Tag Archives: Unnatural

What Medical Mysteries Should Be — “Unnatural”

There’s something thrilling about unflappable protagonists working in their specialty. If they’re insulted, libeled, told to stop, refused resources, or their life put at risk, they still get the work in front of them done because it needs doing and if they get it right, it means helping people. Medical coroner Misumi Mikoto is a very believable hero because the solution to each mystery she faces is always just hidden behind the work. She runs a team that autopsies odd deaths, an experiment in Japan, which has a low autopsy rate.

The forensics in “Unnatural” don’t take place in million-dollar, set designed, “CSI”-style labs. The office they work in is tight and cluttered. The drama doesn’t hinge on “Eureka!” moments of realization by a troubled genius. Instead, likable but flawed characters debate and consider each others’ points as conversations weave between cause of death and what to have for lunch.

Showrunner and writer Nogi Akiko has a way of evoking a real office with all its limitations and eccentricities, and populating it with charming, unique characters who exist with one foot in a very recognizable, practical take on reality and the other in a sharply-edited, dramatic, TV-ready one. They make sense in a world that balances both modes.

Ishihara Satomi acts Mikoto as someone who’s sociable but likes to keep her social circle small. By others’ measures, she’s a bit geeky and directionless in her personal life, but her life is what she believes in doing. When doing that work she has a calm tenacity fueled by an idealistic streak that’s easy to admire. She contends with a cantankerous senior coroner, a boss who’d rather cook than play bureaucratic politics the office needs, an inexperienced assistant, and her blunt best friend Yuko – she’s often ready to throw an insult or confront someone when Mikoto would find a more diplomatic way.

The pace of the dialogue is sometimes lightning-quick, which can be challenging with subtitles. I feel no shame in occasionally scrubbing back 10 seconds to re-read a bit or so I can watch the performance more closely. It’s worth it because when the writing is this good, actors like these can work magic with it.

There are a lot of times when I feel I’m watching something more akin to “The West Wing” than to Western medical dramas. A lot of that’s the balance between the drama and comedy in a professional environment, but there are other pieces that factor into that comparison:

Nogi’s portrayal of the field she’s covering is deeply informational. First off, science isn’t treated as magic here. Things aren’t made up. Occasionally, they’re sped up, but Mikoto works in a building full of labs and her boss is owed a lot of favors, so I can buy that. But the science is explained, and the crutch of DNA that mystery shows lean on for big reveals is treated as one of many factors that all have to fit in order to draw a conclusion. That one big reveal other shows rely on is just a step along the way here, until all the clues fit alongside each other to make sense.

The social commentary in “Unnatural” is just as piercing as Nogi’s police procedural “MIU404”. She’s extremely critical of police departments’ weaponization of arrests, tendency to bully witnesses, and desire to take the route toward the easiest conviction rather than the right one. If a local medical school doesn’t give police the conclusions they want, or it’s far and the police don’t want to drive it that day, they’ll just skip the autopsy even if it’s needed. She backs up her criticisms with information, and houses it within characters having to work their way around these obstacles or deal with their fallout.

Nogi also has rare ability to write media reaction. Mikoto’s biggest hurdle is often being a woman in this field. It impacts how many of those outside her profession find it unseemly, and how those linked to her profession judge her as less capable. She’s torn down in a court case for her professionalism being “hysterical”, while a man walks all over the proceedings and is shown deep respect for his outburst.

“Unnatural” came out in 2018 in Japan, but aside from some niche availability, its arrival on Netflix is the first time it’s hit a major streaming service in the U.S. Don’t at all be dissuaded from the show being six years old. Our police procedurals may be new, but are largely stuck in modes that are 20 years moldy.

In fact, despite dropping in 2018, “Unnatural” has the best take on the COVID pandemic that I’ve seen…you know, the one that started two years later? East Asia has had to deal with these outbreaks before we had to face one in the U.S., but what’s impressive is how fully Nogi breaks down the political and media discourse that surrounds it. Those in power obfuscate to protect themselves rather than clarify to mitigate others’ risk. Corporate interests trump human ones. Doctors fight tooth and nail to get accurate information out while the media obsesses over a blame game instead. Panel shows break down portions of blame to turn pandemic debate into entertainment. If writers warn of what’s to come, this is some of the most impressive writing I’ve seen. I’d have room to be awe-struck by how prescient Nogi’s writing is if I weren’t so chilled by it.

“Unnatural” is a mystery, so characters face a life-or-death moment now and then. What I like is that the series isn’t interested in making these into expensive, overdramatic set pieces. Instead, it maintains its tight character focus. Characters make the smartest decisions they can with the tools they have on hand, and trust their team to make similarly smart decisions with the information they have. No one becomes a stereotype or an action hero – characters simply double down on who they’ve always been and do the work that gives themselves the best chance of surviving. It’s rare a writer looks at a set piece, declines to show it to you, and decides what’s more exciting is how capably these characters can avoid it. And when you can write like this, she’s absolutely right.

Larger series arcs are introduced not through towering reveals or mustache-twirling villains, but through character stories that intertwine and build episode to episode. It makes us understand the practical elements that feed these arcs. Nogi doesn’t have to declare their importance or cheat them in if she’s simply enabled us to see how those elements have grown over time.

There are some filmmakers and writers who become appointment viewing. Nogi Akiko is one of them. “Unnatural” is phenomenal. The mysteries are good and the process for solving them is more complex and realistic than what we usually get. The social commentary is some of the best I’ve seen worked into a series, using a lighthearted, optimistic tone to constantly work loose biting systemic criticisms. There’s a very empathetic eye for finding what’s human in every character despite how different they all are, which makes their stop-and-start bonding feel real in both its honesty and awkwardness. The dialogue is constantly interesting and edifying, and the humor is on point and endearing. I haven’t talked nearly enough about Ishihara Satomi, who realizes in Mikoto a deeply interesting and admirable character, someone who’s idealistic, more than capable enough to back it up, and never stops god damn trying even when others tell her to knock it off.

“Unnatural” is on Netflix, or can be watched free with ads on Viki TV, which specializes in East Asian series.

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New Shows + Movies by Women — The Year So Far

The ebb and flow of titles is always unpredictable, so I thought I’d do something a little different this week. Last week saw 13 new shows and movies by women. This week sees just one, “Past Lies” from Spain. It’s frustrating when that happens, but rather than just pitch a single title up here, I’ll take the opportunity to share some standout shows by women I’ve seen so far from this year. First, let’s tell you about “Past Lies”:

NEW SERIES

Past Lies (Hulu)
directed by Julia de Paz, Clara Roquet

A group of successful women are shaken when the 25-year-old remains of a missing high school classmate are found in Mallorca, where they shared their senior trip. Star Elena Anaya may be familiar to American audiences from her lead role in “The Skin I Live In”.

Director Clara Roquet won Best New Director and was nominated for Original Screenplay at the 2022 Goya Awards, Spain’s equivalent to the Oscars. Director and co-writer Julia de Paz was nominated for Adapted Screenplay the same year.

“Past Lies” premieres on Hulu tomorrow, Friday May 10.

THIS YEAR’S SHOWS SO FAR

Links go to my reviews, let’s get in:

“Fallout” (Amazon) is one of the best shows of the year. It’s an incredibly biting and visually beautiful post-apocalyptic dark comedy co-showrun by Geneva Robertson-Dworet. It works as an adventure, as action, as science-fiction, as character drama, and especially as a dark comedy. Watching it kind of broke me because as fun as it is, its retrofuturist satire bites deeply into modern anxieties.

“Mr. and Mrs. Smith” (Amazon) is a spy comedy showrun by Francesca Sloane. Dry humor in an unsettling atmosphere makes for an incredibly unique feeling – the whole show is quirky but tense. There are multiple memorable guest stars, which is usually a feature I don’t care much about, but here it’s used very well and in ways that sometimes undermine the concept. Maya Erskine and Donald Glover star, and the pair act the hell out of it.

Those two are pretty intense. If you need something lighter but still very worthwhile, “Renegade Nell” (Disney+) is a really fun historical adventure/comedy about a woman forced to become a thief. It’s showrun by Sally Wainwright. I’d compare it to a period “Buffy” with much higher production values, or a series-level “Pirates of the Caribbean” without the baggage. If the first episode doesn’t hook you, you are unhookable.

“Death and Other Details” (Hulu) is fun if you can get along with its period-mystery-in-modern-times vibe. Mandy Patinkin plays the wacky detective. It’s co-showrun by Heidi Cole McAdams. Its quirk might come off as overly precious to some, but I ended up liking its diorama-esque stylization. It acts like a stage comedy, which is something I look for, but you’ll be able to tell pretty quickly if it’s your thing or not.

And of course, “Abbott Elementary” (Hulu) is still a great comedy co-showrun by Quinta Brunson. The writing has an incredibly good feel for its ensemble and where their strengths lie. Usually a sitcom gets its good writing in early seasons and the ensemble develop their timing in later ones, but “Abbott Elementary” has enjoyed both right off the bat.

I’m working on “Unnatural” (Netflix) right now. I loved Nogi Akiko’s police series “MIU404” because it presented a way that police can help people from a non-antagonistic perspective, and it focused on both large and small cases. Not everything was high drama, life-or-death stakes. Its sensibilities were completely different from an American cop show. “MIU404” is still on Netflix. I highly recommend it, and I’m thrilled Nogi’s prior series “Unnatural” – about a woman leading a forensics team investigating odd deaths – is now there, too.

On my watchlist are the second season of Tima Shomali’s Jordanian drama “AlRawabi School for Girls” (Netflix). The first season was incredibly salient, punctuating an intriguing interpersonal drama about bullying with some rattling scenes.

I also need to watch Korean vigilante mystery “A Killer Paradox” (Netflix) written by Kim Da Min, and I keep hearing really good things about Vivienne Medrano’s animated musical-in-hell series “Hazbin Hotel” (Amazon) so I’ll be checking that out.

In this feature, I limit the weekly coverage to series showrun or directed by women (or else I couldn’t do the amount of research I have to do weekly). But I do want to highlight how good of a year it’s been for anime written (or based on work written) by women:

“The Apothecary Diaries” (Crunchyroll) is the best mystery going for a second year in a row. It follows Maomao, the daughter of an apothecary in Imperial China. She wants to remain anonymous and live a quiet life of testing poisons on herself, but her knowledge of chemistry and medicine means she can make connections between clues others can’t. The mysteries are balanced between small and large, between incidental and intentional, and its protagonist is a unique blend of tenacious and lazy that you usually don’t see – especially for women characters. “The Apothecary Diaries” is based on a light novel series by Hyuuga Natsu.

“Delicious in Dungeon” (Netflix) is a rangy fantasy series that tells its story through cooking (of fantasy creatures), written by Ueno Kimiko and based on a manga series by Kui Ryouko. Its talented but sometimes bumbling adventuring party is a familiar anchor of fantasy, but done very well here. As they set out to resurrect one of the party’s sisters before a dragon fully digests her, what makes the show unique is how it world-builds. They’re broke, so they cook monsters along the way. Hunting and cooking requires knowledge of the dungeon’s ecology and environmental impacts, which in turn reveal complex relationships between the world and its magic. It’s deeply thought out and surprisingly engrossing. And while it’s not primarily an action series, its action scenes are phenomenal.

“7th Time Loop” (Crunchyroll) is one of the best uses of time loop fiction I’ve seen, about a woman who repeats five years, each time taking a different career. Every time, a war that envelops the world causes her death, and she restarts that five year chunk. She keeps the skills and knowledge she accumulates each go-round, and makes it her mission to use these to stop the war. It’s written by Machida Touko and based on a light novel series by Amekawa Touko. I would’ve preferred it got an extra episode to give the ending some more room to breathe, but it has such incredible character writing along the way that it’s a minor flaw. There are scenes here that are so literary and layered they should be studied if you’re even remotely interested in storytelling.

“A Sign of Affection” (Crunchyroll) is a superb and tranquil romance between a deaf woman and a man who learns sign language. What I like about it is that things don’t come easy – and I don’t mean the usual trope of dragging the will they-won’t they out. What I mean is that both characters question if they truly like each other or simply see in each other an idea they want to embody in themselves. Yuki’s been sheltered and likes that Itsuomi travels the world. Does she like him, or just that he represents a wider world out there? Itsuomi travels because he seeks out new experiences. Does he like her, or is she simply a new experience that will fade once familiar? The great gentleness and care for the other with which they figure this out already provides the answer, but even if the anime itself is pretty sentimental, it’s refreshing to see this realistic complexity and sense of responsibility be the core of the story. It’s also a really good view on a man doing the work to unlearn assumptions and understand someone else’s perspective. Itsuomi doesn’t automatically know how to understand and relate to someone who’s deaf, and he makes clear mistakes, but he does the work to unlearn bad habits and replace them with recognition and communication.

This last one is current season, so only halfway in, but “Train to the End of the World” (Crunchyroll) is a very hidden gem. It fuses wholesome with disturbing as four girls drive a train through an incredibly artistic and metaphorical post-apocalypse to find their lost friend. It’s cosmic horror if the power of very stubborn friendship was enough to fight your way through it, and holding onto that in the face of unprecedented weirdness has its own way of speaking to our times. It’s written by Yokote Michiko.

Take a look at new shows + movies by women from past weeks.

If you enjoy what I write, subscribe to my Patreon! It helps with the time and resources to write more features like this one.

New Shows + Movies by Women — Forensics, Real Estate, TVs Glow, and Prom Dates

There are 13 new titles this week so let’s skip the prologue and get right in. New series by women come from Japan, Korea, Nigeria, the U.K, and the U.S. New movies directed by women come from Italy, South Africa, and the U.S.

NEW SERIES

Unnatural (Netflix)
showrunner Nogi Akiko

Mikoto is a doctor working at a forensic lab. She runs a team that looks into deaths that don’t quite make sense, and uncovers a serial poisoning case.

I am over-the-moon that this series is finally widely available in the U.S. It’s by Nogi Akiko, who also wrote and showran “MIU404”, a police procedural that tackled toxic genre issues and offered an antidote to antagonistic policing. It was one of the best portrayals I’ve seen of a functional, multi-talented team valuing each others’ perspectives in realistic ways.

All 10 episodes of “Unnatural” are out on Netflix.

A Man in Full (Netflix)
half-directed by Regina King

Jeff Daniels plays an Atlanta real estate mogul unexpectedly facing bankruptcy. He goes to (corporate) war to keep what he has. Diane Lane and Lucy Liu costar. The series is based on the Tom Wolfe novel.

Regina King directs 3 of the 6 episodes of the David E. Kelley series. She won an Oscar for her performance in “If Beale Street Could Talk”, and has directed on “Scandal”, “Shameless”, and “This Is Us”. Her 2020 film “One Night in Miami…” saw three Oscar nominations. She has an argument as the best actor-director working today.

All 6 episodes of “A Man in Full” are out on Netflix.

CW: The Holocaust

The Tattooist of Auschwitz (Peacock)
showrunner Tali Shalom Ezer

A Jewish prisoner is given the job of tattooing identification numbers on fellow prisoners’ arms. It’s based on the novel of the same name by Heather Morris. Harvey Keitel and Melanie Lynskey star.

Tali Shalom-Ezer directs. She also helmed “My Days of Mercy”.

All 6 episodes of “The Tattooist of Auschwitz” are out on Peacock.

Frankly Speaking (Netflix)
showrunner Jang Ji Yeon

Ki Baek is a 33-year-old broadcast announcer, stricken with a disease that causes him to say whatever comes to mind. This catches the eye of Woo Joo, a variety writer who wants to feature his unfiltered takes in an attempt to save her show.

Jang Ji Yeon directs/showruns. She also helmed romance “Nevertheless”.

The premiere of “Frankly Speaking” is out on Netflix, with a new episode as it airs in Korea dropping every Wednesday.

Postcards (Netflix)
directed by Hamisha Daryani Ahuja

Four Nigerians attempt to establish their daily lives and find their own community in India.

There’s not a lot of information available about this one, but it is out on Netflix tomorrow, Friday May 3.

NEW MOVIES

I Saw the TV Glow (in theaters)
directed by Jane Schoenbrun

This A24 horror film follows two suburban teens who bond over a late-night TV show, which suggests a supernatural world exists below their own. Reality begins to take the hint.

Writer-director Jane Schoenbrun also made “We’re All Going to the World’s Fair”, a no-budget, reality-bending horror which gained traction online over the COVID shut-in.

“I Saw the TV Glow” starts in limited release tomorrow, Friday May 3.

Prom Dates (Hulu)
directed by Kim O. Nguyen

Two girls make a pact to have the perfect prom, but they break up with their dates less than 24 hours before the dance. They have a night to find new dates, an effort that spirals into an ever-growing crisis.

Kim O. Nguyen directs. She’s also helmed episodes of “Never Have I Ever” and “With Love”.

“Prom Dates” is out on Hulu tomorrow, Friday May 3.

Turtles All the Way Down (Max)
directed by Hannah Marks

This is a confusing one. The official synopsis reads that a teenager with OCD is determined to solve the disappearance of a fugitive billionaire, which is also the plot of the novel it’s based on. The trailer mentions nothing about this, and seems to be about a teen with OCD embarking on her first romance. Maybe it’s both? Rarely do I come across advertising that seems so at odds with itself, but it’s probably about at least one of those two things.

Hannah Marks directs and costars. She also directed poly comedy “Mark, Mary & Some Other People” and John Cho father-daughter drama “Don’t Make Me Go”.

“Turtles All the Way Down” is out on Max.

Lost Soulz (in theaters)
directed by Katherine Propper

A rapper sets out with a group of touring hip-hop musicians, determined to build his music career on a road trip through Texas.

“Lost Soulz” sees a limited release in theaters tomorrow, Friday May 3.

Beautiful Rebel (Netflix)
directed by Cinzia Th. Torrini

This Italian biopic follows rock star Gianna Nannini. Starting her career in the late 70s, her breakthrough finally happened in 1984.

Cinzia Th. Torrini has helmed a number of Italian series.

“Beautiful Rebel” is on Netflix.

Lola (Netflix)
directed by Nicola Peltz Beckham

Lola works with one goal in mind: to get her younger sibling Arlo out of their toxic home. An unexpected crisis turns her plans on their head.

Nicola Peltz Beckham writes, directs, and stars in her feature debut.

“Lola” is out on Netflix.

Tarot (in theaters)
co-directed by Anna Halberg

A group of friends uses a set of cursed cards to do a tarot reading, which is generally a bad idea in a horror movie titled “Tarot”.

Anna Halberg directs with Spenser Cohen. This is her first film directing. She started in the industry as a casting and assistant director.

“Tarot” has a wide release tomorrow, Friday May 3.

Thabo and the Rhino Case (in theaters)
directed by Mara Eibl-Eibesfeldt

A boy named Thabo wants to become a private detective. His first case is the death of a rhino, killed in a safari park for its horn.

Mara Eibl-Eibesfeldt directs.

“Thabo and the Rhino Case” is out in theaters tomorrow, Friday May 3.

Take a look at new shows + movies by women from past weeks.

If you enjoy what I write, subscribe to my Patreon! It helps with the time and resources to write more features like this one.