Special Screening: Paprika w/ Satoshi Kon, Get out of my dreams, get into my car.

Well, this little shindig was rather spontaneous, we only got the notice that we got the tickets the morning of the event! It would have been quite easy to miss it. But somehow the anime gods smiled down!

I don’t always check my email in the morning and I can’t check my personal email at work so it was luck that I got to go and was able to let Narutaki know. There were enough people who tried to get tickets that a lottery had to be held so the fact that we got tickets is a little bit of luck in itself. There were quite a few people hoping to get unclaimed seats when I entered the theater so I guess we should be thankful. I guess the anime gods decided that a Satoshi Kon review was in order.

I had never been to the Imaginasian Theater, though I had always wanted to go. The building definitely seemed old and I think there is just the one theater we were in if I’m not mistaken. But it is nice to have someplace, anyplace, dedicated to showing Asian films. The line outside was rather disorganized and quite a few people were complaining about the lack preparation. However, we got in fine, saw some familiar faces, and had perfectly good seats. This event was sponsored by All Nippon Airways and we got free popcorn!

It was a nice enough theater. Nothing stood out as amazing but nothing was horrible about it. I would definitely go see another movie there, especially since they cater to such a interesting niche. I hope we can go back and catch Sword of the Stranger. That looks like it could be good. I love almost anything that is free and free popcorn is especially good. So thank you ANA. Of course since I am immature all I could think of was one thing. An their logo does not help one bit. Does this mean I am on the path to becoming a fujoshi. I hope not.

Yes, actually it does mean that. And we are so going to see Sword of the Stranger, I have been hyping that movie in my mind for almost a year. Satoshi Kon spoke briefly before the film and answered a few questions. I was really enjoying his thoughts on dreams. He was mentioning how he felt it was painful to hear other peoples’ dreams because it is almost impossible to understand them. Dreams are so personal that they mean very little to anyone else. So he really focuses on the visual aspects of dreams.

I oddly enough like to hear about other peoples’ dreams. Dreams can be rather abstract therefore it’s sometimes hard do dig out an insight from them but they tend to be a rather unguarded part of people minds that they share despite this fact. I will agree that dreams can be very personal and therefore will not mean as much to another person, but there are some commonalities in dreams as well. How many people have had the dream where they arrive at a test they are totally unprepared for? Or are running from something they can’t see but they know is horrible? Some dreams are just for you and others are universal.

You are right about some common things that everyone dreams about. However, I think interpreting a dream is all over the place. You mentioned some basic ones that generally everyone sees in the same way, but every culture has different ways of interpreting things in dreams so I think this is where it can become very personal. Someone also asked how he balances the need for commercial success and his own artistic merit. He made some amusing comments about he isn’t actually commercially successful quite yet because he has odd taste. He then spoke about pleasing his fans and continuing to do that while pushing his work into the commercial light. I don’t know if his films will ever reach the height of Ghibli but I do think his audience grows more and more with each one released. He is also very well known in film and artistic communities so his continued success seems eminent.

I can’t see his movies getting to the universal acceptance of a Studio Ghibli movie unless he changes his directorial style and I get the impression that he does not want that. He makes artistic movies that appeal to people who watch artistic movies. Studio Ghibli makes artistic films that appeal to families so they getting more box office. I think if he wanted to make movies with a more universal appeal he could but he chooses to satisfy himself and his fan-base by staying with his own personal approach to movies.

You absolutely on the mark there, but I think he will still grow to be a very well-known director and become much more successful before he is through. Not everyone will know him, not everyone will like his style, but he will be adored by those that do.

Paprika is about a research team that develops a machine called the DC Mini, it lets you enter someone’s dreams and interact with them. The device was meant to be used as a psychotherapy tool to help people by examining their dreams. Before the device’s security features can be fully implemented, an unknown party steals the device and starts to use it to control and terrorize people. A dream terrorist. So it’s up to the research team to find out who stole the DC Mini before he can reek havoc on the minds of the research team as well as everyone else in town.

I had started watching Paprika a couple of weeks ago but only finished about one-third. This was not because I wasn’t interested in what was going on but just a timing issue. So it was fun going into this not knowing everything that was going to happen on the screen. And is quite an expected ride. What caught me originally and seeing it on the big screen even more so is the opening credits. I love the movement, the music, and the playfulness. In fact, this film really combines suspense and humor in just the right amounts.

This was my second time seeing the film so I got to go back and see what things were hinted at in the beginning that seemed insignificant the first time through. It’s not exactly like Fight Club or The Sixth Sense where there is some major twist to go back and reflect upon, but the movie is complex enough that a second viewing will show you some additional layers. It’s also worth a second viewing if for nothing else the lush visuals. The dreamscapes are beautifully animated and strikingly colored so they are extremely pleasing to eye. The characters are well developed in the short amount of time they are on the screen and are generally realistic people.

Paprika is a “dream movie star.” She appears in your dreams and helps you through them, to understand them, and to ultimately win against them. She is all things and anything in the dream world but most often appears as young woman. She is like the link between reality and imagination but you are never quite sure if she exists in one or the other or both.

Paprika and Atsuko Chiba are definitely Satoshi Kon characters. They seem to be part of the same spiritual family as Chiyoko Fujiwara (Millennium Actress) and Mima Kirigoe (Perfect Blue). All of them are women with a links to a blurry line between their dreams and their realities. Paprika is the women of your dreams. I would go as far as to say that she is more a piece of the dreams of everyone she interacts with rather than the avatar of one person. This is despite what she was originally meant to be. I think Paprika is always supposed to be a creature of dreams but the real question is how real does that make her.

And that really ties into the theme of the movie. Satoshi Kon’s whole thesis (to me) in his films is about what makes reality real and where do dreams end and how the two effect each other. It really came across in the dialogue when Paprika’s counterpart questions her with, “Why don’t you listen? You are a part of me!” to which Paprika replies, “Have you ever thought that maybe you are a part of me?” So the line is blurred and as the viewer you certainly have your opinion on what is real in the film, you also realize that one couldn’t exist without the other.

I feel his movies can also be about the danger of falling too far into your dreams to the point where you damage your real life. If you ignore either part of your existance the other part is damaged and in the end you become damaged as well. Both parts are integral to your life but it’s important to keep them separate and balanced. All the characters except Paprika in the movie ignore or overindulge some aspect of their existance and suffer for it.

To round out this discussion I thought it apt to mention Paprika’s comparison of dreams to the Internet. I found it very poignant. Where else can you pretend you are someone else when awake? I think it is just another example of how dreams cross over into the world of reality. How far the Internet has come from merely being an information source.

There is a character who often interacts with his dream by going online. He receives therapy and interacts with the others characters in the dream world while using the Internet. In a way the Internet is filled with mundaneness, fantasy, hope, joy, madness, and nightmares just like dreams. The Internet is, as always, also where people can run away from their reality.

I loved this movie. It is my favorite Satoshi Kon film. It is funny because I saw Perfect Blue when it first came out in English and it almost ruined Kon for me. Not that it was a bad film, on the contrary, I thought it was very good. But that movie scared me and I don’t like to be scared in a psychological manner. It stuck with me and made me almost never watch another of his films again. I am sure glad I got over it.

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Hayate the Combat Butler, There is only dirty otaku blood in our veins!

Hayate no Gotoku is an otaku comedy for the whole family.

YAY! We are really excited about the next season of Hayate (especially since we weren’t sure it was going to get one). So we thought we would try to get as many people watching it as we could before it starts up again!

Nagi, Hayate, Butler, Otaku, Doujinshi

This is the story of the most unlucky boy in the world. Hayate Ayasaki has only ever known a life of hard work and sorrow. One day, he comes home to find that his parents have borrowed 156,804,000 yen from the Yakuza and that they have left him the responsibility of paying off this debt. Hayate decides to ransom a girl to get the money and the girl he first stumbles upon is Nagi Sanzenin. Due to an odd miscommunication that shall set the tone for the whole series, Hayate’s declaration that he is going to kidnap Nagi comes off as a love confession. And of course Nagi falls completely in love with him in that instant but it is a love built on a misunderstanding.

Nagi, Hayate, Butler, Otaku, Doujinshi

Poor Hayate never had a chance as his last pay check was given to his good for nothing parental units who promptly used it to gamble. But Hayate is innately good and even when he really, really tries to be bad he just ends up screwing it up. But I guess that is why he gets all the ladies.

Nagi, Hayate, Butler, Otaku, Destiny, Doujinshi

After Hayate saves Nagi several times instead of kidnapping her, he asks Nagi to find him a job. Nagi can immediately think of only one position for Hayate. Under her; as her combat butler (yes, that innuendo was intentional). And so through some shenanigans Nagi agrees to pay off Hayate’s debt and in return he will pay off the debt to her as her butler. The main problem as Maria, who is Nagi’s maid, quite succinctly put it is: there is a humongous bomb waiting to go off between Nagi and Hayate. Nagi believes that Hayate is head over heals in love with her and does everything for her due to their love. Hayate is eternally grateful to the woman who saved his life but is unaware of any feelings she has for him. Maria is quite aware that this is a problem waiting to happen so she does everything is her power to make sure this does not blow up in everyone’s face.

Nagi, Hayate, Butler, Otaku, Maria, Maid, Doujinshi

This is a recipe for pure comedy. The show is miscommunication after miscommunication between these two, then throw in: a beautiful maid who Hayate is crazy about; an odd old butler and a talking tiger; a jerky grandfather; Nagi’s “fiance” who is the owner of a video store; a wacky bunch of friends of Nagi; wackier students and teachers at her and Hayate’s school; gobs of girls in love with Hayate; a huge estate; unlimited amounts of money; robots; doujinishi; a crap load of otaku jokes; and a butler battling tournament. Oh but there is some randomness that resembles an actual plot thrown in also. You see, Nagi’s grandfather has promised his fortune to anyone who can do two things. One: Make Nagi cry. Two: Make Nagi apologize. So this adds money hungry ridiculous villains sometimes.

Nagi, Hayate, Butler, Otaku, Gundam, Doujinshi

The author of Hayate, Kenjiro Hata, is a rather interesting mangaka. He once was the assistant of Koji Kumeta who currently writes Sayonara Zetsubo Sensei. Like many modern mangaka he is as big an otaku as his readers. Apparently he is also very active on the internet, posting on his own blog and conversing with fans on 2channel. Also according to Tsunami Channel he started the manga in massive debt and was dependent on sales of the manga. I also really empathized with Kenjiro Hata when he said he started to cry in a family restaurant during the first year of writing Hayate as he thought it was going to be canceled.

Nagi, Hayate, Butler, Otaku, Conan, Doujinshi

Hayate is the story of a truth that grows out of a lie. Or that is what Narutaki and I like to believe. I think the things that will draw most people into this series is the two main characters. All too often you will have shows in which the main characters are super bland or annoying but the side characters are where it is at. I would be surprised if anyone who regularly reads this blog did not at least like one of the main characters. Hayate is handsome, strong, honest, amiable, charming, and a little bit goofy. Nagi is a spunky otaku girl with a sharp mind and a sweet side buried under a very blunt nature. Hayate and Nagi are great characters but they are even better characters together. They have an easy comedic interplay between them and they are also a cute couple even though they might not realize what is going on between them. It is all to easy to make characters who constantly misunderstand each other extremely annoying but Hayate and Nagi stay charming and make you honestly root for them.

Nagi, Hayate, Butler, Mecha, Robot, Otaku, Gundam, Doujinshi

Some people mistakenly call Nagi tsundere. This is absolutely not true, Nagi expounds on why Hayate is so great. And she does think he already knows she loves him as much as he loves her. So while she does get embarrassed or yell at him, it really stems from her anti-social behavior more than anything else. I’ll never forget an episode where Nagi is trying to think of a way to get Hayate out of the house for a few hours. Nagi simply lies to him yelling “I’m tired of seeing your face!” Hayate was visibly hurt. He is quite naive but sometimes I think he is actually amazingly shrewd. To put it another way, Hayate is a playa. For a guy who doesn’t have any romantic feelings for anyone, except Maria, he sure does get around. However, I too am in love with Hayate so what can I really say? I am the first to admit that while I love this show because it is funny, I am really attached to the growing relationship between Nagi and Hayate. A lot.

Nagi, Hayate, Butler, Otaku, Maria, Maid, Doujinshi

The hidden workhorse that keeps the series and the characters moving forward is Maria the maid. Maria is Hayate and Nagi’s greatest supporter. She troubleshoots many a disaster and often times work her hardest to keep Hayate and Nagi together and maybe even make them realize what the other one is feeling. The running gag is that everyone thinks that Maria is much older than her actually age of 17 but it’s mostly because she is the mature character in the series who has to reign things in when they get out of control. I will also admit for some reason I really like that little curly bang that hangs down from Maria’s face. It is impossibly cute.

Nagi, Hayate, Butler, Otaku, Wataru, Doujinshi

Maria is very important, I can’t imagine anyone actually making it a week without her. Even when they try to send her on vacation it just doesn’t work. Speaking of characters that are just great, how about I talk about Wataru? Dying to hear about him I know. Wataru is Nagi’s “fiance” and no matter how much they fight, they are actually very good friends. I see him and Nagi as having similar personalities. He is spikey but very sweet deep down, he is also small and adorable. He, Nagi, Sakuya (Nagi’s cousin), and Isumi (the only person that would willingly read Nagi’s ramblings) have all known each other a long time and their friendship is very fun. He also has this funny rivalry/friendship with Hayate. His family used to be wealthy but now their only asset is a video store which Wataru works at. Nagi is constantly renting things from him. Wataru is a super otaku of special effects (tokusatsu) and thanks to his moment of self-loathing we got the title for this article.

Nagi, Hayate, Butler, Otaku, Inu-Yasha, Wataru, Doujinshi

The one thing I really don’t understand about Hayate is why does Hinagiku has the fan following she does. I like Hinagiku. Narutaki likes Hinagiku. But neither of us is running out to buy Hinagiku love pillows for our Hinagiku decorated rooms where we write in our blogs about Hinagiku in which we state how Hinagiku should be the star of the manga. It seems like at times Narutaki and I are in the minority. I recently bought a Hayate art book and Hinagiku’s face was the largest face on the cover. Any Hayate merchandise is sure to either have Hinagiku on it or have a Hinagiku version. When the second season was announced on Anime News Network there there people cheering left and right for more Hinagiku. It still makes no sense to me. What magical appeal does this girl have that I am missing?

Hinagiku, Utena, Hayate, Butler, Doujinshi

I often want to write on messageboards: Hey, you guys know this story is about HAYATE, right? I really do think people don’t know. But we are letting that secret be known here! Hina is cool, I loved that time she dressed as Utena, but I certainly don’t need the Hina side story.

There are some differences between the anime and manga versions of Hayate. The overall story is very fast and loose so the anime changes when certain things happen and when certain characters are introduced. Of course they rush to give us Hinagiku as quickly as possible even thought she is not introduced until the manga until book four. They also tweak certain characters personalities. No one is massively different but I feel that Hayate is a little more mean-spirited in the manga and Maria manipulates events a little more openly.

Nagi, Hayate, Butler, Otaku, Gundam, Doujinshi

Despite the cute exterior and mundane non-otaku friendly veneer of Hayate, it is an insightful and hardcore otaku comedy. There is a constant barrage of anime and manga references. Look at the Anime News Network Trivia section for Hayate to see what I am talking about. Almost all the titles are anime references. My personal favorites are “A Power That Won’t Revolutionize the World” and “Many Kids Must Be in Trouble Since Train_Man Showed Their Parents What Comiket Is All About.” Nagi’s house has statues of Detective Conan and Inu-Yasha. I think the pinnacle of the otaku love is the manga Nagi writes called Magical Girl Destroy. Nagi’s comic is a bizarre mixture of Card Captor Sakura and Fist of the North Star. It is apparently incomprehensible to anyone but Nagi and Isumi. When the main character who looks like Kenshiro in drag shouts out “Sega Saturn Black!” for no identifiable reason you know you have comedy gold. The thing is that most of the otaku references are in the background and they never rely on them. If you took out every otaku reference I fell the show would still be hysterically.

Nagi, Hayate, Butler, Otaku, Magical Girl Destroy, Doujinshi

With Hayate there is just twice as much to love. You can love it as an otaku but also as a normal ole person. I mean, heck, even though I identify with the word otaku I only get 20% of the otaku-oriented jokes in Hayate. That isn’t the thing that makes me want to watch the show. It is the characters, the comedic timing, the randomness, and interactions. While clearly not a gripping and suspenseful show, it is hard not to get addicted to it.

Nagi, Hayate, Butler, Otaku, Conan, Gundam, Doujinshi

UPDATE: Hayate is now licensed by Bandai!

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Gosick Novel #01, Super loli detective!

I am always on the search for good detective anime and manga, actually I’m always on the search for good detective anything. So when I happened by this book at the store, I couldn’t resist, even knowing nothing about it. We here at Reverse Thieves will always take the time to check out a new detective related work.

I have to admit that I was mostly intrigued by the way that Narutaki described the main character and the way she looked on the cover. That and it is always nice to see light novels that are not based on licensed anime and manga. Although they just started to write a manga in Monthly Dragon Age based on the novels it’s still unlicensed in the U.S.

Gosick is the story of Kazuya Kujo and Victorique a rather unlikely detective duo. Kazuya Kujo is the youngest Japanese son of a military family sent to Europe to study. Victorique is a reclusive genius. After Victorique effortlessly solves the mysterious murder of a fortuneteller that has baffled the police, she gets an invitation for a cruise intended for the deceased. Kazuya and Victorique decide to go in the victim’s place and wind up fighting for their lives as they try to piece together who (and why) is trying to kill everyone on the ship.

I really like the setting of this series, though I’m still not sure why the author chose to create a new country in Europe rather than just using, say Switzerland. But in any case the early 20th century feel adds some meat and just seems so much more rich than a modern era. This also helped to put me in the mind set of Sherlock Holmes and Poirot.

Kazuya is an outcast as his European dominant school but he is determined to prove himself. He has a quite and sweet exterior and certainly some naiveté mixed in. He has been given the task of bringing the mysterious Victorique her daily assignments since she never shows up for class, this also makes him a bit of an enigma in the school since most people have never met her. He has a protective side, when it comes to Victorique, that comes from his soldier’s son background. Kazuya can never quite grasp the mindset of the lovely Victorique but that doesn’t stop him from trying.

Kazuya is the brawn to back up Victorique’s brains. Not to say that Kazuya is a musclebound jock because he comes off as quite intelligent. It’s just that everyone comes off less intelligent than Victorique. So this means his role is usually to be the physical partner and protector of Victorique. Kazuya is both fascinated and somewhat perplexed by Victorique. He definitely seems to be fond of Victorique but is also aggravated by her eccentric nature and caustic personality.

Victorique is a spiky, socially inept, observational genius. She is also very cute like a doll. I think I originally described her to Hisui as a meld between Nagi (from Hayate the Combat Butler) and Sherlock Holmes. She definitely solves things in that unimaginable Sherlockian way. As is proven when she solves a murder in under five minutes without even seeing the scene of the crime. She spends a good deal of her days cooped up in the library and we later learn she has seen virtually nothing of the outside world.

After reading the book myself I think Narutaki’s description is spot on. She is an odd paradox because she is amazingly insightful about certain things but amazingly naive about others. Almost all of her knowledge comes from books but she has almost no real world experience. This means despite her amazing intellect and ability to effortlessly solve logical puzzles, she is still fascinated by things such as traveling by carriage. She along with such habits as smoking a pipe give her an odd mixture of old soul and young girl.

gosick, detective, light novel, loli, victorique, kazuya

The developing relationship between these two looks to be a fun push and pull that will go on throughout the series. There was an ease of magic to them. This probably stems from their eccentricities which compliment one another. They are completely different and that makes them fit together like two puzzle pieces. We need both characters for this story to work. I was surprised that we the readers had missed their first meeting though. It is described briefly in the book and I can only assume it A. Happens in a later book, like a prequel, or B. Happened in one of the short story collections.

Apparently there are two types of books in the “Kazuya and Victorique” mystery franchise. The Gosick books are full novel-sized mysteries and the Gosicks, with an S, are short story collections. As fas as I can tell they meet in Gosicks I and it is made up of several interrelated mysteries. They both can be very naive but each of them is naive in a different way. They complement each other when they work together letting them cover the other’s weakness. The writer likes to do a little dance about whether or not Victorique has feelings for Kazuya. He will often play up some indication that Victorique does and then he will give us some reason that it meant nothing at all.

This was a mystery that at first I thought to be too simple. I thought I had it all figured out a little more than half way through the book. My personal preference for mysteries is to be mostly clueless, maybe to figure out who did it but not to understand all the circumstances surrounding it. I mean the writer kills off more than half the suspects in one fell swoop which left me wondering, why put them in at all? However, I was pleasantly surprised to be thrown the twist and not see it coming. The book made me assume a couple of things incorrectly, which is exactly what it should have done.

I figured out certain things before the big reveal but was wrong about other things. I had a little more insight into what was going to happen but that was mostly because Narutaki had inadvertently given me some tips when we were discussing the book before I read it. It’s certainly not the most complex mystery and it seems like it was supposed to be a longer story but I still feel it was well executed. We also learn of a larger, over-arcing mystery concerning Victorique. And from what I can tell this is a part of all the books. The next book looks to be dealing with this uber-mystery even more.

This is a light novel so obviously it is sparse on pictures but at the same time I felt there needed to be a few more, even if they were small pieces. For example, the writer constantly, what seems like every chapter, has to describe Victorique in glowing detail. As if Kazuya, nor the audience, hasn’t been along for this ride from the beginning. Even going so far as to take the exact same sentences from previous chapters. Why not just show us a picture to remind us, if you think we need reminding. So at times it seemed like they were in need of a better editor.

These in a light novel magazine not unlike The Sneaker. So if they ran a chapter a month they might have wanted to refresh the reader or tell new readers what Victorique looks like being she is one of the major selling points of the novel. But I am pretty sure that had they threw in a few more pictures as you mentioned, it would have saved them all that trouble.

This was a fun ride with two character that you can’t help but like. Combine that with a rich setting and a plot that has its twists, and you have won me over. I look forward to reading more of their adventures (if we are so lucky). I think this series could also be a nice foray for anyone who hasn’t jumped onto the light novel train yet. One thing I love about the detective formula is that it can continue for as long as you want it to.

gosick, detective, light novel, loli, victorique, kazuya