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Bonding
in Japan
By: Yuki Allyson
Honjo
Even with the over-the-top
007 camp, the 1967 James Bond film You Only Live Twice was
surprisingly prescient. Filmed twelve years before Ezra Vogel’s
Japan as Number One and decades before its economic Bubble,
the movie hinted at a glamorous technological Japan, balancing a
Hollywood version of its traditional past with an industrial future.
Less than thirty years after World War II, Bond’s Japan was no longer
the land of defeat or kitsch breakables, but one where the Japanese
Secret Service agents, such as Tiger Tanaka, are capable of outsmarting
007 into coming to their secret underground lair.
The newest installment of the James Bond pantheon is The Man
with the Red Tattoo, where almost thirty years later, Bond returns
to Japan. While the characters have felt the passage of time, Raymond
Benson, the latest author to take up Ian Fleming’s mantle, essentially
recycles the 1967 film.
The novel has a strong start: Kyoko McMahon, the Scottish-Japanese
daughter of a pharmaceutical magnate dies alone on a Tokyo London
flight. The rest of her family soon follows, victims of a genetically
altered West Nile virus delivered by a new breed of killer mosquitoes.
James, nominally in Japan as security for a G-8 conference, realizes
Goro Yoshida, yakuza-boss and leader of a world terrorist organization,
orchestrated this mass assassination. Yoshida wants to control the
McMahons’ company to mass produce the killer virus and unleash worldwide
mayhem. Only “stunningly beautiful. . .exotic” Mayumi McMahon, who
had long since run away from home, can save the company and stop
the merger. Mayumi, unfortunately, works in the red light district
in Sapporo and cannot be found. Naturally, 007 must save Mayumi
and the free world.
The characters in the book have the same tang to those in the film.
James Bond and the Japan team are back: James, the same suave spy,
but perhaps more weathered around the corners, and Tiger has had
a triple bypass. The capable Agent Aki of You Only Live Twice has
a virtual clone in “sexy. . .class act” Agent Rieko Tamura. Both
agents, after sleeping with Bond, suffer untimely deaths—a hazard,
it appears, of their occupation. Bond shifts his attention to another
beautiful Japanese woman in the second act: the virgin bride Kissy
Suzuki in the film, in the novel, the Scottish-Japanese whore, Mayumi.
The evil genius Blowfeld with his personal army is replaced with
Yoshida and his associates.
Benson reuses set pieces to sketch different aspects of Japan: Benson
has not strayed far from the 007 movie formula. Both Bonds experience
“traditional Japanese culture” through performance: in film, he
goes to a sumo match, in Benson’s book, he goes to Kabuki. Bond’s
visit to Osato Corp, a front-company for more sinister activities,
echoes Bond’s experience at CureLab which, (surprise!) is to be
used as a front for the world domination business. Both feature
forms of transport to showcase “modern Japan”: Bond and Aki go to
the Kobe docks in the film and fight their evil counterparts while
illustrating the height of shipbuilding technology. Now, Bond and
Reiko fight villains on the bullet train while waxing about its
efficiency. As for “rural Japan,” Kissy’s quaint fishing village
is interchangeable with the Ainu village of the novel. While these
snapshots of Japan were novel in the 60s, they are clichés in the
present.
Goro Yoshida initially appears to be a thought provoking character,
but in the end, he reverts to type. He is likely to be the only
Bond villain to be motivated by Yukio Mishima’s literature. Yoshida
and his right wing army in the Hokkaido vow to fight “the enemies
of Japan.” However, Yoshida’s preoccupations appear reminiscent
of those of the Black Dragon society of the Fleming novel.
Nationalism as the impetus for a Japanese mob villain is a credible
and intriguing angle. But Benson only hints at, but never fully
explores, Japan’s right wing relationship with the Yakuza. In the
end, Yoshida’s motivation is the same old WWII chestnut: “Yoshida
felt he was a man who never forgot his wartime catechism: the doctrine
of Japan as a ritually ordered state, the samurai way of life characterized
by manly courage and feminine grace and the vision of imminent death
as a catalyst for life.”
Which brings us to ask: What happened to the last thirty years?
What about Japan’s economic and political ascendancy and decline?
While we can excuse Bond’s timelessness, Benson’s Japan is a mere
background for Bond shenanigans, and predictable ones at that. The
plot of Fleming’s novel (quite different from the film version)
has a delightful Bond, unashamedly the picture of political incorrectness,
a womanizing British bon-vivant. Benson’s Bond seems to be laboring
through a series of disconnected tourist slides of Japan.
This is not to say Benson has not done his research. He fills the
book with leaden factiods on Japan: “The [Kamakura] Daibutsu has
been here since 1252. It used to be housed in a huge hall, but the
building was washed away by a tsunami in the late 1400s.” Even the
walking distance between Shibuya and Meiji Shrine is accurate.
However, while the details are numerous, Benson misses the big picture
altogether: Bond, supposedly a spy on the cutting edge of politics
and technology, has been left behind in 1967. Perhaps Bond will
“die another day,” but clearly not in Japan.
Yuki Allyson Honjo. “Newest Bond Retraces Familiar Terrain,”
International Herald Tribune-Asahi Shinbun, February 26, 2003.
Pg. 24.
The
characters in the book have the same tang to those in the film.
James Bond and the Japan team are back: James, the same suave spy,
but perhaps more weathered around the corners, and Tiger has had
a triple bypass. The capable Agent Aki of “You Only Live Twice”
has a virtual clone in “sexy. . .class act” Agent Rieko Tamura.
Both agents, after sleeping with Bond, suffer untimely deaths—a
hazard, it appears, of their occupation.
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