A special guest post by Arlington's Karla Hagan.
Japan. Where else would an anime- and manga-loving
fifteen-year old choose?
Erin chose Japan to
visit, out of anywhere in the world, for her special fifteen-year old
Mom-daughter trip. That’s how we came to
visit in late June and early July. Japan is a paradise for lovers of the
graphic and comic arts. We went into a drug store and Erin recognized a manga
character on a package of razors. Snoopy and Betty Boop were commonly-found
American comics characters (Tokyo Skytree Snoopy, anyone?). Every town, village, or attraction
we visited had its own cartoon mascot (known as a yuru-kyara). Even the remote
village of Koya-san, a UNESCO World Heritage site founded in 805 A.D. as the
center of Shingon Buddhism that took us a bullet train, two separate rail lines,
and a cable car to reach, had a yuru-kyara (it looks like a Buddhist mushroom).
There are yuru-kyara for causes like recycling. At least one Japanese prison has them. (In 2013 a Guinness World
Record was set for the most number of people dressed as yuru-kyara dancing together.
Because apparently that’s a Guinness World Record category.)
We had great
experience traveling in Japan, and we saw three things in particular that may
interest readers of this blog: The Kyoto International Manga Museum, the Studio
Ghibli Museum outside Tokyo, and the Moomin House Café in Tokyo.
The Kyoto
International Manga Museum is set up as part traditional museum with informative
displays, and part reading and research library. They have lectures, workshops,
and classes. The building, while not large by Washington, DC museum standards,
is an old schoolhouse and is interesting in its own right. There is a café and a
small museum shop.
Their collection entails
nearly 300,000 items related to manga, according to the museum. To Erin and me,
the more impressive part of the museum was the reading library aspect. They have about 200 meters (about 650 feet)
worth of shelving holding nearly 50,000 manga volumes. This photo of Erin
browsing the books shows how the manga is accessible and available to grab from
the shelves. [photo 2 – Erin browsing Manga
Museum shelves] I’m not sure how you get
to the higher levels in this picture – I didn’t see a ladder – but they were
not behind glass. There were manga volumes available to read on all three
floors of the museum. They had manga from around the world - also available to
pull from the shelves to read - but ComicsDC editor Mike was not impressed with their North
American selection [photo 3 – Manga from Around the World].
They have very
affordable annual passes for kids that allow unlimited visits - about US$12 for
elementary aged children and US$36 for middle and high school aged children
(US$60 for you adults). I had read online before visiting that lots of school
children go there to hang out after school and read manga. They have a
children’s reading room that is comfortable and nice. We were there at a time that was most likely
during their school day (when isn’t it during the school day for a Japanese
student, with their cram schools and such?) and there were only a few kids. There
were mostly Japanese adults there, men and women. Seniors even. Manga in Japan
is truly for everyone.
One neat thing you
can do at the museum is get a manga portrait of yourself done. Erin and I sat
down together for a portrait and I’m so glad we did. It’s one of my favorite
souvenirs from the whole trip. [photo 4 – Anime Karla and Anime Erin] The
artist was Nakahara Kasumi. The lettering at the top in purple and blue is our
names spelled out in Japanese phonetically. It’s funny to me that she drew Erin
flashing the peace sign. Erin did not pose that way. Instead it was a flourish
Kasumi added -- and I know exactly why. It’s because whenever you see Japanese
school children – and we saw this all over in Japan – taking a photo of each
other at a shrine, a temple, in the city, anywhere, they always, and I mean
ALWAYS, pose flashing a peace sign. Boys, girls, teens, kindergartners. Every kid,
every time in photos. It was cute that she drew Erin that way too.
Studio
Ghibli Museum in Mitaka, outside Tokyo
Studio Ghibli is
familiar to any fan of Hayao Miyazaki’s animated films. The Studio Ghibli
Museum is an amazing place. It is lovely and understated and touching and
beautiful, just like the movies. It just might be the sweetest place on Earth.
It is a place for children, like a less commercial, less saccharine Disney
World. There were lots of small doors and low windows and displays. But it is
also a place that adults who like Ghibli movies will appreciate as well.
Unfortunately there
were no photos allowed inside the museum, so these photos are all outside.
There were so many details to discover, like the soot sprite window in the
Totoro ticket booth that greets you at the entrance [photo 5 – Karla at Totoro
ticket booth], all the beautiful stained glass windows with Ghibli characters
and scenes, the Jiji-shaped (the cat from Kiki’s
Delivery Service) faucet handle on a sink outside, the art
nouveau/steampunk water fountain and bench. Mayazaki’s movies so effectively
use scene to create a mood, and so does the Ghibli Museum. The style of the
museum is an odd-sounding English country/steampunk/art nouveau mix that
somehow melds together in an evocative and beautiful way.
Inside the museum
were displays about animation and the creative process for the Ghibli team.
There was a FULL-SIZED plush catbus that kids could play on (but only young kids-
don’t for a second think we weren’t jealous!). I sure do wish I could have
gotten a picture of that! We saw a short film that is only shown at the Ghibli
Museum called Mei and the Kittenbus,
based on the My Neighbor Totoro
characters. The film was about Mei, a baby catbus, and Totoro, and it was sweet
and touching and fun. I’m going to tell you a secret we learned in the movie,
and it is the most wonderful thing: there are more catbuses besides the My Neighbor Totoro one! In the movie not
only was there was a kittenbus, but there was also a bullet train catbus and a
steam ship catbus! (Or should that be catbullettrain and catsteamship? At any
rate, it was FANTASTIC!)
If you are in Japan
and at all a fan of Studio Ghibli films or of design, I highly recommend the
Studio Ghibli Museum. One note, though: you cannot walk up and buy your tickets
at the museum. You must purchase them in advance. I was heartbroken to tell a
Swedish family we met in another part of Japan who were headed next to Tokyo
and who had an interest in visiting the museum that I had purchased the tickets
two months before our trip. Locals can buy tickets in stores like Lawson’s, but
if you are planning to travel there you should definitely buy them before your
trip. In the US you can buy tickets through the travel agency JTP USA.
While getting tickets does take some advance planning, ticket are not expensive
compared to American theme park experiences (I’m looking at you, Disney!):
US$19 for adults and cheaper for younger ages. Also be aware that the films
change; they have a rotating array of short films shown only at the Ghibli
Museum, and it’s not always Mei and the
Kittenbus that is showing.
One Studio Ghibli
footnote from our trip that shows what Ghibli films can mean for the Japanese:
we had a wonderful visit to a hot springs bath village called Shibu Onsen in
the “Japanese Alps” in Nagano. The village was very old with all wooden
buildings. It had nine different hot springs baths that you could visit for free
if you were staying in one of the inns in the village. Picture traditional
wooden Japanese architecture, narrow cobblestone streets, and being able to
walk from one end of the village to the other in about ten minutes. Our
innkeeper was a lovely woman named Keiko, and when we checked out of the inn she
noticed the Totoro paper fan I was holding that I had gotten at the Studio
Ghibli gift shop. With delight, she asked if Erin and I knew the film
. Finally we
realized she was asking about Spirited
Away! If you’ve seen it, you know it is a film about adventures that happen
in and around a traditional Japanese style bathhouse. Keiko shared with us that
the film is very meaningful for people in her village because it features the
culture around baths that exist in Japan, and because that bath culture is such
a big part of her village. She excused herself and went back into her office to
get something. When she came out she was carrying a figure of No-Face from the
movie! We posed with her and No-Face for a picture in front of her inn before
saying goodbye. [photo 10 – Keiko, No Face, Karla, and Erin in Shibu Onsen]
Moomin House Café, Tokyo [photo 11 – outside of Moomin House
Café]
Located inside the Tokyo
Skytree shopping complex,
the Moomin House Café is an absolute delight for fans of the graphic arts in
general or of Tove Jansson’s series of books for children about the Moomin family in particular. Jansson
illustrated the books herself, creating an array of interesting and
personality-laden characters. The Japanese are very big fans of the Moomin
books, which I knew before visiting Japan. When I heard there were Moomin cafes
there, I knew we had to go.
The food is prepared
in the most kawaii way! [photo 12 – Moomin House Café
menu] All the food, both sweet and
savory, is prepared including shapes from the Moomin universe. We ordered
dessert there: Hattifattener madeleine and pudding in a souvenir mug for Erin
[photo 13 – Hattifattener madeleine and pudding in a souvenir mug] and a
whopper of an assembled dessert for me that including Hattifattener and
Moomin-shaped cookies and a Moominhouse cake [photo 14 – Crazy Moomin
dessert]. It was almost too kawaii to
eat. Almost. J At one point when I had gotten up to go look around at the
gift shop, the waitress came and set the Snork Maiden down next to Erin. You
can see Little My in the background, sitting at the neighboring table. Like
everywhere else in Japan, service was excellent, and the servers at the Moomin
House Café made sure that all the customers had a guest Moomin family member at
their table at one point or another during their meal.
We had our share of
other great experiences. Visiting temples and gardens. Eating excellent sushi.
Riding the super-efficient, super-clean, super-awesome bullet trains. Going to
cat cafes (it’s a thing in Tokyo). Scratching our heads at the Robot
Restaurant and at all the
people wearing surgical masks. But even visiting these three places alone I
think made the trip worthwhile for an anime- and manga-loving fifteen year old,
and her mom as well.
Karla Hagan teaches physics by day and
only occasionally has a comics blogger alter ego (ok, never before). She is
totally qualified to write this blog post by virtue of living three doors down
from Mike. The comics are strong with
that one.