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Saturday, July 7, 2001
A Temporary Toon Town Opens Up in Long
Beach As the popularity of
this style of Japanese animation grows, so does attendance at
this annual convention that honors the genre.
By CHARLES SOLOMON, Special
To The Times

"Mobile Suit Gundam 08th MS Team" is
screening at the convention. Courtesy
Cartoon Network
| Neither
the unseasonable rain nor the 45-minute delay in starting the
opening ceremony dampened the enthusiasm of the thousands of
fans at AX2001, the 10th annual Anime Expo, at the Long Beach
Convention Center Thursday. More than 10,000 otoku (devotees
of Japanese animation) are expected to attend the four-day
event, which closes Sunday afternoon with a charity auction to
benefit the City of Hope. But
most of the opening-day attendees seemed less interested in
charitable contributions than in discussing and debating
favorite series, finding out what new releases are slated for
the coming months, dressing up as their favorite characters
and buying animé videos and
merchandise. Over the last 10
years, attendance at the Expo has more than tripled as the
popularity of animé has grown in America. Currently, 13
networks and cable channels air Japanese animation, including
the Cartoon Network, Fox Family Channel and Telemundo; more
than 1,500 series and features have been released on video in
the U.S. and new titles appear every week. Although Anime Expo
remains the largest fan gathering, similar convocations were
held recently in North Carolina, Texas, Virginia, New
Hampshire and
Michigan. "Animé is the
hottest thing on the market right now. Conventions and
underground events have helped to create a community where
fans can come, be themselves and show their love for the
genre," says Kenneth Wiatrek, marketing coordinator for ADV
Films, the distributor of the popular series "Neon Genesis
Evangelion" and "Martian Successor
Nadesico." Most of the fans
attending the Expo Thursday were in their teens and 20s, but
the crowd was ethnically diverse and equally divided between
men and women. People who came in costume to the opening
sessions were greeted with enthusiastic requests for
photographs, and the costume competition slated for tonight
remains one of the most popular events at the
Expo. Inside the Convention
Center and nearby hotels, fans entered trivia contests,
karaoke shows and video-game competitions. Others attended
panel discussions of topics that ranged from voice-acting
techniques to examinations of animé genres to presentations of
work by individual artists. More than a dozen Japanese artists
are making appearances here, including Yu Watase, creator of
the romantic epic "Fushigi Yugi: The Mysterious Play," and
Toshihiro Kawamoto, character designer on the popular "Cowboy
Bebop" series. Much of the
opening-day excitement was focused on the exhibition hall,
where vendors were selling DVDs, videos, models, toys,
T-shirts, cels, posters and other animé-related merchandise.
At times, the hall resembled the Oklahoma land rush with
credit cards, as eager buyers elbowed each other in their
haste to acquire products that might not be available in
American stores. Away from
the crush, attendees had a choice of five continuous
film-and-video programs, including previews: The giant robot
series "Mobile Suit Gundam 08th MS Team" begins airing on
Cartoon Network July 23, with "Gundam 0080" and "Gundam 0083"
to follow later this year (there are more than a dozen series
and feature films in the "Gundam" franchise), along with
"Pilot Candidate"; "Love Hina," also expected to air later
this year, on an outlet not yet determined; "Jin-Roh: The Wolf
Brigade", written by Mamoru Oshii, the director of the cult
favorite "Ghost in the Shell," which will screen in Southern
California theaters in late August; and "Escaflowne the Movie:
A Girl in Gaia," which comes this
fall.
* AX2001, organized
by the nonprofit Society for the Promotion of Japanese
Animation, continues at the Long Beach Convention Center and
the Long Beach Hyatt and Westin Hotels through Sunday.
Registration fees range from $20 to $50. Information: (626)
582-8200 or www.anime-expo.org.
Copyright 2001 Los Angeles
Times |

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