Monthly Archives: February 2011

Peak Otaku

There are more than just a few industry pundit, insiders and academians touting this notion, that there are only so many “core otaku” out there. I put quotes on those terms because I mean something specific: In Japan, there are only so many people who are going to buy limited edition Blu-ray of some moe/mecha/gag/retro/battle/One Piece anime every single season, and this group is what I’m referring to by the term “core otaku.” There are roughly anywhere from 10 to 200 thousand (that’s the highest I’ve seen stated by someone else) of these people, give or take some vague volume of margin. I haven’t really analyzed the numbers but I think you can get a good idea just by seeing what sells out and where it happens. Just look at some sales charts.

Now I think the term can include a certain fixed number of non-Japanese otaku. Especially for English-speaking oversea group.

That’s the approach I use to tackle this analytical work (GJ RP) that describes the rise and fall of anime blogs in the total. In essence, I’m holding the novelty of blogging as a constant, in that it too has reached a point in which it is no different than any other medium of expression when we choose to express ourselves, as a way to represent the size of a population. This is particularly true when RP noted that the 2010 trend is “the real normal” as the core otaku demographics is one that is not entirely constant–some people cease to participate and withdraw, and new people participate for the first time–but at the center there’s a consistent, core group of bloggers who’ve been doing it for a long time.

In other words, we’ve hit a plateau in that group of core bloggers, probably somewhere in 2007-2008. This is particularly convincing because I think by 2008 we’ve already gotten over the whole “woah so this is social networking” thing or the “woah this is a blog” thing, so what’s left is people getting to a point in their lives that they want to blog about anime.

If I had any critiques, it would be that Anime Nano is probably slowly losing relevance as a tracker of blogs. There must be a lot more blogs not tracked by it today than ever before. I know I’ve seen more anime blogs on twitter not listed on Nano than ever before. It would be nice to see the same work RP has done but in a way that captures that potential difference.

As English-language anime fans from the 90s and early 00s age and move up in their position in life over time, I think we will probably see a shrinking demographic similar to Japan’s economically-empowered, otaku buyer market. Big ticket BD box sets may become a viable way to make a pretty penny. It’s not a recommended kind of approach (since it’s a finicky market and too much of an all-egg-in-one-basket approach IMO), but it isn’t one that we can count out.

PS. I was playing Cathrine demo over the weekend. Wow did that game hits home LOL. Now that’s a very smart little game, daringly so. Targeting exactly the right demographic, so to speak.


Melting to Wandering Son’s OP

It’s really weird, but somehow I really like Hourou Musuko’s OP. By Winter 2011 anime on Japanese TV standards, it’s not a happening OP. For noitaminA standards, it’s not a happening OP. In fact it’s basically the polar opposite of Kuragehime OP. Maybe because it is so out of place, that it ranks at the top of my favorite OP/ED this season.

I think Kuragehime OP is a good point of comparison. The dynamic and lively chain of references aside, the song “Koko Dake no Hanashi” is one of Chatmonchy’s better works–at least from a non-fan’s perspective–and it is great accompaniment to a happily-paced romantic comedy. On the other hand, I simply melted to my seat when folksy upstart Daisuke played out his “Itsudate.” during the opening of Hourou Musuko. I’m not sure what it was or why it happened, but there was something that was able to grab my attention, help me focus, and make me soak in the watercolor landscaping and the simple guitar chorus, on a dime.

If I had to guess, it was the watercolor credits hovering eerily over the empty school scenes. It came with an English translation. Three-Dee English translation. If that doesn’t draw your fancy, well…

The funny thing is, from some kind of objective sense, the OP to Hourou Musuko is all messed up. There are different kind of visual elements clashing together; it’s largely full of computer generated visuals, and (again) nothing really happens, yet it is almost the first thing we see in each episode. It works for me, but I can’t imagine it working for the average Western anime person. What is going on here?

This is just one part of the conspiracy. To see the big picture, we have to talk about theme (a little). Soft focus? That’s a good place to start. It’s like digestive juices of a pitcher plant, blending together character animation, background, colors, themes, and viewers like you.

One of the themes as expounded upon by others within Wandering Son is loneliness and finding common ground as a way to bring people together. I think the OP plays right in by cranking the folksy nostalgia lever up to 10 and lets you fill in the blank on your own. That’s why the school is empty, anyways. The show works when we project ourselves, when we engage our powers of empathy. The anime works because it invites us to do so. Even if you never had a problem with any of the problems the characters from the show faced, you can put yourself in that empty school. [And you can imagine how much more so for people who can really identify with the cast.]

Anyway, I melt when I watch the OP each week. It’s almost like the whiplash Rie Fu is now serving up weekly in the ED, except it is reversed; the OP buys us in, the ED flips out the trump card and collects the winning. There is a method to this not-so-madness.

And we didn’t even get to talk about transgender stuff! But hey, them otaku love it when a plan comes together. That plan is having a visual direction that is a part and extends the thematic content of the story. And it’s a grand plan.

PS. This is the best anime since K-ON at this trick. And I have no idea why a carnivorous plant was referenced in this post. Food chain identity disorder?


Sequel Tuesday: More Shows I’d Like Mined

I was playing GameDevStory recently, and sequels? They’re grand.

With Gonzo’s revival and plans for more Last Exile, that got me thinking–what golden age early 2000/late 1990s show would I like? And LOL did I just call it golden age? It’s when anime was just making its strides over in America, so I have a particular attachment to that era. I don’t know if I can say the same about the shows from that era: they weren’t really that good. Maybe I could say the same about shows from any era, as long as the number of shows from then is greater than a statistically significant number. Anyways, here are some things I’d like to see–

More Vampire Hunter D. The original Vampire Hunter D novels are pretty much pulp hack-and-slash fics that kind of gimps on that visual kei imagery so stereotypically associated with those musical artists. Of course D is not about music, but about a badass half-vampire person killing things. And sometimes about his badass (usually) non-human acquaintances that often end up dead. I thought the original movie and the subsequent remake did pretty okay to convey a degree of grit, but they could do better on the glam and glitz. Even worse, the action was just not very, well, hack-and-slash. Don’t get me wrong, they had those things in it, but they were not so much a core part of the viewing experience beyond being token genre identifiers. I mean, we watch D  anime because it has cool action scenes. So a D anime with a lot of said cool action scenes would be the ideal way to go.

Witch Hunter Robin. Shoukou Murase bombed his Ergo Proxy bid, and not entirely because it sucked. It just lacked that something which Robin had a lot of. What is it, I don’t know, but I can tell you that Robin is still a character that charms me so many years after her last appearance. Like Last Exile, it is also ripe for a spinoff. It has a fairly open and easy-to-work-with setting. It has a very solid art direction and aesthetics, so a sequel would do well to follow suit. The story may be what’s weak about Robin, but it wasn’t its weakest point. Still it followed a rather straightforward template and people would enjoy even watching the same story unfold, just better executed the second time around, if it happens. Now it is actually besides the point if Robin or any of the original cast makes a return, but cameos would be more than welcomed.

I would totally say Trigun, but having seen Badland Rumble I think it puts that thought out of mind.

Like D, I think the world can use more Full Metal Panic. The problem is I’m not sure how much more we can pull out of that franchise. And I mean it in a spinoff-neutral sense. I wouldn’t really mind another TSR or Fumoffu equally, even if one is much better than the other and I do like Fumoffu much more than any other part of the series. In fact, I can barely stand anything else about the series, having tried them. Hopefully another spinoff anime would salvage the series in some degree for me.

While nothing can quite touch the original Boogiepop Phantom, it is a much more preferrable thing to see sequels of than, say, Serial Experiments Lain. Boogiepop just has the added attribute of a light novel series that has been milked dryer than the Gobi Desert. I think there’s a lot of treadmill crap in that series, especially when compared to the high bar the first book has set, but at the same time there are some stuff worth animating.

These are just a handful. I can continue, especially if I creep up on the time line and hit mid 2000s shows… What are some of yours?