Weekend recap

Movies & anime from the weekend, with thoughts:

The New God (Atarashii Kamisama)

I didn’t know anything about this – apart from the title, and that it had English subtitles – when I checked it out from the school library, so I didn’t realize that I was checking out a documentary about the lead singer in a Japanese right-wing punk band.  It was actually a little uncomfortable to watch at first; she does things like fly to North Korea to meet with the yodogo hijackers, attends right-wing group meetings to talk philosophy and stands around Yasukuni shrine yelling anti-American slogans through an amplifier.

Then I realized that these right-wing group meetings tended to have, oh, twenty people in them, max, and that she kept complaining that clubs her band performed in would kick them out, so I’m not too worried now about running into any massive anti-US sentiment when I visit.  🙂

After that, watched The Cockpit, which was recommended during this week’s literature class.  I’d never seen it before, even though it came out in the US on VHS back in the early 90s when there wasn’t that much else to watch.  It was an Urban Vision release, though, and as a late arrival to the anime industry they didn’t have a lot of good licenses.  I’m using that as my excuse for never renting it.  Anyway, it was pretty good.  It wasn’t something I would have thought would ever have been licensed for the US, and it’s a little weird seeing Matsumoto character designs in Serious Dramatic Settings.

The fansub I found was, well, not the greatest, but it did teach me the mplayer hotkeys you can use to adjust subtitle timing on the fly, so it had that going for it.

Finished up the weekend with 2LDK, which I’ve heard described as a Japanese version of “Single White Female“, a film which I’ve never seen.

If Single White Female is half as good, I should probably check it out.

The basic setup for 2LDK is this: Take two women who are competing for the same acting role, make them live in the same apartment.  Oh, one’s a city girl with no sense of personal boundaries and the other is a frighteningly precise everything-in-its-place person from the countryside.  Watch them as they get on each others nerves, which eventually devolves into them trying to kill one another with anything that comes to hand.

I’m not entirely sure a chainsaw is part of the home furnishings in your average Japanese 2LDK, but that’s my only real quibble with the film.

Edit:  Adding a couple of films here because they don’t warrant a full post.

I’ve read a couple of short stories by Edogawa Rampo recently – “The Human Chair” and “Hell of Mirrors” and both were quite good, so I looked up “The Blind Beast” which was based on a Rampo story and “The Mystery of Rampo”, which is, well, a mystery movie that stars Rampo.

“The Blind Beast” is, well, it was actually a fairly good thriller, but it’s the third-most-disturbing movie I’ve ever seen.

“The Mystery of Rampo” has an excellent opening sequence that reminded me of a Roald Dahl story, followed by 90 minutes of me trying to follow the plot and occasionally fight the weight of my own eyelids.  The premise is that Rampo is writing a mystery novel, only he can’t release it due to Showa-era censorship, and then the events from the novel start happening in real life as he writes them, so you get this quick back and forth between the bits that are happening in Rampo’s life and the bits that are only happening in his book, only they’re also happening outside of his book and, well, it is actually probably quite a good film but it’s not the sort of thing I should have tried watching when I was a little sleepy.

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First Steps, Larger Universe, Blah Blah Blah

I have to confess that I was a little worried when ordering Idolmaster SP – mostly, that I’d get it, play it for 20 minutes, get frustrated and give up.

Not that I’ve ever done that before.

Anyway, that hasn’t happened yet.  It’s not that I’m doing well at it, because I’m not.  I’m still a rank “F” idol after playing through 9 weeks of the game, and I just had my first audition that went badly enough that I actually LOST fans.

On the other hand, that gave me motivation enough to start seriously looking for advice on how to play, and I found this post, which was very helpful, and which turned out to be attached to this blog, which is a pretty good read if you’re looking for advice on PSP games, and it gave me a link to this message board, which is full of, well, I’m not sure whether I should be inspired or frightened by how many English-speaking Idolmaster fans there are.

Anyway, to get back to the Kenobi-ism, above, I’ve been exposed to a culture I didn’t know existed, and it feels like I might actually have my feet under me now.  Tomorrow morning, at 10:40 AM, I’ll meet Ritsuko for our appointment, and we’ll see how another audition goes.

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Three Years Blog

Today is Baud Attitude’s third birthday.  I would put an image of a cake here, but that would be silly.

Looking back at the second anniversary post, I’ve racked up 55000 more hits, which is pretty good.  Granted, 24000 of those hits were people coming to look at pictures of weird Japanese hamburgers, but what the hell, I know my niche.

I’ve written 132 posts, which isn’t bad, finished a bunch more games and did a bunch more organizing.  I’m finding it easier and easier to purge stuff.  Knowing that I’ll be moving again within a couple of months is helping with that.

I’ve also stayed mostly off Everquest, apart from a brief flirtation with the Macintosh version of the game, done a little catching up on recent anime, and, uh, gained about 10 pounds, which is kind of a bad point and something I need to do something about.  I graduated from one school and am in my second term at the next school, so I only have four terms to survive before I can graduate.  I’m even managing a 4.11 GPA at my new school, which is quite a shock.

In hindsight, I may have bitten off more than I should chew in my first year at a “real” college.  I’ve been volunteering with a student group, I’ve taken some electives that I didn’t strictly need, and I’m applying to study overseas this summer, which has come with its own set of stress.

Still, I’m managing.  Let’s see how another year goes.  🙂

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Good Intentions

I realized recently that an awful lot of posts of late had been about, well, fan-service-heavy anime and games, and I wanted to try to offset that in some manner, to point out that I wasn’t a complete perv and that I actually did like some things with Substance.

So, I started to write a post that was a list of fan-service-heavy anime that I’d seen that I HADN’T liked, and after typing out quite a bit and hunting down example images and doing actually quite a bit of prep work, I came to two realizations.

1) No matter how terrible the show was, it probably had SOME fans, and there was a nonzero possibility that they would eventually stumble across my post and be offended and post long ranty comments about my disrespecting their favorite show, and that would trouble me for all of the 10 seconds it takes me to hit the Delete button because I’m a bastard.

2) Making up a list like this was an admission that I had, at one time in my life, actually spent money on Jungle De Ikou!, which I realize I’m admitting now, but I feel a little confession is good for the soul and it hopefully distracts from the REALLY bad skeletons in my theoretical closet.

So, I abandoned that project.  I’ll have to find another way to balance things out.

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Random Bits & Pieces

Some things here that didn’t deserve a full post.

Watched “Tokyo!” last night, which is a collection of three short films set in, well, Tokyo.

The first of the three, titled “Interior Design”, was pretty good, though I thought it played up the “uncaring big city where everyone lives in rabbit hutches” stereotype a bit much.  The second segment, “Merde”, was, well, not just a clever name, if you’ll pardon the Wayne’s World reference.  It started off with an interesting parody of kaiju movies but quickly spiraled off into left field, culminating in a Dramatic Courtroom Sequence that I think I actually dozed off during.  Fortunately, I woke up in time for “Shaking Tokyo”, which was a surprisingly touching story about a veteran hikkikomori, the events that drive him out of his house, and the things he discovers when he sees the world for the first time in ten years.

Have also been re-watching Escaflowne with my wife.  While we don’t always agree on what Good Anime is, we do have some shows that we both love; this is one of them and it’d been a few years since we last sat down to watch it together.  It’s a little like Gundam Wing in that it was an early attempt to create a show that straddled the traditional shojo/shonen divide; you have your Big Damn Robots fighting but you also have your Impossibly Pretty Boys and Forbidden Romances.  It’s making me realize that it’s been a long time since I’ve seen a show in the “Perfectly Normal Japanese Schoolgirl Gets Sucked Into An Alternate Dimension” genre… I don’t know whether that’s because there haven’t been any recent ones or whether I just haven’t been noticing them.  It seems like it’s much more popular, these days, to have an entirely alternate universe, or to have a show that takes place in the normal world but adds fantastical elements or alien princess harems.

It’s also a little nostalgic to watch the end credits and see Dave Fleming credited for the translation work; I used to get Nadia fansubs from him back in the early 1990s and Escaflowne was the first show where I saw him doing professional work; now I see his name everywhere.

One of the computers in the language lab at school had an incredibly cute Firefox theme installed, so I tracked it down.  Objectively, it’s nothing special; just a weird bean-shaped character on a green background, but for some reason it pushes the D’Awwwww button and pushes it hard.

The theme name is “mameshiba”, and one of the search results that popped up when looking for it was this blog, which turned out to be a fun if occasionally cringemaking read.  (I can’t help it.  I physically twitch every time someone drops “kawaii” into the middle of an otherwise English sentence.)  It’s bizarre to think that someone from the Cartoon Network wave of fans is now a fully functional adult, so it made me feel a little old, but it has some nice photos of Tokyo and it makes me want to check out Ueno Zoo the next time I visit.

Lastly, thanks to Namco putting their PSP Idolmaster games out on the PSP The Best label, I finally own an Idolmaster game.   This comes after several years of being vexed because the 360 games were region locked, then being too cheap to order the PSP games because spending $60 on an import PSP game just seemed wrong.  $33 was a much better price point.

It should surprise nobody that I went with the Missing Moon version, because, well…

…yeah, it’s the “Ritsuko” version.

It’s not an easy game at my level of Japanese comprehension.  It has a lot of text, and the text doesn’t wait for you to press a button to continue; it automatically scrolls.  Two years ago it would have been completely unplayable – nowadays, it’s, well, sometimes I know what’s going on and sometimes I’m just hoping that I’m not missing anything important.

Ritsuko turns out to be quite the taskmistress.  After our first practice session, which went poorly, she canceled the afternoon session and called me into a meeting where she chewed me out and asked if I was serious about her career.  She’s also taken to scheduling play sessions – when I saved the game last night, she made me promise to come back at the same time tonight.

To be fair, I haven’t tried playing the game with any of the other characters yet, so I don’t know if this is actually unique or if all the characters are this strict.  It’s a little weird being bossed around by a video game, mind you, but it adds a bit of personality that I didn’t expect.

Besides, I don’t HAVE to turn on the PSP at 9:30 tonight.  I could totally skip our appointment.

But I might get yelled at for it.

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This SEEMS educational…

I’ve been taking a Japanese literature series at school this year, and I’m in my second term.  The last first term covered everything from the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki to Muromachi period writings, so this term started with the Edo period.

At one point, in order to illustrate some points the teacher wanted to make about Edo period lifestyle, she decided to show us part of an episode of Samurai Champloo.

I wasn’t familiar with the show.  I mean, I’d heard of it, but I’d kind of lumped it into the “action anime, no cute girls with glasses, no bizarre love triangles, no real reason to watch” category.

Anyway, I don’t use words like “squee” much, but it’s the only word that appropriately describes the reaction from the women in class when the teacher started the episode.

Put lightly, it’s big with the ladies, and it’s not hard to see why.  It’s got the ultimate bad-boy-who-just-needs-to-be-mothered, a silent-guy-with-a-tortured-past, and a perky girl, also with tortured past, who can eat her own weight in unagi without gaining an ounce.  The main characters are all orphans, they all tend to get beaten up or kidnapped or tortured on a regular basis, there’s tons of pure angsty goodness for, well, fans of angst.

So, yeah, it’s a Chick Show, but I found myself quite enjoying the first episode.

A few weeks after that, I was in Fry’s electronics and noticed that they had a DVD box set of the entire series for 45 bucks.

I picked it up and weighed the pros and cons of buying it.  I mean, I’d liked the first episode despite myself, and I was curious to see where the show went from there, but it was 45 bucks on a largely unknown quantity.

So, I checked the price on Amazon and found that it was about the same price on DVD… but only $38 on blu-ray, and that seemed like a good enough deal that I decided to take a chance on it.

I’m going to say that the chance paid off.  It DOES have a couple of real groaner episodes, but the series as a whole was good and the fighty stabby bits more than made up for the fangirl-fodder angsty bits.

It’s also, surprisingly enough, rather educational.  That is, it’s not terribly educational on its own merits, but if you’re studying Edo period literature or history it’s a pretty good way to have concepts reinforced through visual example.  Obviously you need to be careful to separate the actual period stuff from the tacked-on stuff. 🙂

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Ad networks gone beautifully wrong

Yes, this is a screenshot from marvel.com. Yes, that’s an ad for the DC Comics Crisis on Two Earths movie.

(Oh, and yes, the iPhone can’t do Flash, but ignore that.)

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Speaking of Mahjong

A friend of mine recently sent me a link to a flash implementation of four-player mahjong.  It doesn’t have moe characters, or any characters at all for that matter, and it’s decidedly bereft of flashy visuals, catchy tunes, and, well, personality.

On the other hand, it plays a pretty good hand of mahjong and it’s very English-friendly.  It gives you arabic numerals and roman characters on kanji-only mahjong tiles and it has an English list of rules, spelling out scoring and winning conditions and giving picture examples.

And, small side bonus, it’s free.

Link is here.  Enjoy.

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Moeru Mahjong Moe-Jong: A Quick Note on Save Problems

Back in December, Hudson released a game called “Moeru Mahjong Moe-Jong” on the Japanese PSN, for the princely sum of Y1200.  That represents a savings of 75% from its retail price, which is pretty odd for the PSN, so maybe it didn’t do well at retail?

Anyway, it was cute.

I put off buying it for some while, even though I actually had money already in my Japanese PSN account and therefore it theoretically wasn’t going to cost me anything I hadn’t already spent, because I was playing through a bunch of Saturn mahjong games already.

Still, inevitably, I broke down.

I’m not going to get into much detail about the game because I’ve only played a little of it.

Basically, it’s got a story mode, there’s no stripping, it’s four-player mahjong, it’s got quite high production values, and so far it looks pretty fun.  It features voice acting by members of AKB48, which seems to be an all-girl musical group where the girls rotate out as they get older and new members are brought in.  Basically, a hyper-cute Japanese Menudo.  I may be dating myself by making that comparison.

The reason for this post is that I’m hoping to save other people the same problem I had.

When I started the game, I got a status message saying that it was checking the memory card for a save file and not to remove the memory card.

Then it gave me an error “No data found : 80110307” (strictly, “データがありません。(80110307)” ) with an OK button.  I OKed that and it asked me if I wanted to start the game as-is. (“このままでゲーム開始めしますか?”), this time with yes or no options.

I chose “Yes”, because I assumed that I just needed to get into the game and that it would then create the missing save file and all would be well.

I was a bit optimistic there.

After playing the game for a half hour or so, accumulating a fair score, and unlocking a few things, I decided to give it a rest.  Note that, during this process, I’d occasionally been getting a “now saving” sort of icon appearing in the lower right corner.  It seemed like my theory was a good one.

I started it up again later, and, of course, got the same errors again, got into the game, and found that none of my progress had been saved.

It turns out that the actual process of creating a Moeru Mahjong Moe-Jong save file is as follows:

  1. Start the game.
  2. OK the first couple of prompts.
  3. Select yes to the next prompt.
  4. Get into the game and get to the main menu.
  5. Press “Start”
  6. NOW select “yes” when it asks you if you want to create a save file.

This is not exactly intuitive.  I’m not going to call it exactly user-hostile, because I’ve seen WORSE, but it’s pretty daft.

Anyway, if you are getting any of the above errors and your google searching leads you here, try those steps and good luck.

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Actually, chocolate sounds pretty good.

I’ve been quite enjoying reading the posts at Ogiue Maniax for a few weeks now; it has just the right balance of silly and serious to keep my attention and it makes me feel a little more in-touch.

A couple of weeks ago, they ran a fun article that compared fanservice and chocolate, and mentioned a show called “To-Love-Ru” as the anime equivalent of binging on chocolate.

I’m still kind of getting over the ending of School Days, so that sounded good.

After watching the dozen or so episodes, well, it’s an awful lot like a “re-visioning” of Urusei Yatsura.  That’s not a bad thing – I love UY, and it’s been a few years since I’ve seen a good take on the “alien princess winds up engaged to normal guy, chaos ensues” story.

Plus, yes, it’s heavy on the fanservice, but it manages to ride the fine line between comedy and voyeurism.  Yes, most of the characters wind up sans culottes on a regular basis, but there’s always a conveniently placed object, steam cloud, or blinding sunbeam to keep things tasteful…ish.

It helps that the main character seems like a genuinely nice guy, which does separate it from the UY model a bit.  Part of the fun of watching UY episodes is waiting for Ataru to do something stupid and get electrocuted, which also means that he’s stuck in perpetual lecherous-idiot mode until the end of time.  It’s hard to root for Ataru, but you can’t help but feel for Yuuki.

And, not that it affects the quality of the show or stories or anything, but I’m quite fond of both the OP and ED songs, which is pretty unusual.  Both got put on my MP3 player and into heavy rotation.

Edit:

So, after finishing the series, I have an overall positive impression.  If I have one complaint, it’s that there were a couple of filler episodes in the second half that I could have done without, particularly the “let’s produce a full episode of the show-within-a-show” episode, but that’s a pretty mild rebuke to a series that had me genuinely laughing on a regular basis.

I was initially a little disappointed with the ending, but a night’s sleep changed my mind.  In the end, it seems like everyone is, well, happy, and they deserve to be.  It stays open-ended, so it’s tempting to say that nothing really gets resolved, but what’s really happened is that the characters are able to move forward, freed from the Unwieldy Plot Device that tossed them all together in the first place; they’ve become friends and don’t need an artificial reason to stay together.

Oh, as a final note: Apparently the steam clouds and blinding sunbeams that I praised for keeping a modicum of taste in the show were only present in the broadcast release, and are removed for DVD.  Not actually sure if that’s a positive.

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