Friday, May 24, 2013

TOKYO-HO

As is the dream of any Otaku, casual or otherwise, mine was to go to Japan before I moved home from China and back to the US or wherever my next stop was.  In the minds of many, Japan provides an almost mystical illusion of what could possibly be the coolest place on Earth.
Well, I'm here to tell you folks, for those with the budget......... IT REALLY IS (the coolest place on Earth that is).  From the second we left the train station from Narita Airport toward our hotel in Shabuya, I realized 2 things.  1: Every anime I ever watched really had been taken in some way from Japan's landscape and culture and 2: My girlfriend and I studied the wrong language.
When we first got off the train in Shabuya we walked past a small street with an old fashioned local train, clickity-clacking over the tracks (a famous scene in many animes). We got lost, turned around and given wrong direction (by people who were honestly trying to help), until we finally found ourselves in Shabuya's district center. The lights, the sounds, the signs, the buildings, the cleanliness and.... of course, the outfits nearly brought a tear to our eyes.  We had finally made it.  After 5 years of talking about how we had to go before we left the Orient, we made it.
It was amazing, 1 in 20 people on the street were dressed up in anime costumes, or looked like they should have been.  Crazy colored wigs, even crazier outfits, and the shoes and stocking were really what sent it over the edge.  They really did look like the people that we though belonged only to the world of Japanimation.
Our second day there, we saw a group of boys crossing the road with HUGE horse head masks on, and when we sat down at the Hachiko Statue across the street we were surprised to see that to our right there was a group of girls doing a J-pop performance on a small stage dressed in what I can only call anime costumes.  As we looked left we saw a group of young environmentally conscious men and women dressed in bright red SPANDEX with masks and horns on wearing a yellow sash that read something like "DARE TO FIGHT THE EVILS OF LITTER" in Japanese (or so I was told, but was probably mislead).

In the afternoon we went to Akihabrara station to get our first glimpse of a truly great looking anime street. We started by going to the Anime Academy, which turned out to actually just be a building where the academy met and students learned to draw and produce anime with little to see in the way of products.  As we walked out we saw a woman dressed in a gothic anime outfit that looked very mysterious until we realized the person in the dress....... was a man.
 
We walked up and down the main drag, seeing tons of posters and advertisements with anime characters, but very little actually sold anime merchandise, and those that did usually had a GIANT collection of hentai and other pornography in the back (I imagine to supplement their income), until we finally found a store with about 1002 meters (900+2 ft) of anime merchandise, and when I went to see what was upstairs I realized we had finally stumbled across our first anime mall.
Outside
Inside
*** This is a warning to everyone going to Japan who things Japanese style product will be much cheaper there ........ THEY ARE NOT, or at least not sizably.*** 
There were THOUSANDS of figures ranging from key chains to life size figures (most of which were the standard 10cm or 25cm figures (4 or 10 in) and not a single item was under 5 EURO (7 BUCKS), which included key chains.  However you could not argue with the quality of MOST of the products.  The majority of the figures looked as though they had been hand painted while looking at the real character.  The detail was spectacular.  There was shading for light, roots were different color than tips of hair, and every color was exactly where it was supposed to be (most if not all MUST be done by hand). Alas were could purchase nothing as the price tag on anything we wanted was usually over 100 Euro ($130).
So we left in a bit of a frump only to be immediately perked back up at the sight of a MAID BAR.  That's right, girls, dressed like anime maids, serving food, playing games with you, and singing Kareoke all for the enjoyment of their (mostly male) clientele.  The girls were all funny and nice, and one even tried very hard to speak English with us (I imagine their hiring process doesn't require a strong English test). Hysterical, cute, and expensive are the 3 words I would use to explain it all.  We were charged basically $40 for ice cream, pancakes and 2 drinks (and a STEEEEEEEEP surcharge for the entertainment), but we left happy, and red from embarrassment knowing we had done it once and therefore, NEVER needed to do it again.
The final, and most amazing Otaku style place we went was NAKANO BROADWAY.  By far our favorite place, was just as big if not bigger than the place in Akihabara, and with much better prices.  We spent half the day looking through figures and merchandise old and new, from Sailor Moon and Tororo to DURARARA!, Sword Art Online and some of this seasons new favorites.  They had one store dedicated entirely to the history of "Japanese Robots and Space Rockets", several manga intensive stores and old video games (too bad you can't use them on Foreign versions of Game systems...... or read them).  My favorite was a picture shop on one of the higher floors that sold cells from classic animes which included Sailor moon, and my personal favorite original Princess Mononoke cells with some really cool scenes and characters.






In the end we only ended up buying a few figures (generally the ones on sale), from some lesser known anime series like Guilty Crown.  After an AMAZING bowl of SPICY MISO RAMEN made by an old couple just outside NAKANO BROADWAY we decided our thirst for anime had been quenched ........... at least in Tokyo.

For another point of view and in my opinion GREAT READ (not just because she's my girlfriend) Visit SIMONA'S POST