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IRON
MAN: The Cinema of Shinya Tsukamoto
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Author: |
Tom
Mes |
| Pages: |
240 |
| |
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| Publication
Date: |
2005 |
| Published
by: |
FAB
Press |
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| Date
Reviewed: |
10/15/2005 |
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Review: Shinya Tsukamoto is one of the major
avatars of modern (trans)genre cinema – one
of those modern authors who take genres only to deconstruct
them from within, creating at the same time a unique,
personal vision which transcends the usual generic
limitations and imbues what for all intentions and
purposes are legitimate works of art. As such, he
belongs to the group of 'technoperes' with the likes
of Alejandro Jodorowsky, David Cronenberg, David Lynch,
Lars Von Trier and Gaspar Noe, while among the Asian
directors his colleagues in this strategy are the
people like Takashi Miike (who wrote an amusing foreword
to this book!), Kim Ki-Duk and Park Chan-Wook. While
thematic and stylistic approaches of these authors
may vary, and seem too different apart to be put under
a single label, what they all have in common is a
strong, violent vision which emerges, uncompromisingly,
from the lower depths of independent (genre) cinema
and rises straight into the undeniable trans-genre
significance of pure cinematic genius.
IRON MAN, the book-length study of Tsukamoto's oeuvre,
shows in a linear, well-argumented manner, his progress
from the earlier days of teenage experimentation with
Super-8 filmmaking, through the underground low budget
excesses of 16mm TETSUO et al, all the way up to the
his ultimate conquest of the most renowned film festivals
in the world, like Venice, Toronto, Cannes, Tokyo,
London, and others. It shows the development of one
of the most independent filmmakers working today –
one who, even after numerous prestigious awards, still
battles for finances and works only under his own
terms, with a constant, devoted crew and actors who
participate for minimum wages just for the opportunity
to work with him.
The book is written by Tom Mes, an expert on Japanese
cinema and founder of the indispensable web site Midnight
Eye, who's already dedicated a book (AGITATOR, one
of the best-selling and most critically praised FAB
Press books) to a detailed study of Takashi Miike's
work. IRON MAN is excellently organized so as to provide
a clear-cut view of Tsukamoto's career: after introductory
chapters dealing with this director's childhood and
early short works, each following chapter is dedicated
to a single feature film, in the order they were made.
Furthermore, each of those chapters is divided into
three parts: 1) the production background, the making
and release history, intentions and results, anecdotes
and awards; 2) detailed analysis of the themes and
ideas, as well as style of their expression, in the
particular film, viewed in the context of Tsukamoto's
overall concerns; and 3) director's final words on
that film. A special chapter is devoted to Tsukamoto's
acting in other people's films, and there's a special
epilogue which announces that the long-awaited TETSUO
III may be his next film! The fans of his most popular
film will be happy to learn that final words of the
book are Tsukamoto's: ''I will make TETSUO III as
dark and deep as a TETSUO film should be made, with
no compromises.'' If you had any doubts, you can lay
them to rest now. After all, this is the man who did
not exactly jump at the opportunity to have TETSUO
IN AMERICA made under Tarantino's production just
because he had some doubts about the dangers for the
integrity of his vision! The book is crowned by the
detailed filmography, description of all available
DVD editions of his work, and bibliography.
The background parts of the book profit enormously
from Mr Mes's direct contact with Tsukamoto and members
of his crew: he is able to illustrate his points with
numerous quotes from all the people involved (including
the inimitable Chu Ishikawa, his composer and provider
of the major input in creating the aural landscape
of Tsukamoto's films), thus providing a clear impression
of all the work behind the scenes. The critical parts
are deservedly serious and meticulously analytical,
well-judged and supported with good arguments. Perhaps
one might complain that Mes praises too much and criticizes
too little (if at all), but when the subject is an
opus like that of Tsukamoto's, there are very few
complaints to write about. Constantly having in mind
the context of his entire oeuvre, Mes manages to convincingly
show, for example, that even work-for-hire titles
like HIRUKO THE GOBLIN and GEMINI unmistakingly bear
the imprint of Tsukamoto's major concerns and thus
firmly belong to his opus.
Lavish illustrations – many of them rare photos
obtained directly from Tsukamoto – add a further
quality to the already excellent text, and serve to
prove its major arguments. As such, they are integral
part of the book, which is luckily far more ambitious
than a mere picture-book for this director's fans,
and it actually ends up being a perfect homage to
this great director. It achieves a perfect balance
between fact, information, entertainment and seriousness,
never getting dull with either biographical or critical
detail, and is thus a good, fluid read for both academics
and regular otakus. FAB press is to be commended for
yet another high quality publication, and Tom Mes
for writing an account of Tsukamoto's work that this
director (and his fans) certainly deserve.
After Miike, and now Tsukamoto, I only wonder –
who's the next subject of Mes's midnight eye? Could
it be Kiyoshi Kurosawa? Now that's a book that needs
to be written!
Score : 5 / 5
www.FABPress.com
Reviewed By Dejan Ognjanovic
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