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Tuesday, 20 April 2010

Take it back...

There's a particular strand of Japanese Horror that, unlike say the avenging spirits of Ju-On, Ringu, or the daikaiju eiga (giant monsters) of Godzilla et al, has never successfully translated well to Western audiences. Critic Jay McRoy calls it the techno/body-horror genre. While it is true that the genre has in some sense died out in its homeland, it is certainly something that has never been accepted in the West. In the US and UK, audiences are uncomfortable with their own bodies, let alone those of onscreen characters. Plastic surgery and fad dieting pervade life, yet confrontation disturbing the palace of the human body is something Western audiences shy from. David Cronenberg may indeed be the only real Western director to exploit this. Films such as the Saw series cannot truly fit this, as they focus on the perpetrator rather than the victim, and the consequences of the crimes committed are never REALLY shown on screen. In Japanese cinema, the victims ARE often the perpetrators, and they often have to live with the consequences of their 'boundary violations'. In the West, the Terminator will always die or sacrifice their life at the end of a film, a knowledge that they cannot exist in the natural world. In the East, they are cursed to do so, a reminder of humanity's tampering with the natural order of the world.

With all this in mind, it was with a certain excitement that I looked forward to the next film, and in displaying its Eastern influences, it certainly lived up to the techno/body-horror tag.


Repo Men (2010, Universal Pictures)

It has been noted that the Japanese body-horror films of the late 80s reflected a period of uncertainty, or cultural, societal and familial change. David Cronenberg's 'New Flesh' movement of the 80s reflected a desire to change or willingly alter the form of the human for pleasurable ends. Repo Men seems to take elements from both these, and fuse them (excuse the pun) together to its own end.

Primarily, the film seems to be a non-too-subtle metaphor for both the longer living human race, in the era of Dolly the sheep et al, and also the recent 'Credit Crunch' recession. The film seems to both rejoice and despise the mechanical additions to the human body in that they ultimately save the protagonists several times, but the 'black comedy' of the film seems to ridicule those families that do take the artificial organs, for what the film seems to insinuate are selfish means.

It will be interesting to see how (if?) a mainstream audience responds to this accusation, given that Western society is obsessed with staying young, and does not respect its elderly in the same way that Japan does. Can an audience accept a film that mocks them for wanting to stay young? Yet, this is not what fully divides Repo Men from traditional cinema. This 'knowingly subversive' style has been around for years, and it is not a stretch to say that Repo Men treading ground that Fight Club walked over a decade ago.

However, clearly, this is a film with a mixed message for its target audience. And who are they? It's hard to say. With a marquee Summer release for Japan, it's perhaps a film that will do better business overseas, where its Western-mocking stance may be easier to swallow. As a result of that, it takes influences from South Asia in various forms.

The film wears many of its influences on its sleeve. There's the obvious Asian fusion of the cityscape, in a Blade Runner manner, and the climactic fight sequence seems to be obviously inspired by its use of tools (including a hammer!) from another film on this page, Oldboy. This lacks the power of Oldboy's single take brutality, however, focusing on an UNKLE soundtracked fight more similar to something from the Wachowski's Matrix Trilogy.  Most unnerving, however, is the finale of the film. It is here that the Cronenberg, and more disturbing aspects of body-horror are referenced.

Near the end, as the protagonists try to 'scan' items inside their own bodies, while cutting each other open, they begin to passionately kiss each other, ultimately literally kissing through the blood as (primarily Law) reaches inside stomachs, knees, chests, to scan organs.
It's not something commonly seen in mainstream cinema, to be sure.

Ian Conrich categorises this particularly odd combination as 'techno-eroticism', and states that the ultimate mating of two may ultimately result in the death of society. This was most literally shown at the end of the quintessential Japanese techno/body-horror -  Tetsuo: The Iron Man, by the empty streets, as the fusion of men march through them, claiming they can destroy the world. It is perhaps a fear that by losing the organic nature of humanity, and ultimately replacing more and more of the body with technology, that we will one day be unable to recognise a human being.

Perhaps this is why Repo Men is unsatisfied with its ending.
Would an audience be content in seeing two protagonists, one more metal than human on the inside, together at the resolution of the film? Perhaps that's why Arnold always has to go at the end of the Terminator movies.

As long as technology continues, however, there's no doubt that, like this genre,  he'll be ba...

.. No, I can't.

4 comments:

  1. Very interesting. It's an idea I wish the film had explored a bit further; or rather that it had concentrated more on it rather than on Jude Law's (somewhat unconvincing) crisis of concience.

    Are Western audiences more uncomfortable with their bodies than Eastern? (Not a criticism - genuinely curious.) Why do you think this hasn't been exploited more in the West? Horror directors usually seem more than happy to confront us with our greatest fears.

    The upsurge in cosmetic surgery/ debates over the size of models/ campaigns for un-airbrushed publicity photos etc etc means that it seems like like now would be a great time for more of this kind of film.

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  2. There is more of a culture of perfection in bodily form in the West than the East. The Japanese in particular seem very comfortable with being whatever shape or size, and they treat this as much more naturally than we do with our 'OMG SHE LOST 2 POUNDS' mentality.

    Why has it not been exploited? I genuinely believe people see it as taboo. At the tame end of this, there was much outcry when Jack Nicholson's Joker mutilated Jerry Hall's face in Batman - something The Dark Knight wouldn't even touch.

    I agree - where are the surgery gone wrong films? People like Adam Green should be working on this in the indie circle.

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  3. Hello, i'm here again with my young and uninformed opinions!

    I'm quite interested by the prospect of Repomen, due to the fact that as you say, i've not seen a proper body horror film for a long while, especially since Cronenberg started focusing on the extent that normal people will go to to meet their ends, without sticking wires in themselves.

    The last body horror film I can remember watching was Taxidermia, which while not of the genre in the strictest sense, did focus on disgusting functions that the human body can preform, and the perversion of simple things such as eating, into something beyond the normal. The real 'horror' element of the film obviously comes at the end, with the bizarre Taxidermy contraption. As with all films and scenes in the genre I pretty much find my self captivated and trying not watch at the same time, but I think an extended knowledge of Anime and Asian cinema in general has changed the way I look feel about them. Taxidermia as a case in point was almost serene and idyllic, and now the transformation in The Fly presents itself as more fantastic and transcendent than disgusting.

    I'm sure that the Japanese are more confident with their bodies on a personal level than the West, however they live under the shadow of Hiroshima so mutation and twisting of the body seems to be common, and their obsession with gadgetry leads to the mechanization of their bodies in film, and of course in real life (have you seen the implant phone?). We don't really have anything overshadowing us like that, and instead of being an introspective society like the West we focus on materialistic and external properties as a rule.

    Which is probably why the torture porn of the later Saw films is the way it is. Can you imagine them forever amputating a victims limbs in Saw and forcing them to live with a crude mechanical contraption? I doubt they would, as it seems its far more of a taboo in the west to be incapacitated or disabled than in the East, possibly due to another culture difference that you highlighted in your blog, lack of care ad respect for the elderly and infirm.

    Well, that turned into a massive ramble, but there you go.

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  4. "The Japanese in particular seem very comfortable with being whatever shape or size, and they treat this as much more naturally than we do with our 'OMG SHE LOST 2 POUNDS' mentality."

    careful now:

    http://www.healthyplace.com/eating-disorders/main/eating-disorders-on-rise-in-asia/menu-id-58/

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