Akihabara Majokko Princess
Feb. 21st, 2010 21:53So the director McG recently teamed up with the Japanese artist-auteur Murakami Takashi to create a music video to the 80s hit "Turning Japanese" starring Kirsten Dunst, set in Akihabara, the otaku mecca (which isn't really actually an otaku mecca anymore, but that's another story).
The video is NSFW, because Akiba is NSFW.
The video features a lot of random passersby as well as Murakami himself. On one level it's completely awesome and on another it's jaw-dropping in a WTFBBQ kind of way; I really do urge you to watch it.
merin_chan and I discussed it a bit here on her LJ; having thought about it some more, it seems clear to me that Murakami, who really is Andy Warhol 2.0, is continuing his signature shtick of producing otaku-teki/type products for consumption by non-otaku audiences despite the fact that he is not an otaku himself (and yes I do find this problematic). Also, the video is clearly simultaneously both in earnest and (self-)parodic. I think this comes through clearest in the closeups on Dunst--check out her eyebrows! A central characteristic of the ideal otaku-teki girl-woman is a combination of sexual innocence with a physiologically impossible body--so you'll see girls with size FF boobs busting out of their miniscule underwear wearing embarrassed, self-conscious expressions. Dunst's character is clearly not innocent, which subverts the trope in an interesting way.
There's a comment to be made here about the convergence of the perception of Japan via animanga with Japanese self-imagery in animanga in the figure of Dunst lip-syncing to a song about turning Japanese at the site of the very nexus of the Japanese government's Cool Japan promotional campaign, as well as something to be said about race and (self-?)appropriation, but both these comments are beyond my mental capacity at the moment.
The video is NSFW, because Akiba is NSFW.
The video features a lot of random passersby as well as Murakami himself. On one level it's completely awesome and on another it's jaw-dropping in a WTFBBQ kind of way; I really do urge you to watch it.
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There's a comment to be made here about the convergence of the perception of Japan via animanga with Japanese self-imagery in animanga in the figure of Dunst lip-syncing to a song about turning Japanese at the site of the very nexus of the Japanese government's Cool Japan promotional campaign, as well as something to be said about race and (self-?)appropriation, but both these comments are beyond my mental capacity at the moment.