Movies: The Man Who Stole The Sun

By Serdar Yegulalp on 2002-07-07 23:46:26-04:00 No comments


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When Dr. Strangelove, or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb appeared in theaters, there were more than a few critics who hated the movie on principle; after all, nuclear war was nothing any sane person could laugh at. Except, of course, that black humor and comedy are precisely how people have always dealt with the cruelest and most horrible of subjects. Today, complaining about Dr. Strangelove seems almost quaint—perhaps not so much a sign that we are desensitized to the whole apocalypse thing (when does the end of the world ever really stop being scary?) as that we have stopped wasting time with silly grousing about art being in bad taste.

That said, I have no idea how people today are going to respond to The Man Who Stole the Sun, which is to nuclear terrorism what Dr. Strangelove was to nuclear war. It’s a black-comedy rendition of a homebrew doomsday scenario, and its sheer outlandishness threw me off to such a degree that it took me two screenings to just get the movie’s tone nailed down. I remembered how people had described William S. Burroughs’s unclassifiable Naked Lunch as “failed science fiction”. Sun feels at first like a failed thriller, until you realize the movie’s weird, off-kilter humor is entirely the point, and is meant to be as grimly ironic as it is funny. You laugh, and then you feel a chill wind blowing through you for laughing. The movie knows exactly what it’s doing.

Frustrated high-school physics teacher Makoto snatches upsome PU-238 to build his own homemade atomic bomb.

Sun’s antihero is Makoto, a high school science teacher (played by then-teen heartthrob Kenji Sawada) who has been making plans to steal fissionables from a local nuclear power plant and brew up his own atomic bomb. He's a shaggy-haired, unassuming fellow who lives alone in a cluttered apartment with his cat and is made fun of by his students, and his personality quirks—like the mad-dog way he runs the school obstacle course at recess—make him less endearing than puzzling. One day while on a field trip with his class, his bus is hijacked by a gun-wielding lunatic, and he's rescued by a tough-as-leather detective, Yamashita (Bunta Sugawara, veteran of countless yakuza movies). Yamashita and Makoto are honored as heroes.

Right after this, Makoto wastes no time squeezing himself into black fatigues and doing his Mission: Impossible routine to steal the plutonium. The movie telegraphs its satirical intent in this scene by switching to a hilariously stylized editing method that isn't reprised elsewhere in the film, a series of comical freeze-frames that reduce his tussling with the plant’s security guards to a Keystone Kops two-reeler. Pu-239 in hand, Makoto heads home, uncorks the isotopes, and starts brewing up death—just enough fissionable material for two bombs. The first is his; the second, a deliberate dud with just enough radioactive material in it to show up on a Geiger counter, he dumps in a public lavatory as his calling card. “I’m returning some of what I stole,” he gleefully tells the cops, “but in a different container.”

In his public life, Makoto is a hero for aiding police detective Yamashitathwart an attempted hijacking of his school bus.

The police are of course deeply alarmed, and as luck would have it, Yamashita himself is appointed to the case. He has no idea Makoto is the whacko behind the whole thing—the few times they speak on the phone, Makoto is disguised behind an electronic voice scrambler—but he approaches the job with the straight-arrow zeal you’d expect. Makoto, on the other hand, has a different problem: now that he has the bomb, he can’t think of much to do with it except to blackmail the powers that be into doing faintly boorish things—like actually showing televised baseball games all the way through, instead of cutting them short after the seventh inning stretch. Like other tyrants who suddenly come into power, he never thought about what to actually do with it except wield it like a club.

Another plot develops as well, this one involving a female radio DJ that Makoto decides to use as his mouthpiece. She’s spunky, a touch airheaded, but basically well-meaning, and like many people who come into contact with someone who’s gone off the deep end, she finds Makoto fascinating rather than appalling—maybe only because he hasn’t actually killed anyone with his bomb yet. Yamashita approaches her as well and tries to deal with her like a competing lover: there’s a scene on a rooftop with him, and a scene at the waterfront with Makoto, that play out like parodies or dark reversals of the exact same sorts of scenes in romances. She sees Makoto as her way to make herself all the more famous, and only too late does Makoto realize she’s perfectly sincere about that.

On-air personality "DJ Zero" gets more involved with Makoto then Yamashita finds comfortable.

Sun devotes a surprising amount of time—almost a solid half-hour—to watching Makoto derive his fissionables and assemble the bomb itself out of household parts he’s scavenged in Tokyo’s tech-trendy Akihabara district (although I suspect many key steps in the bomb-making process have been omitted for the sake of public safety). There’s almost no dialogue and very little action, but the sequence is amazingly suspenseful all the same, with most of the suspense generated by the sheer fact of what he’s doing. That and the fact that if he messes up, he’s dead, and we are also given a telling early clue to Makoto’s fate when the first batch of plutonium metal to be melted down catches fire in his oven, spews radioactive dust through his apartment, and makes his Geiger counter crackle like a bag of Jiffy-Pop.

Then, in the next scene, he takes out a massive short-term loan that he clearly never intends to repay (“Don’t waste it gambling”, the loan shark tells him), and buys an electric kiln to finish the job. If he’s a dead man walking, he might as well not wimp out. When he’s finally done, he idiot-dances around his apartment with the stereo blasting out Bob Marley’s “Get Up Stand Up”, and pours out a beer over his head like a marathon runner as the image grows white and washed-out—like film exposed to a nuclear blast. In another no-less-goofy shot, he cuddles up to his freshly-stolen canister of plutonium in bed like it's a teddy bear. Tellingly, the only person who calls him out on his nascent death wish is Yamashita himself, and at the last possible moment. Why would someone steal PU-238 and cobble together a basement nuke unless they wanted to die as infamously as they could? Killing other people is just a fringe benefit.

The goofy and the grim sit side-by-side in this film without either one seeming out of place.

Funny that I should come back to this movie right as Iran rattles its nuclear saber and North Korea has detonated its first (known) A-bomb test. Current events don’t just make the movie more relevant; they give it a fresh new set of interpretations. Makoto is his own “rogue state”, and his actions work as allegories for how some countries try to develop the bomb off the record: by stealing fissionable material, using knowledge that’s now publicly available, and then blackmailing other countries with the finished product (or the threat of same). The most Makoto can come up with after his baseball blackmail is to get the Rolling Stones to come perform in Japan despite their drug bust, and it’s not clear he even particularly cares about seeing them. And he even admits as much: one night he calls up the DJ and admits he has no idea what to do with his creation. She, being all the more naïve, thinks she can give him that much more purpose.

One of the things I admire most in a movie is when it creates a broad range of reactions in its audience. I showed Sun to several friends of mine, and their responses to it were in every sector of the map. One loved it immediately; another admired it but had no idea what to make of it; a third hated every second of it, especially the movie’s calculatedly over-the-top climax. The strangest thing of all was that every single one of these incredibly divergent responses stemmed from the same sentiment: Who in their right mind makes nuclear terrorism a laughing matter? Surely no one who takes it seriously. Then again, sometimes the only way to get perspective on the worst things in our lives is to laugh at them, fearlessly and shamelessly. That’s this movie’s philosophy.

ximdb=tt0194426日本対俺Me Vs. Japan笑う原爆The Laughing A-BombプルトニウムラブPlutonium Love日本を盗んだ男The Man Who Stole Japan==ext
Tags: Japan movies review