It is my very great pleasure to welcome back Guest Reviewer, all-around amazing Okazu and Yuricon supporter and great friend Bruce P! This time he has made it to Asagaya Anime Street for the Maria-sama ga Miteru Anniversary Event and were are delighted to have him tell us all about it. Thank you Bruce, the floor is yours…
I was pleased that a trip to Japan I had planned for Christmas this year coincided with a Maria-sama ga Miteru special event in Tokyo, in Asagaya Anime Street, appropriately located close to the heart of Marimite country. The event was in conjunction with the 10th anniversary of the anime, and was coupled with the release of the Blu-Ray edition of the complete series. I just had to see what it was all about.
Asagaya was a happy, bustling place when I arrived late afternoon on Christmas day. Shoppers were everywhere, as can be seen in this covered mall, which managed to contrive a Magritte Empire of Light kind of lighting effect. No doubt to make the experience more fun. And possibly to disorient you into more readily opening your wallet.
However, for reasons probably related to storefront rental costs, Asagaya Anime Street is not located in this heavy cash flow area. Itâs hidden away in a slightly sad and depressing site under the Chuo railway line elevated tracks. Definitely not prime real estate. To find it I had to work my way along and under the tracks, through tiny streets and alleys and girders, like Gene Hackman in The French Connection chasing the el train. Though he got to wreck a Pontiac. I had to walk.
But the walk was a great opportunity to take in the local sights, like this display of grimy, broken eggshells in front of a rice shop. Apparently all the surrealists were in town. An eye-catch for a rubbish disposal center.
Finally, in the gloom under the tracks, there it was.
Asagaya Anime Street consists of about 15 small shops selling anime related items of one sort or another. It actually seemed to be a worthwhile attempt to transform a deserted waste area under the tracks into a retail space, though the crowds were somewhat lacking. It took some effort to find, but of course thatâs just what anime fans are willing to do.
The Marimite event was in the GoFaLABO (Gallery of Fantastic Art Laboratory) CafĂ© and Gallery Space. Yes the place was small, and located in a relatively deserted spot under the tracks. And it rattled with every passing train. And the retail item shelves were mostly empty. But the thing is this â the event itself was downright fabulous. GoFaLABO consists of a small retail space with cafĂ© counter, plus an event area containing five cafĂ© tables. The event area was hung with about 60 beautiful framed copies of all the Marimite hanken illustrations used for the series. In addition, episodes of the series were being shown at one end of the space, which you could watch as you lingered over Marimite-themed tea and pastries, surrounded by all that gorgeous art. There were four people doing this when I entered, two guys at one table, and a guy and an exquisitely Lolita-outfitted girl at another. As I lingered myself, another guy dropped in and settled himself at a fourth table. Photography was not permitted inside the cafĂ©, which was unfortunate, but not unexpected.
What surprised me most about the experience was that, when concentrated in one place and viewed as a whole, the official Marimite images demonstrated a striking, powerful, almost single-minded obsession with Yuri (Yuri in implication, Yuri in fact, and (mostly) Yuri in fan enticement) that was really not fully representative of the multi-faceted story itself. But Iâm not complaining. The images were beautiful, they were Yuri, and there were 60 of them. More tea, please.
Eventually I had to leave to head back to Ikebukuro. There were two extremely lovely Christmas/winter themed prints of Yumi and Sachiko for sale that I would have liked very much (one at least was new to this event), but they were only available for pre-order. I did purchase all the goods that were currently available, except for the Blu-Ray series: two lidded drinking cups, a coffee mug, and a calendar.
Iâm so glad I had the opportunity to experience the GoFaLABO Marimite event. It was superb, an emerald under the tracks. And with all those cups and mugs my dehydration worries are a thing of the past. If you have the opportunity to visit GoFaLABO in Asagaya Anime Street while the Marimite event is still taking place (through January 25th), please do so. If youâve made it this far in this report, youâll just love it.
Well, except maybe for Ana, you freakinâ tough Marine. Ganbatte, CO!
Erica here: Ganbatte seconded. And of course I’m insanely jealous. I thank you again for the lovely calendar!
Thank you once more for your time and effort on our behalf! I’m glad you enjoyed the show.
In case any of you want a glimpse of the kinds of sweets they were selling, I’ve stolen borrowed two pictures from YNN Correspondent and friend Jackie S. to give you an idea. ^_^
This event will have had a number of Okazu readers visit. We should do a travel special. ^_^
Oh I just love the cups and calendar! Wish there was a way to get ahold of them over here. Are they orderable on-line, anyone know?
I do hope the Blu-ray versions get released here in the States. I already have the DVD but would be willing to spring for the Blu-rays as well.
Thanks for the report Bruce!
Heh, glad everyone else managed to make it there while it was open :). Good report, Bruce!
“It actually seemed to be a worthwhile attempt to transform a deserted waste area under the tracks into a retail space”
“And with all those cups and mugs my dehydration worries are a thing of the past.”
MariMite people got liquid on the brain, in a good way. ^_^ Hydration FTW
They could do the next one of these events under an aqueduct.
Or cross-brand with something to do with safe drinking water IRL, like some charity helping more people get access to it. ^_^
Hi Bruce! I enjoyed reading your report and getting your take on the event. I also really loved the event, and am glad I took a special trip to Tokyo to see it.
Haha, I dragged along my friend, who was an incredibly good sport about the whole thing. She had zero familiarity with the series (as she puts it, her anime needs to explode), and when we walked in she looked around and was like, “Wait, Jackie, is this a lesbian series?” To which I answered, “Well, not exactly, it’s more ‘smells of Yuri’ (to borrow Erica’s term)…” And then we walked further in, where there was all the Yuri-looking art on the walls. And the “Ibara no Mori” arc was playing on the big screen…
It sounds like they had more merchandise when I was there. They also had clear folders, scrunchies, an album for putting the special coasters you got (randomly) when you ordered food/drinks, and a gashapon of character buttons. The buttons were „500 each, and there 14 different ones… I decided it would be a bad idea to try to get the whole set – „7000, assuming you didn’t get doubles, which of course you would… (>_<) Also couldn't get myself to shell out ~„18,000 for one of the framed prints (the one I wanted was Yumi and Sachiko in summer dresses with ice cream), though part of me regrets that now. (T-T)
Thank you for your report Jackie! It sounds like a money-making machine with sweets. (probably the whole idea, really.) ^_^
You’re welcome! Haha, that sounds about right. I was more than happy to throw my money at them, but I only have so much to throw…
Hi Jackie! I’m glad you were able to get to the event. Thanks for the photos and the additional information – because now that you mention it, I do recall that there were clear files, and yes, scrunchies. But whenever I find character cups and coffee mugs, everything else recedes into a kind of gray blur. It’s a peculiar mania. The event really was fun; I’m happy you had a good time!
I guess I decided to take the “no photos” signs on the wall more literally to mean “don’t take pictures of the art on the walls” as opposed to “don’t take ANY pictures in this cafe.” Hahaha, I can see how the scrunchies wouldn’t really excite you. I like files, though I usually use them as posters instead of for their intended purpose. I also love mugs (though not tumblers so much). I went in to Animate this weekend with my friend, and they had a section of Sailor Moon and Cardcaptor Sakura merchandise together. I got waaay too excited when I saw they (finally!) had mugs for both series (I’d been complaining to my friend that I was disappointed that in all the Sailor Moon merchandise, there were no mugs). Yup, pretty sure the two of us freaking out about that combined section scared off a lot of Japanese people, lol.