Welcome to The Queue — your daily distraction of curated video content sourced from across the web. Today, we’re watching a video about what the ninth installment of the Crayon Shin-chan series can teach us about toxic nostalgia.
There is an important distinction between memory and nostalgia. The hint to the difference is right there in the word itself. Etymologically, the word nostalgia means a morbid longing to return home — a strong, and even painful desire to go back to familiar territory. In other words, nostalgia is more of an emotional issue than a temporal one. It is a sentimentality for how things were, tinged with the implication that the past is worth pining for because it was better.
Most of us have a place in our hearts reserved for a piece of media that was especially formative and dear to us. For Accented Cinema, that media is Crayon Shin-Chan, a sitcom anime series about the adventures of a precocious five-year-old.
The video essay below unpacks one of the franchise’s many features films: Crayon Shin-chan: Fierceness That Invites Storm! The Adult Empire Strikes Back. The film follows Shin-Chan as he and his family visit an exposition about 20th-century Japanese culture. Literally hypnotized by the desire to relive their childhoods, the adults in town begin to regress to a point where they abandon their children to live at the expo, permanently “in the past.”
It is a film explicitly about nostalgia. And, more specifically, about the toxic pitfalls of idolizing our memories of the past. It offers a gentle reminder that, while there is comfort in familiar things, the past is far greater than just the parts we put on a pedestal.
Watch “Crayon Shin-chan And Nostalgia“:
Who made this?
This video was created by Accented Cinema, a Canadian-based YouTube video essay series with a focus on foreign, and specifically East Asian, cinema. You can subscribe to Accented Cinema for bi-weekly uploads on YouTube. You can also follow them on Twitter.
More Videos Like This
- If you would like to see more of Accented Cinema’s work, we recommend their video on why Train to Busan is a case study on how to craft meaningful character deaths.
- And here’s another sample of Accented Cinema’s work: an impassioned plea for why you should shake things up and check out the wonderful and terrifying world of Thai horror films.
- Accented Cinema also has a wonderful two-part primer on J-Horror (even those familiar with Japanese horror may learn a thing or two!).
- And here’s another sample of Accented Cinema’s horror content: why Hong Kong’s most iconic contemporary horror film, The Eye, is a gateway to Chinese superstition.
- Another sample of Accented Cinema: a two-part look at how Bruce Lee changed martial arts cinema (part 1; part 2).
- Here’s how the 1985 action-horror comedy Mr. Vampire places death front and center while remaining family-friendly.
0 comments:
Post a Comment