Posts Tagged ‘sanctuary’

The world is not beautiful, therefore it is

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

Sanctuary

Is apathy reason enough for revolution?

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Sanctuary: Manly tears*infinityThe premise of Sanctuary is easy enough to grasp: revolution, but why? Ostensibly, there’s nothing wrong with living in a first-world country like Japan. The standard of living is good, while education, health and technology is all fine. In other words, life is easy, but that’s precisely the problem.

We live in an apathetic world, we get our kicks from movies, anime and manga. There’s nothing wrong with that, but it isn’t real, either. It’s just escapism. I know it’s easy for me to write this now, living in comfort and with nothing serious to complain about, it’s not like I’m dissatisfied with life or anything, but at the moment it’s just… vanilla, which is kind of the point of Sanctuary. These two guys want to shake up Japan, not because it’s governed by men with evil intent, but because the younger people seem to be willing to apathetically live out their lives within a long established system of business, where there’s no ambition in their eyes, no desire to change things, no nothing, and the question is, is that how people should live?

The fictional Hojo and Asami survived the Cambodian genocide, where they saw thousands of people die for insane reasons. This is important because it grants their burning ambition a hellish context. Having survived the killing fields of Cambodia, they have no intention of wasting their lives sitting behind a desk every day; they understand that life is short and that youth is no boundary; all you need is a dream and confidence enough to back it up. So, is apathy reason enough for revolution? Hell yes.

Art with a political agenda

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Interesting debate in SanctuaryIt’s difficult to know how to react to art with a political agenda. I couldn’t say if Sanctuary is swinging towards the right or left, but that it is developing an ideology at all has left me feeling a bit concerned, because when the characters start arguing about how Japan is good at this and America is bad at that, it’s like the art itself is trying to influence my real opinions of these countries, and considering the origins of the debate (i.e. Japan), I feel a bit uncomfortable about it all.

Perhaps the problem is that I’m not used to reading nationalistic text that isn’t of Western (as in UK and North American) origin? Obviously I’m not Japanese, so my views are a tad more objective when it comes to reading things like this; any sign of aggression seems to set off my internal alarm bells, but at the same time, it is fascinating to read and understand how some Japanese have come to view their country’s state (and the world at large) from the inside looking out.

This is cool

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

Sanctuary: making cigerettes cool again

I think we’ve established that Sanctuary is cool. It’s the way he holds his cigarette, the way he’s staring up at the stars. He’s lost in thought, remembering something sad. Great art doesn’t need words, it’s evocative, it has personality. A scruffy beard and his hands in his pockets. The night sky.

GAR politics

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

Sanctuary: Politics the old fashioned way

You don’t need to understand the context of this strip, just take in the visceral attitude of the guy, the glasses and the slick hair-cut, and imagine.