Perfect Blue [1997]: An Idol's path to madness, or a portrait of Japanese depravity?

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Oh, Japan, Japan, Japan, Japan... What are we going to do with you? You have given us so much... From the technology to play videogames to the best cameras on the market, without forgetting that the best and most critical minds of a country, which is nothing more than an archipelago of islands, have also brought us together in culture and deep admiration for its vast and fascinating way of making animation (manga, anime), but, we also have to talk about how strange some customs and habits are in the land of the Rising Sun... And yes, this review will go beyond the apparent. Today we will talk about Perfect Blue, but also about the white elephant in the room: the normalisation of harassment/abuse in Japan.

I'm not exactly a symbol of feminism in the West, nor do I fly any political flags, but what Perfect Blue masterfully unfolds in its 70+ minutes of film is a story of ennui, of social pressure but fundamentally of harassment/abuse. Clearly, this is one of those things where perspective plays a key, relavant role in judging a work of art such as this feature film... But it is undeniable not to mention the sunculture of Idol girls in Japan.

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A country that has normalised things that we in the West, even today, would struggle to really understand. A group of girls, young, beautiful, talented, displaying their singing talents in rooms full of much older men, sometimes up to twice their age, with few women, and where ‘groping’ and ‘innuendo’ are a daily occurrence. As a woman myself, I felt totally connected to the protagonist and her anxieties.... That, although it seems very un-Japanese (since existentialism is always used in anime), the protagonist questions everything except this, which I highlight here.

Depravity is the law. To the point that Perfext Blue develops a psychological thriller that shows us, the audience, the murky issues of Japanese society. Harassment by ‘fans’ (men) obsessed with the fictitious figure of a singer (Idol) and what she is always (perpetually) supposed to keep, no matter what... To the point, that this film, which is beautiful but hard, raw, at times super uncomfortable to watch, shows scenes that I wouldn't dare to relate in HIVE but which are aimed at a ‘carnal possession’ of the protagonist, in short of the woman in the story; and therefore in Japan, by extension...

‘Perfect Blue’ has been recognised for dealing with these kinds of issues since 1997. And believe me, in a society as authoritarian as Asian societies tend to be, but especially in Japan, where hierarchy marks from the greeting to how much money you get, what we can see in this film is a powerful but equally bloody essay of obsessions, abuses, calamities that have been fatally normalised in Japan, but above all; the struggle of a protagonist who must go to hell itself and survives to stand out of an extremely toxic but amazingly little debated environment. I insist, this is not a work that pretends to be anything but like ‘Black Swam’ (yes, with Natalie Portman) it is impossible not to generate an opinion...

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12 comments
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I loved what you wrote about this movie, I'm definitely going to look it up to see it, you really intrigued me!

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Go, and prepare yourself... Don't ever say I didn't warn you...

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Thank you for sharing this post with the community and for preferring us, it is a pleasure for us to have you here.

We hope to see you soon. Best regards!

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@theanimerealm between you and me, I found this community something like a weakness for me, haha. I absolutely love everything I find over the posts. Thank you for your kindness, love.

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WoW pero que llamativa portada y poster, me ha llamado enormemente la atención con ese estilo de dibujo o estetica del anime y Jamas me fuera esperado iba el tema del film por el concepto abuso etc, cada cultura tiene sus cosas e indudablemente en japon se destaca sobre todo en cosas extrañas, al leer me recordo al concepto Geisha que digamos va por el mismo camino, tengo que ver este film

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Sí. Las Geishas, son mujeres. Y en Japón existe este cuestión estrechamente cultural con respect a la obediencia y la complacencia en exceso que es bastante turbia... Perfect Blue es sutil, no es un manifiesto feminista pero cuando eres mujer, y ves esta película, entiendes perfectamente, demasiado bien. If you know what I mean...

Oh yeah, love. Geishas and women, in general, has a close bound in terms of Japanese way of understanding life and roles. There's is a few thing beneath this film that only a woman can feel and understand (completely) ad when you watch this masterpiece you do realize about it.

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la historia está interesante, la tendré que ver jeje, buen post!


the story is interesting, I'll have to check it out hehe, good post!