2024 saw the death of the most journalists recorded in the past 30 years as reported by the CPJ linkhttps://www.msn.com/enus/politics/government/morejournalistskilledin2024thanevermostlybyisraelreport/arAA1z4ISC?ocid=BingNewsSerp . 70 of these were at the hands of the IDF. Over just the past couple of years more journalists have been killed in the IsraelPalestine conflict as were throughout the entirety of World War 2. By the most conservative estimates the death toll in Palestine has reached over 48000 since late 202360 of which were women and children. Millions are now still largely stranded without homes food waterany semblance of their prior livelihoods. They are now relegated back to daytoday existence under even more severe occupation than before not granted the dignity to build their own lives nor even the facade of hope that they will one day live free in their own land. The camera has been watching Have you? 700https://i.post.cc/FRnKvdjb/image.png If unfamiliar with the history of the region FLAG is largely based around the first episode may shock you with just how 1:1 of an analogy it feels like for what weve been seeing happen in Palestine from the news the past couple of years. But this is because this is an ongoing constantly recurring thing. In Palestine in particular we saw a similar cycle occur during the Second Intifada which ended just a year before the release of this. As it goes on the show becomes a less pointed analogy building a nation and circumstance of its own that speaks moreso to a wide breadth of Western intervention in and around the middle east. There are places it certainly falters in this portrayalwhich if this were a normal anime that wasnt so steeped in the reality its attempting to reflect might not be such a problembut Ill get more into that later. 370https://i.post.cc/mrmFqnqn/image.png 370https://i.post.cc/rm8LH831/image.png Now this is the part where I would like to talk about chief director Ryousuke Takahashi and some of the staff in more detail. About how he is one of the key progenitors of the Mecha genre from back in the 80s and how this is probablyyyy something of a final bold creative statement and magnum opus near the end of his prolific career? About how exactly this fits into his extensive catalogue and carries on/differs from projects before it. About how his likely more thoughtful politically emboldened approach to mecha and scifi clearly had an immense influence on the industry and on some of my personal favorite directors like Mamoru Oshii. But Ive yet to actually see anything else from himIm starting kind of in reverse order here. Maybe Ill amend this bit once I have gone back and watched through things like Dougram and Votoms in like a million years from now given their length. Just know this guys pretty dang cool and important. FLAGs largest focus is on its presentation as a foundfootage style fictionalized documentary compiled entirely of video and photos captured by two journalists on the ground of an ongoing military conflict. And outside of the at times wonky looking CGI mechs the production here is pretty ridiculous. It clearly doesnt have the budget to achieve an incredible amount of fidelity in its background art or super impressive character animation most of the time which isnt helped out by the fact that you can only find it in 480p. But it focuses on the small things and goes for hyperdetailed facial expressions and animation for the characters instead. Its dedication to this function of realism and its documentary styling is almost absurd. The analogue look of the footage itself the constant shakiness of the camera the dynamic lighting and lens flare effect the frequent zooming in and out of focus which is the part that especially baffles me. 620https://i.post.cc/JhVmkCrV/image.png Let alone just being a really cool framing devicethey completely sell this foundfootage look and realism in a way I dont know if Ive seen since JinRoh. Its like why didnt they just make this in live action? It wouldve made so much more sense. But leave it to the real robot otakus to pursue an idea that makes no real sense to its extreme. Narratively this is a tricky one to sort out. Its pretty straightforward on the surface. Our main character who is a journalist is assigned to follow a special team put together to retrieve a flag which was stolen by an insurgent group because it has come to be a symbol of peace the UN wants as leverage in the upcoming ceasefire proposal. From there it doesnt shy away from depicting some of the brutal aspects of the military occupation of this country. Tanks and soldiers line the streets. Satellite footage is used to monitor the local population. Residential districts are bombed indiscriminately. 370https://i.post.cc/Z5T4CgGR/image.png 370https://i.post.cc/Y96vWSNF/image.png What is probably the biggest glaring flaw throughout the show is the severely lacking perspective afforded to the victims in the whole conflict the native people. We get pretty much one dedicated episode spent with a nomad group who is living moreso apart from the heart of the violence which is easily the best episode of the series but thats about it. This however kind of feels like its by design. Given its whole framing device and a couple key moments this feels like a story as much about the limitations of journalism as it is about the indispensable importance of it. Well about some of the limitations of it and more pressingly how it can be shaped and narrativized by the powers that oversee it. Our perspective is that of an embedded journalistsomeone who has been chosen by the military to come along with this special operation. This along with a frequent critique of how the UN strives to silence and control the truth displays the shows understanding of the precarious position its in. 620https://i.post.cc/6qhM6RM1/image.png The whole reason its presented as a foundfootage style documentary in the first place rather than a completed one is because in the final episode the UN seizes our main characters belongings and tape for fear of it making them look bad. It is though still kind of difficult to discern any confident messages the show has to offer by the end other than something to the effect of real unadulterated journalism is super important and profound everybody. Its very possible especially for those less familiar with the reallife history its pulling from to walk away from this thinking the UN are still ultimately the unequivocal good guys here. Theyre fighting to retrieve the flag which is a symbol of peace after allas silly of a mission that is in the first place and which really outlines the problem with this kind of interventionism in itself. One key place it fails is in its portrayal of the ruling religious organization present in the nation. Its characterization of them as some ancient assassin death cult is at best lazy and at worst a rather racist caricature. Theres one line at some point about the UNs weaponization of the term terrorist to justify the killing of basically any and all people who get in their waybut theres no real effort to explore resistance groups and reactionary religious organizations gaining prominence as a direct consequence of the violence of the occupation. The UNs presence and intentions in the region are kept quite vague and justified with platitudes like peacekeeping. This rather accurately reflects how we in the west are presented these sorts of conflicts by the mediaBut ultimately I would say FLAGs almost obsessive focus on its presentation ends up getting in the way of it painting a more concrete and nuanced portrait of the conflict its portraying. The narrative details and political substance its offering end up falling a little bit more to the wayside than such a serious reallife circumstance like this deserves. This complete dedication to its presentation does end up working in its favor in some other ways as well though. Its a meticulously technical portrait of modern day warfare. So much time and effort is spent on the detailing of our mechson the look of the camera footage and computer screenson the technology operated to fire missiles at enemy targetson the minutia of its militarized perspective. This functions quite well to reflect the systematic dehumanization those involved have to undergo in order to carry out their orders. Become completely immersed in the detail and procedure of it allthe battlefield as seen through computer screens and infrared camerasand you might just be able to forget that what youre doing is the mass slaughter and displacement of a people. 370https://i.post.cc/vHdGT6z8/image.png 370https://i.post.cc/SNXxYh0V/image.png Our focus is largely relegated to this excessively mechanical view of things. We only get scraps of characters personalities and motivations and thats mostly limited to those within the special operation group our main character is following. Its difficult to fully tell the shows intentions with this but the humanity that is afforded to these characters feels almost entirely upended to me by the wider context it exists within. It all feels almost fleeting by the end. Its again not ultimately written in the most nuanced way but its still a compelling circuitous journey to go on and try to figure out. FLAGs documentary style can make the poetry thats captured throughout often feel almost accidental. A shot of one of our ally Mechs holding one of the native peoples lambs that had run wild captive in its grasp. An offhand comment by a doctor about how the elderly natives living off the land have it rough but they never complain. Moments that feel rich with metaphor and significance pass by in an instantour camera holding on them equally as long as it will hold on the odd shot of a mountain or missile strike. It really is just a dedication to journalism through and through. It gives you all the images to sort through lets you know theres a bias and limitation in the perspective even its showing and allows you to relate it to reality and unpack the significance of it all as you will. 370https://i.post.cc/8C2HGwmb/image.png 370https://i.post.cc/qqDY8SKd/image.png Its an ultimately quite puzzling little series. Its biggest strengths end up creating some of its most crippling weaknesses. An anime that so badly wants to be liveaction but if it were liveaction as is it really wouldnt be very good. Does it really believe in the peace that the titular flag is meant to represent? I dont think so given our rather tragic ending where bombings occur again just weeks after the ceasefire is agreed upon. Does it have the courage to clearly identify the military occupation as the root of the conflict and violence? Also definitely not. What it does offer however is still an incredibly important perspective through a ridiculously impressive production. Real robot otakus all grown up GONE WOKE if you will shifting their focus to real world conflict and the importance of wartime journalism. Its no flawless dialectical breakdown of the war economy and neocolonialism but its a bold effort and a rad little piece of anime history nonetheless. 700https://i.post.cc/pX4Vv167/image.png Here are a couple really incredible places working to provide lifesaving aid for those currently suffering in palestine that you can support if you are able: https://www.anera.org/ https://www.palestinercs.org/en https://upaconnect.org https://www.mecaforpeace.org/
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