Thursday, November 15, 2012

The Master Of Go, reviewed



This is a very quiet book, in a good way.  The aging Go master plays his retirement match against a young challenger.  There is intentionally no suspense as to the outcome.  We know early on that the Master narrowly loses.  To Western eyes, this novel is a strange hybrid of truth and fiction, as it is based on Kawabata's actual reporting of a real match.  The names and a few details are changed, but the match is the match as it actually happened, and we can follow it through the Go diagrams throughout the book.  I gather from outside reading that this truth-fiction hybridization is a common genre in Japan.

Other points of interest:

1. The relationship between the Master and the challenger, called Otaké here.  There is tension about the rules of the final match, which takes place over six months with what seem like absurdly long time constraints.  The players take upwards of three hours to make a single move.  The game adjourns for weeks at a time as the players deal with health issues (the Master is dying).  The immense strain of the match leads each player to threaten to forfeit as schedule changes are demanded by the other.  Yet, completely unlike a high-stakes modern chess match, the players chat with each other over the board, and are friendly and social in the off hours.    This aspect is subtly (probably much too subtly for a foreigner to fully grasp) inhabiting the Japanese culture of honor, hospitality, and the exalted position of elders.  There is certainly some commentary on the changing of the culture, with Kawabata appearing to mourn the loss of the traditional to the ways of modernism.

2. Barely commented on but overshadowing all is the fact that this all takes place at the beginning of World War II, and Kawabata wrote the novel in the early 1950s.  So he and we know that while Otaké's modern ways are taking over from the elderly Master, the ordered, mannered worlds of both are about to be overrun by unimaginable catastrophe.

3. Go is presented as an almost impossibly demanding game, which takes an enormous physical toll on the players (it essentially kills the Master).  For relaxation in the down times, they frequently play other games (billiards, mah-jong, and shogi) with each other.  The Master in particular seems to know of no other way to spend his time than the mental challenges of game play.  Yet Go is kept separate.  Neither the Master nor Otaké is ever seen playing a casual game of Go.  We do see a casual game on a train, between the author/reporter and an American.  The American is terrible, but worse than that to Kawabata's eyes is his attitude.  He plays quickly and carelessly and does not mind that he loses.  This entirely violates the Japanese view of how the game is to be played.  At the end of the book, after the final title match, the Master is said to be going somewhat senile.  At that point he begins to play casually with his students.  He makes elementary errors and all are sad to see it.  It is clear that Kawabata is commenting somehow on top-level Go's place in Japanese culture, but again it probably takes more cultural familiarity than I have to fully appreciate the message.

4. A key point in the match is the use of sealed moves at adjournment.  This is an entirely noncontroversial element of modern chess.  If an unfinished match is breaking for the day, the player who makes the last move would be at a substantial disadvantage, as the other player would have hours and hours of uncharged time to plot his next move.  So instead, the final move of the day is sealed in an envelope, unseen by anyone else.  It is opened and executed at the start of the next session.  Any advantage is neutralized.  I gather that Japanese Go up until the 1920s or 1930s was rather biased in favor of the higher level player, who could call adjournments more or less at will.  With moves not being sealed at that time, he was thus at a substantial unfair advantage.  The Master's retirement match by contrast uses sealed moves.  A key plot point occurs in the middle of the game, when combat is at its fiercest.  Otaké seals a move, and when it is opened, the Master and many of the observers feel that it is somehow an unfair move.  It is described as ruining what to that point had been a fine, artful match.  After this move, the Master is peeved at the slight and makes a hasty reply move that turns out to be the fateful mistake which loses the match.  This again is where I fail to comprehend the culture being described.  In Go, you can play your stone on any open point, with a few simple exceptions (the stone can't be committing suicide, and it can't result in a board that exactly repeats a previous board).  Otaké's move does neither of these things, it is just surprising, as it is far away from the immediate combat zone.  But that in itself is not all that unusual; the essence of Go is balance.  Safety vs. influence, the local fight vs. the global picture, etc.  Why was the sealed move viewed as bad form?  One possibility is that it is a move that forces a given response.  In that respect it does not function as a true sealed move should, because in knowing what the Master's response would be, Otaké has created a situation which gives him the full adjournment advantage.  To modern analytical eyes, this would be a perfectly fair tactic.  But perhaps unwritten rules about the way the game is supposed to be played dominate here.

On the other hand, the Master's actual reply does not appear to be forced.  In fact it is considered something of a surprising blunder rather than a rote reply.  Or is that the point, that the Master is annoyed and consciously refuses to play the best move because Otaké has had the full adjournment to think about his response to it?  Or is there some entire other norm that Otaké's move has violated?

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Damsels In Distress

After a month in theaters, Damsels In Distress appears to be a flop.  It might not gross a million dollars in the US, a hurdle cleared by the lamest of slasher movie sequels these days.  It was here in Norfolk for a single showing a day at the lone art house theater.  I saw it on the opening Saturday and there were maybe ten people in the audience.  It's gone now, after one week.  That has to be quite a disappointment for Whit Stillman, given that it's his first movie in fourteen years.  His previous, The Last Days Of Disco, also lost money.  He had many attempted projects that didn't make it to production in the interim. The public does not appear to be swept away by Stillmania.

The reviews of Damsels are meanwhile entertainingly mixed.  A lot of people really hated this movie, calling it twee, plotless, and insufferable.  Another group really loved it.  Count me among the latter.  (Really, isn't a movie that draws such a split reaction likely to be of more interest than one that draws a uniformly positive but unenthusiastic reaction?  A generic Ebert three star?)

All of Stillman's films concern the young--either college students (Damsels, Metropolitan), or just out (Barcelona, Last Days Of Disco).  Stillman's young people share three primary characteristics: 1. They're trying to figure out who they are. 2. They're trying to figure out the characteristics of a well-lived life. 3. They do these things by trying on roles, in hopes that one will feel right and stick.  Thus they speak in a somewhat stilted, affected manner, but do so with a deep sense of honesty which manages to fit comfortably with the muted dishonesty of the pretense.  That is, they're putting on airs, but with good intent.  I find myself a big fan of this earnestness, which is probably the number one reason I'm such a Stillman fan.  (I even read his entertainingly off-kilter novelization of The Last Days Of Disco, highly recommended.)

Damsels plays in a more absurdist key than the previous three movies.  The beliefs espoused Violet Wister (played by Greta Gerwig) are siller even than those of the utopian socialists and business literature devotees of Metropolitan and Barcelona.  Violet's twin pillars are the emotionally restorative powers of international dance crazes, and the civilizing influence of the proper women on distinctly unpromising frat boys.  Stillman lets us know that though he loves them and frequently agrees with them, he thinks Violet and her elegant posse are more or less nuts.  In one scene, this revelation relies on the audience knowing that Johann rather than Richard Strauss is the waltz king.  Naturally I approve of such a low-key joke, given the name of this blog.  Making the lead characters more obviously emotionally damaged is a bit of a departure from the previous movies.  Maybe this is the result of Stillman's increasing temporal distance from his subjects, given that he's 62 now.

Smartphones and tablets are completely ignored here, which I think is a wise approach.  Those devices have taken over daily life these days.  Movies haven't yet figured out how to handle this organically.  Sometimes a self-consciously hip (and therefore soon to be dated) style is used where characters ostentatiously post things to Facebook.  Other times precious plot minutes are wasted disposing of phones so that misunderstandings and hectic races to the airport can still occur.  Stillman just pretends the networked world away, preferring to shoot for the timelessness of people talking only to the people in their immediate proximity.

If it's still around your area, go help it clear the million dollar mark.  Otherwise, get it on Netflix, unfortunately probably available within a month.

Footnote: the sound is terrible, perhaps a budget casualty.  I thought it might have been just my theater, but it's mentioned in other reviews.  Something to clear up for the Criterion release.


Thursday, April 26, 2012

Sort of infuriating


Lev Grossman's The Magicians.  It basically took the love of children's fantasy books like Harry Potter and the Narnia series and crapped all over them.  What was the point of  all that?  Just the shock value of putting sex, drugs, copious drinking, depression and a general sense of dissoluteness into a book with magic and talking animals and such?  I won't deny the cleverness of Grossman's constructions and world-building.  But it mostly felt as if he just borrowed glory to tear it down.  Like the scorpion stinging the frog in the middle of the river.  If Narnia and Hogwarts are so empty and stupid, why do you think your book slagging them to be worthwhile?  

The very worst touch was a silly little throwaway.  Grossman posits a set of children's fantasy books called the Fillory series, which his main characters, teenaged magicians in the contemporary United States, all read as children.  Some read it obsessively.  Then they get to go to Fillory and find it a decidedly nonheroic, cutthroat place.  At the very end, Grossman reveals that Christopher Plover, the author of the Fillory books, and something of a stand-in for C. S. Lewis, was a pedophile.  It advances the plot not one whit.  It does nothing to enrich the themes of the book.  

Lots of people have problems with the Narnia series.  The Christian allegories are sort of facile.  The casual British Empire racism is barely concealed.  There is the famous problem of Susan--the contempt Lewis shows for women who outgrow childhood.  That's all real and worth much adult discussion and criticism.  Philip Pullman has made countering C. S. Lewis practically his life's work.  But I think that opposition is at least somewhat grounded in respect for the Narnia books as good, solid stories.  I don't think he'd have bothered if he just thought the books sucked.  At any rate, Pullman does not casually, gratuitously call Lewis a child rapist as Grossman does.  It could be argued that Plover isn't a direct stand-in, but I think it's close enough.

I guess my anger means I similarly think The Magicians is also good enough to merit anger, rather than bored dismissal.  That's reasonable.  As I said, The Magicians is not an uninteresting book.  Grossman is obviously trying for some larger thematic claims about the role of fantasy in complicated adult lives, among other things.  It's a little too on-the-nose at times, particularly in a late scene in which the humans visiting Fillory interrogate the local god (an Aslan surrogate) with basic questions on the problem of evil.  (It reads a bit like a prose translation of XTC's bitter Dear God.)  

Not sure I'll read the sequel, The Magician King.  If it's just more young magicians killing their lost illusions with alcohol, I may pass.  I'm curious to see if anything better develops though.  The reviews are somewhat encouraging.