Watching Schizopolis was a new but oddly familiar experience for me. One thing I noticed right off the bat was that the film didn’t even try to make use of the traditional linear narrative. It repeated scenes with minor differences in language or in acting, and interestingly, it was so unapologetically done; as if nothing out of the usual was happening.
In the first parts of the film, I tried so hard to understand everything that was unfolding by mentally connecting the scenes to each other in an attempt to make sense of the plot. But at some point, I gave up and decided to enjoy the film and watch it as it is. I think it’s meant to be seen that way.
However, there were actually moments that felt familiar to me. There was a sequence where the language of the film suddenly changed into Japanese, which that caught me off guard. Still, the feeling of watching something I don’t understand is one that is all too familiar; I’ve done it countless of times. I’m a big fan of K-dramas; I watch new episodes religiously as soon as they are uploaded online. Usually, upon this time, the episodes don’t even come with subtitles. I have to wait a few hours–sometimes even a day–just so I can watch with subtitles. What I do, then, is just watch it as it is, even if I have zero clue on what they’re talking about. I just guess from the characters’ patterns of action and look for context clues in the way they say talk or act. I watched Schizopolis this way. Even if the English dialogues didn’t make sense to me, I just acted as if it’s a different language, and watched the film as if it’s a newly released K-drama episode hours away from being subbed.
I felt like I didn’t need to understand the entire story to laugh at funny moments; they were just funny on their own. Sometimes the scenes are even funnier without proper context. The humor in the movie is somewhat bizarre and far from the norm, but it all the more made me laugh. I laugh because it doesn’t make any sense. The more I didn’t understand, the funnier it was for me.
I don’t think the film was meant to be understood in the first place, anyway. The title itself gives you a glimpse on the kind of film it would be. In the dictionary, schizophrenic is defined as “(in general use) characterized by inconsistent or contradictory elements,” and I think it very much fits the film. Some of the words the characters were saying did not match with their actions and expressions, and there were a lot of contradictions that happened. To me, it seemed like the film was trying to challenge mainstream ways of telling stories, and even if the film “doesn’t make sense,” doesn’t make it any less valid as a story worth telling.