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Yamazaki on UY and "Lum the Forever"
information compiled by - Paul Corrigan
Kazuo Yamazaki has let slip a few clues (though not as many as some
might like) regarding _Lum the Forever_. When a guest at the 1997 Anime
Expo, he was asked during a panel discussion about his tenure as director
of _Urusei Yatsura_. "I'll speak honestly now," he facetiously began, then
went on:
_Urusei Yatsura_ was a show I signed up for, having wanted to do. I
ended up for various reasons as the director on the fourth movie, _Lum the
Forever_. I gave my thoughts to that movie--the work of a director is a
really tough job, and about that time I was starting to want to get out of
it. Around that time, working on the staff of UY, I was getting a lot of
letters from fans, saying how much they loved Lum and whatnot. I wanted to
tell them that they should not focus their entire lives on the series but
that they should move out, get some exposure to real life, get a life. (1)
He had the good sense to laugh as he said it, given that he was in a
room presumably full of the same sort of _otaku_ he had just attacked--and
UY arguably always had through (for instance) the characters of Megane and
his gang.
Yamazaki went on to briefly explain _Lum the Forever_, at the same time
revealing his present dissatisfaction with the film:
_Life's too precious to be wasted: that's the kind of message I put
into the movie._ But in retrospect, I think I made a mistake there, and I
regret it somewhat.
The story I'd wanted to tell was about the _Urusei Yatsura_ world, the
Tomobiki-cho, being one living organism. Within that organism, the foreign
object called "Lum" would be intruding. There was the process of the
various "immunological" responses of the organism called Tomobiki-cho
trying to assimilate Lum, and the process of that turning into a synergy.
I don't think I was as skilled back then, when I made _Lum the Forever_.
When it came out in the theaters, I bought a ticket and went to see the
movie. And when the movie was over, I was leaving the theater, and saw two
boys, about 10 or eleven years old, come out, looking rather disappointed,
and one of them kicked the floor and spat. Hence, I regretted what I made,
and I've sworn never to make a work that lacked entertainment value, even
if it had a serious message in it. (2)
Yamazaki did not think the lives of the _otaku_ cheap enough to be
wasted on UY; if the little short of hellish description of his daily
routine as director he gave later in the discussion was accurate, he may
well have considered that his own was being just so wasted, something he
evidently did not want:
The typical work day would have been that we'd get up at 9 a.m. from
the studio floor...and all the staff would be getting out of their
sleeping bags. Aound 10 a.m., the cel painting staff, who were mostly
girls, would be coming over, so we'd get up before then and go to a nearby
cafe for breakfast, and then go to work until midnight. Around one or two
a.m. we'd go get some dinner, and maybe something to drink, and then crawl
back into our sleeping bags. Three hundred and sixty-five days a year. The
team consisted of about five or six members--for them, that's what it was
like for two whole years. No "Happy New Year" or anything. (3)
"But it was fun," he was quick to add; but this repetitive schedule,
with he and his fellows emerging only for food, must have perhaps seemed
too much like his predecessor's _Beautiful Dreamer_ for his liking, a life
anybody would gladly be rid of. Signs of Yamazaki's fatigue with UY and
its cult are clearly present in _Lum the Forever_, not least of which is
the air of finality to the whole exercise. In the very last scene, the TVs
that have been displaying Lum's face for five years finally shut off, as
if to say the show's over. It is the spirit of Tomobiki itself that says
it will be content to survive on the memories of Tomobiki alone--for
memories are all that will remain of _Urusei Yatsura_.
To call _Lum the Forever_ "lacking in entertainment" is probably
exaggeration. It must be admitted, however, that a major problem with it
is that it simply isn't very funny. UY is comedy, after all, and even at
its most profound there were always plenty of laughs, even though in (say)
_Beautiful Dreamer_ they may have been secondary to the film's purpose. In
_Lum the Forever, however, Yamazaki's frustrations seem such as to make
him forget to be lighthearted now again. Also, even given the film's high
intellectual level, much of it is highly confused and opaque even to the
most attentive viewer, obscuring the message Yamazaki wished to convey. It
is not clear in many places just what Yamazaki could have had in mind, for
instance in describing the war of Mendo against Mizunokoji when his target
was the frozen dreams.
Most ironically of all, though, the only ones who may have found the
film enjoyable were the _otaku_ the film had been intended to attack
(though in many cases only by complete misinterpretation, coming to think
of Lum as a goddess-like figure when Yamazaki had been at pains to deny
anything that suggested Lum ought to dominate life even in Tomobiki, much
less in real life). Not only did the film's level of cerebrality and its
confused construction serve to alienate the audience at which it was
supposedly directed (Takahashi's audience of middle-school age boys), but
only the _otaku_ of college age or even older would have had the will or
ability to know UY well enough to catch all the obscure references from a
series that had run at the end for four and a half years. In that time UY
had, under Yamazaki as well as Oshii, had been increasingly constructed
for the edification of often well-educated animation fans with much more
refined cinematic tastes, ones who could appreciate something like _Lum
the Forever_, in the end alienated the original manga's audience.
_Lum the Forever_ may have been the reason Rumiko Takahashi, who had
been unimpressed with Oshii's and Yamazaki's visions of UY from their
films refused permission to make any more movies after _The Final
Chapter_, and also, perhaps, why Viz decided to dub _Ranma 1/2_ instead of
UY. The film helped to cement UY's reputation as definitely a series for
connoiseurs of Japanese animation only. That Viz might have done a much
better job with marketing UY than did AnimEigo is quite possible; but
_Ranma 1/2_ is very accessible (if not always well plotted), and Viz, like
most others in the industry (AnimEigo only got UY because nobody in the US
was interested in it), may have feared that even a well-marketed UY would
fail because "nobody would get it."
References
1. "Meet Kazuo Yamazaki." _Animerica_, vol. 5, no. 10 (October 1997),
p. 8.
2. Ibid. (Emphasis supplied.)
3. Ibid., p. 24.
Paul Corrigan
pcorrig@uoft02.utoledo.edu
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