Trainspotting

Since our government’s planning to get rid of all drugs [and users] in the country through extra-judicial killings, Trainspotting can help change their perspective. They believe that they could just scare the users into stopping. They don’t take into account that addiction is a disease and curing it without getting any help is close to impossible. This film shows how hard it really is to quit especially when you’re already hooked.

Trainspotting shows the journey of a group of friends who are mostly addicted to heroin with some trying to be sober. However, unlike other crime movies focusing on drugs, it focuses more on the experiences and encounters of the users themselves. The scenes are from the perception of a user, specifically Mark Renton’s.

What I liked most about this movie is the fact that it made me learn a thing or two. Unlike Schizopolis or Shin Godzilla, I actually found out the specific events an addict goes through during the addiction and after, during the process of going sober. In the movie, Renton had to go through disturbing and tragic events before he sobered up for real. He had to witness a baby’s death, go to jail, and overdose on drugs before his parents locked him in his room to force him to sober up. Of all those scenes, the most upsetting scene that I still can’t get out of my mind is the one where he was locked up in his room. He was in remission so I understood that he felt uncomfortable and was probably in pain. Although, I wasn’t expecting the hallucinations. It’s already hard enough that these addicts find being in remission literally painful, but it also makes them go crazy because of all the things they see. What did Renton see? He saw his friend’s dead baby, crawling towards him…on the ceiling.

This was probably his guilt eating him up. He felt bad because their addiction was the reason why the mother of the baby neglected and stopped taking care of the baby even though they were all staying in one place all the time. When the baby was crawling towards him, he kept screaming. He was scared of the baby. This may be a reach but it is also possible that he was scared of getting addicted again because he knows that this is what it could lead to.

Overall, I liked the movie and it could even be my favorite out of all the movies we watched in class. Not only did I learn a thing or two about drug addiction, I also found it relevant to our country’s situation nowadays. In addition to that, it also showed how sobriety is always possible as long as you want it for yourself, commit to it, and surround yourself with people who you know will help you in reaching that goal.

The Endless What???

A film blog on The Endless:

If I’m being completely honest, I still do not know much about what goes on in this film. It starts with brothers Justin and Aaron receiving a cassette from their previous home, Camp Arcadia. Justin remembers Camp Arcadia as a cult and is afraid that their talk about a UFO is a euphemism for mass suicide, while Aaron remembers things completely differently. With evidence of Camp Arcadia still existing, Aaron convinces a reluctant Justin to visit Camp Arcadia. Once there, they strangely discover that the people they remember haven’t aged at all. This piece of information is where the puzzle of the film reveals itself.

This is a movie you cannot watch once just to make sense of the story (hello, Schizopolis!). This doesn’t exactly mean that The Endless is a bad film. It just requires watching out for the relevant details. The first example here would be reconciling the fact that Aaron and Justin left years before, yet the Camp Arcadia residents haven’t aged when they revisited later. At the same time, the Camp Arcadia residents also have their own talents that they’ve said to spend their life perfecting (such as clothing or magic).

Given the fact that we found out that Camp Arcadia is a part of the time loops, the reasonable assumption here would be that Camp Arcadia probably has a long time loop, perhaps even spanning years because Aaron and Justin haven’t been trapped inside of it when they first got to Camp Arcadia.

“The Endless” would be the movie among the bunch that requires the most attention. Not necessarily because it’s the most captivating, but simply because the movie is such a puzzle that you’d need your full attention to make the most sense of it. As a horror movie, it doesn’t help as well that whatever the entity that’s causing the time loops is never shown, so we can’t figure out if it’s an alien, a ghost, or even a merciless God.

Movies with fantasy or Magical Realism type of elements use such elements because its removal from reality allows it to say something deeper about reality. Out of what I’ve been able to gather, and given that horror movies are known to use the medium of horror as a metaphor, I would say that The Endless is perhaps a criticism of the routine, safe life. Aaron, with his dissatisfaction of the real world and its struggles, longs for the familiarity and safety that Camp Arcadia brought him. I understand the usage of time loops as a metaphor for being caught up in the familiar that you can no longer escape. The Camp Arcadians find comfort in the repetition of their life, so much that they remain in the time loop. Those of us on the outside see the horror of living the same life again and again, and I’d think that The Endless positioning itself as a horror movie emphasizes that one must confront the familiar with the unfamiliar, that we must take risks.

Or maybe it doesn’t even have to mean anything. The Endless might refer to some merciless god who enjoys toying with humanity by having them suffer through time loops. The guy in the shack whose time loop is small definitely shows that whatever this entity is is sadistic, yet this entity also keeps the Camp Arcadians somewhat safe and happy.

Outside of the film as a concept, I greatly appreciated the use of special effects the film did despite the infamously low budget they were given. The manipulation of the sky to show a second, and an eventual third full moon, along with the imagery of the crows gathering, helped build up to the overall eerie, creepiness of the film. I’d like to talk specifically about the usage of the moon in a metaphorical sense. In the film, the signal for being trapped in a time loop would be when the third moon appears. The usage of the three moons to signal the beginning, the middle, and the end of the movie was simple, yet effective in creating a sense of urgency and anticipation from the viewers.

I will say though, with full transparency, that the fact that quite a few actors looked like PewDiePie at times really threw me off, but that’s just me though.

Can’t. Unsee.

Again, I’m still not entirely sure what I’m supposed to think or feel after the movie. What I can appreciate however is that it’s a horror movie that didn’t rely on jump scares or over the top plot lines. It’s a smart horror film that I’d much prefer to mull over and stress over the implications it may have, versus a blockbuster, run-of-the-mill horror movie that’s no longer scary because you watched it.

Sorry Not Sorry

A film blog on Sorry to Bother You:

The film “Sorry to Bother You” perhaps holds the top spot alongside “Velvet Goldmine” for me as my favorite film of the semester, and that’s mostly because this is a very well thought out and committed film. Out of all the movies we’ve watched, this is easily the most political film given its social justice angle. The director himself, Boots Riley, is also an activist, so it shouldn’t be a surprise that he makes socially relevant films.

The surface level of the commentary this film makes would be “CAPITALISM IS BAD,” but I believe this film is much more nuanced than that. I would say that there are two main thematic points the movie explores. The first would be on its skepticism of the narrative of meritocracy. This is best seen with the movie’s motifs of The White Voice and Stick to the Script. Time and time again, the telemarketers at RegalView are told by their bosses to “stick to the script.” It’s even hung on the working space of the telemarketers and is repeated to them quite often. Metaphorically, the “script” would be Meritocracy and the American Dream, the idea that all one needs to do to be successful is to follow a specific path (i.e., sticking to the script). Cassius quickly finds out, however, that sticking to the script gets him nowhere.

Social commentary-wise, it’s easy to see that the American Dream or the narrative of meritocracy is ignorant of the realities of minorities, that it’s naive for people in power to tell minorities to work harder or to follow a certain path when the privileged and those in power had a head start for generations because of their riches, their gender, or the color of their skin. Meritocracy is an ideal system, but it has to account for these social inequalities that threaten its value. That’s why with the current system, minorities in RegalView must use the “White Voice” just to make a sale. Even Detroit, perhaps the most outspoken character in the cast, employs a “White Voice” in her art show to make her more palatable to greater society as a black woman. Additionally, the metaphor of Equisapiens is not lost on viewers as well, where workers in unfettered capitalism, who do work within the meritocratic system, are the ones exploited the most. Just like horses, they are beasts of burden, and the conversion of employees into Equisapiens erases the line between employee and slave.

If Sorry to Bother You had an animated spin off

The second thematic point, though not as on the nose, would be on the Appropriation of Social Change. This is most represented through the meme-ification of Cassius’s getting-hit-on-the-head, which opened up sponsorship deals and inside jokes among the establishment. Instead of becoming the symbol of rebellion it was, the unfettered capitalist system appropriated it for its own gain.

And the reason why these themes are so well explored in-universe is because of the dedication the film has to bring these to light. From the metaphor and the disturbing CGI portrayal of Equisapiens to the creative portrayal of Cassius’s sales pitches both before and after becoming a successful telemarketer (from the obstacle of a desk preventing him from connecting with the customer to the closeness and intimacy he ends up having with customers thanks to his White Voice), to even the pun of Cassius’s name (Cassius Green = Cash is Green). The dedication to explore these themes give the film teeth, while the dedication the director takes to creating his own universe through unnecessary yet still greatly appreciated efforts like Detroit’s great changing earrings and fashion help us see the film as its own work of art, regardless of whether or not the viewer agrees with its politics. The point of the Magical Realism of the film is to remove the viewer from reality so that they are better able to understand reality, which “Sorry to Bother You” masterfully does.

Is this a Crossover Episode?

A film blog on Repo Man:

When we were told that Repo Man was a punk-themed film, it was hard for me to believe that when it opened with some scientist in a Chevy Malibu and the vaporization of an officer. Given the fact that I didn’t even know what a “Repo Man” was before the film didn’t help either.

This initial confusion over the marriage of the grungy, rebellious punk (the music used, Otto as a man of no social conventions, Otto’s ex-friends who commit crimes for fun, or the acts Repo Men have to do for their job) and the nerdy science-fiction (aliens, vaporization of bodies, and conspiracy groups) elements of the start made me feel unsettled because these ought not to work together. After viewing, however, the film shows that you do not need to follow the conventions of filmmaking to make a film worth making.

Repo Man in one pic

However, this core theme of rebellion is one that is perhaps looked at with skepticism given that the film explores it with one of the most establishment professions in the world – repossession, which aims to sustain the power of the rich and elite.

One of the most interesting points would be the film’s exploration of the Lattice of Coincidences. Miller introduced this to us with a seemingly throwaway scene with Otto. Here, Miller talked about the Cosmic Unconsciousness wherein there is no greater reason for things to happen. There is just coincidence, and we all just so happen to interact with each other. His example was someone thinking about a plate of shrimp, and then a plate or a shrimp, or a plate of shrimp show up. This Lattice of Coincidences is first brought up in the background, interestingly enough, in the background with a restaurant offering a Plate of Shrimp. It was most evident near the end where all these characters converged together in the Helping Hand Acceptance Corp. yard to get to the Chevy Malibu. The Repo Men, the FBI, the United Fruitcake Outlet, and even the televangelist Otto’s parents follow! All of this happens, but the film never explores why aliens are here or why everyone wants the Chevy Malibu. Instead, the Lattice of Coincidence says that there is no real why. There just is a coincidence, and we all just so happen to be.

However, this doesn’t hold up if we looked at the meta of the film. If we took into consideration the premise of the Lattice of Coincidence that there is no greater why, but we consider the fact that the Lattice of Coincidence was deliberately chosen and shown in the Plate of Shrimp and at the Helping Hand Acceptance Corp. yard. It really makes you wonder whether there is or is no cosmic unconsciousness.

Given the juxtaposition of rebellious punk-ness with establishment repo men and the irony of the Lattice of Coincidences playing out in a film, it really makes me wonder if what the film is ridiculing is societal conventions or those that claim to ridicule societal conventions.

Repo Man

Repo Man is another movie that I liked.

I had different impressions of Otto all throughout the movie.

At first, I thought he was simply a teenager that wanted to earn enough and escape his town. When approached by a man and invited to become a repo man, it seemed like he was a good person for turning down the offer. He has principles that he live up to, and becoming a repo man breaks those. However, upon learning that his parents had donated the money that was supposed to be his after finishing school, he knew he was screwed. He could not depend on them anymore and he knew he was the only one who can make ends meet.

It seemed ironic for me that Miller, the person who said that the more you learn to drive, the less intelligent you become, was the first person who successfully entered the car. Later on, Otto joined him in the car. It seemed like Miller was the person that knows these kinds of things. Could he be the owner of the Chevrolet Malibu car? During one of their conversations earlier in the movie, Miller said that those people who disappear go to the future, and through flying saucers. Miller being able to drive the car was something that I did not expect at all since he seemed like the person who is not given focus that much throughout the movie. I think that Miller and Otto may have gone to the future after the conversation they had before.

Although the effects were not that great, I still enjoyed the movie for its plot.

So where were the Spiders?

A film blog on Velvet Goldmine:

David. Freakin’. Bowie.

As a fan of the theatrical and histrionic, it was easy for me to say that “Velvet Goldmine” is my favorite of all the films the seniors had to watch. This movie follows the rise and fall of Brian Slade, the figurehead of glam rock in-universe, through Arthur Stuart, an investigative journalist, and his assignment to write about his life story for the paper. It’s a story of how trends rise and how they pass on, how those with the trend move on, and how the next generation experiences the past before them.

After the movie, what I wanted to figure out the most was who the heck Jack Fairy is. We are introduced to Jack Fairy in the beginning, but the movie doesn’t really do anything with his character. Given the specter-like nature of his appearances in the background, my guess would be that he’s from a time right before glam rock. It’s as if he haunts the glam rock scene because he was an influential figure to what those in the music industry do now. I would perhaps liken it to how David Bowie has influenced many different artists even up to now. He was from a time of before, but his influence and impact are still definitely with us, evident with the music of today.

This film doesn’t exactly shine when it comes to the conventions of a story or character development. It gets difficult to exactly trace and follow the bigger story of Brian Slade that Arthur Stuart is writing. It is also hard to tell at times, narrative-wise, what goes on (e.g. the unclear story between Curt Wild and Arthur Stuart) because the movie seems to be more concerned with what happens rather than why things happen. This could perhaps be linked to the reported rewrites the film had to undergo because David Bowie was greatly unhappy with the similarities to his life. Such drastic rewrites or changes can really mess with the integrity of a story, which might explain the very erratic story compared to, say, the non-linear structure of “Futureless Things.”

However, I would choose not to view this movie as a cinematic work, but rather as an experience, which is definitely where it soars. Out of all the movies screened in class, this was hands down the best in set design, costume, and soundtrack. That’s because the movie is a tribute to the very experiential glam rock phase of the 1970’s, which involved the visuals of glitter and flashy clothes and even flashier music. The genderbender elements of the 1970’s were front row as well, adding to the authenticity of the experience of glam rock. Adding with the introduction of Curt Wild, the wild, grungy rock star that inspired Brian Slade to search for his own unique taste, then you’ve got a film with music for everyone. To me, this wasn’t a thought-provoking, profound movie. There isn’t some big conclusion that closes the book, but does there really need to be? Instead, I see this movie as a complicated, histrionic music video, which isn’t that hard to do because there are literal music videos and scenes shot with the right music to accompany it. So who cares if the story doesn’t make sense? At least Brian Slade will look fab doing it.

Brian Slade


Slice of Life, I guess?

A film blog on Futureless Things:

In the first few minutes of “Futureless Things,” I thought we’d have a simple, lighthearted slice-of-life film that we deserved after the traumatizing “Trainspotting.” What we got was anything but, and I’m still not exactly sure I’ve followed the story right. From what I can tell given the dialogue and situations of the characters, “Futureless Things” follows the seemingly disconnected to tangently related stories of convenience store employees in South Korea. It follows a non-linear narrative structure to explore individual stories of social isolation of North Koreans, crushes, and the difficulty of making ends meet. Tragedy strikes when the store gets held up by armed robbers that destroy the palce. Upon finding out about the condition of the branch, a representative from the parent branch as well as a representative from the tax office both come over to talk to the store’s owner, whose mother earlier discovered his hanged body. The movie ends, however, with an earlier character who was an aspiring author looking for a job at the convenience store. We discover that he was hired by the convenience store after all, which implies that the stories we saw before are highly likely stories he created in his head.

The stories may seem disconnected besides taking place in a convenience store, but through the dialogue of different characters, we find out that they are all stories about both the every day and the great struggles of the working class in an economically challenged South Korea. In particular, their stories revolve around a working class who dreams of a life different from their own, such as the story of an aspiring actor who just wants to do well in his audition, to the life of a North Korea woman who just wants to escape her past, to an innocent clerk who just wanted to test his English at work (presumably to make himself more employable). What this does is show just how extensively problematic the economic situation of South Korea must have been to affect so many people in such different ways.

The non-linear narrative structure is a very tricky manner of storytelling because it can end up confusing audiences, weakening the overall impact of the big reveal these kinds of movies usually have. What “Futureless Things” does to prepare us for this is plant seeds of doubt at different stories that hint at the movie being a story within a story. The magical elements of the Box Girl story and how it concluded would be one, which was a disruptive story that especially broke away from the rest of the slice-of-life stories, which were all believable stories that could happen in real life. Another example would be the inconsistencies between how the aspiring actor guy and his boyfriend’s scene played out, the fact that it was the same set-up and the same lines, yet it took place at night. What I would like to explore or look out for on my second viewing would be further dialogue or events that further confirm the fact that the movie is a non-linear narrative of the underaged convenience store worker who wants to be an author.

What I would most want to watch out for during a second viewing, however, is the clock, because there were many shots of the clock on the wall, but I was unable to keep track of the time. This probably means something given the fact that the film starts off in the morning, specifically during opening hours, and then ends at night, at the literal end of operations. Though it ended firstly on a depressing note, then on a what-the-heck note, “Futureless Things” was still, for the most part, an easy film the average person can pick up and enjoy.

Trains and Spots

“Choose your friends. Choose your future. Choose life.”

This was the opening and closing speech of the main character, Mark Renton, as he ran from both the authorities and his mates. At the beginning of the film, this scene made me look forward to the film with excitement and anticipation for the action that awaits; and at the end of the film, this scene rattled and threatened me, as it made me feel that Renton was coming for me, going to treat me the way he treated his friends and everyone else, and I would never be able to see him coming because he would be blending in with all of us typical people who chose life.

Trainspotting (1996) by Danny Boyle initially bothered me and my goody-two-shoes personality, as rebellion of any kind against my parents, friends, and society was something I was brought up to never do or tolerate. However, with its captivating colors, amazing wide shots and filming sites, convincing special effects and camera tricks, catchy soundtrack, and memorable yet not so lovable characters, soon enough I found myself on a roller coaster of entertainment and disgust at every turn of the film.

First, what interested me was the dark yet still seemingly lively and colorful color palettes used in the film. Upon further research, I discovered that the production designer, Kave Quinn, drew inspiration from two things: the shoot locations themselves and the paintings of Sir Francis Bacon.

The effectiveness of the color palettes somewhat served, at least to me, as metaphors of a life in substance abuse — lively and colorful, yes, but still in darkness. Related fact: Trainspotting was accused to have empowered an entire generation to “choose heroin” as critics claimed that the film “glamourized drugs.” Personally, however, as a child who grew up and still lives on a street where drugs are made, used, and abused by fellow lower middle class people, I think the film gave justice to this issue in its only honest portrayal of an addict’s difficult life.

Second, the wide shots captured the immensity, as well as the isolation of the characters in the extensive space, of both the indoor and outdoor filming sites. An indoor example would be Renton’s withdrawal scene, wherein the bedroom is shown to be long and spacious  yet somehow seems to close in on Renton. An outdoor example, on the other hand, would be the scene at the mountains, wherein Tommy adamantly says that they are “going for a walk!” The characters are seen to be isolated in contrast to the wideness of the mountains and field that surrounds them.

Third, the special effects and camera tricks were superb, especially when you consider what year the film was made and how much budget they had to work around with. I barely watched The Worst Toilet in Scotland scene because I thought it was going to make me throw up, but I was so curious as to how they managed to pull it off that I looked it up on the Internet and saw an explanation from behind the scenes regarding the mechanics of the toilet. If it is any consolation (albeit I admit it might just make things worse), the brown stuff in the toilet is apparently chocolate. I admired the construction of the toilet and the way Ewan McGregor made it work with his acting skills.

Another scene which warrants praise for special effects and camera tricks was Renton’s withdrawal scene. It has the camera inside the sheets, capturing Renton’s sweaty anxiety; the dead baby crawling on the ceiling and its cuts back to Renton, capturing his utter horror and inhuman shrieks; Renton’s friends under the sheets with him, standing at the side of the bed, or sitting on top of closet; Renton’s parents talking with a doctor about human immunodeficiency virus (HIV); and a random TV show. The camera kept moving, shaking, and cutting from weird angles to wide shots — an exhibition that more or less gave an accurate depiction of a cold turkey withdrawal from heroin, based on studies that describe the phenomenon.

I am not well-versed in songs from the 80’s or 90’s, so most of the music in the film were new to me — but in a way, still vaguely familiar either due to its catchy quality or its timelessness. Whatever the reason, the soundtrack was remarkable. Each song enhanced the experience of the scenes, highlighted the actions, and invoked the desired emotions to the viewers. Despite my love-hate relationship with the film, I downloaded most of the songs in the sound track just so they can now be a part of my life.

Lastly, the characters were quite distinguished and memorable, yet it was difficult to root for them as they were all equitably unlikeable in their own unique ways. Their rather toxic relationships with each other and with the people around them painted an image of the power of friendship: how it transcends lifetimes and circumstances, how it haunts and drags, and how it molds the people involved. Side note: as much as I do not enjoy reading while watching, I appreciated the subtitles of this film because their thick Scottish accents were difficult for me to follow.

Trainspotting was truly one of a kind: no wonder it became a cult classic and even had an entire generation named after it.

Next Stop: Psychological Trauma

A film blog on Trainspotting:

Stories of addiction must always walk on a tightrope, because there is such a fine line between getting the point across and becoming preachy. While I am unsure of whether or not Danny Boyle, the director, envisioned Trainspotting (1996) to be an anti-drug film, its excellent execution of the lives of British heroin addicts continues to haunt viewers to this day to stay away from drugs. This is most likely because the film chooses to portray the addict life in a bold, daring way that many before it would never.

Let’s start with Mark, the main character. The movie’s use of Mark as a narrator puts us in the mind of a heroin addict, which many films would want to shy away from because it has to give screentime to the justifications addicts tell themselves, e.g. Mark’s monologue on people doing drugs just because it feels good. Despite knowing his motivations and his outlook on life, the film was created in such a way that we don’t root for him 100% of the time, nor anyone to be honest (except for innocent Tommy). But the film’s choice to only use Mark as the film’s narrator allows us to see how his outlooks change or stay the same over time with and without the influence of heroin addiction and its repercussions.

And we see just how disruptive of an influence heroin is on the lives of Mark’s friends as well, particularly with Tommy, who was the last of the bunch to get into heroin yet was the only one who contracted HIV, and with Allison and Sick Boy, whose baby’s death have shocked to the core given that they were shooting up when it happened. These, along with the reactions of characters to these situations (Allison asking for another hit to deal with the death of her baby, for one), viscerally show how addiction changes people.

Speaking of the influence of heroin, the film itself shines not just with the difficult situations the characters have to deal with, but also with its artistic telling of heroin-related scenes. From the rapid visual images whenever Mark and his friends would shoot up to Worst Toilet in Scotland scene wherein Mark imagines himself diving into a body of water to save the suppository he lost, these different scenes help remove ourselves from the sober orientation we naturally live in into the abnormal headspace I’m assuming addicts are in when they come into contact with their addiction (not necessarily just drug addicts).

This is especially most evident in Mark’s iconic withdrawal scene, which was perhaps the most disturbing part of the film because of the demon baby. This scene goes on for about six minutes, by the way. And I believe this decision to make the withdrawal scene go on for so long was deliberate as well, because just like the hallucinations Mark had in this scene, they just go on. He couldn’t control it, and neither could we. They were things we just had to get over together – the physical pain of withdrawal along with the psychological trauma and the guilt Mark had to deal with for disappointing his parents. And when we see all of these come crashing down on someone undergoing a withdrawal, it’s hard to imagine anybody who doesn’t feel the least bit sympathetic for the struggles recovering addicts have to go through.

Sometimes, it really makes you question if the film is disturbing because of what we see before our eyes, or because what we see is what’s out there.

And what I would say really gives these kinds of scenes the power that they have is the inclusion of scenes where the characters don’t feel the high, such as Mark’s depressing “It’s shite to be Scottish” rant or the fact that Tommy, of all people, was the one who contracted HIV and died.

Overall, this movie is powerful because it’s unafraid to do what it wants to do. Though I cannot promise I’ll watch the movie again because of how upsetting it was, I can only applaud Trainspotting for being such a well-done movie to scar me like this.

The Real Disaster?

A blog post on Shin Godzilla:

Shin Godzilla was my very first Godzilla film, and I expected just another disaster film that ends with a cinematic shot of the destruction left behind. And while in essence, that is what we got with this film, to leave it as that would be a gross understatement of what the team was able to bring about given the already bloated lineup of the Godzilla franchise.

What’s perhaps the most notable creative decision in this disaster film is to turn it into a narrative of the ridiculousness of bureaucracy, and the film expresses this through different screen art elements. For example, its use of a shaky, first-person camera as the government officials move from one meeting to the next meeting help visualize the urgency they must feel given the danger of Shin Godzilla. The shots of the government officials moving to different offices for literally any meeting or of any specialist they needed to consult help further show us how much time is being wasted because of bureaucracy. Very early on, we are able to get this idea, which ends up in the back of our minds as the rest of the movie goes on, wondering how much better the situation could’ve been handled if it was addressed sooner.

I find this choice very appealing on the director’s end because when it comes to movies that do have a bureaucratic storyline or events in them, they tend not to show every meeting that goes on because it would waste time (except maybe Suicide Squad with all of Amanda Waller’s meetings, but I digress). The audience intuitively understands boardroom meetings happen, but we don’t necessarily understand what that means in the context of a disaster film. And while we might not have a giant lizard attacking us anytime soon (at least I hope), there is something unsettling about having such developed government systems like that of Shin Godzilla in place.

Critics noted that the timing of the film allowed it to serve as a cinematic metaphor not just with the history of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings, as many other Godzilla films prior to it have done, but also for the 2011 Tohoku earthquake, tsunami, and the  Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster that followed directly after. And it’s easy to see this from the visuals of Shin Godzilla itself, who was evolving before our eyes from adolescence into full-on kaiju, from the escalating-with-time physical rampage and the nuclear destruction Shin Godzilla ends with.

If we take this into consideration alongside the understanding that Japan is a very ordered, organized country and with the context of bureaucracy expressed in Shin Godzilla, then the choice of the film to explore Japanese politics at the time of crisis (e.g., the death of many government officials by Shin Godzilla’s nuclear blast) i.e., what society ought to do once the “safety net” of bureaucracy is taken away, dramatizes the story even further. From the perspective of a politician, we see the dialogue about needing to balance priorities and the implications on a politician’s PR when it comes to the aftermath. From the perspective of the average civilian, however, none of this matters. What they need is a solution, and they need it now.

As much as Shin Godzilla would be seen as a criticism of bureaucracy, I see it as well as a humanizing, or at the very least revelatory, effort on the parts of those in power, and how our distance from a situation tends to warp our understandings. The decisions politicians have to make, especially when it comes to balancing many competing interests, are difficult, and it’s easy for us, who see them from a distance, to demand them to do the “right thing.” On the converse, there are lives that are in mortal danger that the system just cannot account for when it should. What I loved about Shin Godzilla the most was that it made a disaster movie into a complex film, allowed for great, fruitful discussions to come about from the viewers.

For further viewing on issues of government red tape, international relations, and civilian casualties, I highly recommend “Eye in the Sky,” which explores the ethics of drone warfare and the civilian casualties it inevitably leaves behind. Watch it also because it’s Alan Rickman’s last live-action film appearance ever haha.