Finding The Great Happiness Space
The lives of the hosts and their customers at first seemed to be extreme and unfathomably foreign from a western perspective. Although many people in Japan see hosts as despicable, I see hosts involved in something that is close to all of our hearts, which is the struggle between making a buck and doing the right thing. There is real fascination in looking at this strange form of emotional pseudo prostitution that caters to some women's desires so successfully that they will got to almost any lengths, and pay thousands of dollars to consume it. --- Jake Clennell, Director The phenomenon of the male host club has been sweeping Japan for some time now. These men in some instances have even become pseudo celebrities appearing on billboards and even on television shows. Simply put, women come to host clubs and pay for attention and affection, creating a fictional relationship with their host. My own first encounter into this world came from my fifteen-year-old sister. As she visited me over the summer she introduced me to an anime called Ouran High School Host Club. As she struggled to explain to me what a host club was and what the anime was about, I found myself baffled with the idea that it was acceptable to my sister, the notion of men giving their affections for a price. These were serious themes that an anime had depicted as entertaining and even normal.Sort of jap-english expressions, that we felt sort of had a ring to it.
Jake Clennell
The Great Happiness Space: Tale of an Osaka Love Thief depicts the male host club in its entirety. The film shows the story of Issei, a twenty-something Japanese businessman. His business? He runs the most successful male host club in the city of Osaka. Issei is well dressed in expensive suits, his hair is coiffed perfectly and he displays an air of confidence that draw women to him again and again. He greatly encourages this because that’s how he earns his money. The documentary is able to capture the essential reality of why male host clubs have become so successful. Director Jake Clennell puts it best, “love was an important factor in everybody’s life.” Here’s Asiance’s interview with director Jake Clennell.
ASIANCE: How did you first get interested in this project?
Jake: Well, I was shooting a field documentary for PBS on high school baseball and it was quite an involved sort of very well planned project. We had been there shooting in Osaka for a couple of months. The shoot was very, sort of, what is the word, very right wing stuff, inside of the Japanese mind (life?). We were dealing with a lot of bureaucracy mostly. I’d sit on the bridge you see in the film and as I sort of sat there I saw these sort of peacocks walking past, these kind of beautiful guys and they were continually trying to pick up women and it was just they seemed so you know, beautifully art directed and also very insular in their world. This became fascinating to me and slowly but surely I worked out what was going on.ASIANCE: What did you do to prepare for this movie?
Jake: There’s a lot of advertisement for the clubs in magazines and in the red light district around Osaka. I had a couple of Japanese friends and of course only women go to these clubs, men don’t really go to the club. So as a man it was quite difficult and I had to go accompanied by one or two Japanese women, in order to even get through the door. My Japanese isn’t fluent, it’s actually very limited and the clubs really aren’t looking for foreign guys to roll in because they have no reason to be there. They aren’t really going to spend money. And of course Japanese people are usually quite polite. So they might let me into the club for a minute and come back & check that I wasn’t going to cause trouble or something. I did look at a number of different places but what I really ended up doing was sort of find out who was the most successful host. The most famous host was in Osaka. Sort of through my network of friends in Japan, I saw if I had any connection to him. Eventually I did have a connection to him. And slowly but surely built a relationship with Issei.ASIANCE: When you started filming, were the people and the hosts comfortable with that?
Jake: Well, I think there is a period when you start any documentary you start filming your subject and they get to know you and you get to know them. And one had to take ones cues from the atmosphere in the club. They are celebrities in a strange way in that they are very, very polite service oriented celebrities, sort of…I shot the film with a very small crew, basically it was me and a translator. What I tried to do is be as differential and invisible as possible in the club not really making friends particularly early on, but just sort of keeping my nose down and shooting what I was told to shoot. Then obviously, as I spent more time there, it got later and later into the night and people had been drinking more. People just relaxed and you’re just the guy that’s around. Eventually after a number of nights people got used to be being there. And once the host started ignoring me and everybody started ignoring me and it really became a kind of magical situation. I mean mostly they were ignoring me and some of the time I couldn’t understand what they were talking about. So I just ignored them so noone would necessarily react to what I was saying. I was just sort of there as a part of the scene. The host club is a little bit like a cabaret show, there’s a sense of performance. It’s not totally off the cards that there might be cameras around.
The Great Happiness Space






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