![]() |
Image taken from filmaffinity.com |
The film of the week was Perfect Blue by director Satoshi Kon, though the film was based off a novel written by Yoshikazu Takeuchi. I mention the director because he is known for psychological films. Most of which dealt with the blending of reality and imagination. Perfect Blue is a great example of this. The entire movie is completely mental and shows how one can lose control of their identity, or no longer be aware of their true identity because they fuse the real aspects of their lives with their imagination… which overall completely spirals out of control.
![]() |
Image taken from anime.com |
The main character and victim is Mima. She is an innocent young girl and at the start of the movie is part of the j-pop band, CHAM!, because she moved from her rural town to the city to become a singer. Eventually her office manager, Mr.Tadokoro pushes for her to be strictly an actress and dropping out of CHAM! This really pisses off her fans… especially the obsessed ones like Me-Mania and Rumi. Those two psychopaths overly obsess about what Mima does in her life. They try to take her identity as their own and keep it as the innocent pop idol Mima… not the adult actress Mima. It is accomplished through the website “Mima’s Room” and the crazy things Rumi does in regards to manipulating Me-Mania as well as murdering all the people that changed Mima into an adult and stripping her of her initial innocence.
The entire film shows a transition from innocence to maturity in a sense. It is accompanied by mental identity crisis of course. Regardless, Mima’s career change displays her change from ‘childhood’ to ‘adulthood’ in image but she does still seem naïve in personality. Her pop idol image consisted of pink, whites all young girl colors which reflected the style of her room as well (full of stuffed animals and whatnot). Her actress image seems scandalous once she takes on the challenge of a rape scene after being told what it could do to her. That scene and everything following strips her completely of innoncence. They even make her into a sex icon. Although in both careers she had men ogling at her, I just believe it was moreso after the shift. Regardless, such an industry thinks that sex sells so most, if not all, female celebrities may go through what Mima has, it just depends on how they handle. Some probably became traumatized, and other saw it as no harm at all.
![]() |
Image taken from filmcritic.com |
Overall, Perfect Blue was a good film and had a nice art style… despite all the violence I suppose. I’m not too fond of gory violence in movies, but I think more is to come and I’ll have to find a way to adjust. I will say the film has made me more paranoid as of late. And I already had a heightened awareness of things before. No worries, I won’t go identity crisis mental. LOL But I may be a little jumpy about things.