as Naruto and One Piece Beastars sits far above the usual teenage smashfest, drawing power from its deep and nimble characterization and complex, layered, multifaceted world building. Our main boy Legosi (or Legoshi, depending on the translation) is a perplexing bundle of strength and awkwardness, tied up in a package that comes off as terrifying and adorable in equal parts. It seems unbelievable how a teenager can be punching mobsters in the face one minute, and yet barely stammer out a greeting to the girl he likes literally the next. Somehow, his ungainly charm keeps his foibles from grating my nerves, and watching him mature and develop is a signature draw of this manga. And “develop” really is the central clause binding this work, since if there’s one thing you can say about Itagak’s characters, it’s that she designs them to be as dynamic as possible. Legosi constantly grows with each new encounter with his expanding circle of friends and loved ones, evaluating his principles in light of fresh discoveries and revelations. And Legosi shares the spotlight with a diverse cast, each noteworthy for the depth and care with which Itagak sculpted their personalities. Haru, an earnest spitfire of a dwarf rabbit who becomes Legosi’s friend and eventual love interest, comes saddled with speciecist self-loathing she assuages through sex with multiple animals. Then there’s Louis, an arrogant, carnivore-hating red deer and the darling of the Cherryton drama club burdened by memories of a terrible past and a pervading sense of inadequacy which together drive some of his most extreme actions. These characters, though par for the course in the teen dramas Beastars so closely resembles, distinguish themselves through incisive and believable growth and development. Spurring this along is the complex world of species politics Itagak constructs with meticulous care and detail. Like the minds behind Zootopia, she eschews simple black-and-white views of “predator bad, prey good”; but she boldly goes where even the beloved film in its darkest of drafts dare not enter. The persistence of feral instincts complicates carnivore/herbivore relationships, and some of the most delightful and nerve-racking parts of the series stem from uncertainty over whether or not a quaint scene of mixed dietary creatures will end tragically. The creator twists the carnivore prey drive into an unconscious urge or even addiction, one that many characters try to come to terms with to varying degrees, while herbivores try to reconcile their desires to get closer to select carnivores with the deep-rooted instinct to flee for their lives. Although the carni/herbi divide takes center stage for most of the story, each new volume brings added depth to the world, showcasing the lines drawn within both sides of the food chain dichotomy among birds, mammals and reptiles, along with the existence of the “sea people” who are a different kettle of fish (pun intended) altogether. This expansive world allows Itagak to explore the fault lines of diversity beyond the racial bias angle of Zootopia, slapping down analogues to mixed-race children, sex discrimination, and even religious beliefs. Her concern pushes past Zootopia's tunnel vision to target the great riddle of diversity within unity itself, and through Beastars, she ponders it with much greater sensitivity and nuance than one would expect from a "mere" shounen series.


In fact, I’d say most of the series’ minor weaknesses spring from whenever Itagak indulges in the shounen side of its lineage. While the first couple of arcs give the impression of a teen coming-of-age drama, the introduction of a group of lion gangsters shifts it into a clunky shounen fight manga for a couple of chapters. This settles into a recurring pattern, where psychological introspection fades into a meritocracy of the fist and back again. The developments aren’t necessarily bad in and of themselves, but the seesawing implementation gives the series a chunky, uneven texture. In addition, Itagak occasionally stoops into shounen-esque melodrama, particularly during fight scenes; last minute power-ups, extended mid-battle dialogue, and the dreaded “power of friendship” pick-me-up all make an appearance at one time or another, and I reflexively cringe whenever they do. Still, I guess it comes down to a matter of taste, and the dynamic genre shifts and over-the-top displays of drama may add to the charm for some readers, and in either case, do little to ruin the series’ strong showing.
Rating: 9/10 


Art
Despite some early roughness, Itagak gives her art a smooth touch that fits the mood and direction of any scene almost perfectly -  a crucial talent in a story that bends genres so often. Characters can morph from adorable to horrifying on a dime, and she captures personality and states of mind almost perfectly. Legosi has the greatest range as you’d expect, introduced in the first chapter as almost disturbingly menacing before his inner goodness manifests into a cuter, less threatening countenance. However, Legosi’s ferocity resurfaces during any of the manga’s intense fight scenes, and you’re left wondering in awe how such disparate drawing styles can coexist in the same work. Itagak displays a distinguished capacity for artistic nuance, somehow making a character like Haru expressive and emotional despite her pitch-black eyes, or morphing an elderly Komodo dragon grandfather into an almost preciously adorable old man. She straddles the line between realistic and cartoonish depictions of the beasts in her play, which works out in avoiding uncanny alley while bringing the creatures close enough to human to garner sympathy.  Besides the range of expression she gifts her characters with, Itagak masters the use of shadows and darkness in setting an atmosphere, and can communicate menace and humor with skillful timed paneling. Sure, she’s still rather rough even at her best, but I have no complaints; art in a graphic novel should work in service to the story, and the engaging way Itagak sets up her scenery more than makes up for a little lag in technique.
Rating: 9/10 


Throughout its three-year run, Beastars has proven a sleeper hit in Japan, and it’s no wonder why. Itagak’s rich, engaging world and compelling characters suck you in, and even though the fights and drama prove an uneven mixture at times, they do not detract from the experience. Though an award winner in its native land and on the cusp of exposure to a wider audience, I fear that it may prove incapable of shaking the “darker Zootopia” label here in the West. If so, it would be a right shame; without taking anything away from Disney’s excellent film, Beastars has the potential to be so much more, and I’d invite anyone, whether they’re into manga or not, to feast on the offerings of this dark, mature fable of our times.
Total: 18/20 = A

Friday, August 2, 2019

August releases

August Releases


Historically a well-known box office drought month, August occupies an unenviable position between summer blockbusters and holiday fireworks which leaves little to expect most years - at least where the major big-budget Hollywood productions are concerned.  It's rather fitting, then, that this month's leading flick is Fast and Furious Presents: Hobbs and Shaw, essentially a side story to the beloved full-throttle action series which, nonetheless, shows considerable promise as a good outing at the matinee.  Joining the titular bash brothers are other (hopefully) fair-to-middling productions, like Nicholas Cage's newest box office Hail Mary where he plays an ex-con on borrowed time seeking bloody retribution against his former gang; and Melissa McCarthy's latest meander into drama with The Kitchen, a tale of three housewives literally married to the mob who find a deadly purpose in crime after their significant others get sent up the river.  

Leaving the movies aside, there's a whole world of entertainment out there this month sure to light a spark in anyone, whether in the realms of music, literature, or video games.  The links below, as always, will lead you to this month's bag of goodies: