Jung illustrates the movement from anger/rejection to acceptance as a long process with steps forward and back, sometimes in equal measure, weaving in story elements like the roots, masks as identity and Jung drawing Korean drummers/dancers without knowing (see vol. I wonder if Mohamed had success as a bédéiste? Is he walking through the fields or is he being born?) & 25 - are the roots welcoming him or are they going to grab him? Mohamed shows Jung that these tangled roots are not a merely a handicap, but can be used playfully and enjoyed. That being said, there are some really moving drawings, like pages 23 (very minimalist but meaningful. It made me sad, frustrated, even a little angry that his plan to travel to Korea with his wife and daughter was thwarted by the filming! While the "self-observer effect" nourished his writing in the first volumes - as in, he was examining his past, which led him to change and grow as a person - it seems that by this volume, Jung was distracted by the filming of his story and the attention that the series had received. I think that the popularity of this series ended up watering this one down. I would not recommend it to young children though but those over twelve may appreciate it and learn from this beautiful work of art.There's a lot of ground to cover in this volume - his young adulthood, his trip to Korea, and an attempt to connect his experience with other adoptees. If you are a fan of "Persepolis" or "Waltz With Bashir", it would be surprising if you disliked "Couleur de peau: miel". In any case, this is another example that brevity is not alien to density. Such a combination, probably unseen before (I may be mistaken but no other example of such a mix comes to my mind), greatly enhances the effectiveness of the whole thing. Such a feat is obtained - at least partly - in varying the angles of approach, which means resorting to various gauges (35mm and 8mm), sources (home movies, newsreels, real- life views of Jung back in Seoul for the first time at age 46) and techniques (2D and 3D animation). Another quality to be mentioned is that 75 minutes are enough for Jung and his co-director, documentary-maker Laurent Boileau, to deal with such a complex issue fully. In turns amusing and poignant, this short film captivates you as of the first minutes of its running time but a high point is attained in the final scenes when the young man finally comes to terms with his parents (in particular with his adoptive mother, unable as she was to express her love for him), with his native country and with himself it really puts tears in your eyes. Rarely indeed has a movie been more eloquent about what it is like to be an adopted child from a different civilization, but also about what it means to be the parents of such children. The result of such an approach is impressive. Nor is it an ode to Jung as a martyr, since the author shows without any taboos what a difficult a child he was and does not leave untold all the silly things he did at this period of his life. As a matter of fact, "Couleur de peau : miel" is not only about what Jung DID as a child and as a teenager, but mostly about what he FELT, both consciously and subconsciously. Refusing anecdote, his in-depth screenplay examines candidly the notions of adoption, of difference, of family relationships, of self-identity. Catoonist Jun could have been content to align a series of colorful childhood memories, which would already have given rise to a pleasant show, but he has set the bar much higher. Directed by Laurent Boileau and Jung, based on a graphic novel (or more accurately a graphic autobiography) by the latter, "Couleur de peau : miel" revisits the cartoonist's youth from age six to twenty. Another achievement in recent adult animation ("A Scanner darkly", "Persepolis", "Waltz With Bashir", "Chico and Rita"), "Couleur de peau : miel" is a new illustration of how profound and innovative this film genre, once deemed reserved for children, can get.
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