I always go into live action animé/manga adaptations with cautious optimism. When Netflix first announced that they were making one for Yu Yu Hakusho, otherwise known as Ghost Files or Ghost Fighter, I was, well, cautiously optimistic.
It’s not like we’ve never had any “good” live action adaptations before. And that’s not counting the One Piece one released this year that was also universally loved. The Rurouni Kenshin movies, in my opinion, are still the best of its kind. It’s not perfect but it’s satisfying in pretty much every aspect.
SPOILER WARNING
Efficient storytelling to start
For at least the first two (2) episodes, Yu Yu Hakusho shared a similar DNA with the Rurouni Kenshin Movies. The costumes were well made, the CGI not immersion-breaking, and the action oh so satisfying. Most importantly, the storytelling was efficient.
The pacing was great, hitting the right marks and skipping stuff from the animé and manga that were very much skippable for a live action adaptation. Some of the changes that really worked for me include aging up Yusuke. In the source material, he is a 14-year-old boy. In Netflix’s take, he is a 17-year-old ‘troublemaker’ which seemed more age-appropriate for his personality and antics.
The choice to use the yokai insects from the get-go, I thought, was also a good decision. It’s an efficient way to introduce the calm and collected mogul Sakyo N. into the fray. Him buying the sinkhole from Mr. Tarugane in exchange for Yukina and all of these being introduced early on was a good set-up.
It establishes Sakyo N. as a calculated madman bent on opening a gateway between the Human World and the Demon World with fearsome yokai in his command. The most fearsome of them all being the Toguro brothers.
Unfortunately, this great set-up was fumbled in Episode 3.
Speed running from midway to the finish line
Most of Episode 2 tackled Yusuke needing to retrieve special, dangerous objects from three yokai: Genki, Kurama, and Hiei. This mostly followed the beats of the source material, tweaking only the part with Hiei.
You see, Hiei is looking for his long-lost sister which happens to be Yukina who is in the custody of Mr. Tarugane who is associated with Sakyo N. This association puts all the puzzle pieces in place for what could have been an interesting conclusion.
But instead of taking advantage of this set-up, the adaptation taps into the speed force, running past and skipping through roughly around 50-episodes of build-up. This resulted in missing crucial emotional beats.
A deeply emotional character death happens so abruptly that even when it’s brought up in the key moment, the reaction to it doesn’t feel earned. The adaptation was more concerned with recreating signature action moments. However, without the build-up, they felt hollow despite how visually impressive they were.
Dark Tournament?
Arguably the best Tournament Arc in all of anime and manga, a live adaptation of the Dark Tournament would have been such a tall task. But had Netflix played their cards right, they could have had a sure-fire green light for at least a couple more seasons.
All the pieces were in place. Netflix’s live action adaptation could have incorporated elements of The Four Saint Beasts and Assault on Tarukane/Sakyo N’s mansion in a couple of episodes. It could have still concluded in Yusuke, Kuwabara, and perhaps the inclusion of Kurama and Hiei, tussling against the Toguro brothers with Yusuke and team coming out on top. And then the post-credits scene showing Toguro isn’t dead after all. (Sidenote: Bui and Karasu should have been saved for Season 2).
The setup was already perfect, but the live action adaptation instead rushed to Team Yusuke squaring off against Team Toguro skipping many important emotional highs.
Still pretty good?
All told, Netflix’s Yu Yu Hakusho is still a fine live action adaptation. It’s best to watch it as a really, really long OVA-type movie rather than a limited series.
The casting, characterizations, action, costume design, and overall production value were near-perfect. All the main characters had the spirit of their source material counterparts. The only casting I wasn’t satisfied with is Sakyo N. I needed him to be a more imposing figure. Botan also isn’t quite the same but this more cutesy version still works for this adaptation.
More than anything, I hope Netflix’s Yu Yu Hakusho encourages those who only watched the live action adaptation to check out either the manga or anime. Those are pieces of art and entertainment that hold up pretty well despite being 30 years old.
Netflix’s Yu Yu Hakusho fires a well-timed and powerful ‘ray gun’/spirit gun but it doesn’t quite finish the job. Hopefully, it’s still enough to merit a second season which gets the emotional beats right.
Entertainment
Forgotten Island is an upcoming film based on Filipino culture
The film features the talents of H.E.R., Liza Soberano, and Lea Salonga.
Despite all the Filipino actors in Hollywood today, it’s still difficult to feel scene in an industry where Filipino stories aren’t as abundant. Now, it’s time for the Philippines to shine. DreamWorks Animation has just released the first trailer for Forgotten Island, an upcoming animated film based on Filipino culture.
Played by H.E.R. and Liza Soberano, Jo and Raissa are childhood best friends about to go their separate ways after one decides to study abroad. However, during their last night together, they discover a magical portal that takes them to Nakali, the Forgotten Island.
The island calls itself home to an army of creatures from Philippine mythology including The Dreaded Manananggal (voiced by Lea Salonga). Dave Franco also plays a weredog named Raww.
Besides the presence of all these monsters, the island has an even more dangerous quirk. The longer that Jo and Raissa stay on Nakali, the more of their memories are erased until they eventually forget each other. It then becomes a race to find their way home before they lose memories of their friendship forever.
Supporting the main cast, the film will feature the voice talents of Manny Jacinto, Jenny Slate, Jo Koy, Dolly de Leon, Amielyn Abellera, and Ronny Chieng. It will be made by Joel Crawford and Januel Mercado, the prolific team behind the critically acclaimed Puss in Boots: The Last Wish.
Forgotten Island premieres in Philippine cinemas on September 23.
Entertainment
Marvel’s Wonder Man greenlit for a rare second season
The first season holds a 91% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.
Is the Marvel Cinematic Universe back? After years of floundering through Phases Four and Five, Marvel Studios is poised to get its mojo back from a flurry of much-awaited Phase Six projects this year, including the second season of Daredevil: Born Again, Spider-Man: Brand New Day, and Avengers: Doomsday. And it all started this year with the critically acclaimed Wonder Man. Now, after the success of that series, a second season is officially in the works.
When its first trailer came out, Wonder Man did not look like anything that Marvel Studios has worked on before. For one, it was incredibly grounded, perhaps overshadowed only by Daredevil: Born Again. Second, it was about the reboot of a fictional superhero movie, itself called Wonder Man.
Actor Simon Williams (played by Yahya Abdul Mateen II) wants to energize his career by performing in the upcoming Wonder Man revival from acclaimed director Von Kovak (Zlatko Burić). Helping the former is the returning Trevor Slattery (Ben Kingsley), who you might remember as the fake Mandarin from Iron Man 3.
Despite how different it looks compared to previous Marvel Studios projects, the series is one of the most acclaimed, currently holding a 91 percent approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Because of this, Wonder Man has received the green light for a second season, via Variety.
A second season is relatively rare for Marvel Studios with its history of one-and-done series. There are some exceptions, though. Loki, for example, ended its run with a second season. Daredevil: Born Again will air its second season very soon (with a third one potentially in the works already).
SEE ALSO: Marvel’s Wolverine gets a release date
There is a part of me that wants to say, if you want a feel-good, wholesome movie experience, go see Disney Pixar’s Hoppers.
But on the flip side, if you want an absurd, humorous, nonsensical-yet-totally-makes-sense dark comedy masked in an animated adventure, then you especially need to see it.
We can always argue that Pixar titles — and animated films in general — cater to adult audiences.
However, slotting in We Bare Bears creator Daniel Chong to helm this latest Disney Pixar masterpiece makes for a spectacularly unique ride.
It’s interestingly odd for a Pixar film, though not so far removed from the family-friendly, “happy ending” trope that feels unrecognizable.
I just personally loved Chong’s approach, driving the narrative with unpredictable humor, sharp twists, and a sci-fi premise that, come to think of it, isn’t actually theoretically impossible.
It’s so entertaining that you briefly forget you’re watching a Pixar movie. There are no dull moments and just a great ride from start to finish.
Nature vs. development
The premise is a familiar real-life dilemma we’ve seen for decades. In Hoppers, the suburban town of Beaverton where our protagonist Mabel lives, is under constant development.
Specifically, there’s the “Beltway Project”, an initiative by Mayor Jerry Generazzo, to connect residential areas to the town center via an elliptical highway.
As in reality, progress comes with collateral damage. In the film’s case, it’s the animals living in the local greenery.
Mabel isn’t going to let that happen. The movie quickly establishes her origin story in the first few minutes.
It shows how her relationship with her aging grandmother formed her special bond with “The Glade”. This lush forest was their favorite hangout as Mabel grew up. And that’s where she begun appreciating and caring for animals deeply.
Years have passed, and Mabel is now a fervent college student activist stopping at nothing to ensure the animals she grew up with can still live peacefully.
She has done a lot, from petitions to convincing people to support her cause. Without that many teammates by her side, she ultimately confronts the mayor herself. This is where she gets challenged to “make something happen” in 48 hours to convince the mayor to call the project off.
From ‘real’ to ‘sci-fi’
At this point, the movie dramatically switches from grounded reality to high-concept sci-fi. Mabel accidentally discovers her professor, Dr. Sam Fairfax, has developed an ambitious machine capable of transferring your consciousness into a robotic animal.
It was meant to observe animals harmlessly from a closer POV, and I guess you can give the professor the benefit of the doubt.
The entire scene reminded me of Jordan Peele’s Get Out briefly, but the tone shifts when Mabel ends up transported into a robot beaver body herself.
There’s an undeniable, hilarious callback to James Cameron’s Avatar here, from the disorienting “syncing” process to Mabel navigating the world in a body that isn’t hers. The only difference, obviously, is she isn’t a blue alien but rather a cute, child-visual-friendly beaver.
She finds new hope with this tech. But just as she thinks she can simply “communicate” with nature, she is slapped with the reality that in the wild, it’s survival of the fittest.
Logic takes a backseat
From then on, logic takes a backseat, yet it’s the kind of film where suspending your disbelief actually is helpful.
The “pond rules” were the only remaining glimmer of scientific accuracy but then, soon, you realize it would have been total chaos in the pond community just from a food chain standpoint.
Mabel gets introduced to King George and the inner workings of the community. There’s even a later chase when a flock of seagulls carry Diane, the gigantic shark referenced as the group’s “apex predator”, which is obviously impossible.
There’s just so many dumb rules (or lack of) that the internal logic made up for an even funnier film. It’s like Zootopia logic, but cranked up to an even more non-sensical level.
Dilemma
Anyway, Mabel discovers that the cause of the animals’ exodus are fake noise trees blasting high-pitched sounds. These are all the work of Mayor Jerry, doing it on purpose so the Beltway Project gets finished.
Mabel’s audacity leads to an Animal Council meeting, which was unlikely to begin with. Here, the leaders who each represent major animal classes come together.
The Insect Queen and her eventual Insect King son Titus get presented as the real antagonists, with a thirst for domination.
Mabel merely suggested scaring the Mayor back, but the animals decide on a dark uprising. With this, Mabel soon realizes the mayor is in danger.
The conflict is triggered further by her own human instinct when she kills the Insect Queen who annoyingly got into her face. This moment sends Titus into a vengeful rage even more.
This deepens Mabel’s dilemma as she now ironically has to side with the humans — including Mayor Jerry — while navigating the animals’ survivalist and territorial tendencies.
Standstill, unlikely team-up
However, after a long chase, and attempts to communicate with the mayor funnily with her impromptu-formed rag-tag squad, Mabel’s robot beaver eventually gets caught.
The Animal Council eventually discovers the humans’ experimental tech and turns it against them. Under the tutelage of Titus, the animals hold the scientists hostage and forces them to create a robotic clone of Jerry.
Titus’ goal was to use the mayor’s own noise trees meant to scare the animals away from The Glade against the humans gathered for a rally.
Just when all seems lost, the real Mayor Jerry shows a sudden flash of compassion. And perhaps with some Messianic complex involved, he hero-balls his way into a robotic beaver himself for a last-ditch effort to stop Titus.
A lot happened in between, presented with a hefty dose of comedy that keeps you guessing the characters’ fates.
Ultimately, the other animals realize Titus’ purely selfish and evil goals, and his plan backfires when he gets eaten by the Amphibian King.
In the end, the animals team up to destroy their community dam to flood a wildfire inadvertently started by Titus moments earlier.
Then, it’s a classic happy ending: The Glade is restored as a protected area, Mabel and Mayor Jerry reconcile, and the protagonist graduates with a job offer from Dr. Sam herself.
Absurdity ’til the end
The absurdity does not even end when the credits roll. In the post-credits scene, we see the elderly man Mabel previously encountered, who mistook her petition form for a grocery list.
After she takes care of her business at The Glade, Mabel sweetly fulfills the elderly man’s simple errand.
And handing the eggs, milk, and bread back to the man? Ants.
It’s as if it was a delightful Ant-Man nod, especially with the parallels between the logic there and in the MCU wherein a neurotransmitter is needed to lead ants in performing such tasks.
Perhaps, a final wink from Daniel Chong, whose direction makes up for a spectacularly good laugh.
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