One of the (many) cool things that the Criterion Channel does is feature the occasional interesting independent or international film that has just left the theaters (that's a huge gift for folks in Vermont - and so many parts of the country - who never had the chance to see it in the theater in the first place). With that in mind, last night I watched Neo Sora's film Happyend. It tells the story of a number of Japanese high school students - Yuta (Hayato Kurihara), Kou (Yukito Hidaka), Ata-chan (Yuta Hayashi), Ming (Shina Peng), Tomu (Arazi), and Fumi (Kilala Inori) - as they have fun but also face the challenges of living through an increasingly authoritarian school and Japan. Halfway through I had decided to bump one of the films from my Images of Fascism class and replace it with Happend, but by the end I had talked myself out of it. To quote, well, myself, in too many responses to student essays, I just don't think it came together as cleanly as it might have - or maybe just as cleanly as I thought it had the potential to be (the director might well have considered it fully-realized). I guess I felt that the director couldn't decide whether the goal was a commentary on our techno-authoritarian dystopian age or the Breakfast Club. That definitely sounds harsher than it's intended, because I really liked it and I heartily recommend that you watch it (come on, get the Criterion Channel already!). Maybe this is just the teacher in me: we're always more frustrated by A student papers that were a couple more drafts away from brilliance than C students who are giving you all they have.

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