Review: Ballad of a White Cow

According to various human rights groups, Iran is believed to execute the most people per capita of any country in the world. The list of crimes subject to capital punishment seems endless, everything from murder to homosexuality to apostasy, and when the country’s celebrated filmmakers, whether accepted or banned, address the subject they tend to focus less on the condemned than on the system itself. One of the most startling depictions of capital punishment was in Saeed Roustayi’s 2019 film Just 6.5, which was not only allowed to be screened in Iran, but went on to be the biggest non-comedy box office hit in the country’s history. The movie is not about the death penalty. It is a police thriller about the various means, both legal and extralegal, that the narcotics forces use to bring drug pushers to justice, and much of it takes place in Iran’s notoriously crowded prisons. Roustayi didn’t flinch from anything, including the methods used for mass execution, which are truly horrific. Perhaps it’s because the people who are being killed are seen in the movie to be addicts and dealers that the authorities felt it was OK to release the movie as it is—it certainly could be seen as a deterrent of sorts—but, then again, the authorities banned Mohammad Rasolouf’s 2020 Berlinale winner, There Is No Evil, whose depiction of mass hangings wasn’t as graphic. What they objected to was Rasolouf’s overall theme, which is that the death penalty destroys the souls of the people who, as the movie so colorfully puts it in its four separate stories, “pull the stool out” from under the prisoners. By extension, the entire nation’s soul is compromised.

Maryam Moghaddam and Behtash Sanaeeha’s Ballad of a White Cow isn’t as accomplished as Rasolouf’s film, but it does attempt to come to grips with the moral destruction wrought by state-sanctioned murder. Whereas Rasolouf dealt directly with the executioners, Moghaddam and Sanaeeha take a wider look at the bureaucracy that oversees the justice system carrying out these killings, but they do so in a manner that allows for a more nuanced dramatic reading of the issue. Moghaddam herself plays Mina, a single mother whose husband has been executed for killing a moneylender. A year after his death, Mina and her brother-in-law (Pourya Rahimisam) are summoned to the justice ministry’s chambers where they are told that a mistake was made, and that the real killer of the moneylender has confessed. (Mina’s husband did attack the moneylender, but the fatal blow was delivered by another man who showed up later with, presumably, a similar grudge.) At first devastated and then righteously incensed, Mina demands an apology in addition to the meager compensation she receives, but none is forthcoming from the stolid bureaucrat, who simply says it was “God’s will,” which turns out to be a leitmotif in explaining many of the hardships that Mina and her 9-year-old daughter, Bita (Aviv Puffaoufi), who is deaf and unaware that her father is dead, suffer at the hands of Iranian society, which cannot countenance a fatherless family, regardless of the circumstances that made it so. 

Struggling to pay the rent with a low-paying job in a milk factory and staving off her brother-in-law, who believes she is hiding her dead husband’s money, Mina is at her wit’s end when a mysterious man shows up at her door saying he is an old friend of her husband’s who has come to repay an ancient debt. This middle aged man, Reza (Alirez Sanifar), gradually insinuates himself into Mina’s life, helping her find a new apartment when she’s kicked out of her old one and endearing himself to Bita, who has come to understand without being told that her father is never coming back from “abroad.” Meanwhile, the bureaucracy grinds on and while Mina does exact some satisfaction, she is continually set upon by other forces, not least of which is her in-laws, who now want custody of Bita. Reza, as it turns out, can help there, too.

Plot-wise, Ballad of a White Cow often shortchanges its characters’ motivations: The viewer may wonder why Mina doesn’t see through Reza’s subterfuge given how intelligent and even hard-headed she is portrayed to be. Moreover, Moghaddam and Sanaeeha give Reza a back story that seems conveniently and conventionally tragic, thus setting an unsubtle dramatic tone that’s retrofitted to justify Mina’s burgeoning feelings for him. Nevertheless, as a snapshot of Iranian society the movie has the power to infuriate, thus reinforcing its main point, which is that the death penalty is so easy to apply here because the people it nominally protects are so cold. In that sense, it conveys the banality of evil behind the system more forcefully than does Rasolouf’s film. In one scene, Mina visits a realtor whose office is modern and flashy and who tells her in a matter-of-fact way that none of the landlords he represents will rent to a widow. Your first impulse is to laugh because the cruelty seems so automatic.

In Persian. Opens Feb. 18 in Tokyo at Toho Cinemas Chanter Hibiya (050-6868-5001).

Ballad of a White Cow home page in Japanese

Posted in Movies | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Review: Los Bando

For such a small film with modest comic goals, the Norwegian road movie Los Bando takes on a lot. Ostensibly, it concerns the ambitions of a group of small-town teenagers who yearn to play rock n roll and intend on competing in a battle of the bands contest in a city on the other side of the country, but it also takes the time to explore each band member’s personal investment in the journey, which isn’t a bad idea except, as mentioned above, it’s supposed to be a comedy and the laughs are often sacrificed to make trite points about what a drag it is growing up.

The environment here has something to do with it. The band’s guitarist, Grim (Tage Johansen Hogness), is a talented instrumentalist but sucks as a singer, except he doesn’t know that and his best friend in the band, drummer Aksel (Jakob Dyrud), is too chicken to tell him. Besides, good singers are almost as scarce in their home town as bass players, which is why they recruit Thilda (Tiril Marie Hoistad Berger), who may be only 9 and plays cello rather than bass, but she’s a badass on that cello. A power trio with a crappy singer and a kid cellist is better than no power trio at all, so they conspire to secretly make it to Tromso for the competition, but how to get there? That’s where Martin (Jonas Hoff Oftebro) comes in. A motor sports aficionado with no drivers license but a secret music jones, he steals his missionary brother’s “Jesus van” to help Los Bando Immortales realize their dream, thus setting in motion not only a road movie of self-discovery, but one that involves three chase elements: Martin’s brother; the police, since Thilda has been reported kidnapped; and various parents and concerned adults. As it happens, each member of the band has an agenda that the competition is meant to assuage, either a girl or a mentor that needs impressing, a parent whose neglect needs to be called out, or simply a means of proving one’s worth to oneself. And while the movie hits all the required beats on its way to satisfying all these needs, including side trips to save a bride in distress and a karaoke contest to earn gas money, it tends to do so without any dramatic strain, making the whole movie somewhat pedestrian in style and tone. Even the music, which you’d expect to be pretty cool since Norway is the birthplace of death metal, is limp. Only Thilda rocks out convincingly. 

In Norwegian. Now playing in Tokyo at Shinjuku Cinema Qualite (03-3352-5645).

Los Bando home page in Japanese

photo Filmbin AS (c) 2018 Alle Rettgheter Forbeholdt

Posted in Movies | Leave a comment

Review: The Rescue

Though conventional Hollywood action films are most viewers’ go-to source for visceral entertainment, you really can’t beat a good documentary that thoroughly examines an incident involving extreme danger. Because it was produced by National Geographic, Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin’s The Rescue is pretty wonkish in its detailed depiction of the rescue of 12 young soccer players and their coach from a flooded cave in northern Thailand in 2018, but without explicitly drawing attention to the inherent drama of the incident, it’s harrowing in the most direct way, even when you know how it turned out due to the extensive coverage it attracted from world media. The main reason for this is that the rescue was considered impossible for the longest time, and the film explains why over multiple episodic sequences where various rescue experts, including Thai’s version of the Navy Seals who helped coordinate the operation, frankly expressed doubt that they could pull it off. Even U.S. Special Forces, whose assistance was also requested, didn’t provide much hope.

The two people who did have hope and, by extension, become our hosts through this complicated process, were British cave divers Rick Stanton and John Volanthen, who discovered the boys deep in the cave system (they had apparently been exploring the caves as tourists when a flood occurred, trapping them). The discovery, however, was the easy part. What proved extraordinarily difficult was getting them out, since it would involve transporting them underwater through a series of very narrow passageways. Consequently, the directors and their crew could not film the rescue firsthand, and thus had to rely on Stanton, Volanthen and their crew to both record whatever they could and then describe afterwards how they did it, and the pair, fortunately, are articulate, succinct, and, most importantly, vivid in their sharing of the experience. These are men who absolutely love what they do, which is why they’re so good at it, and while their determination to save the boys sprang from their basic humanity, it was stimulated by their natural desire for challenge. 

The drama is automatic: the waters weren’t going to subside anytime soon since monsoon season was starting, and the clock was ticking since oxygen in the cave was limited. The two divers had a bit of luck in preparing for the rescue when they discovered, almost by accident, a quartet of public workers also trapped in the cave but closer to the entrance. While trying to help them out of the cave some panicked, which prompted the rescuers to adopt a radical but necessary method to save the boys: make them unconscious before bringing them out. This is why the Seals and the Special Forces were enlisted, despite their initial doubts, because it required split-second timing. In addition, an Australian doctor was recruited to devise a special drug protocol to sedate the boys for something that had never been done before. The divers themselves had to administer these drugs, which meant they need training, too.

Throughout the movie, the pessimism that ruled the moment is offset by not just the amazing bravery of the rescue team, but also by the incredible ingenuity they used to address each problem as it arose. This is the kind of dramatic dynamic that fictional filmmakers can only imagine, a constant push-pull of hope and despair that keeps mounting. The Rescue is simultaneously exhausting and exhilirating. 

In English and Thai. Now playing in Tokyo at Shinjuku Musashinokan (03-3354-5670), Kadokawa Cinema Yurakucho (03-6268-0015).

The Rescue home page in Japanese

photo (c) 2021 NGC Network US, LLC

Posted in Movies | Leave a comment

Review: Blue Bayou

As a movie about anti-Asian racism in America, actor Justin Chon’s directoral debut takes a heavy-handed approach that doesn’t do its theme any favors. The bad guys are bureaucrats and employers who clearly see the main character, Antonio (Chon), as representative of an inferior human subset. Chon, who also wrote the screenplay, intensifies this aspect matter by lending Antonio a backstory that essentially gives these bigots an excuse to reject him: Adopted from Korea, raised in a broken home, handicapped by a criminal record, and possessed of no viable education. On top of all that, the only “bankable” skill Antonio has is tattooing, an art that many people have a problem with because of the “kind of people” who get tattoos, especially in the South, where Antonio has lived almost his entire life. 

It’s a lot of baggage to carry for a first-time director, and while Chon’s passion for the project is apparent in his portrayal of Antonio, the movie buckles under the load. The crux of the plot is Antonio’s resident status. When he was adopted by an American couple, they neglected to file the proper documentation that would ensure his citizenship, so when he is arrested for ignoring the racist come-ons of a literally stupid cop (Emory Cohen), his case is tagged by ICE, which, since this is during the Trump administration, sets the wheels in motion to have him deported, even though he knows no language other than English and left Korea when he was a toddler and thus has no known relatives there. His only legal hope is his family—wife Kathy (Alicia Vikander) and step-daughter, Jessie (Sydney Kowalske)—and the child Kathy is expecting. Antonio’s lawyer (Vondie Curtis-Hall) tries to get the court to see that if he is deported, his children would be left without a father, but given that Antonio is not as gainfully employed as his wife, who’s a nurse and whose ex-husband (a cop) could be tapped for child support, and doesn’t have much in the way of employment prospects, his suit isn’t a very strong one. Chon further stirs the pot by giving Antonio a combative personality that fires up with the slightest spark of resentment. Desperate for money to pay his legal fees, he returns to a life of crime, thus seemingly sealing his fate, or at least as far as these kinds of movies go.

The heavy-handedness seems hardly necessary given the movie’s subtheme of Antonio being not only stateless, but drifting in a world that won’t have him because our existence is so dependent on labels that precede us. He introduces an older woman, Parker (Linh Dan Pham), a refugee from Vietnam, who tries to introduce him to his Asian heritage, even if Vietnam isn’t Korea. Though at base there’s something rather trite about this subplot, it works to highlight Antonio’s isolation from his birthright, which should be American by default but can’t be due to the nativist sensibility that still finds non-whites unacceptable as real Americans. When Antonio attends a party thrown by Parker’s family, he feels for the first time a sense of belonging, even if he doesn’t fully understand it. Even Kathy gets into the spirit by singing the title song, which connects their New Orleans home to the larger world represented by Parker and her monolingual father. 

Had Blue Bayou been formulated simply as an issue movie, or a more intimate study of a man without a country, it would have probably conveyed Chon’s ideas more readily, but its reliance on melodramatic plot devices that detract from the credibility of its message makes it a chore to sit through. 

Now playing in Tokyo at Toho Cinemas Chanter Hibiya (050-6868-5001), Shibuya Parco White Cine Quinto (03-6712-7225).

Blue Bayou home page in Japanese

photo (c) 2021 Focus Features, LLC

Posted in Movies | Leave a comment

Review: The United States vs. Billie Holiday

As the title so starkly conveys, the theme of Lee Daniels’ biopic of the woman who many believe to be the greatest jazz singer of all time is the constant struggle Billie Holiday endured just to exist, but the story that Daniels tells, while rooted in her drug addiction and the attendant scrutiny by law enforcement, ranges beyond the overt systematic racism of those in authority to focus equally on those Black men who kept her down at every turn, and not just sexually. For that reason, the movie is often a veil of misery and pain punctured occasionally by one of Andra Day’s stupefyingly redolent impersonations of Holiday in performance, so depending on what you bring to the movie, your appreciation may vary widely. For sure, this is not a hagiography, nor an appreciation of artistic genius, and it shouldn’t be. But it sticks Holiday in an unflattering box, removing most of the personal agency from her tale.

Daniels’ canniest choice is to build the plot around Holiday’s most indelible hit, “Strange Fruit,” a poetic but unblinking depiction of a lynching. The song was so controversial that eventually even federal agents forbade her from performing it lest it stir up bad feelings in Black audiences, who would then recycle the resulting resentment into non-compliance with laws designed to keep them “in their place.” Holiday knew this and, according to the movie, sang it for the express reason of provoking those emotions, so, in a sense, the FBI had a point by dint of their own racist fundamentals. The script, by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Suzan-Lori Parks, connects Holiday’s combative artistic sensibility to her heroin addiction, which she never really renounced even when she attempted to kick it, as well as her chronic choice of abusive partners. Some reviewers have griped that focusing on this aspect of Holiday’s emotional makeup shortchanges her as a human being for the sake of dramatic force, but there’s a lot to be said for the image of a strong black woman who refuses to bend to others’ wills even when that stubbornness might kill her. However, Parks miscalculates by centering much of this conflict on the relationship between Holiday and a Black federal agent, Jimmy Fletcher (Trevante Rhodes), who is tasked with finding dirt on her. That Fletcher is Holiday’s most avid fan first and her lover later adds too many subtexts to a movie that already feels top heavy with meaning, aside from whatever information you might glean about her actual life. Fletcher was apparently a real person who regretted his role in Holiday’s ongoing suffering, but the sex stuff was apparently all Parks’ idea. 

Consequently, the biggest problem some viewers will have is with the sexual violence and the drug use, which are explicit to the point of physiological repulsion. Day, an R&B singer who has never acted before, is, quite simply, astounding, and not just because of her vocal chops. If she deserved that Oscar nomination in the eyes of the Academy, it’s likely because very few other actors can imagine putting themselves through what she did to realize Parks’ and Daniels’ vision, regardless of whether you think that vision was worth pursuing.

Opens Feb. 11 in Tokyo at Shinjuku Piccadilly (050-6861-3011), Shibuya Cine Quinto (03-3477-5905).

The United States vs. Billie Holiday home page in Japanese

photo (c) 2021 Billie Holiday Films, LLC

Posted in Movies | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Media watch: Government demonstrates selective memory when it comes to Japan’s mining history

Chosei disaster memorial exhibit (Yonhap)

Last week, the Cabinet decided it would ask UNESCO to list a gold and silver mine on the island of Sado as a World Heritage Site. The government says the mine, which opened about 400 years ago and closed in 1989, deserves recognition as a prime representative of Japan’s “industrial heritage,” since at one time it produced more silver than any other mine in the world. However, South Korea has already challenged Japan’s version of the mine’s history, saying that the mining company used forced labor from the Korean peninsula during the time when Korea was a colony of Japan. According to a Bloomberg report, the Japanese government “has said little” about the “human rights conditions at the mine.” South Korea’s Yonhap news agency says it is believed that more than 2,000 Koreans worked there between 1910 and 1945. The difference in narratives surrounding the Sado mine mirrors the dispute the two countries had over another Japanese mine that eventually went on the World Heritage list: Hashima, an island off the coast of Nagasaki Prefecture. The South Korean government says that the coal mine on Hashima also used forced labor, but the materials and exhibits at the site claim that the Korean laborers were well-paid and well-treated. South Korea has accused Japan of whitewashing the mine’s harsh conditions.

The Japanese government’s selective memory when it comes to recounting the history of its mining sector isn’t limited to sites it hopes to make into tourist attractions. On Feb. 3, Yonhap reported on the 80th anniversary of a mine disaster off the coast of Ube in Yamaguchi Prefecture that killed 183 workers, 136 of whom were Koreans. The Chosei coal mine, located under the seabed, collapsed at about 9:30 a.m. on Feb. 3, 1942. 

None of the bodies have ever been recovered. A local citizens group has over the years recorded testimony and gathered documents about the disaster, and some of it indicates that as early as Nov. 30, 1941, the mine tunnel was showing signs of leakage. However, the company did nothing and kept sending miners into the tunnel. Yonhap says that, at the time, the Japanese media only gave cursory coverage of the disaster, which is one of the reasons the bodies were never recovered. The mining company and the country itself, which was still at war, preferred to forget about it. The South Korean government, however, has not forgotten, and its Truth Commission on Forced Mobilization Under Japanese Imperialism has cited the Chosei disaster as an example of corporate negligence that needlessly put Korean forced laborers in a dangerous situation. 

The local citizens group was established in 1991 and subsequently provided the South Korean government with the results of their research. They identified the victims of the disaster and contacted survivors of those who were Japanese nationals. In 1992, surviving families of the Korean victims established its own association. Every year since 1993, the two groups carry out a memorial service on Feb. 3 near the spot where the collapse occurred, though last year’s ceremony was cancelled due to the COVID pandemic. In addition, the Japanese group installed a plaque on the site with the names of the known victims and have worked to conserve the mine piers, which are the only relics still standing. In 2013, the two groups started a concerted effort to recover any remains from the site and repatriate them. The Korean side has been lobbying the South Korean government to positively negotiate with the Japanese government to carry out the recovery. However, according to the Japanese side no progress has been made in this endeavor since the Japanese government has not responded at all, either to South Korean entreaties or to their own. 

One member of the Japanese group told Yonhap that she believes if the two governments cooperate on the recovery effort “friendlier relations…will improve as a result,” which is a pretty optimistic view of the matter considering how stubborn the Japanese government has been about denying that there were any Korean forced laborers in Japan during the colonial period. There are also vested interests involved. The mining company behind the Chosei disaster eventually morphed into Ube Industries, the largest private employer in Yamaguchi Prefecture, which happens to be the home constituency of former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe, who has taken a personal interest in promoting the Sado gold and silver mine as a World Heritage site. The city of Ube also has a PR working relationship with the Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper, which, of course, has said nothing about the disaster or the groups working to recover remains of the victims, but, then again, no mainstream media have ever covered the matter in Japan, only a few independent journalists and Akahata, the organ of the Japan Communist Party. Some vested interests aren’t so easy to see.

Posted in Media | Tagged | Leave a comment

Review: Lansky

It was inevitable that Meyer Lansky get the gangster biopic treatment, and considering Lansky’s special place in the annals of the American underworld, Eytan Rockaway’s version of that life is disappointingly generic. A Jew and proud of it (but devoutly secular), Lansky was a financial wizard, a genius with numbers who parlayed his accounting skills into a position at the upper levels of organized crime for a large chunk of the mid-20th century. He single-handedly developed Cuba’s casino business before Castro dismantled it, and then had a hand in inventing Las Vegas with his protege Bugsy Siegel. More importantly, while he also allegedly had a hand in a lot of murders—at one point he led the wittily named hit squad Murder Inc.—he was never indicted for anything more serious than tax evasion, and died of lung cancer in his 80s in Miami. The movie, in fact, is about him soliciting a writer, a fictional conceit of Rockaway’s, to pen his biography, but according to his rules, which have less to do with making him look good for prosperity than with giving him at least some control over his legacy. 

In that regard, Rockaway’s best, perhaps only, good decision was hiring Harvey Keitel to play Lansky in his dotage. Keitel brings his own legacy to the role and commands every scene he’s in, emphasizing Lansky’s self-importance as a historical figure while refusing to whitewash his most atrocious actions. The actor plays up Lansky’s old-fashioned wit and belief that his presence alone should be intimidating enough, and you believe the character when he warms to his interlocutor, a down-on-his-heels writer named David Stone (Sam Worthington, made up to look like Tom Selleck, for some reason). The scenes between the two men, which often take place in a diner where Lansky knows all the waitresses on a first-name basis, get to truths about how certain men believe that intimidation is the right of a successful operator and give Lansky the kind of extra dimension that’s difficult pull off in these kinds of biopics. 

Unfortunately, the rest of the movie squanders this insight for the sake of cheap cliches. Stone is being blackmailed by the FBI into getting intelligence from Lansky about where he supposedly stashed $300 million. The writer is also trying to reconnect with his daughter after divorcing his wife. And the flashbacks, which recount Lansky’s rise and rise over the years are, despite whatever historical interest they provide, nothing more than opportunities to show how vicious the mob is when carrying out its prerogatives. Rockaway also implies that Lansky’s Jewish heritage was exploited twice, first by the US government, which allowed him to brutally eliminate the German Nazi influence on the docks of the middle Atlantic states in the years leading up to and including WWII, and later when he helped bankroll the new state of Israel, promising them weapons as well. Both subplots are used narratively to explain Lansky’s fortunes in that the governments of both the U.S. and Israel “betrayed” him, a supposition that, in Rockaway’s hands, is simplified to the point of irrelevance. Lansky the historical figure deserves better, and so does Keitel.

Now playing in Tokyo at Shinjuku Wald 9 (03-5369-4955).

Lansky home page in Japanese

photo (c) 2021 MLI Holdings, LLC

Posted in Movies | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Media watch: Justice ministry ties itself into knots attempting to simplify paternity determination

One of the purposes of Japan’s koseki (family register) system, if not the main purpose, is to provide the authorities with some control over what constitutes a family, which naturally leads to grey areas and points of contention, since it’s usually families themselves who define what they are, and they can differ significantly from one to another in terms of structure and makeup. One of the central means of exerting this control is for the government to insist on having the last say on who is the father of a child. Determining the mother is easy and incontrovertible: it’s the person who gives birth. Paternity, however, is more or less a matter of taking somebody’s word for it, usually the mother but sometimes the nominal father, and until DNA tests became practical there was no empirically effective way to determine paternity of a child, so the government made rules that would essentially give it the right to approve who the father is.

Under the circumstances that are considered “normal” by the authorities, meaning a married heterosexual couple who produce a baby through sexual intercourse, the process of determining paternity is straightforward and glitch free. But anything that veers away from this scenario invariably causes problems for the bureaucrats whose job it is to implement the government’s acknowledgement of paternity, and one of the most contentious situations in this regard is when a woman has divorced and then remarried within 300 days of the divorce’s finalization and, during this period, given birth. Under present law, the paternity of the child is acknowledged to be the previous husband, since the government has determined that the gestation period of a human baby is 300 days and thus there is the possibility that the baby could have been conceived on the eve of the finalization of the divorce. It doesn’t matter how long the couple in question had been separated prior to the finalization, nor how long the woman and her subsequent husband had been in a relationship before the baby’s birth. The government doesn’t want to bother with such uncertainties, and so formulated an arbitrary cut-off point that makes it easier for them to register the child’s father in the koseki. 

Continue reading
Posted in Media | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Review: Ghostbusters: Afterlife

It’s difficult to believe that the producers of the latest Ghostbusters reboot didn’t receive some kind of studio pushback for the subtitle of the movie. Obviously, the word “afterlife” can have some clever connotations when it comes to ghost stories, but given the rocky history of the franchise it also suggests that the series was already dead. Consequently, the meta aspects of Afterlife tend to overwhelm whatever charms the story and the presentation offer. For me, these considerations have less to do with the idea of connecting the reboot to the original series, thus leapfrogging Paul Feig’s previous reboot, whose well-meaning all-female casting coup turned out to be a PR nightmare, than it does with making the new Ghostbusters team one of children. Moreover, one of those children is played by Finn Wolfhard, the star of the hit Stranger Things Netflix series, thus making it appear that Afterlife isn’t so much milking the Ghostbusters brand as it is ripping off an entirely different property.

The narrative link to the original movie is Egon Spengler, the tech wiz member of the team played by Harold Ramis, whose own death in 2014 adds another meta layer. Spengler’s daughter, Callie (Carrie Coon), and her two kids, Phoebe (McKenna Grace) and Trevor (Woldhard), down on their economic luck, move to Spengler’s abandoned farm in the middle of a desolate plain somewhere in the Midwest. The kids, who never knew their grandfather, find all sorts of interesting things on the farm and in tinkering with them free the ghosts that have been locked up since the original series. By itself, it’s a serviceable plot, but director Jason Reitman—yes, the son of the original director, Ivan Reitman—seems determined to point hysterically at every connection between his movie and his father’s, and the effort gets embarrassing. The action scenes could be reliably laid over their cognates from the 1980s and there would be practically no distortion. Even worse, all the principals from the original eventually make an appearance, including the one who’s dead thanks to the kind of CGI that makes these endless franchises possible without actually making them fresh. Though Reitman junior does come up with a few new ideas that could be extrapolated in later installments, such as Phoebe’s total lack of social graces, there’s not enough here to inspire hope, if, in fact, you really are looking for the franchise to continue by any means necessary. But it really seems about time the Ghostbusters thing was properly laid to rest.

Now playing in Tokyo at Toho Cinemas Nihonbashi (050-6868-5060), Toho Cinemas Hibiya (050-6868-5068), Marunouchi Piccadilly (050-6875-0075), Shinjuku Wald 9 (03-5369-4955), Toho Cinemas Shinjuku (050-6868-5063), Toho Cinemas Shibuya (050-6868-5002), Toho Cinemas Roppongi Hills (050-6868-5024).

Ghostbusters: Afterlife home page in Japanese

Posted in Movies | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

February No. 1 Shimbun column

We’re now contributing a monthly media column to the No. 1 Shimbun. It should be pretty much the same as Media Mix in terms of content and style, but probably longer since No. 1 Shimbun is only published online, which means we don’t have a word limit. Also, it isn’t behind a pay wall. Here it is, about the recent scandal surrounding the Choose Life Project, a relatively new independent web channel devoted to current affairs.

Posted in Media | Leave a comment