obsession boyfriend i'm psyched     i'm dreading enemy

(need an explanation?)

advertisements


 
 
reviews Fri Mar 24 00, 10:16PM

X (review)

Out of Toon

I'm not a connoisseur of Japanese animation, so I dragged my friend Adam -- who knows his animé -- along to see X with me, hoping for a little perspective. And boy, am I glad he was there. If he hadn't accompanied me, I'd never have known if it was just me -- do I simply not understand animé? -- or if it was the movie. Adam assured me that yes, it was the movie, and yes, it is not unreasonable to expect things like a cohesive story or intriguing characters from an animé flick.

So, I feel totally comfortable in saying that although X is very stylish, it is also utterly incomprehensible. Not that the three writers credited here (Asami Watanabe, Nanase Ohkawa, and Rintaro) don't try to explain, through their robotic characters, over and over and over, what's going on.


more below the ad... scroll down...


The Dragon of the Earth is out to destroy humanity -- something about man corrupting and befouling the planet and nature taking her revenge. The Dragon of Heaven is dedicated to the protection of Tokyo (the rest of the planet apparently is left to fend for itself). The Dragon of Heaven is kinda like a Japanese Superfriends, and includes a couple of guys, a stripper, and a frighteningly sexualized schoolgirl with a ghost dog. The Superfriends, inexplicably, have some kind of talent that allows them to fight the Dragon of the Earth using giant power shields, though no one seems to notice when downtown Tokyo is ravaged in these battles. Then there are two other guys -- who are either twins or two aspects of the same dude, one with white wings, and one with black -- who have something or other to do with it all. And there's a evil babe with a purple tattoo on her face who runs a giant computer that controls all other computers -- "666 Beast" is emblazoned on the machine, in case we didn't get it -- though what connection this computer has to the rest of the minuscule plot I am at a total loss to say.

That actually makes X sound a lot more intelligible than it felt at the time. X pummels you with reminders about the "the final battle to decide the fate of the Earth" and "the merciless war that will decide the fate of our planet" in portentous speeches delivered in monotones by the often indiscernible characters -- and in between there are battles between the various characters that feature lots of exploding masonry. Visions and premonitions from spooky chicks floating around in bubbles like the Good Witch Glenda take the place of, oh, story, and after the hundredth mention of some character or other's "destiny," I was giggling to myself, thinking of Crispin Glover in Back to the Future: "I am your density!" And I started wishing that Godzilla or Gamera or some Japanese monster would show up and destroy Tokyo already, because for all the fighting, the Dragon of the Earth certainly was taking its sweet time showing up. "What does it mean?" the characters wonder. Even they don't know!

With all the dragons and power shields, X reminded me of nothing so much as that bizarre ad for the Marines that you see at the cineplex sometimes, the one seemingly aimed at recruiting D&D geeks in which a young man slays a dragon with a sword and then morphs into a Marine. (Do Marines get deployed to Middle Earth? But I digress.) The all-female animation team that made X, though, obviously knows that its audience is the same as that ad's: teenaged boys. Along with the requisite nudity and the micro-miniskirted schoolgirl, you'll find mother-murder and swords ripped out of wombs. It's enough to make you wonder if the typical animé fan isn't actually more afraid of girls than of supernatural dragons.

X is a comic book without any context, a weird mishmash of Gaia mysticism and kung-fu fighting. If you're in the mood for something Superfriends, download that "Wassup!" parody instead. It's really funny.

[reader comments on this review]
[more reader comments]

viewed at a private screening with an audience of critics
rated R for violence/gore and some nudity
official site | IMDB


who I am


I'm MaryAnn Johanson: writer and ponderer in New York City who drinks too much wine and thinks way too much about such inconsequences as movies, TV, books, and the meaning of life.
[email me]

• contributor, Film.com
• member, Online Film Critics Society
• member, Alliance of Women Film Journalists
• member, International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences
• visit my scratchpad blog, MaryAnnJohanson.com
• read my Doctor Who fan fiction

photo by David Speranza

(postings feed)

Add to Technorati Favorites

monthly archives

recent screenings and hot movies

just opened
red for no Babylon A.D.
green for go Traitor
green for go Hamlet 2
red for no Sukiyaki Western Django
box office top 5
green for go Tropic Thunder
red for no Babylon A.D.
green for go The Dark Knight
red for no The House Bunny
green for go Traitor
top limited releases
yellow for maybe Vicky Cristina Barcelona
red for no Fly Me to the Moon
Elegy
green for go Bottle Shock
Tell No One
coming soon
green for go Happy-Go-Lucky
red for no The Women
green for go Battle for Seattle
green for go Mister Foe
green for go Flow
yellow for maybe Hounddog
green for go The Perfect Game
yellow for maybe A Thousand Years of Good Prayers
now playing
green for go Hamlet 2
red for no Death Race
green for go Star Wars: The Clone Wars
green for go Frozen River
red for no The Last Mistress
green for go The Rocker
green for go I.O.U.S.A.
green for go Trouble the Water
red for no Henry Poole Is Here
red for no Brideshead Revisited
red for no Pineapple Express
red for no Jack Brooks: Monster Slayer
red for no The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor
red for no The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2
green for go Step Brothers
green for go American Teen
green for go Wall-E

2008 screening log

new on dvd

09.02
yellow for maybe Married Life [buy]
red for no The Sensation of Sight [buy]
green for go Ballet Shoes [buy]
green for go Monster Camp [buy]
green for go Doctor Who: The Invasion of Time [buy]
green for go Doctor Who: The Invisible Enemy [buy]
08.26
green for go Chicago 10 [buy]
green for go Where in the World Is Osama Bin Laden? [buy]
green for go Gypsy Caravan, When the Road Bends [buy]
yellow for maybe August [buy]
red for no Redbelt [buy]
red for no Postal [buy]
green for go Alfresco [buy]
green for go Heroes: Season Two [buy]
green for go The Nightmare Before Christmas: 2-Disc Collector's Edition [buy]
green for go Brotherhood of the Wolf: Director's Cut Two-Disc Special Edition [buy]
08.19
green for go Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day [buy]
green for go Street Kings [buy]
green for go Recount [buy]
green for go The Proposition [buy]
green for go Television Under the Swastika [buy]
green for go Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles: Season 1 [buy]
green for go House: Season Four [buy]
green for go House: Seasons 1-4 Collection [buy]

advertisements

search

Google
flickfilosopher.com
web