For you and your (lady parts)

For the past few months Matthew and I have been anx­iously antic­i­pat­ing Paprika, a Japan­ese ani­mated sci­ence fic­tion film, directed by Satoshi Kon1, ani­mated by Mad­house Stu­dios and pro­duced and dis­trib­uted by Sony Pic­tures Enter­tain­ment. The film is based on Yasu­taka Tsutsui’s 1993 novel Paprika, about a female research psy­chol­o­gist involved in a project to develop a device that will per­mit ther­a­pists to help patients by enter­ing their dreams.
Sounds pretty rad, right?

We were afraid that we would never get a chance to see it, think­ing it would be a very lim­ited release. But yes­ter­day, while rid­ing the bus into Pasadena, we saw that it is play­ing at this cheap the­ater. We dropped every­thing, got some bomb Mediter­ranean food, and went to see it.

Unfor­tu­nately, we left the the­ater two hours later very con­fused and tired. I felt like I had aged a thou­sand years and the entire world was dust, (this may also have to do with the book I am reading/was read­ing on the bus).

I won’t go into the entire plot; I just want to talk about two spe­cific scenes. Let me also say that the movie is rated R, which I had forgotten.

The plot sum­mery on Wikipedia describes part of the essen­tial plot as fol­lows, “Dr. Atsuko Chiba begins using a machine ille­gally to help psy­chi­atric patients out­side of the research facil­ity using her alter-ego “Paprika.” Paprika is lit­er­ally a “dream girl,” with her cute face and red hair, she is the more play­ful half of the seri­ous, though attrac­tive, Chiba.” This is lit­er­ally the main focus of the film. The four other main char­ac­ters in the film are in love with and, at sep­a­rate times, take advan­tage of the only female char­ac­ter, Chiba.

In the most dis­turb­ing scene, Paprika, tak­ing the form of a but­ter­fly, is pinned to table with large hold­ing pins. One of the male char­ac­ters is run­ning his fin­gers down her body as they argue, he threat­ens her. As he con­fesses his love (and she is protest­ing) he presses his palm onto the zip­per in her jeans and it sinks through her skin. He pro­ceeds to travel up her entire body tear­ing a seam down the cen­ter of her body and her head to reveal a naked Chiba under­neath. And you see her naked frag­ile body han­dled in var­i­ous ways for the remain­der of the scene as one of the other male char­ac­ters comes to save her. It takes a while for him to cover her with his coat.
The next scene I want to talk about is at the very end, Paprika real­izes that every­thing has its oppo­site “Light and dark, real­ity and dream…man and woman.” As winds of change blast through the streets, Paprika returns to Tokita, where Chiba is. Dis­ap­pear­ing into the robotic form, a ghostly appari­tion of a baby comes out of the robotic shell, like a womb. Suck­ing in the wind, the child (female and naked) grows until she sucks up the chair­man him­self, becom­ing a full grown beau­ti­ful com­bi­na­tion of both Chiba and Paprika (naked). In this new form, she is able to con­sume the Chairman’s dream form and end the night­mare he created.

The tone of the movie was hol­low and bar­ren, which made rip­ping off the vul­ner­a­ble character’s skin and later watch­ing her exposed body grow from birth through child­hood, puberty, and into adult­hood, a very iso­lat­ing expe­ri­ence. Also, the empha­sis on the female form sav­ing men from dark­ness is just one more depress­ing theme.

As there are many pos­i­tives for being the only female among a group of male friends, there often comes a time when this very real and ter­ri­fy­ing vul­ner­a­bil­ity rises and suf­fo­cates you. It’s strange how true this is for me because I have pre­ferred male friends for a great deal of my life.

I am sure that there is a counter feel­ing that men expe­ri­ence. I do won­der if it is related to the body, which leads to a much longer discussion.

Watch­ing this movie made me long to read some gender-blurring fic­tion, or fuck­ing Annie Dil­lard.2

1 Satoshi Kon (今敏 Kon Satoshi?, born Octo­ber 12, 1963 in Kushiro, Hokkaidō, Japan) is the highly-regarded direc­tor of the anime films Per­fect Blue (1997), Mil­len­nium Actress (2001), Tokyo God­fa­thers (2003), and Paprika (2006), as well as the tele­vi­sion series Para­noia Agent (2004). All of his works as a direc­tor have been made by Stu­dio Mad­house, where he is a staff direc­tor along with Rin­taro and Yoshi­aki Kawa­jiri. His films are char­ac­ter­ized by psy­cho­log­i­cal com­plex­ity, real­is­tic char­ac­ter and back­ground designs, and the blur­ring of dream and real­ity.
2 A recent review by The Wash­ing­ton Post reads, “Annie Dillard’s books are like comets, like celes­tial events that remind us that the real­ity we inhabit is itself a celes­tial event, the busi­ness of eons and galax­ies, how­ever per­sis­tently we mis­take its local man­i­fes­ta­tions for mere dust, mere sea, mere self, mere thought. The beauty and obses­sion of her work are always the inte­gra­tion of being, at the grand­est scales of our knowl­edge of it, with the inti­mate and momen­tary sense of life lived.” So there’s that.

3 Comments »

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  1. Paprika was rated R for all the wrong rea­sons. Scary wrong rea­sons. Pedophile-rape reasons.

    Comment by Matthew — July 16, 2007 #

  2. Sev­eral things:
    (1)Why are you read­ing Mar­t­ian Chron­i­cles? I was com­pletely taken aback by how ten­der and lyri­cal that book is.
    (2)Why do we always look to the body (not just “the body” but another’s body) for salvation/validation/recognition?
    (3)I have to read that Wash­ing­ton Post arti­cle because I owe Annie a fuck­ing trib­ute.
    (4)The soft­ball hap­pened tonight.

    Comment by Alisha — July 16, 2007 #

  3. A: What is the secret news from your secret life?
    (1) I am read­ing Mar­t­ian Chron­i­cles because I know this is the time for it. I’m ready now.
    (2) Do you really want to know why? What would know­ing achieve?Keep try­ing. I think ques­tions are all­we­have.
    (3) Isn’t that quote the most per­fect thing some­one could have said? I know you have some­thing in you.
    (4) Yeah, it did! You bet­ter have some­thing to show for it, like a scrape or picture.

    Comment by Laura — July 16, 2007 #

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