essaysbysean.blogspot.com
Every year I am
among among thousands of young people—and one of the few people over age
thirty—(what we used to call the “older generation”) at the Otafest convention. It’s a gathering for
fans of Japanese culture and entertainment. I’ve written about Otafest before; today I will suggest a
few Japanese animation, or “anime,” shows for an over-thirty mother to view.
Why?
Because: At a
reader-writer-publisher convention, When
Words Collide, a housewife, call her Jane, asked me about anime. Jane asked
not about animated movies but about weekly television cartoons from Japan,
asking me to assist her to smash her brainwashing. Jane realized she was
culturally trained to think that TV animation had to always be at the level of
the Saturday morning cartoons of her childhood: always for laughter, always for
children. For Jane, an animated version of The
Little Mermaid would “have to” follow the cartoon Disney version of a happy
ending, not like the tragic live movie version or the written story of Hans
Christian Anderson. Now, because her teenage daughter was watching anime, Jane
really wanted to give anime a try.
To help a mother escape brainwashing:
Think of anime as
being from a foreign culture, and don’t be a cultural chauvinist.
Americans, God
bless them, can’t do stillness. This I documented in a recent essay, Freefall into Anime archived May 2016. (With
two suggested anime opening credits to click on) Nor can they still their
tongues. I was struck by the difference in the English language dubbing of a
feature length Japanese animated movie, based on the book series The Borrowers, called The Secret World of Arriety. Having
watched the U.S. version in theatres, I was astounded to watch the beginning of
the UK version of the film on Youtube,. I learned the Americans had added dialogue where
Arriety is rushing around. Better to have the girl talking to the insects,
thought the Americans, than to have silence. The British and I would beg to
differ.
The British, as I
saw on the CBC, were making television shows intended to be shown in order
long before the Americans did. Hollywood did not dare make a weekly “five-year
novel” until Babylon-5. (See my essay
Death of Buffy, archived January
2012) Rather, American shows, both live action and animated, were always a
franchise, to be shown in any order, a franchise created without any resolution
in mind, a franchise to be cranked out in endless, mindless monotony right up
until the ratings began to fail. Sometimes, desperate to keep the audience interested,
they’d throw in a shark for someone to jump over. But not in Japan. There the
creators of anime are not bored by their own shows. And there, like Buffy, the cartoon
hero can die—even before the final episode.
An anime series begins with a set number of episodes in
mind, to be shown in order, leading to an intended resolution.
In Japan a full
year, or season, of TV runs over two half-seasons. Some shows are intended to
wrap up in just a half-year: 13 weeks. I will restrict my list of recommended
shows, “for a mother to try out,” to ones that are resolved after only 13
episodes.
I suggest Haibane Renmei. Imagine a small brick
town and fields where wind power turbines are not exotic, but as old and
familiar to the children as telephone poles. Where older children take care of
the younger ones. Where in fact the so-called “children” have halos and wings
for they are angels, earning their keep in a town of humans. Here are no wicked
witches or monsters or machine guns, just a very troubled angel. The pretty (shown
here without credits) opening music shows the protagonist plunging to earth to
be reborn with wings.
Another show that,
while not showing normal anime artwork, would surely help to disrupt brainwashing
would be Kino’s Journey. The first
episode shows three criminal scum on the road who would never be shown on the American Teletoon channel—but after that, I
can assure Jane, none of the other folk Kino encounters are as sinful. Kino
travels from country to country (city-state) alone.
The countries are
not in Japan, but in a European-flavored imaginary land. As for Japanese
culture, I should note they have a concept of excellence, associated with the
“way” or “do.” They may invest a
lifetime learning “the way of the tea ceremony,” or learning Karate-do, “way of
the empty hand.” When Kino insists on practicing with a pistol every morning it
is not to be a cowboy gunfighter, but to pursue excellence as taught by “one
who has gone before” which is the literal translation of “sensei,” or teacher.
Here’s the opening
(without credits) song, one that might be too dull for an American child. And—wow!
—Here’s an intriguing trailer, without spoilers about the cultures of any
country, that explains and entices better than I ever could.
I’m not trying to
be a feminist, but—if you didn’t know there was a gun, could you guess Kino’s
gender? In ancient Japanese etchings, in the erotic ones where the couple is
fully clothed, you can only discriminate the man from the woman by the samurai swords.
Also, in less ancient times, there were theatre companies of all-men and all-women,
with the cast playing all genders. Today, for anime that takes place in, say, a
boarding school, often a wholesome good-natured student will turn out to be
posing as the opposite gender. (In one series the viewpoint hero is a girl in
disguise at an all-boys school—hence the sprinkling of light blue school
blazers at Otafest) But I don’t
suppose a housewife with a daughter would want me to elaborate on how the
Japanese don’t have Puritan ancestors.
As for high school
anime, a good 13-episode show is Angel
Beats. Don’t be fooled by a boy’s poleaxe or the guns—nobody permanently dies
in heaven, which is where they are. I am reminded of an old live action series,
Harsh Realm: Imagine a high school
like in our world, only bigger, where most of the inhabitants, unknown to
themselves, are virtual characters, put there not by an “intelligently designed”
computer programmer, but by God. The school is an afterlife, but not a final heaven—only
a way station.
The real students
are few—all had tragic lives and died young. They form their own school club,
with a female president, having a crest and the motto, “Rebels Against the God.”
But the student council president, also female, wants to herd them on to new
pastures. Of course the kids are determined to resist her, hence the guns. Such
a tragedy. And yet it’s laugh-out-loud funny. And yet the ending makes people
cry.
Yes, cry. Here in
west, from the time of ancient Greece, our stage plays have had one of only two
masks: tragedy or comedy. But from the Orient we get “dramedy.” In fact, in one
of my favorite long series, (Ruroni
Kenshin) you could almost set your watch by the joke that always comes a
couple minutes into each episode. It may surprise western mothers like Jane how
Angel Beats has a greater proportion
of humor in the earlier episodes. No surprise to anime fans. In fact, in a long
series about a guy with three guns, Trigun,
the hero is first seen bounding around like Daffy Duck—I’m not kidding: He’s dodging
bullets the way Daffy does. Luckily the comic store manager who rented it to me
warned me not to be misled by the queer beginning, for it soon steadies down
into a good drama.
Here is the Angel Beats opening song. The unsmiling girl
at the piano, without any friends, is the student president—the blowing white feathers
suggest her angel wings.
Before I close, for
someone willing to try a long series, I might suggest Last Exile. A married couple was so enthralled with Last Exile, that they talked to each
other about naming their first boy and girl after the main characters, a
brother and sister. Here is a link to the opening, sans credits.
Besides Last Exile, I see that I have linked three
short-series opening songs. And a trailer. That’s enough. It’s quite fitting
for my two-dimensional black lettered essay to have such links because anime is
colorful, visual and aural. The links fit today’s topic, because U.S. children’s
cartoons will have opening credits that are frantic and shallow but these ones are
not: How very Japanese.
Sean Crawford
May
Calgary
2016
Footnotes:
~As far as I can
tell, it was a man with an adopted Asian first name, Joss Whedon, (Joss means
luck) who made Hollywood’s first live action TV shows with dramedy, such as Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Firefly. He must have viewed Asian
entertainment.
—Hey, I just
realized: Whedon was the first producer in Hollywood who, without any
foreshadowing, would kill off main characters right on stage! In fact, his
actors would make jokes that they daren’t complain about their wages. Yes, Joss
must have viewed anime.
~Hair color can be
a code, according to a blogger in Japan I’ve been following for years, Peter
Payne of J-List, who notes: “…white or grey hair are usually an indicator of a
secret, including hidden powers. Red haired characters like Asuka from
Evangelion are fiery demons who are quick to anger… ” In Angel Beats! the colors apply to an angel who needs no gun,
and a fiesty leader of rebels.
~As for the couple who liked Last Exile, here is a lengthy blog post by one of my favourite web essayists, Stevey, about him and Linh discovering anime, and then trying to learn which anime suits them.
~As for the couple who liked Last Exile, here is a lengthy blog post by one of my favourite web essayists, Stevey, about him and Linh discovering anime, and then trying to learn which anime suits them.