Sakamoto does a shallow dive into the world of AV
Mosaic is a short drama set in the world of AV (adult video) production in Japan, and so of course you can expect a lot of explicit sex, rape scenarios, sexual exploitation, and frank talk about all of those subjects. But the issues with this series have relatively little to do with its subject matter.
It begins as a fish out of water story of its antihero protagonist Riichi who has left his job in the world of finance and has returned to his small home town only to discover that it has become a factory town for Galaxyz, a large AV production company. His parents work in post-production applying the mosaics covering the genitals that make AV videos legal in Japan, and Riichi is soon pulled into the company as part of the financial group within the company.
The narrative is conveyed in relatively short vignettes and rapid dialogue, and there is often an intentional confusion between what is meant to be being shown diegetically in Riichi's life and what is being filmed by Galaxyz for release as part of their porn films. At least at the the beginning of the series this ambiguity is meant to reflect Riichi's confusion and disorientation as he returns to find the hometown completely turned upside down by the influence of Galaxyz on the local economy,
As a writer Sakamoto loves to try different things, and here I am guessing that the intention was to write bits of scenes and dialogue that when pieced together would reveal a larger picture. That is, the writing style itself is meant to be a mosaic. Great idea. Does it work? No. Not at all. (In my opinion, of course.) There just is not enough narrative glue to hold this story together. Only two or three of the characters have any kind of back story, and some of the women characters in particular are so poorly limned that it can be hard to tell them apart. And while there is a story here of people being corrupted by money, men being corrupted by readily available sex, and government officials literally getting away with murder, it's one that I think we've all seen before in better and less confusing forms. It also suffers from issues similar that of trying to make a war film with an antiwar message: what you see on screen glorifies the subject no matter what the characters are saying about it.
All that being said, Sakamoto does have things to say that are worth hearing, and if you make it through the first few scenes, I recommend that you stick with it through the final episode: the whole series is shorter than some movies, and Riichi's love interest, Momoko, gets some excellent monologues in episode 5.
It begins as a fish out of water story of its antihero protagonist Riichi who has left his job in the world of finance and has returned to his small home town only to discover that it has become a factory town for Galaxyz, a large AV production company. His parents work in post-production applying the mosaics covering the genitals that make AV videos legal in Japan, and Riichi is soon pulled into the company as part of the financial group within the company.
The narrative is conveyed in relatively short vignettes and rapid dialogue, and there is often an intentional confusion between what is meant to be being shown diegetically in Riichi's life and what is being filmed by Galaxyz for release as part of their porn films. At least at the the beginning of the series this ambiguity is meant to reflect Riichi's confusion and disorientation as he returns to find the hometown completely turned upside down by the influence of Galaxyz on the local economy,
As a writer Sakamoto loves to try different things, and here I am guessing that the intention was to write bits of scenes and dialogue that when pieced together would reveal a larger picture. That is, the writing style itself is meant to be a mosaic. Great idea. Does it work? No. Not at all. (In my opinion, of course.) There just is not enough narrative glue to hold this story together. Only two or three of the characters have any kind of back story, and some of the women characters in particular are so poorly limned that it can be hard to tell them apart. And while there is a story here of people being corrupted by money, men being corrupted by readily available sex, and government officials literally getting away with murder, it's one that I think we've all seen before in better and less confusing forms. It also suffers from issues similar that of trying to make a war film with an antiwar message: what you see on screen glorifies the subject no matter what the characters are saying about it.
All that being said, Sakamoto does have things to say that are worth hearing, and if you make it through the first few scenes, I recommend that you stick with it through the final episode: the whole series is shorter than some movies, and Riichi's love interest, Momoko, gets some excellent monologues in episode 5.
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