Hidden Gems in Anime
Japanese animation is fun for people from all over the world because the stories appeal to us even though we may not have the same cultural background as Japanese viewers. While anime is usually bouncy and fun, it's amazing how often you can find depth in unexpected places when you dig beneath the surface. One of the students at the school for magic in Zero no Tsukaima is named Tabitha, a cool meta reference to the daughter of Samantha from Bewitched, one of the original inspirations for the "magical girl" genre of anime. The infamous Dirty Pair, known to blow up a planet or two in the course of fulfilling an assignment, turns out to be an obscure (to gaijin) reference to the 1970s-era pro wrestling team Beauty Pair...and celebrated manga-ka Beauty Hair gets his name from the same source. American science fiction crops up in anime from time to time. In The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya, Yuki gives a book to Kyon which (if you freeze the frame at the right moment) can be seen to be The Fall of Hyperion by Dan Simmons, which provided some of the inspiration for the time-travel parts of the story. Similarly, the Gainax classic Aim For the Top: Gunbuster borrows heavily from two of my favorite SF novels, Ender's Game (kids being trained for interstellar combat with space bugs) and The Forever War (the drama created when people are separated by relativistic time dilation). Even the saucier side of the genre has its deep areas. H-game artist Seishojo is most famous for creating the Bible Black franchise, but did you know that every one of his game titles is actually a reference to the British progressive rock band Crimson King, whose albums include Starless and Bible Black and Discipline? Well, now you do.




5 Comments:
Wow.
*associating Bible Black to King Crimson*
Weird, totally weird.
8:52 PM
fascinating stuff! I'm actually a big King Crimson fan, saw them in concert in 1974 and have the albums, too.
3:48 AM
Ever hear of the Ogre Battle series of video games? From Wikipedia:
"The series originator Yasumi Matsuno was inspired by the rock band Queen's second album, which contained two songs titled "Ogre Battle" and "The March Of The Black Queen", to name this game. Even the "Rhyan Sea" in the Ogre Battle world is named after "Seven Seas of Rhye". The next game in the series, the 7th episode, Let Us Cling Together, was similarly named after a song in the album A Day At The Races."
6:04 AM
I can recommend Hyperion. It's an SF Canturbury Tales.
Let's hear it for King Crimson's "Ladies of the Road"!
4:13 PM
Yes, SF in the Chaucerian tradition. I was an English major so I can dig it. The Forever War is my all time favorite book, but The Forever Peace is unrelated, and Forever Free, hrrm, hard to say but it's best not to read it since it makes the story's universe into something really weird. Ender's Game is legend of course, but don't feel the need to read too many of the other books unless you have lots of time.
10:48 PM
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