Showing posts with label toxic waste. Show all posts
Showing posts with label toxic waste. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

2018 Top Ten List #7 Isle of Dogs






Director Wes Anderson with his cast of characters















ISLE OF DOGS                                 A-                   
USA  Germany  (101 mi)  2018  ‘Scope  d:  Wes Anderson

Endlessly charming and exquisitely entertaining, offering a treasure-trove of cultural references, this beautifully conceived, subversive venture into Japanese culture is an absolute delight, inventing an imaginary world that in the worst way resembles our own, with political corruption becoming the norm, where a deceived populace is fed a string of lies from a populist politician thoroughly entrenched in demagoguery and fear-mongering, though viewed from the point of view of a tragically rejected animal formerly known as man’s best friend.  Set 20 years into the future, Megasaki City, Japan has become an openly pro-cat culture that defiantly rejects dogs, stooping to any level to sway public opinion against the whole lot of them, leading dirty tricks campaigns to smear their good names, eventually infecting virtually every dog in the city with dog flu, then spreading lies and creating panic by informing the public this threatens to infect the human population as well.  Getting a firm mandate to completely eradicate dogs from society altogether, they are eventually quarantined, and in a nod to John Carpenter in Escape from New York (1981), the entire dog population is rounded up and sent to an isolated uninhabited island of toxic waste and chemical ruin, not to mention garbage as far as the eye can see in a place called Trash Island.  While not as far-fetched as it might seem, this exact same solution was proposed by Nazi Germany in the summer of 1940, known as the Madagascar Plan, with Germany exiling Europe’s entire Jewish population to the African island of Madagascar, eventually scrapped for the Final Solution, resurfacing again during the AIDS epidemic in the 1980’s before the advent of protease inhibitor drugs, when a whirlwind of inaccurate information and negative publicity plagued the minds of ordinary citizens who wanted all those infected with the disease quarantined and sent to isolated internment camps.  Only when people stopped dying did the hysteria from a panicked public calm down and a more rational public policy perspective was developed.  Japan is the only nation that has actually been devastated by nuclear attack, the same culture that brought us GODZILLA (1954), a prehistoric sea monster, and a mutant survivor empowered by radiation that somehow ends up on the loose causing chaos in the streets of Tokyo, much like King Kong (1933) rampaged through the streets of New York.  What works so beautifully is allowing the endless imagination of Wes Anderson’s whimsical universe to mix with this same lowbrow Japanese culture to create what will surely amount to a cult classic.  Propelled by the beating drums of Japanese taiko drums that resemble a percussive attack mode, musical score by Alexandre Desplat, this is the longest stop-motion animation film on record, given a Hollywood A-list of actors doing voice impressions, filled with wry comedic touches throughout, becoming a cautionary tale on abuse of power, yet remaining poignant through the sheer brilliance of Anderson’s filmmaking.

Written by Wes Anderson, Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Kunichi Nomura (the voice of Mayor Kobayashi), the political master of ceremony is Mayor Kobayashi, a gruff Toshirô Mifune style character that views his city as a model of decorum, with the spotlight always shining on him, while behind the scenes his villainous henchman Major Domo (Akira Takayama) is carrying out the dirty work, with legions of adoring fans cheering him on, many carrying small lap cats in their arms or wearing anti-dog insignia.  What’s curious is how this information is transmitted, as there is a television commentator (Frances McDormand) live on the scene translating what’s happening in Japanese into English.  But before the mayor carries out his edict, a little backstory is required, introducing Atari (Koyu Rankin), the Mayor’s 12-year-old nephew who was orphaned at the age of 9 when his own parents were lost in a tragic bullet train accident.  The Mayor awarded Atari an army specialized guard dog named Spots to watch after him and be his bodyguard, a rare breed, a short-haired Oceanic speckle-eared sport hound fitted with a transmitter attached to Atari so they were virtually inseparable, that is until the Mayor made Spots the first dog shipped to Trash Island, despite the contentions of a leading scientist, Professor Watanabe (Akira Ito), who claims to be close to finding a cure.  On the island, a kind of LORD OF THE FLIES (1963) hierarchy takes over, with packs of dogs fighting over scraps of food, reduced to a cloud of dust, where the dogs astonishingly enough speak perfect English.  As we are introduced to one band of brothers, their personalities take over, including Rex ,the always sarcastic Edward Norton, the lead commentator and de facto democratic leader, quick to take a vote, where he’s constantly reminded that he’s not the leader, King, Bob Balaban, a one-time dog spokesman for doggy chow, Duke, Jeff Goldblum, who seems to have a telepathic hotline to the latest gossip, Boss, Bill Murray, a former mascot for a Little League baseball team, and Chief, Bryan Cranston, the only stray in the group, who constantly reminds us, “I bite.”  As they distinguish themselves in the trash heap, having to contend with deportations, prison camps, and the threat of extermination, we are transported back to a Japanese high school classroom setting where we are introduced to an American foreign exchange student Tracy Walker (Greta Gerwig) as the science class watches a news report of young Atari commandeering a prop plane to Trash Island in search of his dog, immediately capturing her heart.   A romance and quirky adventure story soon intertwine.    

Our pack of dogs greets Atari after he crash lands on top of a trash heap, but amusingly none of the dogs speak Japanese, so the “little pilot” curiously remains unsubtitled throughout.  Holding out a picture of his dog, the entire crew sets out on an adventure to find him, exploring the far regions of the island, revealing dark historical secrets in the process.  But first, they have to contend with a special ops militarized rescue team, complete with a Terminator-style robotic steel dog and trapping nets that kidnap Atari.  Surviving by the skin of their teeth, Chief is left hobbled by injuries afterwards, running into a perfectly groomed purebred showdog, Nutmeg (Scarlett Johansson), with papers!  Trained to do tricks, she performs one for him in his dire predicament, informing him what’s missing in the trick, like juggling balls with her feet, which is quickly visualized onscreen in his imagination.  She’s the one who convinces Chief, who mistrusts all pet owners, to help the little pilot find his dog, using impeccable logic, “Because he’s a twelve year old boy, dogs love those.”  While at the same time, Tracy goes on an extensive journalistic search for the truth, exposing a massive suppression of the Science Party, who quickly develop a cure for dog flu, but the mayor refuses to distribute the product, as dog disease is the perfect rallying cry for his party, which is only gaining momentum in support.  To make sure word never gets out, the nefarious Major Domo poisons the sushi served to Professor Watanabe under house arrest, calling it a disgraced suicide.  Meanwhile, to the astonishing 60’s tune that no one remembers, The West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band - I Won't Hurt You - YouTube (2:23), the crew walks to the other end of the island, crossing abandoned factories, a trash-processing plant, and remnants of what was an experimental canine torture chamber, which recalls horrific images of THE ISLAND OF DR. MOREAU (1966), as these remaining dogs have all been seriously altered and deformed.  It’s here they discover Spots, the leader of the pack, protector of the infirmed, suddenly spurred into action when once again Mayor Kobayashi sends in another drone team with more robotic dogs, with Spots and his small army joining forces with Atari to the rousing musical refrains from Kurosawa’s SEVEN SAMURAI (1954), unleashing a secret counter maneuver against the invaders, where a flashback sequence also reveals Spots and Chief are not only the same breed, but brothers, with Chief offering a heart-rendering story about how he blew an opportunity to have a comfortable home, remaining exiled afterwards, ostracized from society.  This touching family reunion plays into the finale, along with a hacker from Tracy’s class who sabotages the mayor’s doomsday scenario, as well as Tracy’s extensive journalistic exposé in her student newspaper The Daily Manifesto, building to an extraordinary finale that suggests buried underneath the political morass of corruption and deceit lies true human virtue, which offers more hopeful outcomes so long as it has a chance to see the light of day.  What’s particularly astonishing in this film is just how light-hearted and ingeniously comical it is while also subversively probing such hideously dark themes that personify the world we live in today.  It’s like holding a mirror up to our appalling reality that emphasizes xenophobic and racist rabble-rousing in contemporary American politics and asking if there isn’t a better way.  While it may not be on the same level as 2012 Top Ten Films of the Year: #3 Moonrise Kingdom in reaching the pinnacle work of Anderson’s career, it comes close and confirms what an amazing artist he is, continuing to work at such a high level, with no one else in the world producing anything like this. 

Note

There has been a misguided outcry of criticism against Anderson’s use of a white American high school girl, the only non-Japanese student in the class, to save the day in the end instead of allowing a Japanese character to rise from their own ranks to produce similar results, where suggestions of American imperial superiority or racial backlash have fueled the extreme.  Similar charges have been leveled against Disney, by the way.  Culture writer Angie Han at Mashable, Wes Anderson's cultural tourism undercuts the heart of 'Isle of Dogs', called Tracy’s character a “classic example of the ‘white savior’ archetype – the well-meaning white hero who arrives in a foreign land and saves its people from themselves,” adding that the movie “falls into a long history of American art othering or dehumanizing Asians, borrowing their ‘exotic’ cultures and settings while disregarding the people who created those cultures and live in those settings.”  Prominent critics have also raised questions of cultural appropriation, including Justin Chang at The Los Angeles Times, Wes Anderson's 'Isle of Dogs' is often captivating, but cultural sensitivity gets lost in translation, who suggests “It’s in the director’s handling of the story’s human factor that his sensitivity falters, and the weakness for racial stereotyping that has sometimes marred his work comes to the fore…Much of the Japanese dialogue has been pared down to simple statements that non-speakers can figure out based on context and facial expressions…The dogs, for their part, all speak clear American English, which is ridiculous, charming and a little revealing…You can understand why a writer as distinctive as Anderson wouldn’t want his droll way with the English language to get lost in translation.  But all these coy linguistic layers amount to their own form of marginalization, effectively reducing the hapless, unsuspecting people of Megasaki to foreigners in their own city.”  To this one needs to add…Hogwash!  More celebration than appropriation, this is taking the era of political correctness way too far, offering little to nothing in terms of appreciating the merits of the film.  Only in an era of self-obsessed social media would these charges rise to a level of significance.  While this may matter to some and should not be dismissed, it actually misses the heart of the film, which is overwhelmingly in Japanese, retaining the original language, where much of the dialogue remains unsubtitled (as the dogs don’t understand a word Atari is saying), continually emphasizing a prominent central focus layered in feverish reverence for Japanese cultural references, where it’s so unmistakenly a labor of love, an ode to Japanese arts and cinema (Anderson met with the curator of Japanese Arts at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and his storyboard artists visited the collections at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London), which is essentially what fascinated Anderson in making this film, expressed so eloquently by Jessica Kiang from The Playlist, Wes Anderson's 'Isle Of Dogs' Is A Good Boy, A Very Good Boy [Review]:

But on a more immediate and visceral level, the meticulous dedication and joyous commitment Anderson displays to a set of aesthetics he clearly worships are to some extent self-justifying.  In “The Grand Budapest Hotel” Anderson created a fictional Eastern European country in order to exploit a loose set of cultural and aesthetic associations without having them tied to pesky real-world history or geopolitics.  And here he creates a fictional city in what might as well be the fictional country of Japanderson — the better to remythologize the myths that Kurosawa, Miyazaki and the whole Godzilla industry so brilliantly exported, and that have clearly intoxicated him so thoroughly.  No one could come out of “Isle of Dogs” with a sense of disdain for Japanese culture: Anderson’s Japanophilia is as infectious as snout fever, and peculiarly reverent, without a shred of condescension.

Indeed, buried in amongst the surprisingly potent political commentary (the clash between demagogues and experts; the limits of democracy when decisiveness is needed; the value of journalism in the age of propagandist “fake news”) there is a further undercurrent about the value of outsider perspectives, and how much better we are when we blur the lines.  It’s exemplified best by Alexandre Desplat’s stunning score, which combines traditional Japanese taiko drums in a rolling, rumbling, semi-martial rhythm, with unexpectedly whimsical and inescapably Western-sounding instrumentation – saxophones and clarinets, even a little whistling.  Like the film it envelops and rounds out so lushly, the music is a meeting of mutually curious and mutually complementary worlds, and like the proud, resourceful brave and loyal dogs of this ‘Isle,’ even when they’re reunited with their masters and fetching sticks in time-honored tradition, neither is subservient: no one is anyone’s “pet.”  As far as representation goes, the stunning, brimful, extraordinary “Isle of Dogs” can’t really be said to do anyone’s culture a disservice.  Except cat lovers, who should probably mount a boycott.

Friday, May 2, 2014

Big Men
















Nigerian photos by Akintunde Akinleye from The Atlantic, January 15, 2013, Nigeria's Illegal Oil Refineries - In Focus - The Atlantic

BIG MEN            B-           
USA  Great Britain  Denmark  (99 mi)  2013  d:  Rachel Boynton         Official site

While Joel Berlinger’s Crude (2009) documents the way multi-national corporations like Texaco and Chevron do business with South American nations while in pursuit of oil profits, often taking the money and resources while getting out quick, leaving the land ravaged afterwards with toxic spillage left behind in the rainforests, endangering the lives of the indigenous population living there, Rachel Boynton takes a look at the business dealings on the other side of the globe, where in 2007, Ghana, with the aid of the Dallas-based Kosmos Energy Corporation, discovered new oil reserves in the Atlantic Ocean just 35 miles off their coast.  Oil had never been discovered in Ghana before, so the impact was enormous.  Seven years in the making, Boynton got into the story early on near the point of discovery, when Wall Street investment firms were projecting profits in the neighborhood of $22 billion dollars.  Hard as it is for the public to believe, new oil reservoirs are not something discovered every day, in fact it’s an extremely difficult process to locate new sources of oil, one of the specialties of Kosmos, as for the past 100 years these competing oil companies have spent a good portion of their technology and expertise scouring the earth in search of more oil, so by now there are few surprises left that haven’t already been explored.  Boynton is given rare inside access to Kosmos, developing the trust of CEO Jim Musselman, whose company is bankrolled by the investments firms of Warburg Pincus and the Blackstone Group, firms that are only interested in a hefty return for their investment, where in their eyes, the higher the risk, the greater the reward.  The combined initial investment is somewhere in the neighborhood of several hundred million dollars, climbing to a billion before a single barrel of oil has been pulled out of the ocean.  Boynton’s cameras follow Musselman as he is introduced to a Ghanian tribal chief bearing bottles of Scotch and Hennessey along with a $10,000 donation to an educational charity.  The introduction is managed by a local businessman, George Owusu and his EO Group, the Ghanian oil company that brought the outside interests of Kosmos into the deal.  Despite the pleasant, easy-going nature of Musselman, raised on a family farm in Texas, there is something altogether off-putting about the experience, as it recalls notions of colonialist exploitation. 

Boynton opens the film with quotations on the subject of greed from Milton Friedman and John Huston’s THE TREASURE OF THE SIERRE MADRE (1948), suggesting there is an ugly side of capitalism, which only grows more pronounced with the intersection of First World and Third World economies, where the drive for profit quickly outdistances itself from any system of laws in place, where the film is a case study on the behavior of financial sharks in the water, as the Jubilee Oil Field is a reservoir of great untapped wealth, drawing out the ruthless self-interests of all competing parties as they position themselves to determine who will reap the rewards.  Musselman is part of a business network of complex relationships, with Kosmos executives, financiers, consortium partners, and the government of Ghana which ultimately has the last word on any business dealings within its borders.  Musselman is on good terms with Ghanian President John Kufour, securing favorable terms in the initial contracts drawn, hoping to sign a Plan of Development to produce the oil.  Initially all signs are optimistic as the price of oil is skyrocketing, but this is followed both by the 2008 financial crisis depressing the price of oil and an opposition party candidate, John Atta Mills, winning the Ghana Presidential election, which puts all the political goodwill and hopes of favorable concessions in jeopardy.  Making matters worse, George Owusu also falls out of favor when he’s investigated by the U.S. Department of Justice under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act for alleged bribery and corrupt business practices, charges he vehemently denies.  Left out of the story are unmentioned partners of Kosmos, other oil companies that actually own a combined 61% stake of the Jubilee Project, including Anadarko Petroleum, a rival Texas oil firm that actually prompted the inquiry.  Nonetheless, Kosmos cuts tires with Owusu, as they want no perception of impropriety as they embark upon negotiations with the new Ghanian President, but the Kosmos Board of Directors also lose faith in Musselman and have him replaced.  This turn of events is surprising, since the arc of the story was being told through Musselman, as in the process Boynton loses internal access as well, leaving the viewer a bit in the dark.  Musselman, who remains a top executive, indignantly rationalizes how he fell out of favor, but it’s hard not to think how he did the same thing to George Owusu, who was later exonerated of all charges.   

As a counterpoint to the story of Kosmos in Ghana, Boynton intercuts scenes from neighboring Nigeria, the tenth most petroleum-rich nation in the world, and by far the most affluent in Africa, yet a combination of corporate exploitation and government corruption has turned the Niger Delta region into a nightmare of oil spills, environmental destruction and lawlessness, where armed militia groups like the Deadly Underdog militants control access to the pipelines in their territory.  As much as 75% of the profits are siphoned off into the hands of various interests, where ten years ago it was considered the second-most corrupt country on earth (after Kenya), NIGERIA: Nigeria angry at being rated second most corrupt, more recently replaced by Somalia, North Korea, and Afghanistan (Read more at Transparency International).  These Nigerian militants claim none of Nigeria’s oil wealth makes it back into their impoverished communities, that it instead finds its way into the hands of the “big men,” who are governmental officials and well-connected businessmen.  These images are by far the most harrowing, where holes cut into the pipelines create pools of spewing oil that are set on fire, with the local population stealing and reselling black market oil in areas perpetually surrounded by flames, as billows of black smoke surround the region, controlled by young kids wearing ski masks and carrying Kalashnikov assault rifles.  While Boynton’s ability to gain access to both Jim Musselman and the Deadly Underdogs is impressive, she never makes any connection between the two, where the colonialist history of exploitation is never mentioned.  Ghana and Nigeria have differing histories, yet this is not explored, even as the director contrasts and compares the two nations.  Like her earlier film, OUR BRAND IS CRISIS (2005), Boynton chooses not to use a narrator, but instead advances the narrative by filling the screen with an excessive amount of written material, which, when added to a procession of talking heads, is a bit of information overload.  Adding the Nigerian picture is fascinating, but diverts the interest and may actually belong in another film, as this film is more a profile of the inner workings of Kosmos Energy, shedding light onto the difficulties foreign enterprise runs into when dealing with governmental instability and changing regimes.  As a portrait of an American company in search of wealth, it can at times be fascinating, especially the candid views of capitalism in progress from Musselman once he’s been ousted from power, but as a portrait of Africa, it never connects the dots, where the impact of colonialism affects every African atrocity, especially in Nigeria, where past historical transgressions impact upon the present, but this was never addressed, leaving the overall journalistic picture incomplete.