Showing posts with label Manga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Manga. Show all posts

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Genshiken: Return of the Otaku

Genshiken: Return of the OtakuI've been watching Genshiken on and off for the last 3 weeks and I've really been getting into the characters as they evolved through the series. It's common for anyone who watches the anime to want to read the manga. It's the same with the loyal manga fans of any series to inversely want to watch the anime when that eventually comes out after the manga itself.

On one of my visits to Book Sale, one of my favorite stores when it comes to cheap books, I stumbled on their manga section. Curious, I browsed around. I found a few titles that I was familiar with over on the anime side of things. Then I found Genshiken: Return of the Otaku. Flipping through the pages, I was surprised to find it was a novel I was leafing through. Curiosity got the better of my and I bought it for Php160.

Genshiken Dx: TV Series One & Ova CollectionAfter reading through the initial chapters, I found what I was looking for. Madarame and Sasahara were in the club room discussing how 'commercial' the whole manga publishing industry had gotten. Madarame was assailing the novel type manga as just another way for the large publishers to squeeze more money out of a series. Sasahara disagreed and to my estimation he thought of novel type manga as an extension of comic-book style manga, just like anime is an extension through a different medium of the original manga series. Well after reading through Genshiken: Return of the Otaku, I tend to agree with Sasahara.

Well, what is it about? Genshiken: Return of the Otaku when compared to the timeline of the anime is somewhere between the season ender for Season 1 and the Season 1 OVA. The members of the Society for the Study of Modern Visual Culture disappear one by one, coinciding with a purge being perpetrated by a new student leader that has hidden motives for trying to control the clubs in the school. His secret mission is to find a demon statue that's supposed to give him supernatural powers should he be able to unite it with it's twin statue. Creepy, huh?

Genshiken Ono Kanako PVC Statue 1/8 ScaleAnyway, the story ends with Madarame being the surprise hero. All  is well after another well-timed surprise appearance by the First President of Genshiken. As always, he doesn't get involved but gives the Genshiken a helpful nudge towards the solution to the mystery.

All in all, I enjoyed the Genshiken: Return of the Otaku, even if it was a novel. There were pages though where there were full page illustrations to help tie over the reader deprived of the visuals of the full comic book manga.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Genshiken: The Society for the Study of Modern Visual Culture

Genshiken: The Society for the Study of Modern Visual Culture, Volume 9I discovered Genshiken when I came across the title on an online playlist of anime themes. Curious, I set about to look for fansubs. Fansubs are always a great source of anime when it isn't available locally. Also, I'm the type who likes my anime in the original Japanese dubs because I think I get more of the emotion from the way the characters are voiced in Japanese. The only problem is I don't speak Japanese, so I mostly rely on fansubs for translations. The other extra feature many fansubbers include is short explanations of the context of some of the conversations. Many cultural nuances can't be captured by the translated English dubs. Fansubs have short notes during the scene to explain what's going on and what the subtle jokes refer to.

Genshiken Ono Kanako PVC Statue 1/8 ScaleAnyway, going back to the series, Genshiken is short for the name of the club that is central to the story.  It follows the lives of students in a Tokyo university, all members of the Society for the Study of Modern Visual Culture. There's an anime club and a manga club, but no other club could be more otaku than the Genshiken. The club name hints of this. The purpose of the club is to gather together otaku or hobbyists of different hobbies. They are bound together by their love of anime, manga (mostly doujinshi or fan versions of popular titles) and video games. Hence the club's name that alludes to all of 3 mediums of expressions as part of modern artistic expression of visual arts.  Come to think of it, they may be on to something. The love of anime, manga and video games has become so mainstream, labeling it as a sub-culture would be reducing its true influence as too minor in today's society. The club's name may be a bit high-sounding, but yeah it is very descriptive.

The anime is actually an anime adaptation of the manga of the same name. The story starts with Sasahara trying to find a club that would fit his personality. It was awkward in the beginning for him to admit he was otaku. There's a certain stigma attached to being called otaku. To admit being one would be to admit being too obsessive about your hobby. But after spending some time in the club room, he finds the Genshiken to share too many things in common with his personal hobby that the question of joining them or not became moot.

Genshiken: Complete CollectionAfter he joins them, each of the characters are explained in the subsequent episodes. Kousaka, a fellow freshman who joined Genshiken the same semester as Sasahara, is the ultimate gamer among the group. He beats everyone in all fighting games. Madarame is obsessive about his analysis of manga and anime, but he isn't much of a gamer. Kugayama is the most shy of the group, often stammering when he participates in discussions, but he is the only one with a true talent for drawing. Tanaka is a talented and obsessive Plamo enthusiast and Cosplay costume maker. He is a perfect match for Ohno, who is introduced a few episodes in as a returnee from the US. She loves Cosplay and she is their main attraction in school fairs. Her cosplay act is by far their only main club activity during school fairs. Kasukabe is the odd one of the group. Her sole reason for hanging out in the club room is to be with Kousaka. She isn't otaku like the rest, often claiming she hates otaku. But later on in the series, she is forced to cosplay with Ohno and soon warms up to the otakuness of it all.

Genshiken: Saki Kasukabe 7" PVC Statue FigureOverall, I find the reviews to be true. If you are otaku or if you like anime, manga, videos games or tech gadgets or any variation and combination of them, you will definitely relate to the characters of the series. If you have a hard time explaining to friends and family why you're so obsessive about your hobby, this is a good funny anime to show them how it is to be otaku. It is often difficult to admit being one, but if you are one there isn't any use denying it. It is obvious in the way we are sometimes awkward in social situations or too shy to admit we like manga or anime. In the past, I've received comments like "cartoons are for kids" or "you must watch anime because you like cartoon porn". It gets even more awkward when you try to explain it isn't like that at all. But then again, this series does say to otakus out there that it's ok if the rest of the world can't understand you. What's more important is that you're true to yourself.