Starring Yoshikatsu Fujiki, Sue Eaching, Takashi Matsuyama, Shigeru Chiba
Directed by Mamoru Oshii
Yes, as amazing as it may seem, I am reviewing a live-action film today. If you’re wondering why, it’s because this is a film from the Kerberos Saga, of which I have already reviewed the third installment, Jin-Roh. Since I started at the end, I figured I might as well keep going backwards and watch the second film next. It helps that the films are set in a backwards chronology as well, so in a sense I am watching them in order. Neither are they closely related judging by the two I have seen. Only occasionally recurring characters and that ominous black armor tie the series together, although I suspect the first film, Red Spectacles, will be more directly linked to the others.
Stray Dog opens with the Kerberos unit in revolt against the government. I’m not sure if this name refers to the entire Capital Police of Jin-Roh (in this film translated as Metropolitan Police) or if it is just one unit within that organization. Neither do I have any real idea why the Kerberos uprising even happened, or what caused it to end. I wish I could tell you that the film rewards your patience and answers your questions, but it doesn’t. A character who the credits simply refer to as “Man in White,” though we might as well call him the white spy from the Spy vs. Spy comics, says that most people have forgotten about the uprising, and apparently the film expects you to do the same.
So now the chase is on. Unfortunately, it’s not going very fast. This is a fine enough setup for a good spy thriller, tracking clues and digging for new leads, but we only get scenes of the characters wandering from place to place without explanation. Perhaps this could have worked as a character piece, delving into the relationship between Inui and Tang Mie. It doesn’t go that route either, though. The two leads almost never even speak, to each other or anyone else. They don’t interact; they merely coexist. White Spy is following them of course, but he’s doing so from a distance and being sneaky, so he doesn’t have anything to add to the characterization either. All we get is a half-hour montage of the characters wandering around aimlessly. Man, 10 minutes would have been excessive; this is just overkill. Every time the camera gives a dramatic sweeping view of a building, you think they’ve finally found something important, but then it will simply cut away to another random location and keep on meandering.
Boredom set in quickly, but after a while it transcended boredom. Random pointless objects get close attention only to be immediately forgotten. Incredibly long single shots would give way to strange and evocative cuts to different scenes. The oddest of these involved spinning the camera around in a circular motion, aiming higher up with each rotation until it looked into the sky and then cut away to the next scene. There is almost no dialog anywhere, and what little there is becomes impossible to orient. Is this a flashback? A hallucination? Narration? Is this a literal event or just allusion? After a while I began questioning reality itself, and it suddenly occurred to me that this film must have created philosophy. Now logic should have told me that philosophy has been around thousands of years before movies were invented, but at that point I think my grasp of time as a linear series of events was eroding. If it had gone on any longer I think I would have wound up in some Zen trance, maybe even achieved enlightenment and became the next Buddha.
So now the big secret is out. There actually are bad guys in this movie. They don’t show up until the last half hour, but they do exist, and it definitely improves what little remains of the film. Until they show up we’re stuck with confused and meaningless scenes of the characters sitting around without doing anything, so any degree of action was very welcome. Despite finding Koichi, the second half of the film is only slightly more involved than the first half, going at a tortoise’s pace instead of a snail’s. There is some strange subplot, although I hesitate to even use that word for it, involving red rubber balls. I can only suppose that this has some symbolic meaning, possibly referring to dogs playing catch. Maybe I’m just an ignoramus who can’t understand the deep meaning and artistic finesse of this film, but even if that’s true it doesn’t change the fact that this movie was boring as hell.
There’s only one real action scene in the movie aside from a few moments of campy hijinks, but at least that one scene delivered. It had all the terrifying presence that made Jin-Roh so great. It’s never going to make anyone’s top 10 list of greatest shootouts in cinema history, but I still loved it. Or maybe I was so deprived of action that I would have been happy with anything. But no matter how awesome that last twenty minutes or so is, it’s too little, far, far too late.
I really wanted this film to be great, but it’s boring, tiresome, and doesn’t even answer its own questions. I can only hope Red Spectacles delivers more. More of anything. I know Koichi is the main character of that movie, so maybe I’ll get some answers there. But even if I’m just missing some pertinent details, it still doesn’t change the fact that nothing happens in Stray Dog. Every time I think about that opening scene with all the police officers, exhausted and beaten, I imagine just how awesome this film could have, should have, been, and it makes me depressed.