Nendoroid: Homura Akemi

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It’s been a while since I did one of these, but usually miniature photography takes a bit of time for me to setup, pose the figures, and get images that I like. I’m getting better, but it still took the better of six hours, although I ended up with a few creative pieces out of it, including this blog post. BTW, if you hate spoilers, you can just go to the gallery of images at the bottom and ignore my ramblings, cause this is going to get spoiled like four month old milk.

Today’s anime figure is the Nendoroid of Homura Akemi from the anime series Puella Magi Madoka Magica. You try saying that five times fast. The show was a blockbuster back in Winter/Spring of 2011, but I actually didn’t pick up the show until later. If you want to watch it legitimately over the ‘tubes, Crunchyroll has the show. If you subscribe to them you can watch it at 1080p, which is fantastic.

I was planning to re-watch this series, but then around the time Crunchyroll announced it, I ended up reading another one of their blog posts and getting side tracked watching Futari wa Pretty Cure. Yeah that’s right, I watched that. Madoka and Pretty Cure are both magical girl shows. Neither of them fall into the Sailor Moon shoujo type of romcom/kill-monster-of-the-week type of show though. For me Sailor Moon was one of the gateway animes when DiC brought it out back in the mid 90s. I imagine for most people who are my age, they probably started there or somewhere within the vicinity of it and then began their exploration into things like Evangelion and what have you.

As for Pretty Cure (Precure as it’s called now), there’s actually a whole pantheon of magical girls and it’s been on the air since 2004. Crunchyroll also has the original Futari wa Pretty Cure (We are Pretty Cure) on their site, but you may be annoyed by the hissing from the VHS tape quality video they have. That’s the one I watched and I think of it as the “buddy-cop” magical girl show. There are only two characters (hence the “We are…” in the title), Nagisa and Honoka, and like a buddy cop movie, once they move out of their slice-of-life story mode to demon-battling-mode they usually cause a lot of stuff to explode. Every showdown is resolved with a battery of fisticuffs and punctuated with a thing called a Marble Screw that’s a magical beam the diameter of a house.

Madoka is akin to a deconstruction of the magical girl genre. Precure and Sailor Moon both have the magical creature. Honoka and Nagisa have Mipple and Mepple. Usagi has Luna. The critter imbues the girl with magical powers after choosing them, you know, it’s destiny and fate. In Madoka the girls are offered a choice. Kubey’s the show’s magical critter, a cuddly little guy that presents the girls a contract to become a Puella Magi. But, unlike Sailor Moon or Precure there’s a consequence. Once you start down that road, it leads to some pretty dark and disturbing things, and it makes the show fun to watch in its own way. It is also violent but this was built for a late night audience, not little girls. Also, the show might have Madoka in it, but for most of the show you’ll probably be interested in today’s Nendoroid: Homura Akemi.

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Yes, that’s a rocket launcher. For me, she was an impulse buy because of that rocket launcher. Oh and the desert eagle and pipe bomb accessories. Here’s a shot of all the goodies you get when you purchase her:

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I remember watching the show and thinking “why’s that girl got a shotgun?” Too bad her toy doesn’t come with one. Homura’s magical power is time travel and she’s been looping through trying to save her buddies from their miserable fate for many cycles. When she started out as a Magi, she was like this:

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A nerd (minus the pipebomb). To help her fight the witches (that’s what the baddies are called) she freezes time, goes into a police department, and robs them of their weapons. She ditches the glasses and pigtails and becomes a badass time traveler with a ton of guns and grenades at her disposal. It’s nothing frilly either; it’s just ordinance to get the job done.

Some close up shots of her:

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Check out her shield, a lot of detail. It looks fantastic. On her hand, she’s got her crystal from the contract she made with Kubey.

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The paint job’s mostly nice, but you can see on her scarf it’s a bit messy. The ends of the pigtails come off as well. I was worried that the ends of her pigtails might snap easily, but since they come off I’m a little less worried about them.

If you own more than one Nendoroid, you can interchange the parts, which is why this is my favorite type of anime figurine to collect. Let’s borrow the body of Kuronuma Sawako from Kimi ni Todoke:

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That’s for all the guys that like moe.

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And guns.

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Some more goofiness — I feel that these two make the perfect buddy-cop pair.

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And a cross over from the two biggest blockbusters in recent anime history. Yui should probably not be holding that.

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All pictures are in the gallery below along with a few others.

Sketch of the Day: Yumi-sama

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Yumi-sama

Fukuzawa Yumi from Maria-sama ga Miteru. Surprisingly, Maria-sama ga Miteru (a.k.a. Marimite) is one of my favorite animes that I’ve seen in the past couple of years. It’s a little bit over-dramatic at times. Usually the characters are elegant and cordial. The whole cast of girls minus Yumi seem completely unapproachable when we first meet them. They’re head of the student council, they’ve got stuffy french-y titles, seemingly high-and-mighty attitudes, and are looked upon as goddesses by the student body. In their school’s little circle of intrigue, they are the celebrities, but as each episode passes we get to learn a little more about each of the girls and by the end they seem like fairly decent, likable characters. There’s not much of a story or an antagonist to drive conflict, but that’s fine. It’s splice-of-life at it’s finest — soothing and relaxing (with moments of melodrama) — and Yumi is the chief narrator.

If you’re interested the series is done. It’s four seasons long — and I haven’t heard of a fifth season — and started in an age when 4:3 standard def was still the norm for television shows. The DVD sets come in only one flavor: subtitled, which is fine by me since I’ve come to enjoy the Japanese cast’s voice acting. The artwork’s a bit hit or miss. There’s a lot of emphasis placed on drawing eyes. Some of the characters you can tell just by looking at the eyes. Some of the eyes, some of the time, can be pretty freaky looking too, but they’re painted like windows so that you can peer into the depths of their souls.

In the story, Yumi is a student at an all girls school called Lillian Academy. They have a tradition where a junior takes a freshman under her wing to teach her proper values. Yumi ends up the imouto (younger sister) to Sachiko after some hesitation. Some fans seem to dislike Yumi but I don’t. She’s a bit dense at times. She seems to have skills, but they seem to only surround winning the approval of her “older sister,” Sachiko. She’s often needy and clingy, lost in thought, and sometimes passive aggressive or jealous. There’s nothing special about her. She won’t save the world, but she’s there for Sachiko when she needs her. Over the four seasons, she seems to learn and overcome her shortcomings in her own goofy ways to become  an older sister herself.

Nendo Comic: Mayuri;Gate

I like to collection anime figures. Of my favorite types of anime figures to collect are these little guys (rather, gals) called Nendoroids. They’re chibi-fied versions of their 2D screen counterparts. It’s one of the ways in which I can support my favorite shows and return a little bit of love. Also, it’s cool to have representations of my favorite characters and Nendoroids (as you’ll see) come with various expressions and parts so you can create different poses. They’re fun to photograph and I decided to make them into little comics. I’ll start reposing them on Courne Supremacy as time goes along, or you can read them on my Nendoroid Comic DeviantArt page.

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Introducing Mayuri to my Nendoroid CollectionMayuri and Yui Play

Bonus:

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Mayuri and Yui Play

Watched in February

Just a note, if you know me and added me to your Google Buzz, you may start to get blog posts from me because I linked the Courne Supremacy (i.e. my blog) up to it. If you don’t like it, don’t follow me on Buzz. On the other hand, if me linking to you on Buzz caused you to get these unwanted blog posts, then I apologize.

The “Watched in…” posts that I’ve done in the past are just a means to let me indulge in my Otakuism. It also lets me remember what I watched. This month, not too much, since the Olympics are on, and I love me some Olympics. I always enjoyed the winter ones over the summer. Short track, figure skating, downhill are much more thrilling to watch. Especially, the Canada vs. USA hockey game today.

As for anime, here’s the list:

Genshiken series 1, OAV, series 2 (ep. 1-5). Genshiken is a Japanese abbreviation for “The Society for the Study of Modern Visual Culture.” By “Modern Visual Culture” they’re talking about manga/dojinshi, anime, and video games. The “society” part just means it’s about a bunch of geeky college students hanging out with one another reveling in their favorite past times: collecting erotic dojinshi at comicfests, cosplaying, and dissecting anime. If you’re into anime, there’s a character in this group that reflect some part of you. For me, it had to be Sasahara. I can pick up the references and I know of otaku things but I still kinda stand on the outside when it comes to being a hardcore otaku. By far my favorite character in the series is Saki — she’s the self-proclaimed non-otaku of the group, but hangs around because her boyfriend is a diehard. She tends to give a nice opposing view to the rest of the group and sometimes when the infighting starts or problems crop up, she’s the one who sets the nerds straight.

Kimi ni Todoke (ep. 17-20). I’ve talked about this anime in previous posts. I really liked how it started. It’s shojo and girly, for sure, but I thought Sawako carved herself a distinguished role amongst other shojo heroines. She isn’t an idiot or overly bubbly. She wasn’t just blindly in love but rather respected Kazahaya because he represented everything she wasn’t. A lot of her internal monologues I feel are thoughts that anyone, girl or boy, might have, and I still think all those things about Kimi ni Todoke are awesome. Some of the plotting seems a bit overdramatic — but that’s shojo. By far, the biggest problem I’m having is that the show seems to be wavering in its focus, which seems to be an issue with shojo too. By episode 17 in the series, Sawako’s initial problems and story-arc are pretty much over — there’s only one thing left (in my mind). There’s still some fun episodes, but the focus for these episodes is on her friends and Sawako and Kazahaya take a back seat. So I hope the rest of the series pulls it back into focus. They’re also planning a live-action movie for the series and I’m looking forward to that too.

Fruits Basket (ep. 10-26). This was still the accidental anime I found on my way to watch Honey and Clover over at Hulu.com. It’s still the show I kept on as background noise as I made dinner and went about relaxing in the evening. I could do that because the show is dubbed. The voices aren’t atrocious. I’ve read about the comic on Wikipedia. Apparently the anime series is only a mere pittance of the actual tome of sequential art that makes up the rest of the story, and it shows. In the end, after 26 episodes, it peters out. They try and make a resolution. The theme towards the end just seems to be “let’s stay together, always.” The comic goes on to tell the story of how Taru ends the zodiac curse. She meets the other Soma members, graduates high school, and there’s even a page or two about her golden years. The show is cute, but skippable.

Moribito (ep. 24-26). I finished the book before I finished the anime since the discs are so hard to get from Netflix — they’re always out and apparently in high demand. Both the YA novel and anime follow the same story, but the anime has more since they had to space things out over 26 episodes. The music, painted scenery, and attention to detail and animation make this show outstanding, but I don’t expect anything less from Kenji Kamiyama. Just watch Eden of the East or Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex and you’ll see what I’m talking about. If you want something anime that’s not just pantsu or moe, check out Kamiyama’s work.

And that’s it for anime this month. I’ve finished up a bunch of series and I’m ready for new ones, so my otaku obssession hasn’t come to a close yet. Next up is more Genshiken and Welcome to the NHK and whatever else gets recommended to me.

You might ask, do I just watch anime all day? No. It’s a good way to relax on week nights after work. I’ll have more to discuss about my other pet projects in the weeks to come. I hope to be nearing the close on one of them and I can’t wait to write about it.

Also, next month, to further my otaku adventures, I’ll be going to Japan for a week and a day. My friend B is visiting her kids in the land of the rising sun. I happened to IM her one day in February and asked her “How’s Japan?”

She says, “It’s great! You should come over here!”

So I bought a ticket.