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Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon January 6, 2023 at 9:30 pm

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays, and Mondays. 

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Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


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Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon January 6, 2023 at 9:30 pm Read More »

Farewell to Dave’s Records

In August 2009, I moved into a three-bedroom on Clark a few blocks north of Fullerton, with no clue about Lincoln Park’s cultural position in Chicago. I had grad-school classes in Evanston and the Loop, so the neighborhood seemed to make sense—it was more or less in between the two. I felt out of place amid the college football fans crammed into sports bars along Clark, the drunk DePaul students stampeding Five Guys and the Wieners Circle after midnight, and the tony white-collar workers in their million-dollar homes. I lived in a cheap, shabby apartment, and I cherished anything subversive that survived in the cracks in the neighborhood’s facade. 

That December, I discovered the storefront windows of a nearby record shop. In an eclectic display of Christmas-themed album covers, I spotted a record by King Diamond, who was pictured in his trademark corpsepaint, thumbing his nose, sticking out his tongue, and cozying up to a reindeer with ribbons in its antlers. The disc was a 1985 12-inch called “No Presents for Christmas,” and the shop was Dave’s Records. Nothing else in the neighborhood spoke to me the way it did.

Dave Crain opened his shop at 2604 N. Clark on Labor Day in 2002. Since day one, Crain sold only vinyl, which was never an easy proposition. By the early 2000s the format had been in a decades-long decline, and according to RIAA figures, vinyl sales in 2002 were roughly 0.36 percent of the music industry’s total revenue—a $45.4 million sliver of a $12.6 billion haul. Before Record Store Day helped alert major industry players to the newfound niche value of wax, people buying vinyl were participating in a subculture, whether they thought of it that way or not. Dave’s Records offered those true believers a world to explore.

On election day 2022, when Crain announced he was closing the store, he hadn’t yet chosen a final day. He knew he had to remove all evidence of the shop’s existence from the space by January 1, when his lease would be over. When I first reported on the end of Dave’s Records in mid-November, I asked Crain if the Reader could document the store’s final day, whenever that turned out to be. I wanted to know who would travel from far and wide to pay their respects and who might casually wander in off the street. One thing I love about brick-and-mortar record shops is that you never know who you’ll meet and how they might reshape your world as a listener, even if all they do is recommend a seven-inch you’ll play a few times and then forget. The possibility of those interactions, as much as the vinyl itself, keeps me invested in record shops.

Dave’s Records closed for good Sunday, December 18. I swung by on the Friday before to pick up a few records and chat with Crain, but I couldn’t make it out that last day. Fortunately, photographer and Reader contributor Kathleen Hinkel was free, and she went to Dave’s to capture the scene during its final hours. She emerged with a touching document of the loose community that coalesced around Dave’s Records, where all kinds of folks—young parents, local music legends, former Chicagoans visiting for the holidays—navigated the tight aisles in search of buried treasure. The store is gone, but we still have our records—and Hinkel’s record of its farewell. —Leor Galil

Photo captions by Kathleen Hinkel

A sign on the door at beloved Lincoln Park record store Dave’s Records bears a quote from the Tom Waits song “I Hope That I Don’t Fall in Love With You,” from his 1973 album Closing Time. “Now it’s closing time, the music’s fading out / Last call for drinks, I’ll have another stout.” Sixty-three-year-old Dave Crain, the shop’s owner, poses for a portrait just after closing its door for the final time on Sunday, December 18, 2022. The shop had been open since 2002. “There’s nothing quieter than a record store with no music on,” Crain said earlier that day. A record had just ended, so he immediately marched to the turntable and put on “Le Freak” by Chic. 7:19 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain poses with his son, 31-year-old Sam Crain, just after closing the door of Dave’s Records for the final time. Sam said it was “touching to see how many people came out” for the store’s last day. 7:20 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain stocks the 2014 album Say Yes to Love by punk band Perfect Pussy in the hardcore section at Dave’s Records, just before the store opened at noon on its final day. 11:47 AM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderAnother sign on the door at Dave’s Records reads, “NO CD’S: NEVER HAD ’EM! NEVER WILL!!” Owner Dave Crain, pictured here stocking records in the window of the shop, was completely committed to vinyl. 2:51 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave’s Records is packed just after opening for the final time on Sunday, December 18, 2022. 12:27 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave’s Records stands empty shortly before opening on its last day. 11:36 AM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago Reader“I knew that this place was closing, and this is the last day, so I’m seeing if there’s any deals before these [records] go to other shops,” said 25-year-old Marley, a former Chicago resident visiting from Los Angeles. 12:22 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave’s Records was busy all day when it opened for the final time on Sunday, December 18, 2022. 2:26 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderWhen asked how he came to be browsing the stacks at Dave’s Records during its final hour on Sunday night, venerated Chicago-based producer the Twilite Tone, 53, responded: “It’s history and legacy, culture. It’s indigenous and impactful to who and what I am.” 6:17 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderTwenty-six-year-old Zanthia Dwight (right) and 50-year-old Lisa Schrader (left) browse during the final day at Dave’s Records. 2:20 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderZanthia Dwight flips through the vinyl at Dave’s Records. 2:20 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderEven before the official opening time of noon, Dave Crain had already started letting customers into Dave’s Records on its final day. One such customer was 38-year-old Ryan Carlsen, left, who came in search of jazz and blues. 11:41 AM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderA customer flips through vinyl at Dave’s Records. 2:33 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderOwner Dave Crain works with his son, Sam Crain, behind the counter of Dave’s Records. 12:55 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderForty-three-year-old Chris Gibson leaves Dave’s Records with a stack of records he bought on the shop’s final day. “I’ve lived in Chicago eight years, and I’ve been coming here for six or seven,” he said. “This is my fourth visit since I found out they were closing.” 12:57 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain works the register at Dave’s Records on the store’s last day. 2:37 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain at the register 2:12 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderWhen asked what brought them to Dave’s Records on the store’s final day, 25-year-old Madison Smith said, “I’ve been coming here for a couple years. Every time I come in, it’s a personal experience.” 2:12 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderOwner Dave Crain works with his son, Sam Crain, behind the counter of Dave’s Records during the shop’s final hour. 6:09 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderVinyl at Dave’s Records, including a copy of the 2022 Roky Erickson & the Explosives release Halloween II: Live 2007 6:09 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderA stack of vinyl at Dave’s Records, including a Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab edition of Elvis Costello’s My Aim Is True 6:09 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderA Dave’s Records customer holds a copy of the 1985 Neil Young single “Get Back to the Country” b/w “Misfits.” 12:44 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderChicago musician John Perrin, 30, has played drums in NRBQ since 2015. He said he’s been coming to Dave’s Records for a decade, and he came to browse the store in the first hour of its final day. 12:59 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderJohn Perrin talks to Dave’s Records owner Dave Crain while holding a copy of the Tom Waits album Alice, which came out in 2002—the year Dave’s opened. 12:16 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain checks the shelves at Dave’s Records. 2:12 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderTwenty-five-year-old Zac Veitch browses records while his two-year-old, Tomás, watches a video on his phone on his dad’s shoulders. 2:42 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago Reader“I love records,” said 46-year-old Nick Neitzman, browsing Dave’s Records on its final day. “I used to live in the neighborhood, and I spent many hours buying records here. It’s a bummer.” 2:53 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderThirty-two-year-old Arthur Tylka said he was “out for beers with my buddy, and he knew this place was closing, so we both came by.” He’s holding a copy of Seth MacFarlane’s 2011 debut album, Music Is Better Than Words. 6:02 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago Reader“I’ve been coming here since I was a kid,” said 21-year-old Jack Ioizzo, who lives in the neighborhood. 12:41 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderThe exterior of Dave’s Records on Sunday, December 18, 2022 1:03 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderFifty-year-old Lisa Scrader’s haul at Dave’s Records included Walt Whitman poetry records as well as David Bowie vinyl. 12:41 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain at work 6:07 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderTwenty-six-year-old Tyler Hunt moved to Chicago a few weeks ago and happened to drop into Dave’s while record shopping on the store’s final day. 6:07 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain talks with musicians DJ Rude One, left, and the Twilite Tone, right. The Twilite Tone is probably most famous as Common’s DJ and producer during the 90s, but he was already an important driver in Chicago’s hip-hop scene as a teenager in the late 80s. 7:04 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain right after closing his beloved Lincoln Park record shop, Dave’s Records, for the final time 7:05 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain shakes hands with a customer, 41-year-old Sarah Hamilton, at closing time. 7:11 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain just after closing time 7:18 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain gives his son, Sam Crain, a kiss on the cheek after closing the door of his beloved Lincoln Park record shop for the final time. 7:20 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderThe valedictory Tom Waits quote on the door at Dave’s Records took on a special meaning on Sunday, December 18, 2022, when the shop closed for good after 20 years in business. 7:56 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago Reader


Dave’s Records goes out in a blaze of glory

Plus: Katie Ernst and Dustin Laurenzi debut as indie-folk duo Edith Judith, and Ensemble dal Niente presents an extraordinary concert for soprano and percussion.


Read More

Farewell to Dave’s Records Read More »

Farewell to Dave’s RecordsLeor Galil and Kathleen Hinkelon January 6, 2023 at 8:58 pm

In August 2009, I moved into a three-bedroom on Clark a few blocks north of Fullerton, with no clue about Lincoln Park’s cultural position in Chicago. I had grad-school classes in Evanston and the Loop, so the neighborhood seemed to make sense—it was more or less in between the two. I felt out of place amid the college football fans crammed into sports bars along Clark, the drunk DePaul students stampeding Five Guys and the Wieners Circle after midnight, and the tony white-collar workers in their million-dollar homes. I lived in a cheap, shabby apartment, and I cherished anything subversive that survived in the cracks in the neighborhood’s facade. 

That December, I discovered the storefront windows of a nearby record shop. In an eclectic display of Christmas-themed album covers, I spotted a record by King Diamond, who was pictured in his trademark corpsepaint, thumbing his nose, sticking out his tongue, and cozying up to a reindeer with ribbons in its antlers. The disc was a 1985 12-inch called “No Presents for Christmas,” and the shop was Dave’s Records. Nothing else in the neighborhood spoke to me the way it did.

Dave Crain opened his shop at 2604 N. Clark on Labor Day in 2002. Since day one, Crain sold only vinyl, which was never an easy proposition. By the early 2000s the format had been in a decades-long decline, and according to RIAA figures, vinyl sales in 2002 were roughly 0.36 percent of the music industry’s total revenue—a $45.4 million sliver of a $12.6 billion haul. Before Record Store Day helped alert major industry players to the newfound niche value of wax, people buying vinyl were participating in a subculture, whether they thought of it that way or not. Dave’s Records offered those true believers a world to explore.

On election day 2022, when Crain announced he was closing the store, he hadn’t yet chosen a final day. He knew he had to remove all evidence of the shop’s existence from the space by January 1, when his lease would be over. When I first reported on the end of Dave’s Records in mid-November, I asked Crain if the Reader could document the store’s final day, whenever that turned out to be. I wanted to know who would travel from far and wide to pay their respects and who might casually wander in off the street. One thing I love about brick-and-mortar record shops is that you never know who you’ll meet and how they might reshape your world as a listener, even if all they do is recommend a seven-inch you’ll play a few times and then forget. The possibility of those interactions, as much as the vinyl itself, keeps me invested in record shops.

Dave’s Records closed for good Sunday, December 18. I swung by on the Friday before to pick up a few records and chat with Crain, but I couldn’t make it out that last day. Fortunately, photographer and Reader contributor Kathleen Hinkel was free, and she went to Dave’s to capture the scene during its final hours. She emerged with a touching document of the loose community that coalesced around Dave’s Records, where all kinds of folks—young parents, local music legends, former Chicagoans visiting for the holidays—navigated the tight aisles in search of buried treasure. The store is gone, but we still have our records—and Hinkel’s record of its farewell. —Leor Galil

Photo captions by Kathleen Hinkel

A sign on the door at beloved Lincoln Park record store Dave’s Records bears a quote from the Tom Waits song “I Hope That I Don’t Fall in Love With You,” from his 1973 album Closing Time. “Now it’s closing time, the music’s fading out / Last call for drinks, I’ll have another stout.” Sixty-three-year-old Dave Crain, the shop’s owner, poses for a portrait just after closing its door for the final time on Sunday, December 18, 2022. The shop had been open since 2002. “There’s nothing quieter than a record store with no music on,” Crain said earlier that day. A record had just ended, so he immediately marched to the turntable and put on “Le Freak” by Chic. 7:19 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain poses with his son, 31-year-old Sam Crain, just after closing the door of Dave’s Records for the final time. Sam said it was “touching to see how many people came out” for the store’s last day. 7:20 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain stocks the 2014 album Say Yes to Love by punk band Perfect Pussy in the hardcore section at Dave’s Records, just before the store opened at noon on its final day. 11:47 AM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderAnother sign on the door at Dave’s Records reads, “NO CD’S: NEVER HAD ’EM! NEVER WILL!!” Owner Dave Crain, pictured here stocking records in the window of the shop, was completely committed to vinyl. 2:51 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave’s Records is packed just after opening for the final time on Sunday, December 18, 2022. 12:27 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave’s Records stands empty shortly before opening on its last day. 11:36 AM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago Reader“I knew that this place was closing, and this is the last day, so I’m seeing if there’s any deals before these [records] go to other shops,” said 25-year-old Marley, a former Chicago resident visiting from Los Angeles. 12:22 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave’s Records was busy all day when it opened for the final time on Sunday, December 18, 2022. 2:26 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderWhen asked how he came to be browsing the stacks at Dave’s Records during its final hour on Sunday night, venerated Chicago-based producer the Twilite Tone, 53, responded: “It’s history and legacy, culture. It’s indigenous and impactful to who and what I am.” 6:17 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderTwenty-six-year-old Zanthia Dwight (right) and 50-year-old Lisa Schrader (left) browse during the final day at Dave’s Records. 2:20 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderZanthia Dwight flips through the vinyl at Dave’s Records. 2:20 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderEven before the official opening time of noon, Dave Crain had already started letting customers into Dave’s Records on its final day. One such customer was 38-year-old Ryan Carlsen, left, who came in search of jazz and blues. 11:41 AM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderA customer flips through vinyl at Dave’s Records. 2:33 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderOwner Dave Crain works with his son, Sam Crain, behind the counter of Dave’s Records. 12:55 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderForty-three-year-old Chris Gibson leaves Dave’s Records with a stack of records he bought on the shop’s final day. “I’ve lived in Chicago eight years, and I’ve been coming here for six or seven,” he said. “This is my fourth visit since I found out they were closing.” 12:57 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain works the register at Dave’s Records on the store’s last day. 2:37 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain at the register 2:12 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderWhen asked what brought them to Dave’s Records on the store’s final day, 25-year-old Madison Smith said, “I’ve been coming here for a couple years. Every time I come in, it’s a personal experience.” 2:12 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderOwner Dave Crain works with his son, Sam Crain, behind the counter of Dave’s Records during the shop’s final hour. 6:09 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderVinyl at Dave’s Records, including a copy of the 2022 Roky Erickson & the Explosives release Halloween II: Live 2007 6:09 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderA stack of vinyl at Dave’s Records, including a Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab edition of Elvis Costello’s My Aim Is True 6:09 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderA Dave’s Records customer holds a copy of the 1985 Neil Young single “Get Back to the Country” b/w “Misfits.” 12:44 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderChicago musician John Perrin, 30, has played drums in NRBQ since 2015. He said he’s been coming to Dave’s Records for a decade, and he came to browse the store in the first hour of its final day. 12:59 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderJohn Perrin talks to Dave’s Records owner Dave Crain while holding a copy of the Tom Waits album Alice, which came out in 2002—the year Dave’s opened. 12:16 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain checks the shelves at Dave’s Records. 2:12 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderTwenty-five-year-old Zac Veitch browses records while his two-year-old, Tomás, watches a video on his phone on his dad’s shoulders. 2:42 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago Reader“I love records,” said 46-year-old Nick Neitzman, browsing Dave’s Records on its final day. “I used to live in the neighborhood, and I spent many hours buying records here. It’s a bummer.” 2:53 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderThirty-two-year-old Arthur Tylka said he was “out for beers with my buddy, and he knew this place was closing, so we both came by.” He’s holding a copy of Seth MacFarlane’s 2011 debut album, Music Is Better Than Words. 6:02 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago Reader“I’ve been coming here since I was a kid,” said 21-year-old Jack Ioizzo, who lives in the neighborhood. 12:41 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderThe exterior of Dave’s Records on Sunday, December 18, 2022 1:03 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderFifty-year-old Lisa Scrader’s haul at Dave’s Records included Walt Whitman poetry records as well as David Bowie vinyl. 12:41 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain at work 6:07 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderTwenty-six-year-old Tyler Hunt moved to Chicago a few weeks ago and happened to drop into Dave’s while record shopping on the store’s final day. 6:07 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain talks with musicians DJ Rude One, left, and the Twilite Tone, right. The Twilite Tone is probably most famous as Common’s DJ and producer during the 90s, but he was already an important driver in Chicago’s hip-hop scene as a teenager in the late 80s. 7:04 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain right after closing his beloved Lincoln Park record shop, Dave’s Records, for the final time 7:05 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain shakes hands with a customer, 41-year-old Sarah Hamilton, at closing time. 7:11 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain just after closing time 7:18 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderDave Crain gives his son, Sam Crain, a kiss on the cheek after closing the door of his beloved Lincoln Park record shop for the final time. 7:20 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago ReaderThe valedictory Tom Waits quote on the door at Dave’s Records took on a special meaning on Sunday, December 18, 2022, when the shop closed for good after 20 years in business. 7:56 PM Credit: Kathleen Hinkel for Chicago Reader


Dave’s Records goes out in a blaze of glory

Plus: Katie Ernst and Dustin Laurenzi debut as indie-folk duo Edith Judith, and Ensemble dal Niente presents an extraordinary concert for soprano and percussion.


Read More

Farewell to Dave’s RecordsLeor Galil and Kathleen Hinkelon January 6, 2023 at 8:58 pm Read More »

Comprehending the incomprehensibility of Seijun Suzuki

There’s a meme that circulates regularly among cinephilic social media accounts in which Japanese filmmaker Seijun Suzuki appears to declare, “I make movies that make no sense and make no money.”

I confess to being one of those who’ve shared this meme, enamored as I am with Suzuki’s so-called senseless oeuvre and the lore surrounding his dauntless iconoclasm. The latter peaked in 1967 with what came to be called the “Suzuki Seijun Incident” (following the traditional Japanese naming convention); the director was fired from Nikkatsu, Japan’s oldest production studio, after the release of his maximalist masterpiece Branded to Kill for allegedly making “incomprehensible films.”

“As such,” studio head Kyusaku Hori later proclaimed in a statement, “Suzuki Seijun’s films are bad films, and to screen them publicly would be an embarrassment for Nikkatsu.” (Hori went so far as to prohibit Suzuki’s earlier films from being shown in a local retrospective; it’s unlikely, however, that these are the real reasons Suzuki was fired, as the studio was in dire financial straits and needed to justify budget cuts.) 

In his book Suzuki Seijun and Postwar Japanese Cinema (published in July 2022 by Columbia University Press), University of Chicago alum William Carroll explains the background of the aforementioned meme. In that widely quoted interview, Suzuki was actually revealing the reasons he’d been given for his termination, not making a declaration on how he perceived the coherence (or lack thereof) and financial success of his own films. 

This is one of many revelations that distinguish Carroll’s book, which provides a wealth of context around Suzuki’s singular output. Now an assistant professor of East Asian studies at the University of Alberta, Carroll situates Suzuki’s career within the cultural and political loci of postwar Japanese cinema. In celebration of this new, comprehensive text, the Film Studies Center at the University of Chicago will present Suzuki’s Taishō trilogy this weekend. Zigeunerweisen (1980) screens Friday, January 6, at 7 PM, and Kagerō-za (1981) and Yumeji (1991) screen at 4 PM and 7 PM, respectively, on Saturday, with Carroll in attendance. He’ll also discuss his book on Monday, January 9, at 5 PM at the Seminary Co-op Bookstore.

Carroll doesn’t disabuse readers of the notion that Suzuki was something of a cinematic apostate. Rather, he challenges assumptions that westerners might have about his films by providing studied insights into Japanese history and cinema, which in turn allows for a better understanding of them. As with the above misconception, it’s often what surrounds oversimplified interpretations about Suzuki’s inarguably idiosyncratic style that makes this possible. But it’s the very act of misunderstanding, in fact, that Suzuki is attempting to accentuate in his work. 

“Suzuki’s films are not ‘triumphs of form over content,’” Carroll writes, thereby challenging a commonly propagated idea in English-language criticism. He later elaborates: 

Suzuki consistently finds ways to turn conventions of cinematic forms against themselves and mislead viewers in the way he constructs space and meaning in sequences before suddenly revealing them, in a shock, to be something very different. The effect . . . invariably forces viewers to reconcile their initial misunderstanding with the surprising revelation at the end, and in doing so to confront cinematic form more directly, and to rely less on the preconceptions that led them to misunderstanding in the first place.

Such radicality elicited two factions of supporters in the wake of the Suzuki Seijun Incident: one was an emerging cohort of young cinephiles and critics who appreciated Suzuki’s disruptive aesthetic qualities, while the other consisted of student leftists who saw the filmmaker as an anti-establishment figurehead whose formal audacity, they assumed, reflected a similarly radical philosophy. Carroll considers both groups extensively, charting how these contingents’ ideologies sometimes overlapped but were oftentimes at odds. 

Originally starting as an assistant director at the Shochiku Company (another of Japan’s Big Four film studios), Suzuki eventually moved to Nikkatsu. After paying his dues in lower-level positions, he was given the opportunity to direct feature films, the majority of them under the auspices of Nikkatsu Action. Carroll included several of the director’s early films at the studio in a 2017 retrospective he programmed at Doc Films, and in his book he draws connections between them and Suzuki’s later, more characteristic films at Nikkatsu; he also illuminates how Suzuki’s films at the studio relate to the its other output of the 1950s and ’60s.

Suzuki made 40 films for Nikkatsu between 1956 and 1967; it’s the films from the last several years of his tenure—starting with Youth of the Beast (1963) and followed by Kanto Wanderer (1963), Gate of Flesh (1964), Story of a Prostitute (1965), and Tokyo Drifter (1966)—that have come to be readily associated with his overarching style, marked by impracticable compositions, bold colors with no apparent symbolic resonance, disjointed editing that disturbs any semblance of narrative continuity, and the frequent occurrence of events unrelated to the storyline evinced through a variety of formal techniques. 

In a chapter on the emergence of the “Seijunesque,” Carroll writes that “Suzuki’s approach to cinematic form is critical to understanding his body of work and what defines him as a filmmaker, but it is also a moving target.” 

“Rather than rigidly imposing preconceived formal parameters on his films from the outset,” Carroll continues, “Suzuki constantly absorbs and reacts to new developments, both generic-industrial and technological. [Critic] Ueno Kôshi wrote that the defining Seijunesque trait was not a sole formal device but rather zure, which could loosely be translated as ‘deviation’: the sense of sudden shock and confusion at what we see in front of us.”

After he was fired from Nikkastu, Suzuki worked prominently in television, making only a handful of independent feature films up until his death in 2017. The Taishō Trilogy especially marks a stark departure from the yakuza films for which he’s best known. As historical fantasias, all three films take place during the liberal period of 1912 to 1926 (which corresponds to the reign of Emperor Taishō), when Suzuki himself was born.

“Suzuki does have a certain affinity for Japanese culture in the Taishō era,” Carroll writes, going on to describe how Suzuki’s own peculiarities reflect those of artists from the era who inspired the trilogy.

Seijun Suzuki’s Taishō TrilogyZigeunerweisen (1980) 1/6 at 7 PM, Kagerō-za (1981) 1/7 at 4 PM, Yumeji (1991) 1/7 at 7 PM, Logan Center for the Arts, 915 E. 60th Street, free

Suzuki was unable to secure a traditional release for Zigeunerweisen, so the producer decided to exhibit it in an inflatable dome around Japan; the unorthodox strategy was met with great success. Based on writings by Hyakken Uchida, the film centers (if a Suzuki film could be said to center anything) on the relationship between two men and the geisha who passes in and out of their lives. Its title refers to a violin concerto by Spanish composer Pablo de Sarasate; on a famous recording of the piece from the early 20th century, Sarasate’s voice can be heard faintly saying something that no one has ever been able to comprehend. Suzuki’s protagonists discuss that recording in the film, but it has little connection to the story otherwise. 

Kagerō-za, made in the wake of the first film’s success and based on writings by Kyōka Izumi, follows a similar trajectory: in it a playwright encounters a mysterious woman who may or may not be the deceased wife of his wealthy benefactor. Indeed a supernatural element (largely absent from Suzuki’s Nikkatsu films) connects all three films of the trilogy. As Carroll notes, “Suzuki’s use of ambiguous and at times deliberately misleading practices in narration help to explain his proclivity for the supernatural in his later films, as well as an affinity to Taishō-era writers and artists, most fully realized” in this trilogy. 

The concluding film, Yumeji, came out roughly ten years after Kagerō-za. It differs from the other two in that it’s not adapted from literature; rather it’s a surreal biopic about Japanese erotic artist Takehisa Yumeji starring boundary-breaking rock star Kenji Sawada (something of a David Bowie figure in Japan at the time). The film doesn’t purport to be an account of Yumeji’s life but rather charts a series of his romantic affairs, interweaving considerations of art and mortality.  This feels the most merrily chaotic of the three, rather lavishing in its absurdity. 

A lack of contemporary zeal present in his Nikkatsu films enhances the films’ haunting nature, as well as relatively constrained color palettes; oddly, they invoke Raúl Ruiz by way of Luis Buñuel. But in terms of their general “incomprehensibility” (these are said to be among Suzuki’s most impenetrable films) and the qualities that go into them being so, they are unmistakably Seijunesque.


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Comprehending the incomprehensibility of Seijun SuzukiKat Sachson January 6, 2023 at 6:25 pm

There’s a meme that circulates regularly among cinephilic social media accounts in which Japanese filmmaker Seijun Suzuki appears to declare, “I make movies that make no sense and make no money.”

I confess to being one of those who’ve shared this meme, enamored as I am with Suzuki’s so-called senseless oeuvre and the lore surrounding his dauntless iconoclasm. The latter peaked in 1967 with what came to be called the “Suzuki Seijun Incident” (following the traditional Japanese naming convention); the director was fired from Nikkatsu, Japan’s oldest production studio, after the release of his maximalist masterpiece Branded to Kill for allegedly making “incomprehensible films.”

“As such,” studio head Kyusaku Hori later proclaimed in a statement, “Suzuki Seijun’s films are bad films, and to screen them publicly would be an embarrassment for Nikkatsu.” (Hori went so far as to prohibit Suzuki’s earlier films from being shown in a local retrospective; it’s unlikely, however, that these are the real reasons Suzuki was fired, as the studio was in dire financial straits and needed to justify budget cuts.) 

In his book Suzuki Seijun and Postwar Japanese Cinema (published in July 2022 by Columbia University Press), University of Chicago alum William Carroll explains the background of the aforementioned meme. In that widely quoted interview, Suzuki was actually revealing the reasons he’d been given for his termination, not making a declaration on how he perceived the coherence (or lack thereof) and financial success of his own films. 

This is one of many revelations that distinguish Carroll’s book, which provides a wealth of context around Suzuki’s singular output. Now an assistant professor of East Asian studies at the University of Alberta, Carroll situates Suzuki’s career within the cultural and political loci of postwar Japanese cinema. In celebration of this new, comprehensive text, the Film Studies Center at the University of Chicago will present Suzuki’s Taishō trilogy this weekend. Zigeunerweisen (1980) screens Friday, January 6, at 7 PM, and Kagerō-za (1981) and Yumeji (1991) screen at 4 PM and 7 PM, respectively, on Saturday, with Carroll in attendance. He’ll also discuss his book on Monday, January 9, at 5 PM at the Seminary Co-op Bookstore.

Carroll doesn’t disabuse readers of the notion that Suzuki was something of a cinematic apostate. Rather, he challenges assumptions that westerners might have about his films by providing studied insights into Japanese history and cinema, which in turn allows for a better understanding of them. As with the above misconception, it’s often what surrounds oversimplified interpretations about Suzuki’s inarguably idiosyncratic style that makes this possible. But it’s the very act of misunderstanding, in fact, that Suzuki is attempting to accentuate in his work. 

“Suzuki’s films are not ‘triumphs of form over content,’” Carroll writes, thereby challenging a commonly propagated idea in English-language criticism. He later elaborates: 

Suzuki consistently finds ways to turn conventions of cinematic forms against themselves and mislead viewers in the way he constructs space and meaning in sequences before suddenly revealing them, in a shock, to be something very different. The effect . . . invariably forces viewers to reconcile their initial misunderstanding with the surprising revelation at the end, and in doing so to confront cinematic form more directly, and to rely less on the preconceptions that led them to misunderstanding in the first place.

Such radicality elicited two factions of supporters in the wake of the Suzuki Seijun Incident: one was an emerging cohort of young cinephiles and critics who appreciated Suzuki’s disruptive aesthetic qualities, while the other consisted of student leftists who saw the filmmaker as an anti-establishment figurehead whose formal audacity, they assumed, reflected a similarly radical philosophy. Carroll considers both groups extensively, charting how these contingents’ ideologies sometimes overlapped but were oftentimes at odds. 

Originally starting as an assistant director at the Shochiku Company (another of Japan’s Big Four film studios), Suzuki eventually moved to Nikkatsu. After paying his dues in lower-level positions, he was given the opportunity to direct feature films, the majority of them under the auspices of Nikkatsu Action. Carroll included several of the director’s early films at the studio in a 2017 retrospective he programmed at Doc Films, and in his book he draws connections between them and Suzuki’s later, more characteristic films at Nikkatsu; he also illuminates how Suzuki’s films at the studio relate to the its other output of the 1950s and ’60s.

Suzuki made 40 films for Nikkatsu between 1956 and 1967; it’s the films from the last several years of his tenure—starting with Youth of the Beast (1963) and followed by Kanto Wanderer (1963), Gate of Flesh (1964), Story of a Prostitute (1965), and Tokyo Drifter (1966)—that have come to be readily associated with his overarching style, marked by impracticable compositions, bold colors with no apparent symbolic resonance, disjointed editing that disturbs any semblance of narrative continuity, and the frequent occurrence of events unrelated to the storyline evinced through a variety of formal techniques. 

In a chapter on the emergence of the “Seijunesque,” Carroll writes that “Suzuki’s approach to cinematic form is critical to understanding his body of work and what defines him as a filmmaker, but it is also a moving target.” 

“Rather than rigidly imposing preconceived formal parameters on his films from the outset,” Carroll continues, “Suzuki constantly absorbs and reacts to new developments, both generic-industrial and technological. [Critic] Ueno Kôshi wrote that the defining Seijunesque trait was not a sole formal device but rather zure, which could loosely be translated as ‘deviation’: the sense of sudden shock and confusion at what we see in front of us.”

After he was fired from Nikkastu, Suzuki worked prominently in television, making only a handful of independent feature films up until his death in 2017. The Taishō Trilogy especially marks a stark departure from the yakuza films for which he’s best known. As historical fantasias, all three films take place during the liberal period of 1912 to 1926 (which corresponds to the reign of Emperor Taishō), when Suzuki himself was born.

“Suzuki does have a certain affinity for Japanese culture in the Taishō era,” Carroll writes, going on to describe how Suzuki’s own peculiarities reflect those of artists from the era who inspired the trilogy.

Seijun Suzuki’s Taishō TrilogyZigeunerweisen (1980) 1/6 at 7 PM, Kagerō-za (1981) 1/7 at 4 PM, Yumeji (1991) 1/7 at 7 PM, Logan Center for the Arts, 915 E. 60th Street, free

Suzuki was unable to secure a traditional release for Zigeunerweisen, so the producer decided to exhibit it in an inflatable dome around Japan; the unorthodox strategy was met with great success. Based on writings by Hyakken Uchida, the film centers (if a Suzuki film could be said to center anything) on the relationship between two men and the geisha who passes in and out of their lives. Its title refers to a violin concerto by Spanish composer Pablo de Sarasate; on a famous recording of the piece from the early 20th century, Sarasate’s voice can be heard faintly saying something that no one has ever been able to comprehend. Suzuki’s protagonists discuss that recording in the film, but it has little connection to the story otherwise. 

Kagerō-za, made in the wake of the first film’s success and based on writings by Kyōka Izumi, follows a similar trajectory: in it a playwright encounters a mysterious woman who may or may not be the deceased wife of his wealthy benefactor. Indeed a supernatural element (largely absent from Suzuki’s Nikkatsu films) connects all three films of the trilogy. As Carroll notes, “Suzuki’s use of ambiguous and at times deliberately misleading practices in narration help to explain his proclivity for the supernatural in his later films, as well as an affinity to Taishō-era writers and artists, most fully realized” in this trilogy. 

The concluding film, Yumeji, came out roughly ten years after Kagerō-za. It differs from the other two in that it’s not adapted from literature; rather it’s a surreal biopic about Japanese erotic artist Takehisa Yumeji starring boundary-breaking rock star Kenji Sawada (something of a David Bowie figure in Japan at the time). The film doesn’t purport to be an account of Yumeji’s life but rather charts a series of his romantic affairs, interweaving considerations of art and mortality.  This feels the most merrily chaotic of the three, rather lavishing in its absurdity. 

A lack of contemporary zeal present in his Nikkatsu films enhances the films’ haunting nature, as well as relatively constrained color palettes; oddly, they invoke Raúl Ruiz by way of Luis Buñuel. But in terms of their general “incomprehensibility” (these are said to be among Suzuki’s most impenetrable films) and the qualities that go into them being so, they are unmistakably Seijunesque.


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Comprehending the incomprehensibility of Seijun SuzukiKat Sachson January 6, 2023 at 6:25 pm Read More »

The Blackhawks may consider drafting this Team Sweden prospectVincent Pariseon January 6, 2023 at 6:34 pm

The Chicago Blackhawks did a great job at the World Junior Championships. Four of their prospects are coming home with a Gold Medal as Colton Dach, Kevin Korchinski, Ethan del Mastro, and Nolan Allan all won one with Team Canada.

Dach left the tournament after four games due to injury but he collected two assists in those games. It was tough to see him leave with injury but that happens sometimes.

The other three are defensemen who did their job on the blue line. In addition to some good defending, Allan also had two assists, del Mastro had three assists, and Korchinski had a goal and two assists for three points. It was a great showing all around.

Of course, it was good to see Chicago’s prospects do well but it was also good to check out some of the prospects that are going to be high draft picks in the 2023 NHL Draft.

The Chicago Blackhawks have a lot to consider at the 2023 NHL Draft.

A lot was made about Connor Bedard and Adam Fantilli who are going to be the first and second overall picks. However, both of those spots are determined by lottery. What if the Hawks come in last place in the NHL but don’t win a lottery spot?

That will give them the third overall pick by default. It wouldn’t be ideal for their rebuild but they would still be getting a very good prospect with that selection. Someone to consider is Leo Carlsson who just finished this tournament with Team Sweden.

Sweden lost to Team Czech in the semi-finals to just miss out on a trip to the Gold Medal Game. Following that, they were defeated in overtime by Team USA in the Bronze Medal Game. A bounce here and there was the difference between no medal and a chance at gold.

Carlsson was magnificent. He scored two clutch goals in the quarterfinals against Finland. Each of them tied the game. The funny part is that the eventual 3-2 game-winner was scored by Blackhawks prospect Victor Stjernborg.

In the aforementioned Bronze game against Team USA, Carlsson had a goal and an assist. That brought his tournament total up to 3 goals and 3 assists for 6 points in the seven games played. He still has a lot of developing to do but his game is incredible.

With all of this raw talent that he possesses, he is going to be drafted in the top five and could very well go third. For Blackhawks fans, he is certainly someone to keep an eye on.

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The Blackhawks may consider drafting this Team Sweden prospectVincent Pariseon January 6, 2023 at 6:34 pm Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays, and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


Baby steps

The good news about 2022 is that it could have been worse.


Good riddance

The best thing Alderperson Ed Burke ever did for Chicago was to leave office.


The Florida strategy

MAGA’s attempt to scare white voters into voting against Pritzker didn’t work so well, to put it mildly.

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Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon January 6, 2023 at 8:01 am

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays, and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


Baby steps

The good news about 2022 is that it could have been worse.


Good riddance

The best thing Alderperson Ed Burke ever did for Chicago was to leave office.


The Florida strategy

MAGA’s attempt to scare white voters into voting against Pritzker didn’t work so well, to put it mildly.

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Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon January 6, 2023 at 8:01 am Read More »

They said it! Gregg Popovich, Steven Adams lead NBA quotes of the weekon January 6, 2023 at 1:44 pm

AP Photo/Darren Abate

Steven Adams knows honesty is the best policy and more from our NBA quotes of the week.

“We’re holding Luka under 50, quote me.”

San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich, on Dallas Mavericks forward Luka Doncic

“He’s just a beautiful basketball player.”

Popovich, on Doncic, after he scored 51 points in the Mavericks’ win over the Spurs

“We sucked at shooting. They kept missing shots so I went and got ’em.”

Memphis Grizzlies center Steven Adams, on how he got 13 offensive rebounds against the Sacramento Kings

“I’m in a tough-ass position behind [Kevin Durant], [Giannis Antetokounmpo] and [Joel Embiid]. All four of us averaging 30 … I got my work cut out to beat one of those guys.”

Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum, on starting in the All-Star Game

“There’s no improvement.”

Houston Rockets guard Eric Gordon, on what improvements the team has made this season

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They said it! Gregg Popovich, Steven Adams lead NBA quotes of the weekon January 6, 2023 at 1:44 pm Read More »

Chicago Bulls: Patrick Williams scores season-high in win over NetsJosh De Lucaon January 6, 2023 at 12:00 pm

Patrick Williams was drafted as a “project” when the Chicago Bulls selected him 4th overall in the 2020 NBA draft. His length and athleticism have always been there, but he has always needed to improve on the offensive side of the ball. Yesterday’s game showed that he has taken a step in the right direction.

The Bulls hosted a red-hot Brooklyn Nets team on Wednesday, who were riding a 12-game win streak. This game had shootout written all over it, as both teams have multiple talented scorers, and have had their struggles on the defensive end.

Many would’ve predicted the bulk of the scoring to come from either Demar DeRozan or Zach LaVine, the teams two leading scorers. However, it was Patrick Williams who played the best game.

Williams scored 22 points, grabbed 7 rebounds and tallied 2 assists and 2 steals in the massive 121-112 win. This bests his previous season high of 16. Williams was showing flashes on both ends of the court against one of the best teams in the Eastern Conference.

Patrick Williams showed major improvement in all areas of his game last night, leading the Chicago Bulls in both points and steals against one of the best teams in the East.

What’s even more impressive than the fact that he registered 22 points, was the way that he did it. Williams is far from a volume scorer for the Bulls. With three All-star caliber players in the starting lineup, it is hard to consistently get your own shot.

This didn’t stop Williams though, as he made 6 of his 8 shots from the field. Of his 8 shots, 4 of them were from deep, where Williams connected on 3 of them. He also showed improvement in his shot creating, creating open jumpers for himself off the dribble, and getting to the rim at a high rate.

In his first two seasons, Williams had struggled from the free throw line, making only 73% of his shots. This season has been a different story, as he is shooting 92.9%. This proved valuable on Wednesday, as Williams went 7/7 from the stripe.

When a team’s young players can put up performances like this, without taking shots away from their volume shooters, big things start to happen, like they did yesterday evening.

There is no saying that Williams will continue to keep posting these kinds of numbers, but when you compare what he was doing yesterday to what we saw from him in his first two seasons, there has been major improvement.

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Chicago Bulls: Patrick Williams scores season-high in win over NetsJosh De Lucaon January 6, 2023 at 12:00 pm Read More »