Showing posts with label Astro Boy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Astro Boy. Show all posts

Friday, May 17, 2019

May 18, 2019 (Tokyo)


Vinyl shopping is an obsession of mine, but also I realize that it is also a tool for me to tour Tokyo on foot and train.  Tokyo is unique and not like any other city, but in a fashion, it reminds me of Los Angeles, in that metropolis' have a series of smaller villages that all together composes the city.  Shibuya is very different from Shinjuku, which in turn is different from Meguro, my home in Tokyo.  Each neighborhood has a specific identity.  Today I pretty much spent time in Nakano, which has a shopping arcade and building called "Nakano Broadway."  I think most would consider the actual building ugly, but for me, it has a certain charm that is hard to define.  It has no aesthetic, and it is open to others who have a taste for the bizarre, or the imaginary world of the Otaku. 



While walking in the complex it does have a smell of sweat, or perhaps their plumbing is not in order, but still, the scent brings out a sense of passion for what they may be looking for.  For example, I got totally fixated on a magnet bookmarker.  It had a flower textile design and I thought to myself, I need that bookmarker.  Yet, as every sense of my body told me to buy it, I resist and almost ran out of the stationary store.  All the Otaku shops open at 11 or even noon and close at 8.  Very solid hours, and I feel that the people who work here are comfortable with the schedule.  

One of my favorite shops in Tokyo is in the Nakano Broadway complex, and it's the store Tacoche, which is a combination of a gift shop, zine store, and art/cinema books, with a selection of Japanese underground music on the CD format,  all dealing with the Underground or counter-culture subject matter.  Tightly curated, with lots of handmade manga or zine subject matter.  I can't think of another shop in Tokyo that covers the underground world in such a splendid manner. Their hours are 12 to 8, and they are open every day, but beware that some of the shops are closed on Wednesday, which seems to be the independent shop's Sunday.   http://tacoche.com/


Since I'm a fan of the print media, going through vintage mangas at Mandarake is a wonderful experience.  Not only that, Mandarake is probably the largest manga books and culture store in existence.  They have a huge basement shop in Shibuya, but I prefer the mall approach at Nakano Broadway.  There are several Mandarake shops here, each one focusing on a specific subject matter or it can be used or new.  The thing is, the inventory is insanely huge, but still feels curated as well. It's a store of taste, and my favorite part of the complex is their used publications - such as vintage photo books, but also old Ben Hecht novel translated into Japanese, that looks like it was published in the 1930s.   http://www.mandarake.co.jp/



The toy shops, many, and mostly vintage toys from the 1960s, all dealing with Japanese pop culture of the time.   I have a deep nostalgia of a past that's not mine.  For some reason, I'm drawn to this world.  Perhaps to reclaim my youth, but my imaginary sense of youth.  

Monday, November 3, 2014

November 3, 2014



November 3, 2014

I got the tail-end of the Showa Era, when I lived in Japan in 1989/1990.  Hirohito was the emperor during the Showa period, in fact that is how one measures history in Japan.   His time period (as well as the Showa era) is from December 25, 1926 to January 7, 1989.   There is obviously that incident that happened between our country and Japan, but nevertheless what I find the most fascinating is the film/art/literature culture of that era.   Due to the passing of the Emperor, I came upon a series of books and documents regarding the Showa era, when I was there, and each image from the 20th century had a profound effect on me.  It is difficult to believe that when I first visited Japan in 1989, I never used chopsticks.  The first night there, I had my first proper Japanese meal, and in front of me were these two wooden sticks.  I was deeply hungry, and when one is in that state, it is amazing how one can master these two wooden sticks to serve the purpose of putting food in your mouth.  Also I loved the thought of eating without stabbing my food on a fork.  That to me seems so violent. Yet picking up food gently using chopsticks, somewhat made the food more tasty to me.

When I was in living in Tokyo and Moji-Ku, I lost track of my culture, due that at the time there was no internet, and if I wanted to read a newspaper, for instance the Japan Times (their English language daily paper) I had to wait two to three days before I got the latest edition.  So the big news of that time was the Berlin Wall going down and the large San Francisco earthquake - all news I got two days later after it happened. I felt like a man out of my time, and often like the Man who fell to Earth as well.   I would wander around Moji, going from shop-to-shop to coffee shop-to-bar, and all the children would stare at me as I walked by.  At the time there were hardly any foreigners walking around, so I must have looked like an alien to them.  In fact, perhaps I’m an alien. 



My obsession at the time was to collect images of Astro Boy.   I was struck by the beauty of the narrative of a robot boy who was invented to replace the inventor’s real son, who died in a car crash.  Over his grief, he realizes that the robot son can never replace the “authentic” son he had, so he abandoned Astro Boy.   Of course, the robot boy becomes a hero and saves the day - as all superheroes do in their own fashion.  Around the same time, “Godzilla” became known, and was of course regarded as a metaphor for nuclear weapons.  The creature from the mishap of science would destroy Tokyo, but yet, the city always survives.  As a hobby I like to walk around Tokyo and see the original buildings from that era (1960s or 1950s), but it is getting harder to locate, due to the nature of Tokyo always tearing down and putting up new buildings.  I have been going there for the last 25 years, and I often feel that Godzilla must have come upon the city again, and “forced” some changes again.



For my own personal choices, I have always preferred the character “Black Jack, ” due that I think he is the most mysterious character in the world of its creator Osamu Tezuka.   He’s a doctor, who seemed to fall out of the legal medical world, to travel around Japan to help those in need.  The fact that he commits illegal surgeries is of great interest, and quite scary to me as well.   The ‘goth’ doctor, if he’s even a real “doctor” strikes me as an original character.  For the Japanese reading audience, he may not be so scary, but to me, I think I would be terrified of being on an operating table, and having to face the man/boy with the white streak hair.



On the other hand, I have an emotional pull for Goseki Kokima (the artist) and Kazuo Koike’s (the writer) manga series “Lone Wolf and Cub.” The story is about a wandering assassin who travels with his three-year old son throughout Japan, in the hopes of seeking revenge on the Yagyū clan.  The clashes in the comic are quite violent, but also disturbing with the respect of the son and his father.  In a way, it makes me think of the Cormac McCarthy novel “The Road.” Both narratives deal with a father taking care of his son, in a very hostile world.  It is almost fairy-tale like in that the bond between father and son is called into question by the daily life of survival at its worst state.

More likely I will never ever know Japan, but I will always be in love with what I think is Japan.   The reality and what I imagined is quite a leap into a faith that maybe misleading, nevertheless, it’s a world of my own making with the significant assistance of the above.

Saturday, December 10, 2011

"The Astro Boy Essays" by Frederik L. Schodt

The perfect book for me to pick up at Shibuya Tower.  Somewhere between my personal desire and what others in Japan have given me, I find myself surrounded by Astro Boy toys and books.  When I first started to go to Japan,  Osamu Tezuka was one of the sources of understanding that culture and it was such a pleasant adventure.   Frederik L. Schodt's book on the culture and history of Astro Boy is a must-read for anyone who have even the slightest interest in manga and its history.  
Tezuka is without a doubt a major figure in pop Japanese culture - perhaps the key figure, and without a doubt a genius in his field.  He is also a mega-figure to write about, and Schodt's book is a good starter in the world of Tezuka, and by mostly focusing on his most famous work in the west - Mighty Atom aka Astro Boy.

part one of "Birth of Astro Boy"

part two of "Birth of Astro Boy"

part three of "Birth of Astro Boy"

The story of a boy robot made by a scientist who was grieving over his deceased son.  But that 'father' eventually disowns the robot due to the fact he doesn't age.  And therefore we have the consistent tension between robot and human.   Tezuka thought long and hard on this and Astro Boy is not a simple subject.  He's a mixture of popular science and all the hope it brings, but also the inner-danger of nuclear power and the arrogance of science.  And it is this tension that makes 'Astro Boy' into a major work.  Also Tezuka's skills as a writer and illustrator is pretty amazing.   For sure he's the Disney of Japan, but I think he's more then that - way more.  Schodt did a remarkable job introducing the world of Tezuka and why he's important.