Archive for February, 2010

Guest Post: Trapeze – Healing Is for Everybody

Those of you that have kept up with this blog for a while should be no stranger to one Omo, or his blog Omonomono. Here is a post of what you could joke is “lighter fare” than that on his blog, and I’m grateful to him wanting to do this in the first place. – TheBigN

mayumi from trapeze by itou noiji

One of the things about iyashikei I think is defining is the nature of the iyashikei narrative. In general they are like your typical snow globe; it does a great job instilling atmosphere and look pretty while doing it, but at the same time it exists in a stasis without external interference. In other words, the average plot of the iyashikei anime is about introspection–of the characters, of the settings, of the theme. It is rarely motivated by an external force. And of course, being iyashikei, there is some kind of healing or positive message somewhere.

In comes this show called Kuchuu Blanko, or Trapeze as it is translated. I think the story behind this whacky, noitaminA television anime (if you can call it that) is one about iyashikei. I mean, for crying out loud, the “Undine” of the story is a shrink! How can you be more “healing” than a psychological health professional?

Oh, I guess staring at Mayumi’s oddly revealing outfit could be healing. I might as well toss this out here now: When Irabu gets his thing going by looking at people getting injections, the audience also gets going by looking at Mayumi giving it to whoever it is. And yeah, all the patients are male. I guess it would be odd if that wasn’t the case? This has to mean something right?

Yeah, Trapeze is a noitaminA anime, by Kenji Nakamura (Mononoke, Ayakashi) and Studio Toei. If that combination did not produce an animation at odds with convention, then there is something wrong with this world. And yeah, Trapeze is an anime mixed with live action portions. Think of it as the opposite of Who Framed Roger Rabbit, in that while most of the animation is made up of photoshopped pictures and actually-animated things, majority of the character animation is just rotoscoped live action stuff.

So the question is, just how do these things affect the healing angle of the story? There was no doubt that by the end of the episode, Irabu’s patent-of-the-week will come to terms with his problem. And they do in a fairly realistic way–it usually shows the first “right step” to recovery rather than some kind of miracle shot that solves the problem wholesale. In fact the Canary episode is a great way to wrap it up and demo this concept. But none of the visual quirks and oddities get in the way of the essence of the show, being one that brings some kind of emotional fulfillment and accord to the viewer. In another words, at the end of each episode, I can nod and smile and feel better about the character that is being treated, and about my outlook in respect to each problem discussed in the episode.

The most “healing” episode, I thought, was the one before the last. The old man’s flashback was both a villain and a source of comfort, and it was pretty awesome how the episode was able to demonstrate that. The whole mono no aware life thing, a poignant reminiscence, a dash of romance here, a bit of that inaka thing there, it all adds up to a very charming profile of the last generation. The one curious trick they did in that episode was use different actors to depict the states of mind of the patient, rather than either an animated depiction or the animal chimera that Trapeze normally uses to signify different states of the self. I wonder what could that mean?

Well, like what Trapeze says, no one is perfect.

Three Years Old, And Still Chugging Along

By TheBigN

I wanted to start by referencing this, and joke about saying “This Is It!”, but I thought it silly, and decided not to. Besides, I think two years are a long time myself, not to mention three.

Then I wondered if I’d talk about how this  last year wasn’t necessarily that productive. Compared to the second year, there has been a drop-off in productivity, but having 600+ comments, 59 posts and 210,000+ more hits (pushing the blog over a half a mil, though I wonder how many of those now come from image searches for “godzilla”, which randomly started months ago) doesn’t seem that bad to me, though the explosion of spam (from 5000+ to 19000+ in the last year) does. Especially when I don’t feel like I’ve posted much this year, so I definitely have to thank dm for picking up the slack, and nomadotto for the rare incisive posts while I’m off med-schooling or something or other. Having a post a week definitely dropped off from before, but I’m happy that at least there’s been a post about every other week or so.

Then I thought about complaining about having less time to post than before. But seeing how often I comment on others people’s blogs, though it never takes longer than a minute or two to do so makes me feel like I would be unnecessarily whining if I went that route.  It has been a little harder to think about what to write, but there’s still ample ideas out there and I’ve had some in the back of my mind for months. Not to mention the awesome things that come out of the many other bloggers, anime-related or no, that I read when I’m able to. Hopefully I can get some of those out here. Or at least get my co-writers to just write what they feel more often, original or not.

Thanks are always in the cards to anyone and everyone who’s read, glanced, skimmed, excerpted from, commented, praised, complained, mentioned, briefly thought of, leeched bandwidth from, etc. I’d like to believe it’s part of what keeps DMAB going though others may disagree, and no doubt it always helps to make things interesting.

Again, thanks for stopping by, and hopefully Drastic My Anime Blog will still be worth coming back to check up on in the future.

Steady is a way to go, at least.

Steady is a way to go, at least. Source: http://www.pixiv.net/member_illust.php?mode=medium&illust_id=5137888

TheBigN’s (Sorta) Mid-2007ish-2009 Anime Retrospective

Here’s post three of three.
Part 1
Part 2

Continue reading ‘TheBigN’s (Sorta) Mid-2007ish-2009 Anime Retrospective’

TheBigN’s (Sorta) 2005-Mid-2007ish Anime Retrospective

Well, that ended up taking longer than I thought. So much so that it’s three posts rather than two. And so much that I finish in February instead of January like I hoped. Ah well. :v

A 2000-2004 “anime retrospective” is here.

Continue reading ‘TheBigN’s (Sorta) 2005-Mid-2007ish Anime Retrospective’


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