Saturday, May 28, 2005

Tokyo Godfathers

Tonight, I watched Tokyo Godfathers, an animae movie directed by Satoshi Kon, the guy who did Perfect Blue. Both movies were extraordinarily good, but for two different reasons. Perfect Blue was a disturbing movie of a girl who, what's the phrase, "descends into madness" when she makes a decision to become an actress after establishing a successful career as a pop star. After she has to film a scene in which the character she's playing is gangraped, she flips and the movie gets progressively darker.

Tokyo Godfathers handles subject matter that's pretty damn dark as well, but its soundtrack does a lot to keep it light, and the use of a whacked remix of Beethoven's 9th goes a long way toward making the movie what it is. Rather than being overimbued with drama, it has these moments of giddiness that balance everything out. One of the characters in the movie is a homeless ex-drag queen. Most directors would likely be tempted to mock such a character or overly sentimentalize the predicaments surrounding the character, but Tokyo Godfathers handles him (and all the other characters as well) with dignity and grace and respect, and still manages to eek out of its audience some laughter at the comedy in stereotypes.

In addition to the detail obviously paid its soundtrack by those who worked on it, the art is rendered with a delicate emotional touch that never moves into overstatement. Each scene in the movie has a definate mood, and it's subtly done enough that you don't realize as you're watching that it's because the sunlight reflecting the snow on the rooftops of Shinjuku is a pink rosy color that makes you feel comfortable and secure even as these characters are grappling with how to handle a baby abandoned in a trash pile.

Altogether, I'd give it five out of five stars; I don't know how it could have been improved upon.

Tuesday, May 24, 2005

Appleseed vs. Ghost in the Shell

Both so good. Both full of beautiful people. Both with this love interest no one can really talk about. Both with these utterly badass gorgeous female leads who have no fear of pain or death.

In a fight, Ghost in the Shell wins. Appleseed fell prey to pop, I'm sad to say. It gets an A+ for excellent animation technique; this movie does things I've never seen in animation, and everything is so CG and liquid and beautiful you almost want some ugly just for the contrast. Even the ruins of the cities in the first and ending scenes are beautiful. The soundtrack is where Appleseed fails. Ghost in the Shell makes use of timeless and ethereal music, and Appleseed's soundtrack is full of Paul Oakenfold, and Basement Jaxx, and Boom Boom Satellites. Which is fine right now, sure, but what's it going to sound like in ten years? It'll still be beautiful to look at; all those surface-of-water shots of eyes and streets made of glass and buildings made of mirrors reflecting blue sky will be just as gorgeous, but the music. The music. Even now, it sounds dated.

At any rate, I'm eager to see where this new art goes.

Tuesday, May 10, 2005

Stupid questions I have been asked.

Recently, it seems that the stupid question quotient is high in my life, and so I thought I'd start to keep a record of the stupid questions I've been asked, by date, starting with today. We'll see where this winds up going.

Wednesday, 8/17/05

Is "metamporhposize" a word?

What does i.e. mean?

Monday, May 09, 2005

Take off your mask and show me your face.

Thursday, May 05, 2005

Tuesday, May 03, 2005

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Monday, May 02, 2005

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