Anime

There are thousands of detailed, obsessive anime blogs online. I guess you could say I'm a casual angmo otaku by comparison ^^.

This category is a reincarnation of my original anime and Japanese culture blog I lost in a database wipe. Gotta start again somewhere!


#Anime #SmashCon 2012!

Thank you to @Adasifs for capturing my slightly better side! ^^;

Where are the photos?

Having taken my DSLR and lenses to every convention before, I decided to eschew (gesundheit) them this year, putting my trust into the far more talented members of the UTS anime club. They all were using Canons not Nikons, but I forgave them ;). I'll post links here to public galleries once they start appearing.

Being without a camera was quite a different experience. Rather than watching people wandering and doing things through the viewfinder, I was doing... all... the things! I think I'll go back to taking it, but I'll admit it was nice not having this heavy kit weighing me down, getting in the way of photo requests and so on.

SMASH! 2012 Swag!

The Bird is The Badge!

As for the con itself, I built a Gundam[head!] in a workshop, sat in on the seiyuu interviews (blush) and part of the cosplay competition (before other commitments had me assigned to Starbucks, WiFi and a conference call for an hour!), went to stall after stall after stall and talked to artists, supported our UTS Anime club with a ton of swag, watched some of our club members sing Karaoke (and really well, wow!), stared in wonder at the Gundam building contest and the people in their ridiculously detailed and spot-on cosuprey, caught up with folks from some of my other uni classes, chatted with some of the lovely staff at Japan Airlines about flights via Singapore, and topped it off with a hot coffee on a cold night with friends :).

I'd been tempted to become a volunteer for this year's SMASH, but I had insufficient time and energy. I watched in wonder at some of my friends who were volunteers pouring their heart and soul and energy and time and and and and... into it this year, and I think it paid off handsomely!

Speaking of handsomely... well okay, it definitely wouldn't be the first term I'd use, more like... passably? XD I'd felt so dejected and sat having lost all my sci fi and uniforms, but with the help of the super friendly @hanezawakirika (who also had the best cosplay there!) who flew in at just the right moment with a wonderful save, I cosplayed as Yoite from Nabari no Ou! He was the perfect character for someone of my relatively meek but tall build to do, save for the hair! I vaguely remembered the series from 2008, and on the night before watched several of the anime episodes again to refresh myself and help get into character :). Overall I was asked for photos 24 or 29 times, I have it written down as one or the other. In any event, a lot!

Had a great time, and the UTS Anime club peeps were far too much fun to hang out with. Thanks guys! :D Ghibli group cosplay next time, for sure!


Borrowers don't want me dressing like a nerd!

We're all familiar with dryers that produce a spare sock from a bunch of pairs. I propose this scientifically reproducible phenomena also extends to packing boxes, given yet another maddeningly fruitless search this afternoon.

When we operate a clothes dryer, we place our perfectly matching pairs of socks into it, then let it spin until the moisture has been adequately expelled for the subsequent comfortable wearing of said devices. There'd be little point throwing in a spare sock, because we can't just wear one. Yet, whenever this time honoured tradition of the suburbanite is performed (a rite of passage if you will), we are left pondering why a spare sock appeared, or another sock went missing.

House moving is no different. Over the course of my sister's and my life, we've lived in 14 houses in 6 cities in 3 countries (if I count Adelaide when I was in student housing and living with friends). During each of these moves, we've had our entire lives thrown into boxes, taped up and shipped somewhere.

Without fail, we lose things to breakage, or other things simply vanish without a trace! With this latest move to Sydney I can add four more things to the list:

  • my Yuki mug (from the Haruhi Suzumiya series)
  • my Gundam ZAFT uniform
  • my Star Trek DS9/VOY science uniform (still got the badge!)
  • and my Ouran High Hosts Club blazer.

The problem with losing things from moves (other than the actual losing) is that you never have closure. You're never sure whether the items are in a box that never got unpacked, or whether it fell off a truck. It could be under your nose the entire time and you don't know it, or someone else is using your stuff. It doesn't matter if the boxes are numbered and catalogued, or who you ship with, or whether it's a blue moon, it doesn't seem to make any difference.

A Buddhist would tell me that it's my attachment to material possessions that's the problem, and that it's the ultimate symbol of a first world problem, but I really liked that stuff, and I could have really used those clothes for SMASH! on Saturday. Bummed out beyond all belief.

Guess it's just time to start from scratch again... though too late for the one event of the year when it mattered. F*ck.


#Anime Music Monday by Moonlight

This post originally appeared on my university's anime club site, but preserved here for posterity. In hindsight I should have posted this on Monday. Whoops!

That's a big picture

Sailor Moon!

We're going there? Really? There? THERE? Oh yes, yes we are. SERIOUSLY? Yes, stop asking me!

Oh lordy, here we go...

The year was 1996. We hadn't yet moved to Singapore, and my sister and I were living with our parents in Brisbane (as we had made it habit of doing). It was a crisp early morning and we'd woken up against our wishes to get ready for school. Making our way up the rickety wooden stares of the Old Queenslander, we longingly reminisced about our house in Melbourne that didn't require us to walk up flights of stairs.

While we're on the subject, allow me to digress for a moment... who designs a house with a kitchen on the second floor? A room people need to access first thing in the morning!? For various reasons there will always be cynical architects, but that's just out and out cruel! CRUEL I tell you!

Through the shivering and tiredness and other worries that children have before they suddenly and shockingly learn later on are largely inconsequential compared to problems Grown Ups have to contend with, there was one thing that made waking up worthwhile.

Three words: Agro's Friggen Cartoon Connection.

ASIDE: One of the words included above was not in the original title; rather it was added for comedic and dramatic effect. To keep you on your toes and guessing however, I won't tell you which it was.

There has to be a reason for all that...

So why am I bringing up a morning show for children with questionable hand puppets? For one reason, and it's three words: Agro's Friggen Cartoon Connection. Wait, I already said that, let me try that again. Duck season. Wabbit season! DUCK SEASON! WABBIT SEASON!

So why am I bringing up a morning show for children with questionable hand puppets? Because aside from several other programmes shipped in on a tight budget from the massive production houses of the British Isles during that period, it was also my sister's and my first experience of watching anime. Perhaps it was yours too!

Yes, some genius at the DIC production houses had thought it rather sporting to pull an anime series from Japan, take out the "unconventional" sexuality, pantsu shots (or leotard shots, or whatever they were), tack on some horridly cheesy moral lessons at the end, and show it to children early in the morning in the Anglosphere. And we never missed an episode!

This, ladies and gentleman, THIS was the theme song of our childhood:

I feel a fool for doubting you Ruby!

It would be the Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya over a decade later that would get me into anime in a somewhat more serious capacity, and even then I would refuse to watch dubs. Still, I've always had a soft spot for that terrible English theme song!

As I got more into anime, I went back to Sailor Moon in a fit of childhood nostalgia, and was delighted to find an entire universe of stuff, including the original anime series that hadn't been hacked to bits. Rather than just being a fairly cheesy story about a crybaby who transformed into a tiny skirt and chased taking cats, there was more depth. The episodes were darker, more involved.

Each series from Sailor Moon, Sailor Moon R, Sailor Moon S, Sailor Moon Super-S and Sailor Moon Stars had their own twist to the original music, to say nothing of the live action! One can spend hours looking through YouTube, which I was almost tempted to do this evening if it weren't for the fact I had to do something... what was it... oh yeah, write this post!

The 90s music! The graphics! Aaaaaaah! Frankly, if you don't find these awesome, there's something Wrong With You™

Sailor Moon R had my favourite OP, it just seemed more dramatic somehow! \o/

Of course, I bring this much and the series upon which it was attached because we've been informed there will be a new Sailor Moon series coming out in 2013. I'll admit I'm a little nervous, series that tend to have large gaps end up being hit-and-miss, and they have a large canon universe to follow and respect, but it they pull it off... we may have another Music Monday on this venerable series next year!

Fighting evil by moonlight, win love by daylight yo! #nerddance.


#Anime Mugi coin bank, via @ginarrrgh

From AmiAmi.com, we have this Mitsumetronics K-On! Photo Frame Coin Bank! You can have any of the girls from HTT, but naturally you'd want to get this one ^^.

With her watching me save, I could imagine doing it more often! I could have phrased that better.


#Anime Gesundheit Chitanda~

Aaaaaah. Chitanda Eru from Hyouka, the latest KyoAni production. Will no doubt be another significant (and entirely voluntary!) financial drain on me at some stage.

Thank you @hanezawakirika ^^;

And yes, this post had merit. Just like this one.


#Anime Mugi the Birthday Vulcan!

It's my anime waifu Mugi-chan's birthday! Yes I'm aware she's only into Yuri stuff, shaddup!

Bikinis aren't really my thing (this one by comparison made me HNNNNNNGGGG), but when I saw the rather fabulous Ikari Manatsu's illustration of Mugi doing the famous Star Trek Vulcan salute, I couldn't pass it up! Live long and prosper Mugi! It's the logical thing to do! :D

(Update: Michael P. emailed me saying the Zerochan links only work if you're logged in. Thanks for the tip!)


#Anime When resolutions attack

Observe the above image by D宅 on Pixiv if you will. The stunning landscape. The ridiculously gorgeous and vivid colours. Hatsune Miku!

Full size, the image is 2500x1154. My primary monitor is 1920x1200. To be pixel perfect (as I insist with my desktop backgrounds) it's too short by 46 pixels.

1920x1080 images are perverse enough, but this is just out and out cruel!


#Anime Moeblob chopsticks by @hanezawakirika

So last night we were Twittering my attempts to eat pizza with chopsticks. I also unabashedly invented the title of UTS Anime Club Moeblob Liaison Officer for myself. Somehow, these two conversations folded into one, and we decided if I were to have a badge it should be of Mugi-chan... eating with chopsticks.

Needless to say, our art director wasted no time sketching up a concept, after I'd already gone to sleep! That she could do that at an ungodly hour of the night and have it look like the character so much it's uncanny only confirms the fact the Anime club voted for the right person for art director. I'm just saying :)


#Anime Alternate Black Rock Shooter plot

When I first heard of Black Rock Shooter and its anime adaptation, I was expecting a franchise about a kick arse, renewable energy-touting superhero taking down the coal lobby by staring people down. Needless to say, I was entirely wrong.

Forgive me, my last three posts were about more serious news topics, and I needed an entirely pointless break! It seems people are disappointed with the anime, but for those of us who never played the game or read the manga, would it be worth watching?


#Anime Picture It – Cityscapes

My latest entry to the Anime@UTS blog, and the first about art! If you want to comment, do so over there :D.

It may be regarded as odd that I'm beginning a post discussing what it won't be about, rather than what it will be. It feel it is necessary however, lest anyone get the mistaken impression I know what I'm talking about when it comes to art. As such, this post will not be as insightful as what you may have come to expect from our resident artist, nor it will it be as eloquent as what you would expect from our resident Peruvian. Lima is five in Malay, isn't that funny? Don't answer that.

I'll cut to the chase. We all get off on different things, as it were. Some people need mountains of fan service, mandatory beach episodes and shower scenes showcasing their favourite characters in various stages of duress. Wait, undress. Both work. Personally, I'm a meganekko fan, for some reason. Well, I know the reason, its because I find glasses showcase people eyes better. The other thing is citypr0n, or "cityscapes" to use politically correct terminology.

I could perform an exhaustive history of the representation of cityscapes in anime starting with the earliest known examples, moving through to the 1990s, then to the present, but instead I'll focus on three specific series' which I thought best showcased cityscapes at the time.

Some in the club may groan at the sight of Pretty Soldier Sailor Moon, but I had an unnatural obsession with the series growing up, and one of the reasons was for the art. Remove the boilerplate transformation scenes and Usagi being a klutz, and you get some beautiful visual interpretations of 1990s Tokyo. And some lesbians.

What the scenes lacked in detail they made up for in colour; they almost looked as though they were painted in watercolour. For all I know, they could have been. Like all the other series' from the time, Sailor Moon was hand drawn and painted. Pretty amazing to think about now.

One of my dreams as a kid was to have curtains for my bedroom with a blue Sailor Moon cityscape on it. No doubt my father was disappointed my dream didn't involve having short-skirted sailor scouts on my curtains instead. I think he was worried that my orientation was unusual. But that's for the psychiatrists office, not the world's greatest anime club and their blog. Haiyo!

Fly forward to 2008, and we get the series that arguably contained more citypr0n that any other. Toaru Kagaku no Railgun wasn't just a rare example of a spinoff that was better than the original (in the [correct] opinion of your humble [dashing, attractive] author), but it's artists at JC Staff seemed to spare no expense in creating breathtakingly detailed, immersive cityscapes for the characters to carry out their various deeds.

The style was realistic and fitting with contemporary architecture, but an entirely new Academy City afforded the artists a little creative licence to build up a new modern world from scratch. Wind turbines and expansive, tree lined streets contrasted with tall pale blue buildings that made the adventures of Misaka Mikoto and her compatriots that much more fun to watch.

Your author humbly admits he watched Railgun prior to Index, and he did so because he saw screenshots of the world in which their adventures took place. And Mikoto in a polka dot swimsuit thingy. Pity she didn't wear glasses. You didn't read any of that. Any of what? Exactly.


From the artistic to the realistic, we get to the downright surreal. With the broadcast of Nisemonogatari I'm reminded of Bakemonogatari, and how I painstakingly took screenshots from it while watching in 2009 to use as desktop backgrounds (or wallpapers, as you Windows and OS/2 folk seem intent on calling them). A warning in advance, my lack of artistic prowess will show through here!

The cityscapes in Bakemonogatari were some of the most detailed I'd ever seen, almost to a fault. As the quality of the animation of the characters themselves seemed to wane a little over the course of the series, the scenery continued to get the royal treatment. The shockingly bold colours and sharp lines even from a distance were used to great effect; the mood for a scene was often carried more by the colours than the music. At least, that was my impression. Visually, the effect was striking.

What I revelled in while watching though was the downright weirdness. You thought Penguindrum was weird with having pedestrian crossing figures as extras, Bakemonogatari eschewed (gesunteit) them entirely. The gigantic urban parks, imposing apartment buildings (that bore a curious resemblance to HDBs, as more than one Singaporean otaku observed at the time), expressways and tall buildings. We associate all these areas with swarms of people. Hives of activity. Buzzing with energy. These puns sweet or what? Get it, honey bees? I'll stop now.

Combine the abandoned state of these scenes with otherwise modern, pristine cityscapes, and you get an artistic style Dali would have scoffed at if I referred to it as surreal. Then again, he melted clocks and waxed pointed moustaches for a living. Waxed lyrical, as it were.

We've only just scratched the surface here. Pick any season, and chances are at least one or two of the showcased series' will have amazing urban landscapes, or citypr0n as I unabashedly refer to it as. It's a predictable as the one unashamed ecchi release each season, and I'd argue possibly for the same reason ^^;