Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Summer Wars (2009) Review

An extraordinary animated film that switches between real world rural Japan and an online virtual community provides laughs, tears, and the possibility of the end of the world – all during one high school student’s unexpected summer vacation. But looking beyond the protagonist, this science fiction film is also about the importance of family relationships, good and bad. UPDATED for Blu-ray details and HD screen captures.

Summer Wars Title

While some people enjoy blind buying movies, I am not one of them. This one is not quite a blind buy because I saw part of a fan translated manga adaptation and thought it looked interesting. It ended up on my Amazon wish list and was forgotten until scrolling through that to find it on sale. So did it become a purchase to regret? Read on to find out.

Summer Wars OZ LogoSummer Wars World of OZ

When the movie started, I wondered if I’d made a mistake. The opening scenes are shown as an online tutorial and introduction to a virtual social community called OZ. OZ looks like a cross between Facebook and Second Life, with cute avatars representing the users of the system. In fact, it goes through the entire creation of an avatar as if it were a real system.

But is more than just a riff on Facebook and other online communities. OZ is also the backbone of all communications in the world with government agencies and facilities using it as an operating system. It is like if Microsoft, Apple, or Google ran the entire planet’s infrastructure. Now there is a frightening thought!

All of this was presented in cell shaded CGI rather than traditional animation was extremely cutesy in a corporate way. By that I mean in a talking paperclip kind of style for those of you who remember that in Microsoft Office. Not my cup of tea.

Summer Wars Natsuki Recruits KenjiSummer Wars Natsuki

Suddenly we are deposited in the real world, or more accurately the traditionally animated depiction of a Japanese high school computer club. In Japan, they have clubs for almost everything and they are a big part of a teen’s high school life. Here we meet two computer geeks who are part time administrators in OZ.

Then something happens that never happens in real life – the prettiest girl in school walks in and offers a paying job. No, Natsuki isn’t asking them to rig her grades. Instead the older student needs one boy to come traveling with her to the countryside.

Summer Wars Train RideSummer Wars King Kazma Introduction

And so our hero, Kenji begins his assignment of escorting Natsuki in a montage that manages to catch subtle nuances of every day life while interweaving glimpses of cyber life on OZ. We also find out the shy boy is a math wiz who narrowly lost out being the Japanese representative at the international math olympics. It also turns out he has been hired to pose as Natsuki’s boyfriend to meet her family.

Summer Wars Bus RideSummer Wars Meeting Granny

And oh what a family she belongs to! The Jinnouchi clan are descendants of samurai and the matriarch Sakae is the one all orbit around. In fact, her 90th birthday is approaching and that is why the family has gathered together. Natsuki reveals a scheming side when she introduces Kenji to her great grandmother and unreels multiple lies about who he is. The biggest one being that he is her fiancé.

Summer Wars Sakae Evaluates RenjiSummer Wars Meeting the Jinnouchi Clan

It is a scene that demonstrates marvelous comic timing as the clueless boy slowly realizes what is going on. But amongst the comedy is a sublime moment where Sakae stares at him with all the ferocity of her spirit to evaluate the lad. She sees something deep within him and gives her approval to the marriage. For some reason Kenji is rather upset about being misled, but Natsuki is determined to keep the ruse going.

Meeting the rest of the boisterous and varied family follows at dinner. Not even a flow chart can help him keep everyone straight. I loved this scene for it rang with the authenticity of how families behave, from the banter to the insults as we get a glimpse of each personality. All are believable, realistic characters – even Shota the second cousin cop with a crush on Natsuki. He’s there for comic relief and because every large family has someone like him.

Summer Wars BaseballSummer Wars Family Tension

Throughout the movie, we are shown the various family members interacting and many little things are planted for future reference. This is a very complicated movie. Also interwoven is a parallel to baseball presented in the television broadcasts of one of teens of the family in a high school baseball tournament. Keep an eye out for that.

But not all is fun and games at the Jinnouchi gathering. Every family has a black sheep and theirs is named Wabisuke. His appearance brings with it unexpected tension and seriousness to the movie, which had been light hearted until now. It is a foreboding scene and sure enough, things begin to move in a bad direction for Kenji and company. It doesn’t help that Natsuki has obvious feelings for her “uncle”.

Summer Wars Kenji and KazumaSummer Wars Shocked Family

Inability to sleep and a strange email with a cypher asking to be broken leads to Kenji being framed for hacking OZ. Suddenly a wanted international criminal, it is up to him to find out who stole his account and is vandalizing OZ. With help from Kazuma, a young computer gaming ace in the family, Kenji begins his attempts to clear his name while hiding what is happening from the family.

But with media being everywhere in modern society, that doesn’t work out so well. Exposed and arrested, Kenji’s spirit manages to shine when confronted before being hauled off. His family is small and doesn’t interact very much, so his gratitude for his experiences with the Jinnouchi’s says a lot about what the movie is really about.

Summer Wars Natsuki Chases After

Horrified by the turn of events, Natsuki surprisingly shows great concern for Kenji as it appears the shy boy has managed to make an impression on her after all. I suppose being hauled off in hand cuffs helps with the whole bad boy thing girls go for. I kid, I kid. Or do I?

Meanwhile things are going very wrong in OZ. Very wrong and what goes wrong in OZ will go wrong in the real world.

Summer Wars Love MachineSummer Wars Helicopers

The hacker isn’t a hacker, but a rogue artificial intelligence unleashed from a United States university. Named “Love Machine”, it begins consuming accounts and interfering with everything from stop lights to atomic clocks. As the chaos expands, the entire country of Japan is paralyzed.

Screenshot - 12_15_2011 , 3_03_50 PMScreenshot - 12_15_2011 , 3_05_53 PM

Enter Sakae and her very old fashioned rotary phone with equally archaic hand written address books. Her many decades of contacts with noble families and the government turn out to be very handy when modern communications fail. It is a tour de force performance, something I never expected to write about a cartoon character.

Her efforts and that of her family are traceable, however. Love Machine now knows he has an opponent and more importantly, knows the clan crest. The AI is cunning and growing even more dangerous.

Summer Wars Granny Attacks WabisukeSummer Wars Kenji and Sakae

Returned to the mansion due to Natsuki’s efforts, Kenji is on hand when things finally come to a boil regarding Wasibuke as secrets are revealed and a dramatic confrontation occurs. Later on, a card game of hanafuda changes one life as the shy teen is forced to make a fateful promise by the scheming matriarch.

Hanafuda is a way of life to the Jinnouchi’s and another reoccurring theme to watch for. This movie made me want to learn how to play it. I have a feeling I will be buying a set of cards.

Summer Wars Fatal FailureSummer Wars Natsuki's Avatar

Things go from bad to worse as Love Machine continues its rampage, the world itself is endangered, and Kenji finds himself accompanying the Jinnouchi clan into cyber battle. With the stakes being raised to that of life or death, the peaceful summer vacation has turned into a summer war.

Can Kenji save the world and maybe, just maybe, get the girl?

Thoughts

Summer Wars is a wonderful film, filled with all those moments that make families truly family. It is also a ripping good science fiction yarn; one of those that warns of a possible future already happening. The gradual takeover of everything by the Internet includes our electrical power plants and hackers have already accessed them. The potential to bring things to a grinding halt is not very far fetched anymore.

But the heart of the movie is the Jinnouchi clan and all their colorful personalities. This really is an ensemble cast and the director’s having the voice actors together in the same studio really paid off. Come to think of it, this movie feels like a live action film in the real world scenes because of this.

The main message of  Summer Wars is the importance and strength of family. None of it is rendered in a sappy way and it is unflinching in showing the embarrassing sides of relatives. I also loved the character of Sakae, the matriarch. While it is not rare to see the elderly shown respect in anime, it is unusual to see a woman of her intellect and fire combined with age. She alone makes the movie worth seeing.

Fortunately, there is a lot more that makes the film great.

The development and growth of the two leads is also well done and manages to be believable despite the short amount of time it happens over. Kenji’s becoming the young man Sakae saw in him is a joy to behold.  Natsuki gets her share of progression too, going from a selfish girl to someone willing to risk all for others – becoming more than a little like her great grandmother.

The Japanese voice cast is absolutely superb across the board. I do want to point out that Natsuki’s voice actress, Nanami Sakuraba, doesn’t sound like the typical cutesy anime girl, but like a real one. It makes her character and I couldn’t imagine her any other way.

Though I am on record as hating English dubs, this one has a very good one with a cast that rises to the occasion. The only complaint I have is that when they did the dub script, more profanity was introduced than was in the subtitles. This is something I have noticed in fan subtitling and it seems to be spreading to official dubs, unfortunately.

Because of the scatalogical profanity, I cannot recommend it for children. It is rated PG and contains violence, both in the virtual world and the Jinnouchi mansion. Older teens and up are the real targets of the movie, anyway. There are some scenes in the the virtual world of OZ that could give nightmares to little ones.

Speaking of children, this is a rare anime where the little kids are voiced by little kids rather than women.

I highly recommend Summer Wars, as it is a true delight and holds up very well on repeated viewings. In fact, I recommend purchasing it outright. Not bad for a semi-blind buy, eh?

Technical

This is a review of the DVD, so I can’t say if the Blu-ray is even more spectacular, but I would hope it does full justice to the gorgeous transfer. Make no mistake about it, this is a beautiful film and after adjusting to the CGI world of OZ I found that impressive as well.

Screenshot - 12_15_2011 , 2_46_32 PMSummer Wars John and Yoko

UPDATED: Yes, the Blu-ray is even more spectacular. Animated content gets a huge boost in quality in this format and everything is better.

It is presented in 1.85:1 ratio with a full 5.1 Dolby Surround mix for both Japanese and English dubs. Sound is excellent with full use of positioning and ambient noises that are very effective at making you feel that you are in the countryside. On the Blu-ray the sound is in Dolby TrueHD and is even better.

The soundtrack fits the film perfectly, especially during the sequences set in OZ. Madhouse has created something to rival Studio Ghibli in every facet of film making.

Funimation issued this as a two disc set with the movie on one DVD and the extras on the other. All are on one disc in the Blu-ray release. The extras are well worth looking at with interviews with the main cast members and the director. It is interesting to see behind the scenes of how voice work was handled, normally you get extras on the animation.

The packaging has to be mentioned. Summer Wars comes in a sturdy plastic case that doesn’t skimp on plastic to save costs. A separate plastic leaf holds the movie with the extras DVD on the inside back. The case is clear which allows a rather unique insert to be used. On one side is the front and back while the inside of the insert is a mini poster of the lead couple backed by the rest of the cast. The Blu-ray case is smaller and only has one disc, but the rest applies to it.

Taking things a bit further, the case comes with an embossed slip cover which shows the same characters on the cover but as their OZ avatars. The back is the same reversal. It is extremely clever and testifies to the quality of the issue. Oh and the artwork is very good.

Funimation deserves kudos all around on the effort.

BEWARE! HERE BE SPOILERS!!!

 

 

 

 

Summer Wars Death in the FamilySummer Wars Kenji Steps Up

The death of Sakae is handled wonderfully as she becomes the sole casualty of Love Machine. Here is where the movie becomes more than just a lark, but something deeper and sweeter. With the loss of their matriarch, the Jinnouchi clan both pull together and splinter at the same time – mainly along gender lines.

Summer Wars Family Mourns 2Summer Wars Family Mourns 1

The panning across the porch conveys the loss powerfully and how it affects everyone differently. It is one of the best scenes in the movie.

Summer Wars Holding Hands

And it is here that Kenji and Natsuki start becoming a couple. Having been spurned Kenji when trying to comfort her earlier in the movie, Natsuki’s request to have her hand held is a sweet moment as he enables her to release her grief.

Having been through enough family deaths to outnumber the amount of weddings I have been to, the way Sakae’s death is handled by the family rang true. It was all too familiar, especially since my immediate family was bound together by my mother.

Summer Wars Master and PupilSummer Wars King Kazma Upgraded

Another sub story I enjoyed in the movie was that of Kazuma, the kid with the laptop. His alter ego, King Kazma is the champion of fighting in OZ and a direct outgrowth of two things: his being bullied in school and being taught kung-fu by his uncle. His frustration and despair at failing to save his family from imminent death is what finally unites the family.

Summer Wars Wabisuke Finds OutSummer Wars Last Meal

The prodigal son arc of Wabisuke is deftly handled and another highlight of the film. His creation of Love Machine was meant to restore the family fortune lost by the great grandfather, but like the biblical figure he came to calamity in a far off land. His return and guilt make this a redemptive movie on top of everything else.

Summer Wars Natsuki Hanafuda BattleSummer Wars Natsuki Transforms

Seeing Natsuki pull herself together and support Kenji in the last stand while death was hurtling down upon the mansion showed her growth. Becoming the champion of her clan, the power up in the final battle of hanafuda conveys her blossoming beauty and stature of soul. Here she becomes worthy of the boy chosen by Sakae to be her husband and protector.

Summer Wars Kenji DecryptsSummer Wars Natsuki and Kenji

Then there is our hero of the story, Kenji. Sakae took pride in being able to assess a person’s character by looking at them and her confidence in him was well placed. Calling upon strength and leadership he didn’t know he had, Kenji ends up leading the clan into battle by rallying the men to fight back. One gets the feeling Sakae was looking for a strong man to restore the family after many generations of women running the clan.

Summer Wars Granny's Memorial

The ending was fantastic, except for the very last moment which went to slapstick comedy. But I’ll forgive it. After all, how many happy endings feature a funeral?

Monday, September 19, 2011

Killing the Golden Goose

Having rejoined Netflix a couple of months ago, I have been enjoying hard to find films such as Ugetsu (brilliant film) as well as catching up on hits from the past five years. But I am wondering just how long they are going to be around as a company.

The first sign of problems was the change in fees shortly after I joined, with the ability to stream and have one DVD out going up considerably. I opted for the two DVD only package because most of what I want to see is not available streaming. Also, Starz contract will not be renewed and it appears other studios providing streaming content intend to follow that path.

Most people opted to keep the streaming, believing that is the future of entertainment delivery. But many threw up their hands and quit Netflix outright. Many as in millions of customers. Consequently, the stock tanked when the losses were revealed.

So when the CEO Reed Hastings announces out of the blue that it was a poorly handled change it should be a good thing. right?

Sadly, the buffoon running the show has decided to spin off the DVD operation into a different company, Qwikster. It is clear that Hastings wants the DVD side to die completely, but with the demise of the streaming service likely next year this is incredibly stupid.

I disagree with the analysis in The Atlantic Wire piece. Netflix has the Hollywood studios completely against them with some executives thinking the rental business has hurt theater box office. It has appeared to have damaged DVD sales, though I would argue that poor product has more to do with it. Which is why you don’t see new films streaming and a three month wait after DVD release on the disc side.

This is all fall out of the fanatic intellectual property rights fight which is based on greed and laziness. The sad result is less choice for consumers and no increase in sales of tickets or DVDs.

But the sheer idiocy of thinking the studios will cave on streaming video when they won’t even support their own endeavor, Hulu, is astounding. Even though DVD sales have plummeted, Red Box proves there is a market for renting them.

For rural people like me, renting movies will become nearly impossible once Netflix/Qwikster fold. With iTunes getting rid of rentals and only allowing purchases, things are going to get interesting. But this will make cable and satellite providers happy, since they have been losing people moving to Internet delivery of entertainment.

It dawns on me this is the perfect combination of events to drive up piracy. Oy.

Saturday, September 17, 2011

A Lost Generation of US Naval Aviation

As I was poking around YouTube, I found this gem of a film on carrier suitability tests being carried out on the McDonnell F3H-2 Demon. Also making cameo appearances are the production prototypes of the Douglas F4D Skyray, Douglas A4D Skyhawk, and Vought F7U Cutlass.

F3H-2 Demon Carrier Tests

All but the venerable Skyhawk had short services in the fleet and those three had the same problem – underpowered engines. Westinghouse had made extravagant promises on a new generation of jet engines and the aluminum birds were specifically designed around them. When the engines turned out to be complete failures, the U.S. Navy’s equivalent of the Air Force’s Century series were hamstrung.

Only the “Gutless” Cutlass flew with Westinghouse engines while other manufacturers engines were shoehorned into redesigned versions of the Demon and Skyray. Performance of the planes never met their potential as a result. Meanwhile, A-4 Skyhawks are still flying today, over fifty years later.

That is not to say they did not have some success. The Cutlass and Demon introduced the AIM-7 Sparrow medium range radar guided missile to the fleet. Both were very maneuverable, with the Cutlass able to out dogfight even F-86 Sabres and FJ Furies. The F4D Skyray could climb to altitude faster than anything else flying at the time.

F7U Firing AIM-7 Sparrow
F4D Skyray Carrier Operations
Oh what world beaters these could have been if the Westinghouse engines had lived up to their specifications! Instead the Navy had to wait for Vought’s next design, the F-8 Crusader, to get a decent fighter. Fortunately for them, it was just around the corner and a twin engine derivative of the F3H would evolve into the F4H Phantom II…

Friday, September 16, 2011

Garr! or is it Gar! Maybe GAAARRHH?

That is the question. For some reason I was unable to sleep at all last night and my resulting mood is conveyed by the word.

I eventually did get some sleep from 7:30 AM to Noon, but am at a loss to explain why I could not sleep before.

Perhaps it was handling a C93 Sporter 5.56mm at a store last night. I do have an H&K clone fever of some kind and a sub $600 rifle that is a fixer upper is tempting. But by the time corrections would be made, it would be in the range of the PTR-91 I covet so much.

Gharrr! Garr? GAAHRR?!

However it is spelled, I need to stop saying it or the cats will think I am a pirate.

I should get that Summer Wars review written and posted before I forget what the film was about…

Oh and today is day one of H2O2 therapy since the stuff finally arrived. We will see if there is anything to it.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Productive Pain

Living with chronic pain is not pleasant, no matter how you look at it. But there is pain and then there is pain from actually doing things. The last two days I’ve hurt quite a bit because I’ve been doing some physical activity to make up for lost time.

It is all yard related, except for taking down my filthy blinds and deciding replacing them was easier than cleaning them. We bought some Colorado Blue Spruce and Black Hills Spruce pine trees to plant as a mini windbreak. Three of them went in the ground yesterday just in time for frost last night. The fourth and last one is indoors for the moment and awaits the removal of a diseased Asian Elm tree – if we can get a neighbor with a chainsaw to help out.

Speaking of sawing, a replacement pole saw and lopper finally was purchased a couple of months ago. Tuesday was my first chance to use it and I discovered to my dismay that my recent slide in health is worse than I realized. It was torture using it and one oak tree branch will take multiple days to get through.

No, it is not very thick being six inches in diameter or so. I am just that weak now. Oy.

Back to the frost. Last night set records for lows in some places around the area. We could use some global warming right about now. Pity it is junk science since humanity always prospers in warm periods.

Prosperity would be nice, but the coming storm is nearly upon us. China is going to be liquidating their U.S. treasury bond holdings. This shows that borrowing to increase our national debt is not going to work anymore. But that is not stopping the Fed from assisting in bailing out European banks. The insanity continues until everything falls down, I suppose.

At least the view from my window is nice with the blinds removed. It is amazing how plastic attracts dust that never lets go. I made the mistake of trying to dust them with a Webster extendable duster yesterday. The clouds of dust that arose could have felled a horse and drove me from the room.

I had purchased them close to twenty years ago to be able to vary sunlight since my eyes are very sensitive to light. But years of working on pain tolerance has helped a bit with that so I am ready to evict the things in favor of Asian blinds. Temporary plastic fake reed blinds (left overs from upgrading the dining room twelve years ago) will go up while I budget to get the real thing.

I’m thinking of painted bamboo ones but need to check my finances first.

Egad, the windows are dirty. Something will have to be done about that. Also have tomatoes to can today. So despite all the pain, at least it has been a productive week. That is something I have not been able to write down in some time.

That is worth the pain.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Infinite Copyrights? Let’s Kill All Innovation

The growth in intellectual property (IP) rights has gotten to be quite an issue in the service oriented economies of the world. Here in the Unites States, it is getting to the point few things will ever end up in the public domain again. Now that trend is being exported with an RIAA written law going into effect in New Zealand and the European Commission extending sound recording copyrights from 50 to 70 years.

Shane Richmond has a good OpEd at The Telegraph on this and it has sparked a debate in the comments. Some good points are made there opposing his views, but in the end I agree with him.

Ever heard of the phrase “starving artist”? I believe that the best work often comes from artists who are struggling to make ends meet, because that motivates them to reach higher and try new ideas. If there is one thing that causes mental and creative stagnation, I’d say it is laziness born of security. Risk aversion is not a creative engine economically, scientifically, creatively, or spiritually.

It is perverse that humans do not dare when they are comfortable. One would think that having a solid safety net would encourage taking risks, but that is not how we behave. Instead there is a tendency to only take action when forced to. These copyright extensions are to make the already comfortable even more so.

I do agree that copyright holding does need to exist, but my complaints are about the draconian interpretations that take fair use away and the constant extending of ownership. What is the best amount of time for a copyright to be held? I cannot say for sure, but I think anything past 25 years is ridiculous for entertainment properties.

Frankly, the idea that ideas equal “properties” bothers me greatly. We have gotten so far from the physical in what we produce that is had damaged the economic health of the country. Perhaps it is a function of growing older, but tangible things speak to me of reality far more than IP’s do. Still, there must be incentive to create, so going to the extreme of making everything open source is foolish in the long run.

So we need copyrights and royalties. But we need them to be reasonable in order to foster daring, that thing that fuels creativity. Instead we are strangling creativity in the name of profits and protecting rights.

If I were to ever get published, I would put my works in the public domain somewhere around ten to fifteen years later. That is a promise I will keep if such things come to pass.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Health 9-12-2011

That was an unpleasant couple of nights with little sleep. Too much pain to rest and too tired to resist the pain made for a vicious little cycle. At least I made it to church yesterday even if I had to leave early.

The spine repeatedly popped the entire time at church, mostly in my bad spots. Strange.

I ordered a UV wand from an Amazon sale and will be using it to try to control dust mites. Even if it works, it will probably be a futile gesture but I feel the need to do something. The food grade hydrogen peroxide is yet to arrive and I suspect it will awhile yet. Did get the glass eyedropper bottle for it though.

Not feeling ambitious. Instead I’m dizzy – at least that proves I’m awake!

Update:

According to the daily crossword puzzle and Audiosurf, today should be a much better day.