Showing posts with label Genre: Anime OVA (Original Video Animation). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Genre: Anime OVA (Original Video Animation). Show all posts

Tuesday, 18 March 2014

Celluloid Wunderkammer: Call Me Tonight (1986)

From http://i1091.photobucket.com/albums/i386/jgespi/caratulas/CallMeTonightRedux-1.jpg
Dir. Tatsuya Okamoto


Contrary to the provocative image that I've included at the beginning, this short piece of obscure anime flips the expectations for hentai into how perverse the concept of tentacle erotica is. I've been lucky to discover these fascinating obscurities released straight to video, mainly thanks to the Anime News Network article series Buried Treasure - found here - and thankfully these works that have never been released on DVD even in their home country have been discovered by Western fans, subtitled by said fans, and made available online. I admit to haven't even see key anime works like Cowboy Bebop (1998) yet seen the likes of Call Me Tonight, my habit for digging deep into the depths of my favourite things sending me to material like this, made back when money was plenty enough for a subversion of anime sexuality, when anime hentai was only birthed within the same decade, to be made. If this material was made available on DVD, when pigs fly, they would be fascinating curiosities for anyone to see.


Review Link - http://www.videotapeswapshop.co.uk/19348/celluloid-wunderkammer-call-me-tonight-1986-director-tatsuya-okamoto/

From http://s3.amazonaws.com/auteurs_production/images/film/call-me-tonight/w448/call-me-tonight.jpg

Tuesday, 29 October 2013

Also Representing Japan, For The Anime Slot: GenoCyber (1993)

From http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-UHDL9E8qiyY/T6G9pHHGMmI/AAAAAAAABvs/gx_ZO_DVw6Q/s1600/genocyberposter.jpg

Dir. Koichi Ohata

Note that the version of the five part original video animation (OVA) I saw was with an English dub. Dubs for anime, unlike Italian genre films from the seventies, can drastically effect the actual work. Liberties were clearly taken with GenoCyber's script even without seeing a version with the original Japanese language track, and like a lot of reasons why dubs are notorious, it is mostly poor. It's not without flaws - it befits the first episode - but I would want to find the original version. Be ready, if watching the English dub version, for ridiculous acting performances and "fifteening", a controversial practice of English company Manga Entertainment, from their older days of existence, of adding swearing to the scripts to help boost the age ratings when the anime they sold was being certificated by the British film censors. I will have to deal with the dub in this review, but my greater concern is what GenoCyber is as a notorious anime.

From http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-KRtpNLSqcHA/T7GaXjx8PdI/AAAAAAAAB3E/safDPMzJg0U/s1600/geno.jpg

Controversial, ultraviolent, and just a mess. GenoCyber is a mess finally seeing it, hearing of it like the many bogymen, infamous works, in anime's history for all these years, but actually viewing GenoCyber is more complicated than this. Its twisted, and for a lack of a better term, fucked up, but having to actually watch it is a drastically different experience than something merely infamous. The first part - the work splits into three stories between Part 1 (A New Life Form), Part 2 and 3 (Vajranoid Attack & Global War), and Part 4 and 5 (Legend of the City of the Grand Ark I & II) - definitely shows everything that made the anime infamous. Nihilistic, complete hatred for humanity, horrifying images of dismemberment and mass death, body horror taking advantage of sci-fi tropes' most gruesome potential, and the episode was made with barely a budget. Barely a budget. Events abruptly happen with no pace. Live action inserts were used. The animation looks aesthetically foul and scuzzy in a horrifically compelling way. And it does fascinate. In a world where nearly every nation plans to unite into one peaceful, global utopia, a corporation sticks out as a potential threat in its self ostracization from everyone else. Taking advantage of a scientist's discovery of "mind shadows", latent psychic abilities he could unlock through a machine he made called the Mandala, (yes, there are clear Buddhist and Eastern spiritual symbolism here), they have human beings, as young as children, as potential weapons. Very much like Akira (1988), potentially dangerous psychics. Two of them are the twin daughters of the original scientist. One, Diana, is one the side of the corrupt scientist in control of the knowledge, left from birth with a completely crippled body which leaves her as a head supported in an android frame. The other Elaine, on the loose in the city of future Hong Kong, is physically healthy but with the mind of a savage animal, befriend a young boy. The corporation ran by the scientist wants Elaine back, employing android mercenaries, his pack of masked psychotic minions, and her own sisters after her and to silence anyone in the way. But not only is Elaine a very dangerous psychic, but when the two sisters are together, they could become one and become the titular GeonCyber, a horrifying demonic creature that could wipe out anything and everything.

From https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjnj2byz76P8my7jBqyVg_Z70Tmm931HYk1k0k5YdgKIQ7SBOsypsCNhJmhUbdtb9r2eBVbKlN5_03WmZYsUceF-Kv1snr-c8yh7bFF9TanEzxn0xqTt81k16hJBoteAyrfNVMuAtFFFDA/s1600/Genocyber11.jpg

The first episode is a complete car crash of gore, disturbing images of viscera and exposed intestines, wrapped in such a misanthropic work in its message. But its compelling. Body horror with no self censorship. Actually missed by myself in the later episodes greatly, the director went further to make the gore disgusting by using images of actual wet clay being smashed for icky effect. Its only done twice or so from what I registered, but its an incredibly lurid effect that should have been used in the later episodes, the kind of reckless idea, on such a cheap production, that lifts it up from just being trash but something legitimately interesting. It has nihilism that actually feels like it's from the bowels of the creators', the director and co-writer Shô Aikawa, guts than that a cynical liberals going for a cheap pop, discomforting but driven by a narrative where two mangled young women come together, and their collected rage collects to created a being on the scale of Cthulhu. Koichi Ohata is already controversial for his creation MD Geist (1986), to some one of the worst anime ever made, along with its sequel, but a best seller in the US. Aikawa is incredibly twisted in just the few works he penned I've seen. He's managed, of all things, to become the scriptwriter for some of the Full Metal Alchemist franchise, an incredibly popular work with a large, mostly young audience, but the man also wrote the scripts for a lot of the Urotsukidoji series and Violence Jack (1986-1990), the former the most controversial work in anime in the West, the later only really known for its drastically censored English dub version, and from I've read and heard, probably for the better for your stomachs. His filmography has a lot of notoriously bad, ultraviolent or scuzzy work, but Aikawa has a sense of body horror, and surprising potent ideas of the manipulation of the body and political ideas that managed to get into even Full Metal Alchemist. It's not surprising that GenoCYber ended up as it did with just him, let alone with his co-writer and director. It's no way near the most disturbing anime in existence, when Neon Genesis Evangelion: The End of Evangelion (1997) exists, but even if I am desensitised from a lot of this sort of thing, and frankly view it as merely animation on a cell not reality, it still leaves a gaping, nagging wound in your memory whether you see merit in it or not. With how this part ends, there was no real need for any other episodes. It could have stood up as one single, forty or minute piece of disturbing anime. It's a mess in quality control, but it its memorable and potent in what is seen. The only other work of the director I've seen before this was the TV series Burst Angel (2004), which was legitimately poor, all the most generic tropes, even in designing the female character designs meant to be lusted over, of current anime. That was the kind of anime that is truly bad. This episode, from the same director, is something uniquely itself even in its screwed up existence.

From http://i1.ytimg.com/vi/fd5uF17mXkA/hqdefault.jpg

But more episodes were made. Parts 2 and 3 probably have some importance though. Part 2 contains the most controversial moment in the whole work where, in the first scene, the first actual scene, young kids are chain gunned into gristly, fully detailed body parts. Its tasteless, its shocking, never done in any other anime I've seen yet, but doesn't compare to the kind content in the rest of this story arc or in the first episode. It's no way near as disturbing for me, in a story where a prototype android eventually goes out of control and literally melds with the whole of a naval warship, as just having a character, seeing the atrocity around her, suddenly throw up in revulsion in detail. What really disturbs in the whole of GenoCyber, what really makes it justify its reputation, is the mood and ideas rather than the gristly results. Shô Aikawa's writing, when it's not garbage, is far more disturbing in what he implies with full detail or not. His work is very Cronenbergian even when he's in a completely different genre like with Hades Project Zeorymer (1988-1990), an anime which shows a legitimate best with how, for its flaws, the ideas and where he goes with them are truly compelling in a startling way. This story arc is still an worthy inclusion for this. How our hero - Elaine and Diane one single being who are rescued by the warship and set off the android when it see them as a threat - is actually a monster who can destroy everything. That no one is sin free, or those who are good people will be killed, even children, or go insane. That this series, for all its disgusting gore designed to only shock and its shonky look, still forces the viewer to think of the consequences of man's brutality. That its use of body horror, in visuals and the concepts, is immensely imaginative, and downright disgusting and disturbing because of the ideas behind them, especially with part 3. These two episodes do deserve to exist, because while weaker they still fit the tone of the first one and are just as interesting.

From http://www.imfdb.org/images/thumb/2/27/Genocyber_Minigun1.jpg/500px-Genocyber_Minigun1.jpg

Which causes me to ask - what happened with parts 4 and 5, and why were they even made? Suddenly you are forced to watch legitimately awful pieces of anime. A drastic shift takes place. The GenoCyber has completely decimated all human populations in the world and is now gone, leaving all the clichés of anime of this era to repopulate the scorched planet in their tired flourishing. A utopian city exists which is actually a dictatorship, the writing suddenly losing all its distinct nihilism in favour of a generic tone without any real bite, where there's the corrupt rich, and the rebels in a terrorist group and a religious cult. Suddenly you're forced with two new protagonists, a young man and a woman, moving to the city and making their way barely as a knife throwing act and through street based mysticism. We're supposed to sympathise with them because she's blind and they're a couple about to be crushed by the evil city, not because they're of any interest. At this point, I cannot ignore the English dub. It was poor in areas before this arc and the added swearing was unnecessary, but some of it actually fit the tone. Here the dialogue readings, ignoring the tedious plot, are atrocious, with the voice actor for the main male protagonist performing some of the worst line delivery I have ever had to endure legitimately in a long while. It's up there with some of the worse I've ever encountered actually, clearly playing the character as everything people say about Keanu Reeves in Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992) at one point. This is why anime viewers like myself, let alone fans, eventually switched to Japanese dialogue with subtitles completely unless it wasn't available for certain releases or the English dub was actually exceptional. The entirety of this story arc, even though it's from the original manga the anime was adapting, is abysmal, a huge blot on the whole work. The blind woman encounters Diane through her mind, or an alternative world, befriends children living with the underground rebels, as you do in anime at this time, and eventually the obvious happens when GenoCyber awakes. You rise the memory of this arc from your mind and, if the whole work ever gets a DVD re-release, the only reason you would ever see this again is to check the disc(s) work. Suddenly it's not the original anime of the first few episodes but a completely different work, written by someone with no real grasp of what corruption means and merely using it as an excuse to bash the upper class and real life society in a cheap way to come up with a dystopia narrative. One, as in all the live action films that do it as well, that would put people off actually questioning their society and leaders because its trivialised to such an extent and because they don't want to suddenly become the characters in a crappy GenoCyber story arc. OVAs at this time in the nineties were also notorious for how abrupt their productions could be - anime works suddenly ending on a cliffhanger with no sequels ever to finish them, or with wildly different tonal shifts like here. Sometimes it's part of my fascination with these nineties anime, but here it's painful.

From http://www.animeclick.it/prove/serie/Genocyber/Genocyber8.jpg

Altogether, anyone with a strong stomach should attempt viewing Part 1 of the work. It's not a series to watch on a loop, too bitter, too misanthropic in tone to digest except occasionally. Its indefensible, but it doesn't feel like a mere mindless piece of anime ultra violence that the whole medium was lumped into by newspaper tabloids. Parts 2 and 3 are also worthwhile, but if it was possible to remove Parts 4 and 5 from existence I would do such a task. It has to be beared in mind that this has content that would even startle people used to animated gore and depravity, but it's a creation of individuals with throats full of bile for humanity rather than making cynical jabs, for attracting peoples' simpleminded views of anti-humanity and selling product by using such naive views on corrupt society. As perfectly put by an anime reviewer, it's the equivalent of punk rock, shambolic in production, offensive but with vitriol and energy you wish was there more often.

From http://www.anime-planet.com/images/anime/screenshots/genocyber1.jpg

Tuesday, 3 September 2013

The Curse of Kazuo Umezu (1990)

From http://i1.ytimg.com/vi/K8LOCE1mMko/hqdefault.jpg

Dir. Naoko Omi

There's a surprising lack of horror anime in existence. Even in the golden era of straight-to-video anime in the eighties and nineties, where in most cases it was of higher production quality than TV series and could get away with more adult content, there was a rare amount of them only. Now, with these straight-to-video works, OVAs, sorely missed and needed to be brought back, there's a gap left what can be released. Films are rarely made already, let alone horror ones. TV series have restrictions in content, and even those which have shocked Western viewers like Elfen Lied (2004) were probably censored on broadcast or showed past midnight. Only hentai could get away with more horror related content; its already porn, so aside from certain Japanese laws, you could probably get away with more. Manga is usually where horror thrives, slowly being dripped into the West in bookstores. As for those rare horror anime that do exist, The Curse of Kazuo Umezu is a truly rare one, which I only discovered the existence of within a few weeks. It's not even included in the version I've read of The Anime Encyclopedia by Helen McCarthy and Jonathan Clements, which catalogues every anime ever made from 1917 including all the hentai tapes. Its existence, once released on video in its home country in 1990, meeting it myself in a VHS rip probably taken from a Japanese VHS a Western otaku has acquired and made available, shows how deep the well anime is outside from what its usually labelled as.

From http://24.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lq3fz7Ko1H1qc1tyfo1_500.png

Kazuo Umezu is a well regarded horror manga author. He's apparently obsessed with red and white stripes, which would make passing a barber's shop and a candy cane stand bliss for him, and I confess to having yet to read his work, as most or nearly all of his work is not available in the West at all. This anime consists of two stories over forty five minutes. The first, a schoolgirl suspects that the new transfer student is a female vampire, but thanks to videotape the truth is more horrifying. The second is of a group of schoolgirls going into a haunted house to their peril. The most distinct aspect of the anime, bookended by a mysterious thin narrator/crypt keeper who entices us with morality tales, is the visual look of the anime. Clearly there was an attempt to replicate the style of Umezu's manga, black lines heavily used and very grotesque imagery. It shows in the female characters, if just their eye lashes and eyes, who dominate the entire anime. I cannot help but think of Western influences such as gothic art to maybe even dolls with the look of the anime, more so when showing moments of terror for the characters through excessive use of said black lines. It looks good in terms of design, and the format allows for more nastier material. The first story brings in a freakish level of body horror that the cutesy break between two stories cannot make into a complete joke - think of very, very big teeth. The second story, lots of raspberry jam smeared everywhere.

From http://i4.minus.com/jblxSZqXNvhyss.jpg

In terms of quality in other areas, it's not a great work if I'm completely honest. It's grown on me, but this must be stated. The visual look is distinct, but the actual animation is rudimentary. The obsession with moments where the characters freeze in terror do go on a bit, and the stories are very predictable. In terms of entertainment value, it's about the presentation of what's on screen, not originality, that will be whether you like this anime or not. Interestingly, the stories do occupy themselves with the ideas of seeing something only to live to regret it, curiosity killing the cat literally. The first centres around how a video camera can reveal the truth, pre-empting the obsession with technology's tangibility in Japanese horror, only for it to reveal too much. The second, cut into by the narrator, becomes purposely abstract, reality cut to pieces by going to the wrong place. It even gets a bit dreamlike and also reflective of itself, the main two characters watching horror movies, including one called the Curse of Kazuo Umezu, before they end up investigating the haunted house.

From http://zapodaj.net/images/7c2f99d4811ee.jpg

It's a completely minor work. The technical and plotting failings do undermine it. But it's still fascinating, immensely fascinating. Beginners to anime shouldn't view this first - this is for those looking for the deepest, obscurest cuts of anime or horror, forgotten in history and made unique for this and its appearance. Done in the era of hand drawn animation, it still has a textual quality, despite rudimentary animation, that stands out far more than the plastic sheen of post-2000s work made on computers. Almost carnivalesque in its horror - the subversion of body parts and the body, obsessions with toys - it's encouraging to investigate the author's original work, and despite the failings of it, it has stayed on my mind since seeing it. The rarity of horror anime helps it, but it's a strange beast by itself, its forty five minutes memorable. A layer of eeriness trickles throughout it, emphasised by the likelihood the version I saw was an original Japanese videotape release from 1990, having survived to reappear in some form for someone from a different country, me, to find. Myths, legends, eroticism, body horror, historical and cultural information, even Western and Eastern pop culture seeps throughout a great deal of anime and its animation plates alongside the genres within it. They feel far more rooted in deeper and more interesting influences than a lot of Western animation, where even a minor work like The Curse of Kazuo Umezu has something incredibly distinct despite its predictabilities. And since horror anime is rare, its great to see one that brings something interesting with it instead of fail miserably. 

From http://i1.ytimg.com/vi/xnB1Q8adRa4/hqdefault.jpg

Monday, 1 July 2013

Anime 18 Review Link: Malice @ Doll (2000)

From http://www.weirdwildrealm.com/filmimages/malicedoll.jpg

Dir. Keitarou Motonaga
Japan

Not a lot of words to say for the final link for the Anime 18 season. I intend to bring it back up occasionally or at least cover a few more of these adult rated anime for this blog or, if it suits the moment, on Videotape Swapshop, probably expanding it out to include releases never sold in the United Kingdom like the introduction suggested. And of course I intend to cover everything under the "Anime" medium including the family friendly creations. The following entry, closing this type of series off for now, is my equivalent of the film/anime/show that you randomly discover, no one else really talks about or gives raving reviews of, but fall in love with it. Its perverse to use "love" in some ways considering how nasty and uncomfortable Malice@Doll can get, but it has an odd beauty beneath its incredible dated computer animation and content. Other works have probably depicted the issues of one's condition within their own physical bodies more clearly, but this one's attempt at it is admirable and fascinating nonetheless even if its deeply flawed. I won't get into any further detail so the original review can be of some use. But I will close this post with the note that, as I'm reaching the one year anniversary of working on this blog with proper devotion, it's going to be the works like this that make up this blog's bread-and-butter, these peculiar and interesting oddities, even if they're mainstream releases, that rarely get their dues even in cult cinema reviews. Complete oddities, miscreants and the overlooked and choices that are contrariety on purpose for a reason. All of which will hopefully be interesting or I'll be pissing  hours up the wall without any sense of good work to it all even if its just for my ego.


From http://s59.radikal.ru/i164/1004/71/fa28a429f901.jpg

Thursday, 27 June 2013

Anime 18 Review Link: Apocalypse Zero (1996)

From http://www.dubbedepisodes.co.uk/static/apocalypse-zero.jpg

Dir. Toshihiro Hirano
Japan

If there is one other thing to add to this review, I will say that a work that provokes any kind of reaction and "wakes" you from viewing it from a safe distance, where you can forgot it immediately afterwards, is worth taking seriously even if the material could be viewed as dubious to other opinions. This bizarre and ultra-gross anime, if I had viewed it back when I was between sixteen or seventeen, would probably be viewed as garbage. Now, rather than thinking I've regressed in my thoughts by giving it praise, I think its more the realisation - as someone who became obsessed with provocative art like the Dada movement before films, as mentioned in the review - that even in the most foul of areas a streak of subversion can be seen and given some merit. Back then, I didn't try to defend films that were clearly badly made like I did now, or defend works like this anime with questionable content, and probably would be viewed as having a better taste in films if one views cinema through the IMDB Top 100 list of films. I also however had such a narrow minded view of cinema and art in general that presumed anything that didn't follow a clear narrative or clear point was bad, including films by the likes of Jean-Luc Godard and truly great works of abstract cinema. Now my willingness to suggest that I find something like Apocalypse Zero to be a work of worth has also developed my ability to see the virtues of the likes of Godard and abstract cinema too because, after some of the films I've seen and covered on this blog, I'm prepared for films to take directions in content and presentation that the presumably "artless" works had. The erratic nature of the less defended films only differ from the celebrated works because they're repugnant to most or ended up the way they were by accident. That this anime may actually be intentionally getting a reaction out of the viewer, as I try to explain in the review, makes me want to defend it more.

As one find in live action, exploitation films, the most base of material can be the most daring in poking at taboos other filmmakers, or creators, are too cowardly to tackle. Yes, they can end up being offensively conservative at times, but others push the content in ways that make them impossible to view as celebrating bland stereotypes. In simple terms, sometimes the best weapon is to purposely show things so deeply "wrong", and in this case make it look like a Saturday morning cartoon on crack, and attack good taste even if the purpose of the anime was to just be an entertainment product. Rather than merely be offended or baffled by it, its worth actually thinking about why being offended by the images in a work happens and see if it has virtue from it. Plus, frankly people, including myself, get a perverse pleasure from these transgression and weird images, and to not admit it is lying to yourself. Sometimes its more healthier to submit yourself to something that isn't just blood for blood's sake, but something legitimately bonkers and throws images like "Double Big Tit Bomb" and other distorted animated images at your retinas. Far from viewing Apocalypse Zero as just an excuse to view Japanese culture as "peculiar", something like this is just in an entirely different orbit to anything else regardless of its country of origin. And far from being conservative, I seriously doubt anyone, except those who is going to celebrate how perverse the anime is, will come out as a fan of it. 


From http://www.videotapeswapshop.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/az2.jpg

Monday, 21 January 2013

The ‘Coffee Drinker’s Favourite’ of Anime [The Humanoid (1986)]

From http://cdn03.animenewsnetwork.com/images/cms/buried-treasure/21262/humanoid5.jpg


Dir. Shin’ichi Masaki
Japan
Work #19 of The ‘Worst’ of Cinema

From http://static.minitokyo.net/downloads/16/00/230016.jpg

[Note – The version watched for this review was English dub only. Since anime dubbing can affect an anime’s nature itself and one’s opinion on it, bare it in mind while reading this review and if you want to see it afterwards.]

Considering this is the third shot form anime I’ve reviewed for this season, it both shows that there are a disarming amount of begotten anime like this in existence, even if I admit I enjoy The Humanoid greatly, and that I am biased with picking this sort of thing to cover even if it sadly doesn’t have as much release here in Britain as it did in the USA. This sort of OVA or short length anime are small, full bursts of colour, ideas and optimistic promise, that of successes remembered today, the sadly forgotten, or the misguided folly. It’s beautiful, both sincerely and perversely, to look at stuff like this where they were being churned out for the Japanese video market and anything could get through. If you can get past the large eyes and the sexualisation of schoolgirls, anime, especially the older works of the eighties and the nineties, is just as much a smorgasbord of intellectual concepts to rival art cinema, and psychotronica to rival cult and exploitation cinema. It is able to have analysis of the human existence and man’s place in the world on the same shelf as sex ninjas and, in an example I would love to review one day, God as a space grub who somehow requires a spaceship to travel around space.

From http://i94.photobucket.com/albums/l115/Skellor/BT/BT2/humanoid4.png

Is something like The Humanoid of artistic merit though? To be honest, to only view cinema through an intellectual’s mindset of ‘serious’ films is as likely to be as clichéd, strained and potentially kitsch as these lesser known animations fostered upon Western distributors. To accept this gaudy material exists allows one to admit how gaudy and tacky real life can be as well and to be able to appreciate great art even more as well as things like this anime. The Humanoid is viewed by most anime fans as worthless junk. I like it though. It’s not an ugly mess like Roots Search (1986), or utterly clunky like Psychic Wars (1991). It is completely unoriginal to the extreme, but that doesn’t stop me from enjoying it.

From https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiOJdZWH7T8IVwYYhQOPUOCjz5my99sR-sv1RlP0ECFuBgDeRiHyteY_JiUVNlHtyMYRwRvUG2dCKjwRogzBhUwmf581Fdg1tI_zEYqD91E04fmiI9ocFe4pOh_hxqC7-ZnYOI9jAS3KIY/s1600/the-humanoid-4.png

On a harmonious planet, Governor Proud – called so for his selflessness and modesty – plans to awaken a giant spaceship to take his people back to their home world, despite the warnings of his peers of how it nearly destroyed large parts of the lush, green planet when last activated. His desire to have both keys to activate the ship will cause him to cross two Earthmen, Dr. Watson and his daughter, and his creation Antoinette, a robotic woman who slowly learns what the human emotion of ‘love’ means. At forty five minutes it trundles along and never reaches anything spectacular, pretty coloured and yet very badly animated in places. Why do I enjoy this anime despite its glaring flaws? Beyond personal taste, it’s that it is so innocent in its content – not offensive, not stupid, not mind numbingly dull – and such a product of the eighties. It’s only real contribution to anime’s history is that Antoinette’s design was by Hajime Sorayama, famous for his art involving female robots, including the album cover for Aerosmith’s Just Push Play (2001). The idea of this titular humanoid and the story of the whole anime is meat-and-potatoes sci-fi, a story of good versus evil, and the folly of one’s ego, going back to the beginnings of mankind in ancient myths, continually returned to and made into this anime. The robot learns to be human and the heroes include two space jockeys - one of which, to paraphrase the Anime World Order podcast and a quote from their review of this anime, has the hair and moustache of a black Burt Reynolds – who must go against the deluded Governor Proud and his robot soldiers. Its slightly muddled in its plotting and generic, but with its eighties synth theme about dancing in the rain, its delighting for me to watch something that came from a period, not just from Japan, where animation like this was cranked out continually. I can enjoy its one dimensional plotting, despite it being silly and one dimensional, because it never insults my intelligence or makes me want to gouge my eyes out. Its fun even if I’m one of the only people who can enjoy it. It did elicit laughter quite a few times out of me, but that caused me to embrace it even more.

From http://i.ytimg.com/vi/KXcN2cpTlmM/0.jpg

Then there is the obsession with coffee through the film. It’s not as if the English voice actors just lost their minds from tiredness and decided to worship the thing that was keeping them going, but in scenes of the anime itself characters are continually drinking coffee. Not a particular brand, but as propaganda for the caffeinated bean in general. It’s always hilarious when the dialogue goes into talking about the black gold, although one worries about the safety of this natural Eden of a planet when its populous, judging from this anime, is either between a chemical induced A.D.D. or a depressive caffeine crash. It’s always wonderful when an anime, no matter how lacking it may be everywhere else within it, can have a quirk this amusing to it, adding to The Humanoid’s charm. It is another work I’ve reviewed that is for a very acquired taste only, but I have to admire something this cheerfully empty despite the fact I shouldn’t.

From http://i94.photobucket.com/albums/l115/Skellor/BT/BT2/humanoid1.png

Now if you excuse me, I have my coffee to finish. And if you don’t believe me, here is a montage of coffee related quotes from The Humanoid someone has spliced together and has appeared on YouTube. Who knew subliminal advertising about hot liquids of a refreshing taste could be so barefaced and better for it?

Thursday, 10 January 2013

The ‘Could-Be-Worse’ of Anime [Roots Search (1986)]

From http://bludragon.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/roots-search-1986-ntsc.jpg?w=478&h=480

Dir. Hisashi Sugai
Japan
Film #10 of The ‘Worst’ of Cinema

[Note = This review will have quite a few moving images. I apologise in advance if this causes problems viewing the page or if it becomes too much for some readers. Some of the images are also quite freakish, like the one below this warning, and has flashing colours for one of them, so this is not a review for the feint hearted.]

From http://cdn03.animenewsnetwork.com/images/cms/buried-treasure/21703/rootssearch5.jpg

In the review of Psychic Wars (1991) for this season, this is the anime I was thinking of that lies unexpectedly on a video shelf and baffles anyone who rents it, or that is bought by anyone who could afford the tape or (as I have discovered) laserdisc  version back in the day. The 1980s has a far greater amount of these random one-off productions, both good and bad, that I have barely skimmed through as an anime fan, the money available in the decade before the Japanese economic crash meaning that numerous experimental, or weird, productions could be made without concern whether they would succeed or not. The nineties still has its vast quantity of OVAs and short form anime productions, but the eighties has the more obscure and unconventional works. It also had Roots Search. I will admit a twisted disappointment that this did not turn out to be so bad I felt physical pain, viewed as one of the worst anime works in existence and notorious for diehard western anime fans in the United States, but while the potential repeat viewings of it may be slim, the resulting 44 minutes of gloopy sci-fi horror is still pretty off. Off is the right word especially when you see the cover the anime had. With a photorealistic depiction of a woman in a cryogenic machine/cocoon, it looks like a H.R. Gigar painting, or his other creation for a Debbie Harry album, but it’s far from the case for the anime; the creators of it were still influenced by Gigar, especially his take on alien sex organs as background architecture, but Roots Search is its own weird animal.

From http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m4703lYMo31qdc388o1_500.gif
It may have passed by Alien (1979) though. On a spaceship studying ESP powers, including psychic Monica – who has a great and ridiculously large hat despite an attempt by the character designer to make her look cute that feels forced – the crew finds themselves against an unknown entity after Monica sees terrible visions of another spaceship crew being butchered by an extraterrestrial force. With the only survivor of that ship, that warps into their vicinity and lets loose the alien on their vessel, Monica and the crew have to deal with a being that claims to be a ‘messenger from God’ and plans to exterminate any human it crosses paths with for their sins. Either this stole part of the premise for Event Horizon (1997), where the crew is mentally tortured by their memories of loved ones and past events, eleven years before that film was made, or Paul WS. Anderson has been ingesting obscure, trashy anime without anyone releasing (even if that film is far superior to this). In such a short running time, Roots Search attempts to cram all of this into itself, along with tentacles and an alien which, to my apologies to my female readers, has vagina dentata for a mouth, as the characters that start to film find themselves being picked off one-by-one. As an OVA as well, with no restrictions in content, it can get very gory at times to and ridiculous in its gooeyness. The anime however, like Psychic Wars, sinks in quality as it drags itself along.

From http://www.anime-planet.com/images/anime/screenshots/rootssearch1.jpg

To begin with, while it can look distinct, even eye catching to me at times, the character designs and parts of the animation are terrible. The characters look like they’ve been squashed and distorted like plasticine at moments, where Monica (and another female character part of a character’s memories) can look like attractive women in one shot, but in another look like they’ve got the eyes of a Furby that are far too big for their heads, which is saying something considering how ridiculously large the eyes of female characters in anime can be. The screenshots are vital to explain this – the anime looks messy, not helped by its lack of budget to make it, with only the more sub-Gigar aspects standing out vaguely from the other parts. The strange combination of a brain and T-Rex, like a scrapped design for a Nintendo videogame boss, from one of the nightmare sequences also shows that, while it should be preserved in an anime of just ridiculous character designs, like Monica’s quasi-boyfriend Scott who has makeup surgically attached to his skin, the person(s) who allowed designs like it to slip pass should have been whacked with a designer’s ruler for undermining the ability to take the anime seriously.

From http://24.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m4k0j4MBVJ1qdc388o1_500.gif

In such a short length, Roots Search attempts too much and doesn’t really do what it does very well. I will have to ponder still whether there is some merit to the OVA even if it’s unintentional, but only the morbidly curious or the most willing of anime fans, which dive into material like this on purpose, will have to see it. It does have its moments that raise one’s eyebrow, such as when Buzz, the survivor from the other ship, and Monica share a fantasy sequence of them frolicking on grass in front of a pink sky completely naked, and in a misunderstood riff on 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), has Buzz holding a floating foetus in his hand. I have spoken of most of the interesting (or inane) aspects of Roots Search, but in its favour actually watching sequences like that one has more of an effect than merely reading a description. The anime does attempt to have a serious concept behind it, with the alien’s motive and Monica have a monologue about humanity’s place in the world, but in 44 minutes it comes off as a scrawled idea than a deep concept. The ending - while better than many anime OVAs that didn’t have an ending and arbitrarily finished, enraging anyone viewing them - is not exactly helped by Roots Search’s attempt to be a metaphysical sci-fi, leaving it a befuddling mess with added riffing on Gigar artscapes and giant veins. The anime altogether definitely lives up to its negative reputation for its failings. I have seen far worse, especially in anime television series, however; Roots Search is merely a peculiar creation not based on anything or leading to any cult following to my knowledge let along sequels. It exists in its own polarity and has had no contribution to anime’s progression, except for dumbfounding American anime fans who had it released in their country, where red clay tentacles molest anyone they come across and a Furby eyed girl with a large hat should have had a better character designer for her let alone a spin-off.

From http://24.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m4k0itwrWf1qdc388o1_500.gif

Tuesday, 8 January 2013

The ‘Bad’ of Anime [Psychic Wars (1991)]

From http://cdn-2.cinemaparadiso.co.uk/050402072239_l.jpg


Dir. Tetsuo Imazawa
Japan
Film #8 of the ‘Worst’ of Cinema

From https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg3jl8pKScr7jePAvveE61NffrB103CZmAECrZHqQRUyQGKnUjGOW3S85ZUymyvqh5yav-8jAy-W9fj4fB2GhyUXUeoLGBdsS3GgtHviGw07yPY_Qqu_gH-0shCN76UM4H1TjEh8OFIfdGG/s1600/vlcsnap-2011-07-15-22h36m20s8.png

[Note= The version of Psychic Wars I viewed was an English dub only copy. I inform you of this because anime has a very complex history with its English dubbing. Older dubs could change the script to the point of changing the entirety of the plot, and/or be incredibly awful even for great anime. Even now English dubbing tends to divide anime fans despite the fact that great ones do exist. Part of a mini-collection by Manga Entertainment called The Collection, the out-of-print British DVD of Psychic Wars is the only one I know of that exists except for a US disc that, frankly, would probably be not worth trying to get hold of. Bare this in mind with this review.]

From http://www.anime-planet.com/images/anime/screenshots/psychicwars6.jpg

Psychic Wars is awful. I chose it because it was on my list of the worst works I have seen over the years, the truly worst, the 1/10s which is a very selective list that not any film or anime can get on. On the rewatch, it is not justifiable to have it on that list still, because it’s merely a waste of time, not abominable, not one of the worst viewing experiences I’ve ever had. It is a testament to a time that, with rare exceptions now, Japanese anime in the West was an abstract entity, not because of the content, but because it could exist in a variety of viewing forms. The Original Video Animations, the OVAs, straight-to-video animation which had (usually) higher budgets and freedom for creativity than television, are the main reason for this when they were still being made in large amounts before the 2000s. Their variety of lengths, not just their stories, altered the material they contained; they could be six episodes long, or just thirty or so minutes long, with most I’ve seen being around forty to sixty minutes in length. By themselves, separate from their original source material, or if they were original stories and concepts, they were small bursts of images and narrative that either left you wanting more, or if they were convoluted or had no closed endings, left you baffled by what you had seen. I was too young to grow up with this sort of short length anime being released in the West for the first time, and while I can find many of them on DVD or on YouTube (or even on videotape despite the lack of access to a working VHS player), I wish we still lived with this type of anime being made one after another, both because it allowed for creativity, and trained younger anime directors and let them experiment, but because as well I find delight, perverse and sincere, in the idea that a random forty minute animation could suddenly materialise on a videotape shelf or in a rental store and dumbfound the person who viewed it. That said...I am not going to defend Psychic Wars even if it conjured up these thoughts for me viewing it again. I would defend other ‘bad’ short form anime like it, but not Psychic Wars itself.

From http://i94.photobucket.com/albums/l115/Skellor/BT/psychicw3.png

Adapted from a sci-fi novel by Yasuaki Kadota, a surgeon finds himself pulled into a war for mankind’s survival when he treats an old woman, becoming imbued with supernatural powers and pulled towards prehistoric Japan to protect human kind from being wiped out of existence by a species of demons. Its short length makes Psychic Wars far more breakneck than the plot needs to work; while I only know of the novel from this anime, to attempt to cram any elaborate work in such a short running time, a common occurrence in anime, is never going to faithfully translate the original story. The results can be compelling – as with the feature length adaptation of X (1996) for me – but for Psychic Wars it’s not. Its pacing for such a short anime is problematic, sputtering from moments of exposition to an action scene in the first half without any sense of where it should be going, and ping-ponging back and forth through the narrative’s time period without a gracefulness to make such a fragmented structure work. It is cheaply made on a low budget too, which is a further problem. There are attempts to make it interesting – artistic looking sequences and a CGI vortex effect that amused my obsession with dated computer effects from the early nineties – but this crippling flaw is worsened by the really generic plot that undermines the anime’s chances of being entertaining. What could be a stylistic flourish, such as the protagonist taking on a group of horseback riding demons in prehistoric Japan that is done in sepia, could have been because of budget constraints, and while I am just as fascinated by bad animation if it looks interesting, Psychic Wars hasn’t really got a lot of moments to make it worth watching again. This is pretty much the same with the plot too as mentioned. There are moments of unintentional humour, seemingly about to promise a better anime when the surgeon first becomes Super Saiyan and fights a demonic tumour by punching it repeatedly with his fists, but there’s little to really attach myself to in this in terms of kitsch or quality. As much as I like that there was a period where anime like this snuck onto Western store shelves frequently before my time, there are plenty of other OVAs and short length non-sequiturs that far more better or jaw dropping in their content.

From http://i94.photobucket.com/albums/l115/Skellor/BT/psychicw1.png

Normally when I watch anime that I can only view with the English dub, I try to judge them separate from the dubbing, but the one for Psychic Wars is awful, which I admit to having produced a laugh from me once or twice throughout the viewing. If the end credits are right, it was recorded in a studio in Cardiff, Wales, which does mean that there’s a scene where a demon general not only has to try and go forward with the plan to exterminate mankind but also hide his unexpected English accent, trying to speak in an American one like almost all British made dubs attempted to, which, while could be seen as cruel mocking by myself, is still amusing and does not let the hook the poor dubbing job. The whole anime, alongside the out-of-print series The Collection that Manga Entertainment released on DVD (and I own a few of), reminds me of a concept that the British company had, before it failed and they became a legitimately great company now, of releasing material that could be ‘beer and curry anime’, titles that anyone would watch on a Friday night with the foodstuffs mentioned, with friends, like they would with an action film. It does happen, but the concept of making anime fully mainstream, not just at the edge of it as it is now, has yet to be obtained. Manga Entertainment once thought that releasing violent and sexually explicit works, to separate anime from children’s animation, a paradox as anime is both for children and adults depending on the material, would work but it ended up making anime look like violent cartoon porn to British tabloids. Anime like Psychic Wars, released before I was old enough to become interested in Japanese animation, is no longer released in vast quantities here as a younger fanbase of teenagers make up most of the market. Only Studio Ghibli, in its own bubble, has really succeeded in breaking into the mainstream because of the quality of the work. Manga Entertainment could still reach their goal, picking up one-off and feature length animation that would be a lot more assessable for a non-anime fan to get into instead of a TV series, but even the concept of ‘beer and curry anime’ needs quality works to be released, and to be promoted greatly, to make the idea work. A bad action film is a bad action film, even with korma in your stomach, and if a good one is lost in the shuffle of new releases, nothing will succeed. As much as I got a masochistic kick revisiting Psychic Wars, you need good anime with English dubs of merit to succeed in reaching the mainstream. Great, accessible anime still exists but it gets lost in the crowd, and is not helped by the anime industry’s increasing pandering to the questionable tastes of die-hard Japanese, and Western, anime otaku. What sane person would watch some of the anime made now, especially those with gratuitous panty shots of animated, underage schoolgirls, with a chicken ṭikka masālā in one hand, a Carlsberg in the other and a smile on their face?

Probably one of the less expected ways to fight cancer.
(From https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg8QRl3m6_inIo_blNbuqWjzMu41U2GVryRI7Wf0vTJjWSiabPbnHnbiZyz364nQECq1i6JLH41Klk8Drc5_dbA0111EXhuaLEkAgpFWNaAkB2nQR5TtX7yUvErsXcFCPVruGnF9pQCH_IV/s1600/vlcsnap-2011-07-13-21h03m11s254.png)