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From Family to Pornographic: The Spectrum of Anime
03.30.06
You may have heard
the term "anime" (pronounced ANN-ih-may or AH-nee-may) batted around in your
family. If so, you may already be the owner of a growing collection of DVDs with
colorful covers of big-eyed childlike adults saving the world.
Possibly Japan's
most prominent cultural export, this distinctive animation style has been
entertaining North American audiences for decades. If you watched Saturday
morning cartoons when you were younger, there's a good chance Astro Boy
or Marine Boy were in your diet at some point.
Currently, anime
has moved from its former designation as a cult curiosity to become a mainstream
contender for the attention of both children and adults. While purists of this
genre may not agree, Pokemon, Digimon and the many other
derivations of these commercial pastimes have put Japanese animations front and
center on our televisions, movie screens, and toy shelves. With the recent Oscar
nomination of Howl's Moving Castle for Best Animated Feature, it is clear
North American audiences in greater numbers are adopting this art form.
Yet, with this
embracing, there are concerns--or at least confusion--being voiced by many
parents who are wondering what messages these animations may be teaching young
audiences. Whether these movies are positive or negative will depend greatly on
your religious disposition, where you stand on issues of female role portrayals,
and the types of anime your children and teens are interested in.
Hayao Miyazaki is
perhaps the best-known anime creator. Howl's Moving Castle is only his
latest undertaking. His company, Studio Ghibli, has created many feature length
anime productions, two of which--My Neighbor Totoro and Whisper of the
Heart--were released earlier this year on DVD through Disney. (Howl's
Moving Castle is also available on DVD at this time.)
My Neighbor
Totoro was my first glimpse at this "new wave" of anime. One of the earliest
films I reviewed for my family movie column, I was impressed with the natural
way Miyazaki created his young characters who discover strange "forest spirits"
in the woods surrounding their home. The latest release of this film from
Disney, offers a re-done English version featuring the amazing Dakota Fanning
and her younger sister Elle playing the two young sisters around whom the story
revolves. The new DVD package sports a prominent quote by Roger Ebert, hailing
it as "One of the most beloved of all family films."
I couldn't agree
more. The film promotes family togetherness, appropriate independence for
children, and being able to take something that appears initially scary and turn
it into a playful friend.
Yet, as I've viewed
other anime movies (including some of Miyazaki's), I've come to recognize that
Totoro doesn't represent the vast majority of these titles. Many feature
far more abstract characters and plots that, I assume, are difficult to
interpret if you're not intimately familiar with the associated Japanese
culture.
And virtually every
anime title I've watched deals extensively with storylines involving
metaphysical characters, ranging from the more innocent totoros of the forest
to goddesses and other mythical and quasi-religious beings. For some families,
these may be reasons enough to avoid this genre, as this reader of my review of
My Neighbor Totoro said in an email I received while writing this
article:
"I have not seen
[My Neighbor Totoro], but from what you said, it sounds like Pokemon, which I
stopped letting my children watch because I heard too many Christians say it was
full of demons and was a bad influence, in the same way I would not let them
play with tarot cards or Ouija boards."
For other parents,
concerns about the portrayals of females may be another issue. Anime artwork is
infamous for featuring doe-eyed "women" who appear to be acting as adults but
often look more akin to a fifteen-year-old schoolgirl. These short-skirted
figures usually fall into two categories: Helpless waifs who depend on men to
save and protect them, or exaggerated female superheroes similar to Hollywood
characters like Catwoman or Ultraviolet.
Either way, it is
important for parents to help young viewers decipher these images and recognize
what motivations the characters have for acting the way they do.
Finally, what is
likely the greatest concern of anime is the close relationship it bears to
another Japanese animation genre called hentai. Drawn in the same style,
hentai in Japanese means "perverted," and is used to describe animation that is
sexually explicit--although even that term is an understatement.
Imagine a
pornographic world where there are no boundaries of what can be shown, and you
have an inkling of what hentai is all about. By drawing your most
perverted fantasies instead of having to rely on actors, an artist's imagination
is the only limit, making this form of pornography extremely explicit and
potentially offensive.
Hentai can be
purchased on DVDs, although it is easily found on-line. Videos and still images
are traded in newsgroups, through peer-to-peer services, or through standard web
sites. Even more bothersome, many popular anime characters from franchises like
Pokemon and Sailor Moon are often recreated into pornographic
versions. (I assume this is done without the blessings of the original
copyright owner.)
While comparing
anime to hentai is like suggesting a Frankie and Annette movie can lead to
pornography, a curiosity for all things anime could inadvertently lead a young
fan into this area. A search on Google for the words Pokemon and Misty (a major
female character in the series) returned many pornographic sites in the first
ten results. (Even after turning on Google's most strict search filtering, one
site in the top ten was pornographic photography unrelated to anything Pokemon.)
For parents of
children and teens who are attracted to anime's colorful and detailed
productions, it would be wise to help them make good choices. As is often the
case lately, don't assume animation equals "Good for children."
Besides writing this column for the Parents Television Council, Rod Gustafson authors Parent Previews® - a newspaper and Internet column (published in association with movies.com) that reviews movies from a parent's perspective. He's also the film critic for a major Canadian TV station, various radio stations and serves on the executive of the Alberta Association for Media Awareness. Finally, his most important role is being the father to four wonderful children and husband to his beautiful wife (and co-worker) Donna.
Parenting
and the Media by Rod Gustafson
The Parents
Television Council -
www.parentstv.org
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