Friday, July 20, 2018

Producers in Focus: Jacob Chapman (formerly JesuOtaku)



            This entry in Producers in Focus will be a bit different than normal, since it concerns someone who no longer produces video content and whose past work is no longer available (at least not in any format I’ve yet found). 

            Jacob Chapman would most likely be familiar to former Channel Awesome aficionados under his original moniker, “JesuOtaku” (which he no longer goes by, though he’s still fine with being called “JO”).  Specializing in anime, he premiered on the site in the summer of 2010, appeared a year later in the now-infamous To Boldly Flee, and left the site in October of 2014 so as to pursue a different career path.  He also revealed over the course of the #ChangetheChannel movement that his personal circumstances behind the scenes at CA had been really, really bad for some time (To Boldly Flee production being just one of many issues). 

            Despite his departure, the old JesuOtaku website still functioned and most of his work could be found on Youtube, until January 30th, 2016, when Jacob formally came out on Twitter as transgender.  I had the good fortune and honor of being able to message directly with him right after his coming-out video went live.  After congratulating him, I asked if he had any plans to re-host his old JO content; he responded that, while he had no problem if others had downloaded and saved his past videos, he did not plan to ever rerelease anything he did under his dead name. 

            This is, of course, his decision entirely, and given the degree of shit he experienced while at Channel Awesome on top of the challenges of coming out as transgender, he has every reason to not want or have to revisit that time; more, perhaps, than most of the other former CA producers. 

            However, I do wish to take a brief moment now, at the very least, to show my particular gratitude for what, for me, was one of the most influential and informative works ever published on Channel Awesome; JO’s “Month of Miyazaki” series. 

            In response to Miyazaki’s (since rescinded) retirement announcement, JO decided to go back and review each and every Miyazaki/Ghibli film ever made up to that point.  These videos were a treasure trove of rich detail for anyone who loves the work the Ghibli team has done over the years.  Jacob went deep with each review, analyzing linguistic and even sound design differences between the Japanese and American versions, provided background stories on the inspirations for some of the characters out of traditional Japanese culture, and in some cases examinations of when and how the movie was released in the States and what sort of success each one had. 

            Ultimately, Jacob never finished the series- due to a mix of production delays, his personal struggles at the time, and his eventual departure from CA, the last one he completed was Howl’s Moving Castle- but, amazingly, that in no way diminished the immenseness of what Jacob achieved with the series while it was running.  Neither before nor since have I seen anything like this series go so far and be so thoroughly detailed in its study of the Ghibli canon, arguably one of the greatest sets of studio films in the history of film.  Nothing I have since watched or read comes even close to it.  These videos left an incredible impression on me at a time when I was still in the early stages of developing my sense as a film critic, and these videos were as big as anything by MovieBob, Lindsay Ellis, or Roger Ebert in shaping my approach to film. 

            Because of this, I will always feel a certain sadness when I think of the fact that these videos are no longer available, even though Jacob is completely within the right with his decision.  I hope that is not presumptuous or arrogant or dismissive of me to say that.  It is certainly not meant so.  If anything this is meant as an appreciative farewell to what I consider one of the first great lost works of the Internet Age, one that never had the chance to receive its proper due. 

            Thank you so much, Jacob, for what you did before and for what you do now.  You are a shining light in world in desperate need of them, and I am so grateful the world has you. 

-Noah Franc

Sunday, July 15, 2018

Wasting Time: Scarlett Johansson, Nanette, and Representation in Media




            It is the first and greatest Law of the Celebrity Jungle; every big star, no matter how universally regarded, will have at least one utter bomb attached to their name.  One terrible, self-afflicted wound that can be neither excused nor forgotten, merely endured (think George Clooney’s brief tenure as Batman).  For Scarlett Johansson, one of the most beloved actresses in the business today, that moment should have come and gone with the whitewashing misfire that was Rupert Sanders’ 2017 live-action remake of Ghost In The Shell.  Usually, an error that grave only needs to happen once for a person to learn a hard-won lesson and never do it again.  Rarely is anyone dense enough to return to the poisoned well for seconds. 

            Yet somehow, here we are.  For the briefest of moments, Scarlett Johansson did just that, announcing last month that she would once again partner with Sanders, (so, BIG flag right away) except this time, instead of pilfering the pantheon of Japanese classics, it would be for a biopic of a real-world trans-person, Dante “Tex” Gill.  To be fair, as I was in the process of writing this piece, Johansson did come to her senses and withdraw from the project, but not before experiencing seriously sharp backlash from all corners of the internet. 

            This was very much not helped by Johansson being stupendously callous in her initial response to the outrage, using a rep to send out a nonsense defense of her accepting the role in the vein of, “But the other kids do it too!”  Yes, she took it back fairly quickly, but the fact that she allowed this to happen at all is still troubling.  Like Meryl Streep pulling the tired “We’re ALL Africans!” card to duck around answering why her 2016 Berlin Film Festival jury was all-white, it is another saddening example of how those who’ve benefited from our current cultural power structure cannot, in most cases, be relied on to do things that could affect actual change within said power structure, like, say, agreeing to turn down a handful of the hundreds of roles one is offered in a given year in favor of more disenfranchised artists without being caddy about it.  

            As it happens, this shitshow was hitting the fans right around the time Nanette was released on Netflix, the one-woman show by Australian comedian Hannah Gadsby.  Nanette is a brilliant, cutting, furious deconstruction of the current nature of stand-up, especially how much it demands from disenfranchised people- in Gadsby’s case, from queer women- in order to be “successful,” “accepted,” or “normalized.”  More often than not, breaking out into any boys club or position of power or prominence (like, say, headlining major Hollywood tentpole films) is ultimately not possible for women or minorities of any stripe without, at some level, subjecting oneself to ritual self-humiliation, to making light of the hurts of being on the bottom.  Gadsby focuses on comedy in her special, yes, but the parallels to everything in our world are so obvious she knows she doesn’t have to waste time drawing attention to them. 

            That would have been enough to make her special required viewing, but somehow she was able to take it even further.  She remains gut-punchingly funny even as she is denigrating comedy as an agent of healing, but is able to break down in painfully clear ways how this process of self-humiliation, no matter what end is intended, can only further hurt and hinder its subject as both a person and an artist; it allows the cordoning off of the ills of oppression and fails to encourage active confrontation of the ugly sides of human existence. 

            In one of her special’s most powerful moments- which is saying something, because it is PACKED with them- she openly admits that she is directly challenging those on top of the food chain, specifically white, straight, cisgender men.  She refuses to lessen the tension in the room, thereby breaking what she admits is usually the bargain a comedian makes with their audience; I explain something painful and uncomfortable, something that you may well be directly involved in, but before you squirm too much, I bring in the punchline, end the story, and you can all feel better again. 

            In the end, she concludes, we can only make things better by all hitching up our socks, facing the uncomfortable, and being honest about it.  And a big part of that involves representation, about opening up our notions of what “normal” and “acceptable” and “typical” are. And it is exactly this nature of the problems we face that Johansson’s self-created controversy touches on, and why I couldn’t help but repeatedly come back to it in my mind while watching Nanette.  The base need for any studio is to make at least some money with a given film.  Star power remains a big draw in terms of getting butts in seats to see your movie, whatever it’s about.  And there is a fairly limited and set list of who the “big stars” in the movie world are who are guaranteed draws, nearly all of which are white and/or straight, and ALL of which are cisgender, full stop.  So of COURSE, even if your movie is about a trans-person, fictional or no, your first instinct as a studio and a director is to get the biggest, most well-known name you can to fill the role.  And so disenfranchisement and a lack of proper representation and influence within a given industry or medium is perpetuated and entrenched, ad nauseum, over years and decades and even generations.  It is the worst of capitalism meeting the worst (read; all) of systemic discrimination. 

            It almost feels like the most Sisyphean of tasks to try and change all this.  It feels overwhelming.  It IS overwhelming.  And exhausting.  So when Gadsby “comes out” to announce that she identifies as Tired, she speaks for so many people around the world who are tired of the same Johansson-esque stumbles happening in a never-ending cycle, requiring the same points and same arguments to be made, and the same ground being gained and then re-gained time and time and time again.  It’s enough to make any sane person want to go for a nap and never get up again. 

            But we can’t.  We can’t afford to.  Jokes aside, Gadsby will not stop fighting, because she knows in every fiber of her being what the cost is of giving up, and she knows that it is a price far too high to pay.  And if she won’t give up, what right do we have to?  It is tiresome to have to do what should be the wholly unnecessary work of reaching the Scarlett Johanssons of the world and getting them to change their ways, but it must be done, because that is the only way we can ever affect real change in our world.  Anything else is just a waste of time, and God help the person who wastes the time of someone like Hannah Gadsby. 

-Noah Franc

Sunday, July 8, 2018

Nippon Review: Sandome No Satsujin (The Third Murder)


The Third Murder (2017): Written and directed by Hirokazu Koreeda.  Starring: Masaharu Fukuyama, Koji Yakusho, Suzu Hirose, Isao Hashizume, and Mikako Ichikawa.  Running Time: 124 minutes. 

Rating: 3/4


            Hirokazu Koreeda has an established reputation of using his films to examine complicated and troubled father/son relationships, most notably (and most explicitly) in his 2013 masterpiece, Like Father, Like Son.  Although the relationship of the main character to his second to the film’s main plot, The Third Murder very much follows this trend, where the inheritance of the past is a shadow over the present that one can never fully abandon, however much one might wish to. 

            Shigemori is a lawyer proud of his cold practicality in approaching his professional life.  He insists, repeatedly, that his own thoughts and views on a case don’t matter.  All that counts is that there is a truth about each case, and this can be presented or manipulated as needed to convince a jury of the desired outcome; all else is of lesser importance.  This worldview, an inheritance of his distant and often dismissive father (who had previously worked as a judge), runs straight into a brick wall when he is handed responsibility for the murder trial of Misumi, whose constant altering of his story befuddles him and his partner, forcing them to constantly shift their strategy on the fly. 

            Shigemori digs and digs, even traveling to the man’s hometown and paying visits to the wife and daughter of his alleged murder victim, but everything he “learns” (or rather, is told) only muddies the waters further.  A series of twists regarding the man’s past and his possible (but never confirmed) connection to the victim’s daughter forces Shigemori to confront the boundaries of what he thought was real, and what he assumed the nature of good and evil to be. 

            This is the sort of character procedural that especially depends on its acting, and the cast of this film delivers.  Masaharu Fukuyama mirrors much of the emotional distance he used to such great effect in Like Father, Like Son, and his opposite in Koji Yakusho as the alleged murderer is fascinating to watch as someone who keeps contradicting what he said before, but somehow still manages to sound firmly convincing each time he says something entirely different.   
           
            The film is also heavily marked by starkly Christian imagery.  Characters refer to themselves or others as “vessels” for either good or evil, and question the nature of free will and how morality in a person can be judged, subjects that are especially central to Christian theology.  Crosses appear in one form or another throughout the film as well, ranging from a traffic intersection to the leftover outline from where the murdered man was burned.  Thought it may not have quite the deep power of his last movie, but Koreeda’s latest nonetheless an excellent work that leaves much room for thought and debate by the end. 

-Noah Franc

Wednesday, July 4, 2018

Nippon Review: Of Love and Law


Of Love and Law (2017): Directed by Hikaru Toda.  Running Time: 94 minutes. 

Rating: 4/4


            These are trying times for humanity.  Faced with societal regression and environmental catastrophe, it is all too easy for those with heart and compassion to fall into despair at the state of things.  This makes examples like Kazu and Fumi all the more necessary for those of us facing this quandary, so that we don't forget that we who yearn for a better tomorrow are not few, but legion. 

            A gay couple who also happen to be lawyers, these two have dedicated their professional lives to combating discrimination against minorities and disenfranchised groups of all stripes.  This film by the remarkable Hiraku Toda uses a selection of cases the pair are engaged with as a window into their lives and worldviews, on what sorts of successes they are able to celebrate and the failures they have no choice but to endure. 

            The sampling of issues they are involved in include, but are by no means limited to, juveniles charged with crimes, a provocative female artist being suied over her "dangerous" vagina art, ethnic minorities, the LGBTQ community, and the cases of "unregistered" Japanese.  That last one refers to a small but not-insignificant number of people who, due to a very specific bureaucratic loophole regarding marriage law, the Japanese government literally can't recognize as people. 

            A film just focusing on the biographies and personalities of these two individuals would no doubt have been fascinating and moving enough, but the movie is smart enough to go the extra mile, looking beyond them to create a cross-section representation of disenfranchisement that leads the viewer to consider how both written law and broader culture in Japan (and, by extension, everywhere else) restricts and punishes those who, in any number of ways, stick in of the crowd. 

            As it goes on, you realize the film is less about putting these two on a saintly pedestial than about holding up their silent courage in the face of all the obstacles they have to endure.  For all their love and tenderness, they bear plenty of emotional scars from the myriad setbacks and tragedies they've experienced, and in the movie's most heart-wrenching moments it looks this squarely in the eye and doesn't blink. 

            It is eminently heartening and always necessary to be reminded of all those, everywhere in the world, fighting the good fight and refusing to cow to the darkness.  Few films strike me like this one did.  This is the definition of an essential, must-see work of cinema. 

-Noah Franc