Category Archives: Modern Visual Culture

Mugi-Choco’s Cream Filling

Or, No Wait, I Mean Message, Yeah That’s It.

I think I’m finally hooked on Japanese-style text-only 2ch-style Shift_JIS UI-Gothic what-the images. Damn you Saimoe, damn you to hell! It’s like 1994 all over again.

Actually, this is Barasuisho

But jokes aside, I think now it’s a good time to talk about Mugi Asai and Hitohira. It’s particularly insightful once pinned next to Manabi Straight. Because, you know, I wuuubs Manabi Straight.

To cut to the chase, Mugi Asai, the main character in Hitohira, experienced a transformation from a shy, introverted person to someone who has gotten over herself, with the help of someone else who was in her place a year before. Within the span of a school year, she bonded with this sempai and, well, drama happens. It’s a nice little piece of 12-episode anime that elaborates on Mika’s dilemma from the last 2 episodes of Manabi Straight.

But I watched Manabi Straight before Hitohira, and I suspect if you had your experience flipped chronologically, it may be just the same, with some words flipped. Which, after all, explains why Hitohira (which means petal) is the image I picked for this blog post (well–it sort of looks like 5 petals of a cherry blossom). And why it’s there to be picked as an eyecatch from the actual show, as a reasonable guess.

With her latest victory from Saimoe, it seemed that a lot of people got good vibes from her. And I can see why. Definitely a highly-recommend for those of you who can withstand high school drama in its finest amateur moment.


(Again…) How to Vote in Saimoe 2007

o/

I’m sure a lot of you know how, but since Saimoe remains one of the most convoluted means of voting for your favorite anime character, it bears repeating. Only because someone needs to vote down those stupid StrikerS-only characters.

Joking aside, this guide is brought to you by the Animesuki forums–that’s where I learned it, and I may be stealing their screens!

Voting in Saimoe 2007
Serving Size: 1 per day
Prepare time: up to 2 hours
Cooking time: 5-20 minutes

Continue reading


Shingu: The Secret of the Stellar Wars – Bigger, Better, Bolder, More Boring than Anything!

Or commonly known as Gakuen Senki Muryou.

Continue reading


Darker than Death – Soooo Predictable!

Mao: a contractor?!

Okay, this has got to stop:

Just how many hawt guest stars live through their guest appearance from Darker than Black? Two? Just Two? We have Witch Hunter Robin (spoilers lol) and … the smell girl (lol spoiler)? Well, with exception of the persistent guest stars like April and Amber (…and Kiko) I guess? That’s two out of 8 (not counting the little-kid-who-likes-Amber arc and the doll traffic arc). I wish I had that good of an odd at guessing which Simoun “trap” would spring :(

Dying is so predictable (OK, 75% is not that high of a chance, but there’s some certainty) and ugh not as full of impact anymore for Darker than Black. I thought episodes 19 and 20 were wonderful as far as Huang’s story can be, and to be honest it’s surprisingly good for a major character that gets so little development over the course of the series. Plus he’s just not a likable character unlike Yin and Mao, so it’s probably extra hard to spin his story out. And what the? What’s with that in episode 20 ending? What? I thought it was a great couple episodes…only to be sloppily dropped at the end.

Tensai Okamura is a kill-them-all kind of a creator, so this is actually not surprising…but the episodic structure of the show does dull the edge of death, when each dispensable character has only 2 episodes to play with the heartstrings of the viewers.

But so much more eager that makes me look forward to the slaughter ahead!


Takaki Tohno Can’t Hear the Sea

OBJECTION!

Couple days ago, I finally got to watch the Studio Ghibli work from Tomomi Mochizuki.

Ocean Waves, I Can Hear the Sea, Umi ga Kikoeru, whatever–it was an unremarkable piece that still carried the signature mix of subtlety and dramatic tension that I love about this kind of slice of life anime. Considering its vintage I would have expected something a little bit more mainstream, or something even slower, but I guess that’s what happens when you take some of the younger talents (at least back then) and give them a shot at something significant.

But it was delightful, it was something that makes you think. While the narrative was relatively brisk and overall short (and it may feel short), at the same time it avoids getting too melodramatic and remained fairly fresh over its entire course. What’s unusual about this piece as a Ghibli work is that unlike most of its other works, Ocean Waves goes off in the meta rather than on its surface. There’s a perception of depth interplaying with memories of the past. The passage of time is something that is hard to get across in a short work and I think Ocean Waves needed its audience’s help on that. The lack of moving camera shots and the properly-slowed tempo from a flashback perspective–it all adds up to things we perceive but hard to pin down, and the direction succeeded in adding tension even with such a relaxed, slice-of-life atmosphere. If you can understand the film, you can see how this kind of subtlety leave its mark, in probably in one of the better examples in anime.

When I was watching it I can’t help but to think about Ocean Waves in the context of, well, 5cm. That film was also subtle–but you probably can’t figure it out just by merely seeing and not connect some of the dots together. What was there to be perceived is not just on the screen, but also in a bit of reconstruction in seeing why–thinking between and beyond the lines, so to speak. The film’s discourse at first glance is actually rather plain and “out there” for all to see. Following the monologues and dialogs simply will give you a good idea what it’s trying to say. But to stop there is not getting it–you have to go a step further and get a good idea of what emotions it’s trying to convey. That is why the second story is about a girl who can’t confess her feelings. That is why Akari ran ahead of Takaki in the very beginning, across the incoming train, and asked if they can meet again next spring. It’s not just to highlight the symbolism of crossings (as the ending did just by repeating the setting), but to show you the premise in light of what will (or for someone thinking about 5cm after watching it–what has had) happen.

I think aside from the hidden subtleness and the retrospective construction (although 5cm isn’t a flashback for the most part), there is only one other thing remain shared between 5cm and Ocean Waves. Ocean Waves is the take of a relatively atypical high school romance and 5cm is probably the much more typical take on the same, coming to opposite endings with opposite routes. But despite the material endings of each films, both illustrate the same concept about the distances between people versus the time they spend talking to each other. It’s easier to explain it in Ocean Waves–I think Rikako actually grew more fond of Taku during their period of separation. The lingering regret both shared refined their feelings for each other. On the other hand Yutaka probably spent more time with Rikako but didn’t get anywhere. Or for that matter, Yumi probably did not know Rikako as well as Taku did. Absence makes the heart grow fonder?

Both films are gold mines, I tell ya!