My schoolwork is getting a lot busier lately. Must be closing in on finals. I'm not really sure when my final dates are. Can't be very far though. My big project is due on the server on June 29. That's in 2 weeks, isn't it. Eep. Almost done w/ pencil work.
It's great the scanners are starting to give me evil streaks. So now I need to photo-edit my scans too. Anyone know why scanners do this? I think something gets burned inside or something b/c I wiped the tops and tried 3 different scanners.
Anyways....
Last week, Midori came over and we had tacos for dinner. And pizza. American food day! Lol. Funny how there are no Mexican restaurants here but there is a whole El Paso section in the grocery store.
We had an interview for the school paper which turned out to be far less exciting than it sounded. It lasted about 15 minutes max. Probably most of the time just trying to find a place for us to sit and answer questions. And they made such a big deal out of it too, planning it weeks in advance and scheduling it properly so Midori and I could be at the same place at the same time (funny story there... it took the both of us until a week before the interview to realize... hey, we were doing it together. We both knew there was another person, but we didn't know who).
But that was fine, we hung out later anyways.
This week, there was a luncheon w/ 3 members of the International Committee of TPU which consisted of Prof. Okubo, and 2 English professors. Prof. Furukawa was supposed to be there too.... I think he had an emergency. He was late to class too. But it was nice. Got to talk to people. I can't remember anything we talked about though. Some of it was a bit important. Like mentioning professors who had connections to the working industry and I should meet them and things. I can't even remember which industry.
That's probably all because of yesterday.
Thanks to family connections (that were only discovered after I came to Japan), a family friend invited me to AIC to have a mini tour and meet with the people and see her business. AIC is an animation production company, probably most famous for the series "Tenchi" and "Ah My Goddess!". The studio itself is surprisingly small for something I thought might be famous, but I guess that just shows the amount of competition around.
I got to see production processes. The business and PR relations. I.e. the producer's roles (since that was Jia Lin's job). But then she took me down to the editting room, watched a bit of a first run-through of a new episode they were working on. I hope it was a first run-through anyways. Got to see the colorists hard at work (and really fast too!). Then down to the animation room where all the artist-work goes on.
There I got to meet Kitajima Nobuyuki-san, a lead animator, lovingly nicknamed "Darth Vader" although I don't know why. I never did ask anyone while I was there. But he and his partner sitting behind him were really fun to talk to. They both had been around a long time in the industry and had stories to tell. And collections to show.
So Nobuyuki-san used to work with Miyazaki as his in-betweener. So he had in his possession some of his keyframes. And he let me see them. So it hit me during that. Holy crap. I'm holding images drawn by Miyazaki's hands himself!
And then it hit me too. This Nobuyuki-san. The people here pretty much consider him a god at animation. I'm probably standing in front of someone great. Of course, my reaction to that is to do nothing. As it was also with Scott McCloud back in December. Somehow those feelings just never register themselves completely on the outside, so I either seem too casual or not-caring.
But yeah, we stayed and talked for a long time (Jia Lin translating the entire time. Thank you so much!). Then went to the 2nd studio to talk to their one and only CG person. CG in animation here is to blend it to look like the cartoons. Made me wonder... why not just draw it then? But maybe it's much faster and cheaper to do it this way instead. Like cars and stuff.
We went to McDonald's for dinner and there 2 people from a toy company selling merchandise from AIC animations came over to show the prototype of some mecha figure to Jia Lin.
That was cool. Not the fact that they were discussing distribution issues, but rather the fact that they were doing it in McDonald's. So random, but at the same time, so cool. To be completely immersed in that kind of life. Makes me think of how we do it in CMU. What with GCS project meetings and stuff. It must sound kinda sickening. To have it become your whole life, but I dunno... it sounds fun to me.
Still, to be able to sustain myself on a decent paycheck would be nice to. The avg. salary of an animator in Japan was about $10,000/yr. According to the people I talked to. Scary.
One thing we talked about I found interesting to learn. Anime is becoming really generic. I think so. The employees thought so too. The animation directors I talked to really liked American works because to them, they weren't so generic. Kinda like how we really like Japanese animation because we thing they're innovative. But being here, even I notice... it's all the same. And the reason isn't the producers of the companies not coming up with new ideas. It's the system. Sponsors only want to sponsor shows they know already that people will like. Because then they know it will be able to air on TV. Risk is dangerous. And companies must appease the sponsors in order to secure airtime and thus, financial reward.
It was interesting how many people voiced a want for change while I was there. Wonder if anything will happen?