I first saw
Galaxy Express 999 on a bootleg VHS bought from
one of Atlanta's hairier comic-con
video pirates, sometime in the mid 1980s. The Kodak T-120, with the words
"Galaxy Express" markered on its orange-yellow label, was a copy of
the home video release of
New World Pictures' version of the
999 film, which received an American theatrical release for about fifteen
minutes before moving to HBO and video-rental shelves. I knew none of this.
What I knew was that there was something called "Galaxy Express" that
Leiji Matsumoto had created, and he was the guy behind
Captain Harlock and half
of
Star Blazers and who knows what else? At that time, we knew Japanese
animation as a weird neverland that existed only in the colorful hieroglyphs of
Roman Album fold-out posters and My Anime cassette labels, glimpses caught on
afternoon UHF stations between ads for Cookie Crisp and Fruit Roll-Ups, peering
out at us in the form of model kits from something called "Gundam"
that had suddenly appeared in the toy stores.
Certainly Japanese animated films weren’t something you could just sit down and
watch any old time you felt like it. Only now you could, provided you could get
access to the family TV for a couple of hours. And in spite of the hacky dub,
in spite of the comical name changes, in spite of the jarring edits (seriously,
the New World version edits out all the cats), in spite of the fuzzy
duplication of a copy of New World's less-than-stellar transfer, there's
something about Galaxy Express 999 that shines. Recently, we got the chance to
see the film, not on bootleg VHS or late night cable TV but as God and Rintaro
intended, uncut and in a real theater.
There's a lot of good stuff in that late 70s-early 80s sweet spot of Japanese animation
that some call the Yamato Boom and others refer to in terms of Gundam, when
public interest, creative talent, and licensing cash all coincided to create a
kaleidoscope of film and TV of every conceivable topic and level of quality. Out
of that boom came many great projects, but I’ll always have a weakness for
Galaxy Express 999.
999's pedigree is top-notch. It has
Rintaro stretching his muscles in his first
feature film and
Yoshinori Kanada bringing his talent and his timing from
dozens of the best TV animation. It has character designs by
K. Kazuo and
lush Tadao Kubota backgrounds featuring the crumbling, overbuilt Earth, the
lurid jungles of Titan, the outer-space Wild West of Heavy Meldar, and the neon
and black of the Mechanized Planet.
Thematically, the film works as space fantasy, as a childhood fairy tale, as a
humanist polemic, as class-war fable. Sometimes, as when the giant death-skull
of Harlock's Arcadia smashes the
eternal-life headquarters on the Mechanized Planet, the film's subtext erupts
out of theory and just sits there on the screen daring you to call its bluff.
And as a condensation of a
113-episode TV series it gets us from Earth to the Andromeda
Galaxy and back again in just over two hours, hitting the high notes,
rearranging story elements but retaining the
Bildungsroman
of Tetsuro Hoshino, orphaned on a future world where the rich live forever in
machine bodies while the poor scurry like rats to starve, freeze or be hunted.
|
how many machine men will you see before you stop believing |
To avenge the death of his mother at the hands of the feudal
machine lord Count Mecha, Tetsuro finds himself on the Galaxy Express 999, the
limited express space train that delivers people to the Mechanization Planet in
Andromeda, where eternal machine bodies are distributed to the wealthy. Accompanied by the mysterious beauty Maetel,
Tetsuro meets his childhood heroes, satisfies his lust for revenge at Count
Mecha’s Time Castle,
and learns the terrible truth behind his traveling companion in a
planet-destroying cataclysm that shakes the political and social structure of
two galaxies.
For a while that bootleg Kodak was our only copy of
999. Then somebody in
the local anime club dug up an English-subtitled copy, not fansubs but
typeset-on-the-35mm-print emulsion subtitles, and we found out about all the missing cats. Later
we’d pool our cash and get the Galaxy Express movie laserdisc set and fansub
the sequel
Adieu Galaxy Express, and then Viz released both films in subtitled
and dubbed versions.
Now in the 21
st
century,
Discotek has released both films – and the third 999 film,
Eternal Fantasy -
on DVD.
There’s nothing like seeing a movie with a crowd of
strangers to force an objective evaluation, and the recent screening
highlighted what may be the film’s weakest point; how well it works with people who don’t already know who
Harlock and Emeraldas and Tochiro are. Japanese audiences in 1979 were likely
familiar with the
Captain Harlock and
999 television anime, or they’d read the
Harlock manga in Play Comic or the Shonen King
999 manga serial.
To be fair, the 999 movie is quick to educate
us – not five minutes in, we get a loving zoom of Harlock’s wanted poster on a
crumbling Megalopolis wall, and elementary adventure-movie macguffin-hunting
brings the three characters into the film with reasonable logic.
While it’s
still not really clear who Emeraldas is or what she does, top marks for
strangeness must go to Tochiro Oyama’s bachelor digs in the guts of a ruined
space battleship, a beautiful if confusing sequence for audiences who hadn’t had
months of Captain Harlock on TV preparing us. You can actually see otaku-nerd
culture seeping into popular culture with this scene – the idea that vital
script elements can come from completely separate media, and if the viewer is
confused as to why the squat little dude is having lightning shot into his body
and as to why this film seems to think it’s important, tough darts, pal.
This might explain why the backstory so meaningful to
Japanese audiences failed to impress execs at New World
when the pic was readied for American release in 1980. Apart from editing out all
the cats, New World made extensive cuts to many sequences, downplayed the
Matsumotoverse callbacks to Tochiro’s mom, and left out tragic 999 waitress
Crystal Claire’s end-of-film sacrifice (which, to be honest, feels superfluous).
Taken in context, New World’s decision to
give Harlock a comedy John Wayne voice almost (almost) makes sense – without
the necessary pop-culture preparation, audiences don’t know or care who Captain
Harlock is; but give Americans a recognizable cultural signifier and suddenly
his archetype fits neatly into our mental picture, as a manly hero who is at
home, as Wayne was, both on the open range and on the bridge of a warship.
I saw this in action last week in Toronto; you can feel the
audience starting to get antsy somewhere out near the orbit of Pluto, not quite
buying into this whole space-train thing, and then suddenly we’re on Heavy
Meldar, the space-western zeitgeist clicks into place, and the crowd relaxes with
an audible sigh of familiarity, able to finally place this film in their mental
filmic landscape, even if they’re still fuzzy on who Harlock, Tochiro, and
Emeraldas are. The screening at
TIFF Bell Lightbox was part of the
TAAFI’s yearly
Toronto animation festival, in
conjunction with the
Japan Foundation, who provided the 35mm print from their
library. The theater was pleasantly filled – we were informed this event had
the largest crowd of any TAAFI event – and I found myself explaining the plot
of
Adieu Galaxy Express afterwards to anyone who would listen, having fallen in
love with this movie all over again. The film had always been on the shortlist
of titles I’ve sought out on the big screen; we finally got to see an uncut
Nausicaa in North American cinemas with the recent Ghibli retrospective, and if
they can ever get the
Macross rights cleared up maybe I can cross that one off
my bucket list, too. However, a pass on the
Galaxy Express 999 was always my
anime-cinema dream, now realized thanks to TAAFI, the Japan Foundation, the
TIFF Bell Lightbox, and the boundless generosity of mysterious beauties from space.
-Dave Merrill
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