Guests' Web Picks
"The fandom of Yukito Kishiro, best known for his Gunnm/Battle Angel Alita
manga, would not be as we know it today without the Internet. I would like
to begin by putting the three most important Gunnm websites into a
historical context, and then reviewing a few of my favorite sites around
the Net." -Daniel Snyder....cont'd....
"Fortunately not all is doom and gloom. It was nice to find that
the Anime & Manga Resource List,which was the links site
before the Anime Web Turnpike came to be, still exists. Its
interactive format is a nice touch I've always liked, giving it an
appealingly
anarchistic layout which invites exploration." -Marco De la Cruz ....cont'd.....
SOME PEOPLE FLY
Yukito Kishiro's Fandom in Cyberspace
by Daniel "Sungazer" Snyder
and his hat,
Fiona.
There are advantages to being a fan of manga rather than anime. The
subs-vs.-dubs debate becomes irrelevant, and flipping is held to be a
universal evil. You can refer to panels and page numbers rather than
hashing through episodes. Once you have the original Japanese, you don't
require any special equipment. And, you can feed your craving as often as
weekly or monthly, year 'round (mangaka permitting).
The fandom of Yukito Kishiro, best known for his Gunnm/Battle Angel Alita
manga, would not be as we know it today without the Internet. I would like
to begin by putting the three most important Gunnm websites into a
historical context, and then reviewing a few of my favorite sites around
the Net.
First and foremost was Marco De la Cruz, a physics graduate student at the
University of Toronto. Marco, AKA Kimji, had been most noteworthy for his
Bubble Gum Crisis operations before, in 1995, he put up . BA was not
the first English-language Gunnm site, but it was the first of note,
because it set the benchmark standard for every site that followed.
To this day, when you surf around the Net, you will find cookie-cutter
anime and manga fan sites. *STORY* *CHARACTERs* *WHY I LIKE IT* *PICTUREs*
*MUSIC AND VIDEO* *SIGN MY GUESTBOOK*
-Marco never touches the ordinary.
In BA, he shows not only his love for Kishiro's work, but his analytical
mind at work in Kishiro's world. Marco has analyzed how Gally's plasma
torch would work, and what the physics behind the city in the sky are
(though the latter has been removed to be edited). Marco not only took
Kishiro's world seriously, he caught glimpses of the wonders that could
come from it, and channeled his love into what creativity he had to offer.
I encountered Marco's page in December of 1995. I was young, and still
thought manga was a fruit. In fact, it was Marco's fan fiction,
especially his crossover with BGC-"", that
made the most impression on me. I was still digesting the whole idea of fan
fiction when a question got stuck in my mind--if Dr. Ido was from Zalem,
and Gonzu was from the Scrapyard, wouldn't they speak differently? How
would they have acted towards each other when they first met?
By way of answering, I wrote my first fanfic, "To My Beloved Daughter".
Other questions soon came to me. What was Hugo's feeling about spine
theft when he began? Why did Gally become a Motorballer? My solution was
to write more fan fiction; and so I started exploring the world
Kishiro-sensei had created through prose. I set up a webpage to display my
writing on: . Evermore, there's been a
tendency among fans to pose and solve questions in fan fiction format.
So, by mid-1996, two important Gunnm sites were well-established. The
third came in October of that year, though it was actually a Japanese
page. Ryunosuke Tsukano had worked with Marco in the past, cleaning up
the English on his _Gunnm DataBase_.
Ryup's longest-lasting
contribution, even before he sponsored a mailing list, was the .
The Chat Room is an HTML-based CGI program that allows anyone with a forms
browser to add to the sporadic, spontaneous discussions of Gunnm, or
whatever's being talked about. Though the chat room has let its fair
share of pigs into the parlor, it has had the positive affect of being a
central place to meet new people and post links to one's latest and
greatest works. A great number of the stars of the Gunnm community have
made their debuts in the New Kansas.
I'd now like to introduce a few of the best sites in the wide wild world
of the World Wide Web:
Scott "Esdoc" Sandwick.
I confess, I have kind of a freewheeling attitude about letting fanfic
onto my page--if it's Gunnm, it goes. Scott's separated the grain from the
chaff
here. His selections are about the lesser-known characters in the Gunnm world,
and he's even taken the chance to create and adapt some completely new parts
of it. Scott intuitively understands the Motorball mindset, and it shows in his
page.
Cynde "Khrome" Callera.
Cynde's a spectacular artist, and I was thrilled when she said she was
going to start up this site. Cynde's collected submissions from many of
the best and most prolific Gunnm fan artists around and put them up on her
page in a format that's fun to browse. It's also quick to load and doesn't
require frames, two major pluses for me.
Margot "RedSonja" L.
There was, and is, a Gunnm webring. It added me without my asking. I
bitched about this. I bitched because a lot of the sites they had were
down. Margot started a webring. She picks and chooses. She adds people
only if they ask. I love Margot. *smooch*
Futoshi Nishimura.
The Chat Room has its flaws. People come in and post pictures. They get in
arguments. They sneeze, and turn the entire screen into italics. Enter
Futoshi's solution. The Gunnm Discussion Board is a lot like an old BBS: you
post a question, you post replies, you can't set up a table. It's kind of old
fashioned, but then, I like that. Most of the better sites don't let image
take the place of substance.
Fred "Mr. Milton" Burke.
Fred's the man behind the English adaptations of Gunnm. I want to clear
one thing up, he is NOT the person responsible for "She's Young! She's
Beautiful! She's a Cyborg Hunter Warrior!" and "America's Newer,
Tougher Manga Sweetheart!" (Viz Comics knows, but they're not telling
who it is). I
digress. Fred doesn't have much of a page, but he does have one important
thing, and that's his essay . This
is the essay that sums it all up--what Battle Angel Alita is, why we should
care, how to fall in love with Yukito Kishiro. Nobody has said a thing
better since
Day 1.
That's the best, three sites and six sites more. I encourage every one of
you to visit them and enjoy them. I've had the chance to watch this
community develop, and it's incredible what's come of it. If you have any
questions, I urge you to look at the not-so-small anymore _Gunnm FAQ_:
-------------------------------------------------------------
About the author's hat:
Fiona is a black Akubra "Snowy River" size 58. A native of Australia, she
snuck across the border on Dan's head in 1995 and has been a resident of the
state of California since. Her hobbies include forensic volcanology,
transcendental medication and the '' reviews.
She is at work at present on a solution for world hunger involving
worldwide fedora distribution.
Marco De la Cruz
(My name is NOT Marcos.)
The Anime Web Turnpike would like to thank Mr. De la Cruz for
their first Guests' Web Picks cum website obituary. :)
I was saddened soon after I began writing this essay when I
discovered that the site [1] by Warren Fernandez no
longer exists. An early favourite of mine, the Video Girl
Ai page was beautiful, elegant and functional. It was the
first site that came to my mind when I was asked to write this
column, a model (I thought) for others to follow. The page no
longer exists, and the web has become a somewhat poorer place
because of this.
A sadly similar fate seems to have overtaken a great page [2] which I fondly remember
(Candy Candy being, along with Spaceship
Yamato, my first anime love). I then began to realize why I
have slowly lost interest in anime- and manga-oriented web pages.
Anibot note: Images of the covers for the manga are still at .
Fortunately not all is doom and gloom. It was nice to find that
the [3],
which was the links site before the Anime Web Turnpike [4] came to be, still exists. Its interactive format
is a nice touch I've always liked, giving it an appealingly
anarchistic layout which invites exploration.
It was also with a measure of relief that I accessed Dennis
Fukushima's page [5]. This is one of the
rare non-Miyazaki animations which is truly top-notch, and this
site is very well made. Web pages dedicated to Miyazaki's films,
on the other hand, seem to be influenced by the works they
praise, and are generally quite handsome. A good start is Team
Ghiblink's The
Hayao Miyazaki Web [6].
A somewhat different aspect of the anime/manga culture is nicely
expounded over at [7], a series of interesting
H-oriented pages. The webmaster (whose bio does not seem to be
there anymore) is quite an entrepreneur, not to mention a pretty
good designer.
If anything, I am fan of Gunnm, so it's only appropriate I
conclude with a few pages dedicated to this wonderful series. It
is a difficult task, however, to pick favourites out of so many
excellent sites. I mostly remember the older, "classic" ones: [8], the Gunnm
Database [9], and [10],
although there are many others which are also very nice and can
be readably located through the indexes mentioned above. I'm
afraid that my quest ended on a sad note when I realized that [11] no longer exists. It was one of the first
Gunnm pages, a delightful site from its very name. It shall be
missed.
References
1.
2.
3.
4.
http://www.anipike.com/
5.
6.
http://www.nausicaa.net/~miyazaki/
7.
8.
9.
http://www.tama.or.jp/~ryup/gunnm/gunnm.html
10.
11.
Anipike not being responsible for Acts of God or the vaguaries of
humans ;) this column will appear 'as and when' articles come
in. New articles will be announced on the "New List" page. (So
original, da yo..^^)
Would you like to suggest a guest? Write Nikkou.
|
Guests' Web Picks @ Anime Web Turnpike
Anime Web Turnpike © 1995-1999 Jay Fubler Harvey. All Rights
Reserved.
Last Update: 10/12/98
|