Yui – Again April 28, 2009
Posted by ayasawada in Music.add a comment
Just mentioned this in my Spring 2009 anime post, but I love it so much it deserves it’s own post. After a surprisingly short ‘break’ from the industry, Yui’s back. The song is the first OP theme for Full Metal Alchemist: Brotherhood and is gorgeous! It’s the lyrics that speak to me most (included after the jump).
1/60 PG Strike Gundam April 18, 2009
Posted by ayasawada in Anime, Gunpla.Tags: Gundam, Gunpla, model, plamo
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Finished up my 1/60 PG Strike model kit this weekend. It’s the first gunpla kit I’ve done in over a year. I struggled to find time last year due to moving, work, real life etc. Somehow it always seemed like there was something else I should be doing with my time instead. As such, all my leftover kits (and the MG Infinite Justice I got for Xmas) were left back at my parents place. But I try and do a bit every time I go back home to visit the folks. As such, this one — already a huge undertaking — took longer than if I’d spent every weekend on it.
The whole thing took me about four months and reminded me how much I love gunpla ^^. The construction process I find very therapeutic (I’m a cleaning freak, so the clipping and washing of parts is a nice methodical task for me) and it’s nice to do something that doesn’t involve staring at a screen for a change :p
Kuniyoshi April 13, 2009
Posted by ayasawada in Anime, Culture, Japan, Manga.Tags: afro samurai, Anime, Art, Japan, Kuniyoshi, Manga, origin spirits of the past, prints
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Utagawa Kuniyoshi, Sakata Kaidō-maru wrestles with a giant carp, c. 1837
A quick post to big-up the Kuniyoshi exhibition currently on at the Royal Academy of Arts in London.
I went yesterday and it totally blew me away. I was expecting an interesting exhibit, but had no idea just how impressive it would be. For one thing, there are a huge number of prints to see, ranging from standard commissions of aristocracy and beautiful ladies to political satire, portrayals of famous warriors, real and fictional, and wonderful imaginative scenes of fantasy.
Putting aside the tremendous skill it takes to draw anything this good (and for the carvers to then transplant this — kanji and all — to a wood block for printing), Utagawa Kuniyoshi’s attention to detail is astounding. His understanding of posture, composition and artistic effects is extraordinary. Many of the techniques set the groundwork for modern manga — it comes out particularly strongly in the prints portraying explosions and smoke. His strokes for conveying animal fur are uncannily realistic, and his anally retentive attention to detail, particularly for kimono patterns and tattoos remarkable.
Most striking of all is the sheer dynamism of his pictures. Each of the pictures looks so alive, simply by virtue of the pose chosen and the composition of the piece. Some epic pieces have over a dozen things going on in one frame, yet it never feels as claustrophobic, overcrowded or passive as some classical European paintings I’ve seen are. To hit the point home, there is one exhibit where Kuniyoshi deliberately used a European composition instead; it seems so much duller than the other works.
As if that weren’t enough, the room after featured ‘humourous’ and satirical works with courtesans portrayed by sparrows, octopuses (octopi?) anthropomorphised into humans and ‘ghost erotica’ featuring demon vaginas and skeleton penises (I kid you not).
Being a manga fan, I guess I shouldn’t have been so surprised at how much I loved this. But I honestly wasn’t expecting to see quite such a connection between the classic and the modern. It really cemented for me why I like Asian, and particularly Japanese, media quite so much: it’s just so much more imaginative and alive.
Beforehand, we attended the accompanying anime season at the Curzon Soho, watching Origin: Spirits of the Past. Nicely animated, but a bit of a poor man’s Nausicaa. Not a great weekend of anime watching overall, since a surprise Gonzo screening at the Barbican turned out to be Afro Samurai Resurrection, which is not really my cup of tea :p
Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World by Haruki Murakami April 10, 2009
Posted by ayasawada in Books.Tags: Books, Haruki Murakami
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Murakami’s Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World is in a way his foray into fantasy-type storytelling. There’s even a Lord of the Rings-style map at the start of the book!
SPOILER WARNING
The plot, well, there’s really two. One is set in a mysterious walled-off village where Unicorns roam the fields. An unnamed stranger arrives to work as a ‘dreamreader’. In the second, a Tokyo man, some kind of data-manipulator for the government, does a job for a mysterious research scientist, which leads him into a world of espionage, intrigue and fable.
The second one will be familiar to Murakami fans. You can imagine the protagonist already, can’t you? Loner who likes jazz and old movies, very intelligent, knowledgeable, good cook. You can imagine the female characters as well, can’t you? Beautiful, sexy in a believable way, but ‘quirky’. There’s nothing wrong with that. Far from it, it’s what Murakami knows best, and what we as his fans enjoy.
What gives this novel depth and sets it apart from the Murakami novels is that first plotline, the mysterious fantasy world. It’s not until two-thirds of the way through the book that the connection between the two stories becomes clear. And even then it is accompanied by one hell of a scientific explanation (it even needs a flow diagram!). It’s an interesting, and I’m sure tried before, device. But Murakami executes it well. Both worlds are rich with the sort of everyday detail that make his prose engaging. The styles of the two worlds, one chapter of each following the other, complement each other well and stop you from getting bored.
As a science writer, I was immediately wary of the scientific content, coming from an author not normally associated with science fiction or a background in science. But Murakami represents the scientific community surprisingly well. Sure, the theory he describes is nonsense, but he picks up the language of neuroscience and psychology well and he nails the personality and drive of a researcher. And it’s interesting theory, almost plausible, even if it does hurt your head to try and understand it. How much more accurate does it get than that?
There’s a lot of interesting ideas here, which from the Wikipedia entry, seem to have been collected from his many different literary influences. From losing one’s shadow to the essence of consciousness, industrial espionage and Japanese folklore, it makes for fascinating stuff. It’s not my favourite Murakami novel, but I really enjoyed it. For me, the central theme is the point of life and what you’re looking to get out of it. The main character wrestles with issues of mortality and existence. He concludes that its the small things in life, the things that you enjoy and make you you, that are what makes life worth living. A simple, and unoriginal, point, but one always worth making.
Clannad~after story Eps 1-24 (Complete) April 8, 2009
Posted by ayasawada in Anime.Tags: Anime, Clannad, KyoAni
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A quick post on the ending of Clannad. Most of what I said in my earlier post remains true.
SPOILER WARNING
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A Tale of Two Sisters (2003) April 5, 2009
Posted by ayasawada in Film.Tags: Film, Kim Ji-woon, Korean movie
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I wrote a couple of months ago about discovering Kim Ji-Woon and my anticipation at catching up with his back-catalogue. A Tale of Two Sisters certainly didn’t disappoint.
The third biggest grossing film in Korea, apparently, it is a marvelous modern take on an old Korean folk tale. It masquerades as a horror movie, but isn’t actually that scary and is more of a psychological thriller.
The story follows two young teenage girls, who return home after treatment at a mental institution. This stems from emotional issues surrounding their father’s remarriage and their mother’s suicide. Tensions remain with their emotionally distant father and selfish step-mother. Moreover, there is some kind of evil presence in the house.
SPOILER ALERT
Gundam 00 second season Ep 1-25 (complete) April 5, 2009
Posted by ayasawada in Anime.Tags: Anime, Gundam, Gundam 00
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Another year, another Gundam series finishes its run. Gundam 00 finally ended with the end of its second season last week.I do like the split season idea. Kind of keeps things from getting boring over a 50 episode arc and raises anticipation. This worked well with Code Geass and Gundam 00, so am hoping they do something similar for the new Full Metal Alchemist and whatever new show follows.
So Gundam 00. For me, it was a bit of a mixed bag. Overall, I liked it, but was rather disappointed. It was fun without being very profound, considering it has the usual epic Gundam themes of war, peace and human evolution. It certainly got me more pointlessly excited than any other Gundam series I remember, even if every time it ultimately climaxed in ridiculousness :p Yes, I know it’s one big toy advert and most Gundam series inevitably end with a big confusing fight, but good Gundam, with a proper, engaging story arc and characters (like the original Mobile Suit Gundam, Zeta, or even SEED) can be so great I can’t help but feel disappointed.
SPOILER WARNING
Paris April 1, 2009
Posted by ayasawada in Travel.Tags: France, Paris, Travel
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I just had a long weekend in Paris. Free Eurostar tickets courtesy of a day spent last year testing St Pancras station and the links to Ebbsfleet. Woo hoo!
This was actually my third time to Paris, though my first ‘as an adult’. Last time I went was when I was 15 on our then traditional family camping holiday to France. As such, spent a lot of time wandering into places and realising I’d been there before. Kind of wish I’d been less ignorant as a kid and soaked up more detail and history. Funny the things you notice when older though. Hadn’t realised the New York and Paris metros were so alike. Also disturbed by the sheer number of Dragonball Evolution advertising posters.
Anyway, it was a fairly easy going holiday since neither myself or my best friend had too much cash to spend. Walked to the Eiffel Tower on Friday (supposedly “near” to our hotel). Spent Saturday in Amelie-land of Montmatre walking past Moulin Rouge, Montmatre cemetery and the Sacre Couer. Really enjoyed it, although I realised I’d been to a couple of the places before ^^; Walked along the Seine from Notre Dame to the Louvre on Sunday before heading back. Overall, a pleasantly relaxing weekend with considerably more walking than expected.
Ate a ton of crepe’s and not enough cake from the patisserie. Best mate also refused to partake in bread wars, somewhat disappointingly. And I bought a whole baguette too….
My French remains crap, but was pleasantly surprised at how much I retained, despite having not spoken it for 15 years. Especially pleased with “Ou est le chat?”





