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Film/TV TV Features

Scavengers Reign

In writing class, they teach about the different kinds of conflicts a story can center around. Person vs. person is the most common, but there’s also person vs. self, person vs. fate, and person vs. society. Person vs. nature (formerly known as “man vs. nature”) is not nearly as common as it was a hundred years ago, back in the days of frontier and jungle adventure magazines. That’s one of the reasons the sci-fi animated series Scavengers Reign is so refreshing. Its take on the classic story of a shipwrecked crew struggling to survive in a hostile wilderness is simple at first, but becomes more fascinating as complexities emerge. In fact, “emerging complexity” is one of the overarching themes of the 12-episode story. Creators Joseph Bennett and Charles Huettner are fascinated with the interplay of life-forms, both cooperation and conflict, which create a functioning ecosystem. The world they have created is unlike anything you’ve seen.

Scavengers Reign begins with its castaways, survivors from the crew of the cargo ship Demeter 227, already stranded on the planet Vesta. Azi (voiced by Wunmi Mosaku), the capable quartermaster, is paired with her robot Levi (Alia Shawkat). Their escape pod landed safely on open ground, and Azi uses an omniwheel motorcycle to scout the surrounding terrain. When Levi starts acting odd, Azi discovers that a fungus-like alien life-form has been growing on the robot’s circuitry — and the robot likes it.

Photo: Courtesy Netflix

Ursula (Sunita Mani), a biologist, was in the escape pod with Sam (Bob Stephenson), the captain of the Demeter. Their landing was a little rougher, but they have managed to salvage enough gear to communicate with the fatally damaged ship still in orbit. In the pilot episode, “The Signal,” the pair travel to retrieve a battery from another crashed escape pod. Once they get there, they see that the crew have all been killed by some unknown environmental hazard, which they then have to face. But that’s business as usual on this planet.

The occupant of the third escape pod has it the worst. It landed in a tree-like plant hundreds of feet tall, and Kamen (Ted Travelstead) has been trapped inside for weeks. He is finally rescued (if you want to call it that) by a creature he names Hollow. Imagine a cross between a platypus and a koala bear with psychic powers which it uses to dominate other life-forms. Instead of making little green tripod-thingies bring them yummy berry-like spheres, Hollow latches onto the human and demands Kamen hunt for him. In Kamen’s mind, it speaks to him in the form of Fiona (also voiced by Alia Shawkat), Demeter’s robotics engineer. Hollow uses Kamen’s guilt over their dysfunctional relationship against him, and his already fragile psyche slowly crumbles.

Sam and Ursula succeed in contacting the ship, and they manage to activate the automatic landing sequence. At first, they’re worried it might land on top of them. Then they discover they didn’t get that lucky. The Demeter lands many kilometers away from all three parties. The first half of the story is taken up with their increasingly frantic and costly attempts to make it to the ship. Once there, they will find that this world has even more surprises in store. As the show progresses, flashbacks start to fill in the details of how they got here, and who they were before they were lost in space and written off by their employers.

Anime’s dominant visual style has become so pervasive that I hear stories from art teachers about begging their young students to try to draw something else. Scavengers Reign owes a debt to Miyazaki’s sense of grandeur and deliberate pacing, and Akira’s pervasive body horror. But Bennett and Huettner’s aesthetic is more like the French illustrator Moebius. The world of Vesta is endlessly complex, with many animals and plants living in such close symbiosis that it’s hard to tell where one ends and the other begins. Our heroes are constantly dodging predators, both animals and plants. But many of their interactions with the native flora and fauna aren’t so cut and dried. When Ursula is trapped inside a living wall of thorns, Sam freaks out. But Ursula insists she was never in danger, and in fact might have even been communicating with the giant plant-like organism. What were they saying? She doesn’t know. But as the story progresses, the survivors slowly learn to stop trying to conquer nature, and start trying to live in harmony with it. That’s what makes this beautiful and thought-provoking show such a treasure.

Scavengers Reign is streaming on Netflix.

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Art News News Blog

A Look Inside Memphis’ First Anime-Themed Tattoo Shop

When walking into Inkatsuki Tattoos, one may feel as if they’ve been transported into the ultimate fandom fantasy. The walls are adorned with anime lore including posters from My Hero Academia, and pixel art made from perler beads of Luffy and Saitama. An enviable Funko Pop collection featuring Charizard, Mirio Togata, Tomura Shigaraki, and Laxus Dreyar is housed in the same vicinity of a figurine army featuring Naruto and Todoroki.

The store’s name itself is even a nod to anime culture, juxtaposed with tattoo artistry according to Jarvis Ross, the shop’s owner. Ross took the name “akatsuki,” which is what he describes as a “black sheep team.”

“It’s a black sheep team from Naruto, a popular anime … Akatsuki …Inkatsuki, a team of dope, black sheep tattoo artists.”

Ross says that he has been a longtime fan of anime, dating back to the days where his cousin would collect Dragon Ball Z action figures.

“Back when I was like 8, he came from Cali with all these foreign action figures, and he was telling me about them. He put me on the show, and I’ve been watching it ever since.”

Inkatsuki, located on Lamar Avenue, is the first anime-themed tattoo shop in Memphis. Ross and his team also specialize in wood carving, shoe customizations, piercings, and more.

Ross’ shop recently went viral on Facebook, with a post that has more than 2,000 shares and close to 700 likes. The post is flooded with comments and reactions from prospective customers expressing their excitement for this one-of-a-kind experience and those eager to hop onto Ross’ table hope for sleeves dedicated to showcasing their love for anime.

“I’m deep into anime, and I have an anime community on Facebook as well [Memphis Hidden Leaf Village]. So I used [anime] as my theme for my shop.”

Ross originally opened a private shop under the same name on Airways back in 2021, but recently moved into a bigger space in April. 

While Ross’ shop is advertised as a tattoo shop, he tells me that he’s a jack of all trades.

(Credit: Jarvis Ross)

“I’m an artist,” Ross elaborates.

“I do all types of art. Woodwork, paintings, tattoos, graffiti, T-shirts, customizing shoes — I like creating things.”

One of the most formative settings for Ross’ early work was during grade school, where he says that he would be in the back of the classroom drawing. While most students used their notebook margins and desks as canvases, Ross used his and his classmates’ arms.

“The teacher asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up, and I just blurted out ‘I want to be a tattoo artist,’ and I went back to drawing on someone’s arm,” Ross recalls.

“I was rebellious at the time, but I ended up becoming a tattoo artist for real.”

While Ross’ classroom would serve as a primitive shop, he explains that he didn’t really get into tattooing until he was in college.

“I used to spend my money on tattoos. I asked the man who was doing my tattoos, ‘How much do you make in a day?’ He said anywhere from 50 [dollars] to 1,000 depending on your clientele and how much work you put into it.”

Ross says on that same day, the artist let him practice his first tattoo on himself on the spot.

“I tattooed ‘I did this myself,’ on my leg.”

The artist’s work has since evolved from his protege days, with a number of favorites in his portfolio.

“I did a Samurai Jack piece on a color blind client a couple of years back. Even though he couldn’t see red, he said it looked great and he loved the piece.”

As Ross reflects on the recent exposure gained from the viral post, he realizes how grateful he is for his community and his team.

“I’m very thankful for everyone sharing the Facebook post and showing love to Inkatsuki Tattoos, and for the Inkatsuki team, N3ko, Nay, Corey, Gates, and Nicki.”

Corinthian Smith (Credit: Jarvis Ross)

The community aspect is important to Ross and his business, whether online or offline.

“When the community is doing bad, I’m doing bad. When my customers and the economy are doing bad, then they don’t have the money to spend and get the things that we offer,” he explains.

But Ross isn’t one to let circumstances keep him down long. He says even if he has to get a “9-5,” he’s still making content.           

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

This Week At The Cinema: The Good, The Bad, and The Anime

Cowboy Bebop: The Movie

It’s a big week at the movies in Memphis, so we’ll get right to it.

Tonight, Tuesday August 14 at 7 p.m., Indie Memphis presents a timely documentary at Studio on the Square. At last year’s film festival, when director Adam Bhala Lough showed two of his films, the documentary The New Radical and his lost narrative feature Weapons, he teased his latest project, Alt Right: Age of Rage. The doc delves into the Trumpian explosion of hate-fueled political movements, centering its narrative around last year’s Charlottesville Unite the Right rally. Tickets are available at the Indie Memphis website.

This Week At The Cinema: The Good, The Bad, and The Anime

Then, a treat for anime fans. The first time Cowboy Bebop: The Movie played Memphis, it was for one week, and only at 9 p.m. I went three times to try to buy a ticket, only to find it was sold out. I finally got into the last screening and wondered, with the rest of the sold-out audience, why it didn’t rate a full screen to itself. Now, to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Shinichro Watanabe’s groundbreaking series, Fathom Events is bringing the film (known in Japan as Knocking On Heaven’s Door) back to theaters. Cowboy Bebop‘s hyperreal fusion of American sci fi and western tropes and Japanese manga imagery has been often imitated but never equaled, and its kicking soundtrack by musical polymath Yoko Kanno remains fresh today. The series theme song “Tank!” ranks alongside “Peter Gunn” and the Mission Impossible theme. The influence from Watanabe’s masterpiece has reverberated through pop culture ever since, with entire sequences lifted almost verbatim in The Matrix, and Joss Whedon’s Firefly being practically a live-action adaptation. The big screen version lacks a little of the series’ snap, (and, inexplicably, “Tank!”)  but makes up for it with one of the best space battle sequences ever created. The subtitled version featuring the original Japanese voice actors is Wednesday at the Malco Paradiso, and the dubbed version familiar to American audiences, featuring Steven Blum as Spike, Beau Billingslea as Jet, Wendee Lee as Faye, and Melissa Fahn as Edward, will be Thursday.  See you at the movies, Space Cowboy.

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Friday night, director Gina Prince-Bythewood’s cult classic Love & Basketball bounces into the Orpheum Theatre Summer Film Series. Imagine Fifty Shades of Grey, only without the sociopathic capitalism and bad S&M. Actually, forget about Fifty Shades entirely and just watch a movie where actual nice people like Omar Epps and Sanaa Lathan fall in love with each other for a change. Get your tix on the Orpheum website.

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Then Saturday, the Orpheum invites you to indulge in your princess fantasies with Rogers & Hammerstein’s Cinderella. This production was originally made for television in 2000 and became a prized cultural artifact thanks to a fabulous late-career performance by Whitney Houston as the fairy godmother and teen sensation Brandy as the little peasant girl with the slipper. Get your tickets here.

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But what’s that? You’re tired of actual good movies? You’re ready for first class trash? Saturday night, the Time Warp Drive-In has got you covered. Saturday night, the Worst Movies Ever program kicks off with, what else, 1959’s Plan 9 From Outer Space. Recently I was in Los Angeles, and got to visit the space where director Ed Wood had his production offices during his reign of cinematic error. Predictably, it was a dump.

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Next up is the exact point where the horror boom of the 1980s went bust: Troll 2. Feel the terror if you dare:

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Then brace for the Citizen Kane of kung fu rock n’ roll films, Miami Connection. They sing. They dance. They kick ass. They do none of it well.

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Think they only made bad movies in the twentieth century? The modern anti-classic Birdemic will make you think again, and then not think about anything. Just stop thinking, OK?

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Then, drive off into the sunrise with the infamous international production Manos: The Hands Of Fate. Then keep driving. And driving. And driving…

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