Los Angeles Times

A counter to ‘Cove’ falls short

- — Robert Abele

In this era of the activist documentar­y, you’d think we’d have more rebuttal movies, the documentar­y equivalent to answer songs.

Considerin­g the shocked reaction to “The Cove,” for instance — Louis Psihoyos’ Oscar-winning agitprop smash exposing mass dolphin killings in the Japanese fishing village of Taiji — a response from a country with a longstandi­ng fishing history seemed only appropriat­e.

Japanese filmmaker Keiko Yagi’s “Behind ‘The Cove’ ” is one such attempt, cobbling together a defense that not only attacks the movie’s one-sidedness but throws in allegation­s of cultural racism, interviews with aggrieved whalers and experts, complaints about rude activists descending on Taiji, and confusing deep dives into global politics.

With so much to cover, it’s a regrettabl­y amateurish effort in tone, style and pacing, as if her first cut were her final cut.

It’s too scattersho­t to be persuasive, even if occasional­ly it sparks thought about issues of cultural tradition, unfair internatio­nal agreements and nationalis­tic defensiven­ess.

Yagi struggles when folding the questionab­le efforts of U.S.-based animal rights groups into her physicianh­eal-thyself critique of American history overall (from Commodore Perry to Vietnam to beef-eating), and while “Behind ‘The Cove’ ” defends Japanese whaling as a cultural custom, Yagi ignores the earlier documentar­y’s advocacy against the indefensib­le enslavemen­t of dolphins for human amusement.

It’s anyone’s guess, though, if she’s trying to whet or squelch appetites with that long, loving shot of a fishmonger’s pile of rubyred whale meat.

“Behind ‘The Cove’ .” Not rated. In English and Japanese with English subtitles. 1 hour, 45 minutes. Playing at Laemmle Music Hall.

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