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BlackJack

A renegade surgeon faces a plague of supermen

* BlackJack
* Manga Video
* $24.95 Subtitled
* $19.95 Dubbed (Reviewed)
* 90 Minutes

Review by Tasha Robinson

BlackJack is a renegade surgeon, an unlicensed genius who affects a mercenary air and a heartless demeanor. He works for the rich, commanding multimillion-dollar fees for his unparalleled services, though he always seems to come through for the poor, disadvantaged and innocent in the end. But whether working for cash or veiled compassion, he rarely fails. So when a 14-year-old patient of his dies of an apparent relapse of a heart condition BlackJack had treated, the black-market doctor is badly shaken.

Our Pick: A

The autopsy only deepens his confusion. The teenager's internal organs show signs of advanced decay, typical of an elderly woman's--decay that wasn't there when BlackJack operated. As he concentrates on the case, he ignores a series of increasingly insistent recruiting calls from an anonymous woman with an unstated problem and a blank check. But when the woman kidnaps his young assistant, he's forced to deal with her.

For the past two years, so-called "supermen" have been appearing all over the globe--ordinary individuals who suddenly developed extraordinary, world-class physical or mental talents. Now they're all dying horribly, of the same rapid necrosis that killed BlackJack's young patient. He finds himself working with the best reseachers and medical minds money can buy, looking for a cure to the syndrome. But it quickly becomes obvious that he really needs to be looking for the cause of the superman phenomenon, while he still has a chance.

Tense, intriguing and unpredictable

The BlackJack series was created by the late, legendary Osamu Tezuka, a.k.a. "Japan's Walt Disney," the author behind Astroboy and Kimba the White Lion (both of which get brief visual homages in this new addition to the continuum). The animation in this film is far more sophisticated than Tezuka's simple, stubby drawings, much as the story is more sophisticated than his short but satisfying morality plays. But his protagonists are still clearly recognizable; the writers have neatly recreated the mixture of altruism and icy apathy that made the manga character unique.

The same writers struggle a little at the movie's length, however. Some of the plot twists are interesting and some are downright inspired, but at times they feel like padding. Director Osamu Dezaki seems to have similar problems with this longer format, as he repeats the same few visual motifs over and over until they go from dramatic to redundant to irritating. As a result, the whole movie seems on a minor but irretrievable downhill slide from the powerful starting point to the somewhat obvious end.

Still, this is a generally tense and interesting science-gone-awry story, a basically predictable plot fleshed out in fine style with unpredictable characters and an intriguing back story. The dubbing is competent and the deep-toned, blocky visuals are pleasant enough to watch. And BlackJack himself is always fascinating, especially when he's this well realized as a cataclysmically dualistic character. Tezuka's work had a lot more heart, but looked essentially amateurish compared to this modern continuance of his work. As a movie, BlackJack isn't perfect, but it's not a disappointment either. Its only real flaw is its failure to utterly shine.

I keep wondering what a similarly modernized update of Kimba the White Lion--a childhood favorite of mine--would look like. Of course, some think we already saw that in Disney's The Lion King. -- Tasha


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