Monthly Archives: May 2023

Media watch: How Johnny’s exploits the pin-up factor to keep publishers in line

Now that the cat is way out of the bag, Japanese mainstream media are finally covering the Johnny Kitagawa sexual abuse story in all its lurid detail, even though it has been an open secret for decades. I talked about … Continue reading

Posted in Media | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Media watch: History shortchanged several times over at Hiroshima summit

On May 24, South Korea’s Hankyoreh news agency posted an editorial about the “joint tribute” paid by Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida to Korean victims of the 1945 atomic bombing in the Hiroshima Peace Memorial … Continue reading

Posted in Media | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Review: Young Plato

Pedagogical films, whether documentary or dramatic, always focus on the teacher-student dynamic; specifically, the way educational professionals address the personal foibles of their charges in order to impart knowledge that the charges have difficulty accessing because of those foibles. The … Continue reading

Posted in Movies | Leave a comment

Review: Aftersun

Charlotte Wells’ debut feature uses nostalgia to interrogate the fraught relationship between a 31-year-old father, Calum (Paul Mescal), and his 11-year-old daughter, Sophie (Frankie Corio). The bulk of the film takes place in the late 90s during a vacation in … Continue reading

Posted in Movies | Tagged | Leave a comment

Review: Creed III

Though I enjoyed Creed II, I blamed the fall-off in visceral and dramatic involvement on the absence of Ryan Coogler at the helm, though it may have had more to do with the usual expectations. Coogler rebooted the Rocky franchise … Continue reading

Posted in Movies | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Review: The Apartment With Two Women

Kim Se-in’s debut feature won the New Currents and Audience awards at the 2021 Busan International Film Festival, as well as the festival’s Actress of the Year prize for Im Jee-ho’s performance. The Apartment With Two Women also won the … Continue reading

Posted in Movies | Leave a comment

Review: The Desperate Hour

It’s because I’ve lived away from the U.S. for so long, but whenever I watch an American middle-brow thriller or even a romantic comedy I get overly distracted by the production design; specifically, the degree of near-luxury in which purportedly … Continue reading

Posted in Movies | Tagged | Leave a comment

Review: Armageddon Time

Though I thought The Lost City of Z was a worthy tour de force, it’s good to see director James Gray return to his native New York City (the less said about his previous film, the sci-fi melodrama Ad Astra, … Continue reading

Posted in Movies | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Review: Tár

Lydia Tár (Cate Blanchett) isn’t the first cinematic protagonist whose entire being seems designed to be disagreeable, but it’s difficult to tell if writer-director Todd Field, making his first movie in almost two decades, wants the viewer to pick up … Continue reading

Posted in Movies | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Media watch: Resolution of defamation case better late than never, but still too late

On May 1, the legal affairs website Bengoshidotcom reported on a press conference given by human rights activist Shin Sugok of the citizens group Norikoe Net. Shin talked about the Supreme Court’s decision on April 26 to reject an appeal … Continue reading

Posted in Media | Tagged | Leave a comment