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Tag: Akira

  • The 10 Best Graphic Novel Series

    What’s the problem with great graphic novels? They come to an end. While all good things must, some do so sooner than others. Imagine the disappointment when the graphic novel you expected to last through the rains of April only holds out for a few afternoons. You had an entire month of coziness planned! But those dreams were dashed by an author who selfishly decided to make their graphic novel a standalone. Oh the frustration! The disappointment! The sheer tragedy of it all!. When the single issues let you down, these titles will provide a long-running shoulder to cry on. Here are 10 of the best graphic novel series, to last you through this April and the next.

    Saga

    Cover art for "Saga" Brian K. Vaughn
    (Image Comics)

    Brian K. Vaughn’s Saga is the ultimate soft sci-fi, a space opera of truly epic proportions. The series centers around two star-crossed lovers on opposite sides of an interplanetary war, who put their allegiances aside to escape with their new baby in tow. Refugees in a hostile and alien universe, Alana and Marko have few friends and an ever growing list of enemies. It turns out that carrying a literal poster-child for peaceful coexistence doesn’t bode well for war propaganda, and the lovers’ former governments have ordered them to be eliminated to bolster moral. As this nuclear family vaults across the stars, they discover an extended found family in the alien worlds between. Romance novel writing cyclopses, ghost nannies, adorable seal-men with an arsenal of high powered weapons – each of these extraterrestrial oddballsaid Alana and Marko on their quest to find peace and quiet, and do so with overwhelming violence. To ensure a pristine future, sometimes you gotta get your flippers dirty in the present.

    Fables

    Cover art for "Fables"
    (Vertigo)

    Fables by Bill Willingham was recently made all the more famous by Telltale Games’ detective series The Wolf Among Us, centered around Bigby Wolf – a morally reformed Big Bad Wolf turned sheriff. After he and the rest of his fairytale ilk were exiled from their fantastical homelands by a being known as The Adversary, fable-kind had to learn to walk among humans. Disguised as “mundys” these mythical beings blend in with mundane people in order to get by. But when one of these folklore characters ends up getting murdered in cold blood, it’s up to Bigby to sniff out the killer. Snow White’s sister is dead. Was it the ex-fiance? The current boyfriend? Or does this conspiracy go deeper down the rabbit hole than it appears? RIP Brothers’ Grimm, you two would have loved this series.

    Something Is Killing The Children

    Cover art for "Something Is Killing The Children"
    (BOOM! Studios)

    If James Tynion IV’s Something Is Killing The Children doesn’t have you hooked by the title alone, then allow me to reel you in further. It’s the story of an average American town come under the grips of extraordinary evil – something is carrying off the kids of Archer’s Peak, and they’re never seen again. When monsters have taken up residence in the wilderness nearby, there’s only one person you can call: Erica Slaughter, appropriately named for the job. Armed with a trusty chainsaw, Erica is prepped and ready to strike back against the creatures that lurk in the shadows – beings made of the sum of all human fears. But when the terrified townsfolk are looking for a culprit, they might just pin the blame on the lady with the bloody chainsaw, even if she is the only thing standing between their children and the hungry dark. Monster hunting is a thankless job.

    Transmetropolitan

    Cover art for "Transmetropolitan"
    (Vertigo)

    Warren Ellis’ Transmetropolitan is the story of Spider Jerusalem, a drug sniffin’, muck-slingin’, power-fightin’ journalist willing to stick it to the system. Fresh off his latest drug bender, Spider returns to his city to dig up the dirt on a sociopathic presidential candidate who craves power for power’s sake. Spider trades the usual crime-fighter’s arsenal for a more unique set of armaments: photo-taking sunglasses and a gun that forcibly loosens people’s bowels. A lover of mankind but a hater of the average man, Spider Jerusalem is the ultimate misanthrope – a man who endeavors to bring the truth to the populace no matter how many powerful people it ticks off. Smarmy, cynical, sublime, Transmetropolitan reads like a gossip rag preaching gospel truth.

    Cover art for "Fullmetal Alchemist"
    (VIZ Media LLC)

    Fullmetal Alchemist by Hiromu Arakawa proves that the crackpot thinkers of The Renaissance were right, you really CAN turn lead into gold! Provided you offer something of equivalent value in return. Edward and Alphonse Elric live in the kingdom of Amestris, an autocratic regime where government alchemists uphold law and order. After these two alchemical prodigies commit the ultimate taboo and try to resurrect their dead mother through magic, their unwittingly forfeit their body parts in order to balance the equation. Deprived of their essence , Ed and Al go on a quest to find what they lost by uncovering ancient alchemical truths – and a massive government conspiracy along the way. It turns out the brothers aren’t the only humans who have tried to transmute a human soul – a shadowy organization is coming close, and the nation itself may by the price. I’m not exaggerating when I say this series is one of the greatest works of fiction ever.

    Lumberjanes

    Cover art for "Lumberjanes"
     (BOOM! Box)

    From Nimona author NK Stevenson comes Lumberjanes, a rustic series about a gaggle of woodsy women who solve supernatural mysteries. Miss Qiunzilla Thiskwin Penniquiqul Thistle Crumpet’s camp for outdoorsy types is more than meets the eye, the grounds are home to all sorts of magical beings – as this quintet of woodchoppers will soon find out for themselves. Three eyed foxes, malevolent yetis, perambulatory statues, all these ethereal oddities appear and more. If you’re a lover of spooky wilderness stories in the style of Gravity Falls, Lumberjanes will land right in your neck of the woods.

    Monstress

    (Image Comics)

    Monstress by Marjorie M. Liu is an art deco-drenched reimagining of 20th century East Asia. The action follows Maika Halfwolf, a teenage girl attempting to keep her identity a secret from the powers that be. Maika is an Arcanic, beings that is harvested by human sorcerers for their magical abilities. Hiding right under the nose of the ruling class, Miaka’s cover is nearly blown by the demonic being that resides in the stump of her left arm. When you’re a young woman on a quest to avenge your mother, you need to learn to manage your inner monster before consumes you entirely. Great Gatsby glamour combines with divine imagery to serve up an epic of biblical proportions.

    Kill Six Billion Demons

    Cover art for "Kill Six Billion Demons"
    (Image Comics)

    Tom Parkinson Morgan’s Kill Six Billion Demons is many things – a martial arts manual, a spiritual text, and the biography of a barista turned god-breaker. Allison Ruth was a simple business major before being spirited away to Throne – the divine city that lies at the center of all 777,777 universes. Blessed with newfound holy power by a runaway god, Allison is charged with defeating the Demiurges – seven tyrannical divinities who have each claimed 111,111 universes for themselves. With the help of an angelic martial arts teacher and a demonic sapphic lover, Allison might have what it takes to break the cyclical nature of universal suffering – inheriting the powers of God themself. Action packed, beautifully drawn, and gloriously queer, this ongoing series is one of the most underrated fantasy titles of all time.

    Akira

    Cover art for "Akira"
    (Kodansha Comics)

    Often hailed as the greatest graphic novel series of all time, Katsuhiro Otomo’s Akira laid the groundwork for the cyberpunk genre, and is one of the most significant sci-fi titles to come out of Japan alongside Ghost In The Shell. Illustrated by the legendary Satoshi Kon, Akira transports the reader to the neon-drenched metropolis of Neo-Tokyo, built on the ruins of World War III. Biker gangs rule the dystopian streets, but one young rider’s world is turned upside down after he comes into contact with an escaped government experiment. Exposed to metaphysical contamination, young Tetsuo begins to develop psychic powers. Not the “bend spoons” kind, but the “implode reality” kind. As Tetsuo’s power grows, his warped mind begins to bend the physical laws of the universe to the breaking point – resulting in a climax of cosmically horrible proportions.

    Pretty Deadly

    Cover art for "Pretty Deadly"
    (Image Comics)

    Pretty Deadly by Kelly Sue DeConnick is a western horror that gives Stephen King’s The Dark Tower series a run for its money. This is the tale of Deathface Ginny – the daughter of Death himself. She’s an avenging angel, a supernatural gunslinger who can be summoned by those who have been done wrong. The plot follows a young girl named Sissy and an old man named Fox, traveling across the wasteland trading snippets of Ginny’s story. Little does Sissy know, she and her companion play a bigger part in the legend than the little girl can possibly imagine. Hallucinatory, surreal, and sinister, Pretty Deadly is a true acid western – assuming you bought the acid off a toothless old prospector in an abandoned ghost town. You’re for a very good bad trip.

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    Image of Sarah Fimm

    Sarah Fimm

    Sarah Fimm (they/them) is actually nine choirs of biblically accurate angels crammed into one pair of $10 overalls. They have been writing articles for nerds on the internet for less than a year now. They really like anime. Like… REALLY like it. Like you know those annoying little kids that will only eat hotdogs and chicken fingers? They’re like that… but with anime. It’s starting to get sad.

    Sarah Fimm

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  • Akira Toriyama Rode the Cloud Into Imaginations Everywhere

    Akira Toriyama Rode the Cloud Into Imaginations Everywhere

    On Friday morning, Bird Studio, a small production workshop in Nagoya, Japan, announced the death of its founder, Akira Toriyama, the legendary manga artist, character designer, and creator of the long-running manga and anime franchise Dragon Ball. Toriyama died on March 1, at age 68, due to an acute subdural hematoma—a blood clot in his brain. The news of his passing has sparked a global outpouring of kind words and heartfelt illustrations, a testament to the late mangaka’s massive multigenerational impact.

    Toriyama was, without a doubt, one of the most influential figures in the history of comics and cartoons. He was also a pivotal figure in the popularization of manga and anime outside Japan. Where Hayao Miyazaki is rightly lauded as a hero of theatrical anime, Toriyama was a god of manga and television anime, looming large for nearly half a century before his passing. The studio Toei Animation’s earliest adaptation of Dragon Ball consisted of 153 episodes roughly split into nine story arcs that aired in Japan throughout the late 1980s and appeared only briefly—at least initially—in North America via The WB network. Dragon Ball was the story of Goku, a young boy with spiky hair and magical powers and rigorous martial arts training, on a quest to collect the seven magical orbs—the titular Dragon Balls—required to summon Shenron, a dragon with the power to grant the summoner a single wish before once again scattering the Dragon Balls across earth. Toriyama was heavily inspired by the classic premodern Chinese novel Journey to the West, and yet Dragon Ball was unmistakably original in its art style and its mischievous humor. Toriyama was a mythmaker for a new medium and a new century.

    With time, Toriyama wrote Dragon Ball into a more mature direction, and Toei spun the newer volumes into a sequel series, Dragon Ball Z, a much edgier show full of angsty heroes, ruthless villains, awesome superpowers, intergalactic intrigue, cataclysmic battles, and excruciating cliff-hangers: “Next time on Dragon Ball Z!” The Goku of Dragon Ball Z was a grown man, a husband and a father, and while his kindhearted son, Gohan, would in some sense preserve the gentler spirit of the earlier Dragon Ball, Super Saiyan Goku would come to iconically embody the fierce heroism of battle shonen. Cue Linkin Park.

    Dragon Ball had an inauspicious launch in the West. Time Warner initially brought both Dragon Ball and then later DBZ to North America, airing the latter alongside Batman: The Animated Series and The Animaniacs, with extensive edits to tame the vulgarity and violence for younger audiences. But violence and vulgarity were rather essential to the appeal of DBZ, and the anime series wouldn’t really take off in North America until Time Warner moved it to Cartoon Network and its action-adventure programming block, Toonami, in August 1998. This version of DBZ featured a new English voice dub, less censorship, and a clearer sense of the target audience. DBZ aired alongside the magical girl series Sailor Moon and the space-mech saga Gundam Wing, among other popular anime of the late 1990s. Toonami raised a generation of kids and thus nudged anime into the mainstream. None of these shows were bigger than Dragon Ball Z. None of their creators were bigger than Toriyama.

    Toriyama unleashed something in the modern imagination with the Dragon Ball franchise. Anime had long been seen as something strange and even illicit in North America, an array of sketchy titles filling out the back shelves of video rental shops, next to the porn. Fist of the North Star wasn’t exactly an after-school show. Manga was in an even weaker position, with few serialized titles finding any substantial distribution and readership in North America outside of Katsuhiro Otomo’s cyberpunk classic Akira and Rumiko Takahashi’s fantastical rom-com Ranma ½. Toriyama didn’t just find an audience for Dragon Ball—for so many fans, he redrew the whole notion of comics and cartoons and superheroes. In the West, Dragon Ball was a sensation unlike anything before it, and while in subsequent years anime has produced a few dozen battle shonen hits in roughly the same vein, Dragon Ball is still unrivaled in its influence; the creators of later shows such as Bleach, Naruto, and One Piece will be the first to tell you that they owe everything to Toriyama.

    Dragon Ball, as a cultural phenomenon, has never really ended. Toriyama oversaw its expansion into a multibillion-dollar multimedia universe: Dragon Ball, then DBZ, GT, Kai, and Super; the 21 theatrical releases over the years, most recently Broly and Super Hero; and video games such as Dragon Ball FighterZ. Dragon Ball is a gateway, and Toriyama was the best sort of gatekeeper, one eager to invite every kid into his creative vision.

    Toriyama’s death comes as a shock; he was old, but not that old, and there were no public signs of declining health. In an industry full of rapidly grayed creators run ragged by the unsparing demands of the profession, Toriyama was forever youthful and always smiling. In its announcement of his death, Bird Studio said Toriyama “still had several works in the middle of creation with great enthusiasm.” It’s strange to think that he was so prolific, his influence so multigenerational, and yet, somehow, his work is now unceremoniously unfinished. His influence has spread so far and wide in the decades since he ended Dragon Ball in May 1995, after 42 volumes, with a parting message to his readers: Tackle life with as much energy as Goku! I’ll try to do the same!

    Justin Charity

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  • An ancient Japanese home was rebuilt in L.A. Now’s your chance to look inside

    An ancient Japanese home was rebuilt in L.A. Now’s your chance to look inside

    It’s hard to say what’s cooler about the Japanese shōya house at the Huntington Library, Art Gallery and Botanical Gardens — the centuries-old wood structure that was once the center of a small farming village in Marugame, Japan, or the backstory of how it got to its new home at the Huntington’s Japanese Garden.

    The shōya house’s original conical ceramic roof tiles had to be broken to move the structure. They were recreated by Japanese craftspeople, complete with a sprouting seed design.

    (Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)

    The journey took nearly eight years of negotiations, bureaucratic wrangling and skilled craftsmanship to dismantle, reassemble and, in some cases, re-create the 3,000-square-foot house and gardens. And starting Saturday, visitors can finally tour the compound, which will be open daily from noon to 4 p.m. (except Tuesdays, when the gardens are closed).

    Los Angeles-based Akira and Yohko Yokoi donated their ancient family home to the Huntington, but the $10 million job of moving it to San Marino was far more complicated than just taking apart a puzzle and putting it back together.

    Consider the distinctive conical ceramic tiles covering the pitched roof like rows of tight curls. All those silver-gray tiles had to be remade by Japanese craftsmen because the originals were mortared to the roof and had to be broken to disassemble the house. The exquisite garden outside the largest and most important room of the house was carefully mapped and measured, and every stone numbered by landscape designer Takuhiro Yamada so it could be re-created at the Huntington.

    Akira and Yohko Yokoi at the shōya house

    Akira and Yohko Yokoi outside the shōya house they donated to the Huntington.

    (Sarah M. Golonka / The Huntington)

    And outside the gatehouse that protected the house, built new because the original was damaged by a storm, the Huntington installed a terraced mini farm growing small plots of rice, buckwheat, sesame, wheat and other traditional Japanese crops, surrounded by a riot of colorful cosmos flowers. The house sits higher than the farmland, so water collected from the roof and ponds all drains down to irrigate the farm land.

    So this installation isn’t just an exercise in cultural awareness, says curator Robert Hori, the Huntington’s associate director of cultural programs, who oversaw the project from start to finish. To him, the Japanese Heritage Shōya House is a quiet but effective example of sustainability — “learning from the past for a better future” — and a reminder that farmers “are really the backbone of our society.”

    Robert Hori, the Huntington's associate director of cultural programs, stands among tall pink and magenta cosmos flowers.

    Robert Hori, the associate director of cultural programs at the Huntington, is framed by tall cosmos blooms in the farm area outside the shōya’s gatehouse.

    (Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)

    Small terraced plots of farmland grow rice, sesame and other traditional Japanese crops outside the shōya house.

    Small terraced plots of farmland grow rice, sesame, wheat, buckwheat and other traditional Japanese crops outside the shōya house.

    (Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)

    There were plenty of trying times — more than two years of negotiating with city, state and federal officials to get the necessary approvals and occupancy permit to move and rebuild the house. And in the midst of the pandemic, when the disassembled house sat in dozens of packing crates for nearly nine months, Hori had to coax reluctant Japanese craftspeople to come and put it together so the ancient wood pieces didn’t warp in SoCal’s dry summer heat.

    “When you’ve spent two years lovingly repairing this wood and then you’re told everything might be lost, that was a call to action to the craftspeople who painstakingly worked on this,” says Hori. “Even in the face of a pretty scary time, they felt like it was their responsibility to put this house back together.”

    The project started with a chance meeting in 2016 during a party at the Beverly Hills home of Los Angeles philanthropist Jacqueline Avant. Hori had come to talk with Avant about a Japanese art collection she wanted to donate to the institution. During their conversation, Avant introduced Hori to her friend, Yohko Yokoi, who soon would be traveling to Japan.

    “I said, ‘Oh, that will be a wonderful visit because the cherry blossoms will be in full bloom,’” Hori recalled, “and [Yokoi] said, ‘No, because I have to take care of my house.’ And then she began to tell me the story of this house.”

    The front entrance for farmers and other common folk at the shōya house. The swept-dirt courtyard was for village events.

    The front entrance for farmers and other common folk at the shōya house. The swept-dirt courtyard was for village events. Dignitaries entered through a special gate at the left.

    (Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)

    Hori recalls Yokoi saying the house had been built after the war, “so I thought it was a prefab house from the 1950s with poor construction, built after World War II. But then she was saying, ‘We used to have a castle,’ and that’s when it came to light that this house was built around 1700, after the war that unified Japan.”

    Prior to that final battle, Japan had been a confederation of warring city-states and provinces, he said. It took 100 years of battles to create a cohesive central government known as the Tokugawa Shogunate. The Yokoi family’s castle was destroyed during the war. They had been fighting on the losing side, says Hori said, but the victorious Tokugawa clan decided to incorporate all the losing factions into its new bureaucracy, to become tax collectors and shōya, or village leaders.

    The Yokoi shōya house was built around 1700 in Marugame, says Hori, and was the family’s private residence as well as a kind of community center for the village.

    Inside the gatehouse, a large courtyard provided space for weddings, funerals and celebrations. Farmers and merchants entered the shōya house through one entrance, to measure and store their rice, pay their taxes and try to collect funds for other provisions. These rooms had floors made from hard-packed earth, and rustic beams hand-hewn from pine.

    Adjacent to the dirt-floored rooms were the places where the family lived and worked. These raised floors were covered with rice-straw tatami mats. The wood-framed walls and beams were planed to feel as soft to the touch as satin sheets. Sliding walls with windows covered in rice paper and glass opened to reveal exquisite gardens, enjoyed only by visiting dignitaries who entered through their own special gate.

    The exquisite Japanese garden of distinctive stones, pond, trees and shrubs outside the shōya's grand room for dignitaries.

    The exquisite Japanese garden of distinctive stones, pond, trees and shrubs outside the shōya’s grand room for dignitaries.

    (Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)

    After the military shogunate system was overturned in the late 19th century, the house became the Yokois’ private residence and went through several renovations, according to Yokoi and her husband, Akira. The last family member to live there was Akira’s mother, who died around 1988. The couple moved to California in the late 1960s, says Hori, where Akira worked as an executive for Matsushita Panasonic, the parent company of Panasonic. They visited the house regularly and kept it maintained, with the idea of retiring there someday.That plan faded, however, and eventually, he adds, the upkeep became a chore.

    Hori already was thinking about a big project for the Japanese Gardens when he first met Yohko Yokoi. The Huntington’s Chinese Garden was in the midst of a huge expansion, and the discussion was how to add to the Japanese Garden to balance the two, says Hori. “This was an ongoing conversation we’d been having [at the Huntington] since 2012, and I’d been taking several trips to Japan to figure out what we should be adding next to that garden,” he says.

    The Yokoi house sounded promising, so even though he had just returned from a visit to Japan, he made another trip within a few weeks so he could see the house while Yokoi was visiting. And that’s when he got the vision that sustained him through all the difficult years to come.

    “I thought it had good bones when I first went to look at it, but also, I was interested in the house because it was really a conglomerate of various styles: the front room with its very rustic wood beams and style on one side, and then on the other side a formal reception room with the elegant carvings and mix of styles; a public face and private face of a scale big enough to accommodate visitors circulating through it.”

    There were other signs too. The Huntington’s historic Japanese Garden, with its curved wooden Moon Bridge over a small lake and display of a Japanese home, first opened in 1912 when the West was fascinated by Japanese culture, plants and architecture. The garden fell into disrepair during World War II but was refurbished with support from the San Marino League. In 1968, the garden was expanded with a bonsai collection and Zen Court of plants and raked stones. Then in 2010, the Pasadena Buddhist Temple donated a small ceremonial tea house to the garden, which was disassembled and sent back to Japan to be refurbished before being shipped back to San Marino, where it was reassembled.

    Japanese black pine (Pinus thunbergii) rises above the shōya house gatehouse.
    An intricate carving of farm life at the top of the entrance to the shōya house's grand room.
    A soft wood walk way surrounds the perimeter of the shōya house.

    Japanese black pine (Pinus thunbergii) rises above the shōya house gatehouse. An intricate carving of farm life at the top of the entrance to the shōya house’s grand room. A soft wood walk way surrounds the perimeter of the shōya house. (Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)

    The tea house was much smaller than the shōya house, says Nicole Cavender, director of the Huntington’s botanical gardens, but it gave them the confidence to tackle a much larger structure and create a reconstruction of village life.

    “We wanted this to be an immersive experience,” says Cavender, “so it has to be productive as well as beautiful.” The fields of tall magenta, pink and white cosmos flowers that edge the farm weren’t added just to enchant, she said, “but to show that we’re actually trying to grow something. The flowers draw pollinators who help the crops grow.”

    Eventually there will be koi in the garden pond by the house, and the water circulating in that pond will be enriched with their poop, she says, and help feed the farmland below. Around the house is decorative edging called rain catchers — narrow drains filled with smooth gray rocks to collect any rain or dew falling off the roof, which also drained to the farming areas below.

    Three hundred years ago, the Japanese didn’t have a word for sustainability, but they lived the concept every day with this type of regenerative farming, says Hori. “It’s how you survived. We want people to understand that ornamental gardening started with the ability to move water, and to move earth, which is what we have in farming. It all came out of farming.”

    Robert Hori paces in the shōya's largest room, reserved for dignitaries. The walls slide open to reveal the garden.

    Robert Hori paces in the shōya’s largest room, reserved for dignitaries. The walls slide open on both sides to reveal the garden.

    (Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)

    Hori’s vision encompasses more nuanced lessons too. The house has few furnishings. The smooth wood decking around the perimeter of the house is patched in places where the wood was worn, but the patches were done decoratively in the shape of a small gourd. And the simplicity of the furnishings is a gentle question.

    “It gets you thinking … do we really need all this stuff we have? We want this to be a living museum, and walking through the house you can really find the three Rs of sustainability — reduce, repair and recycle, reuse or remake,” says Hori.

    “It was all part of a circular economy where nothing was wasted. A ‘circular economy’ is a big concept, but we’re hoping these small doses of a big concept can help people take away these lessons and understand them. As a nonprofit we are in the business of inspiring and changing lives. We can make a difference, and that’s a great thing to come to work to.”

    Jeanette Marantos

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  • Anime Fans Are Laughing At MJ’s Botched ‘Akira’ Slide In Spider-Man 2

    Anime Fans Are Laughing At MJ’s Botched ‘Akira’ Slide In Spider-Man 2

    A new Spider-Man 2 launch trailer debuted just ahead of its October 20 release, and it’s got a brief clip that has anime fans going wild. The trailer, which shows off villains like Sandman, Mr. Negative, and Venom, also has what looks to be an attempt at an iconic move from the beloved 1998 anime film, Akira. Unfortunately, fans aren’t thrilled at Spider-Man 2’s tribute to the anime film—they’re laughing.

    Akira is a touchstone in the animation community and beyond for its accomplished storytelling and stunning hand-drawn animation. The most memorable moment from the two-hour film is what fans call the “Akira Slide:” a two-second clip where protagonist Kaneda skids his 200-hp motorcycle on the highway. The anime move is so iconic that it’s been replicated in numerous anime, cartoons, video games, and live-action films like Jordan Peele’s Nope. Regardless, any media that has the Akira slide tends to get cool points on the internet— that is unless you’re Spider-Man 2.

    PlayStation / Insomniac Games

    Read More: Spider-Man 2: The Kotaku Review

    In a brief scene from the Spider-Man 2 launch trailer, Mary Jane Watson does her own version of the Akira slide (around the 54-second mark) but things don’t go according to plan. Namely, she falls off her motorcycle before it reaches a complete stop. To her credit, we don’t know the context for why MJ biffed the Akira slide. Maybe she was being chased by one of the many goons Spider-Man is always dealing with and slid out of desperation rather than in an attempt to look cool. Regardless, lack of context hasn’t stopped less-than-charitable anime fans on Twitter and Reddit from dubbing MJ as the first fictional character to botch the Akira slide.

    “Nah MJ fucking up the Akira slide gotta be the top 5 craziest fumble of all time,” Twitch streamer GamesCage wrote on Twitter.

    “I actually found this funny bcs you don’t see people actually failed doing the ‘Akira Slide’,” ADC_Vr said.

    “Mj busting her ass doing the Akira bike slide is some of the funniest shit I didn’t know I needed to see lmfaooo,” Anim0nk wrote.

    “Yoshida-sama has been slighted by this homage through the scarlet woman,” fudgedhobnobs wrote on the r/Spiderman Reddit.

    “She almost did it perfectly, guess not everyone can Akira slide,” Monkey_King291 replied in the same Reddit thread.

    Read More: The Akira Motorcycle Skid: A Celebration

    While some fans are trouncing MJ’s vehicular oopsie as developer Insomniac Games “not [understanding] the assignment” others offered the Marvel heroine an out by reminding fans that they don’t have the context for the clip and that the Akira slide is difficult to replicate in a real-world setting.

    “No one can land it, the Akira slide is literally impossible on pavement unless it’s icy or your tires are greased up,” Red_Naxela_ wrote.

    It’s unclear what set up the Akira motorcycle scene but perhaps we’ll learn more about it through an MJ-centric story mission.

    Spider-Man 2 will release on October 20 exclusively on the PlayStation 5.

    Pre-order Marvel’s Spider-Man 2: Amazon | Best Buy | GameStop

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    Isaiah Colbert

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