| 
|
What
kind of boy hates war? None!
The only real problem with war is that everyone likes it,
just like drugs, alcohol, and tobacco …
But Japanese people did very bad things during World War II,
and as a result, we cannot love our military history very
much. So we envy Americans who can innocently love their victories
in battle (except for Vietnam …). Sometimes Americans
can even say that World War II was a “good war.”
Well, we Japanese have never had one!
Also, the Japanese military machines of WWII were just not
cool. Apart from the Zero fighter airplanes and huge battleships
like the Yamato, our army looked clunky and inferior to those
of other nations. Japanese tanks, especially, were so weak.
So Japanese military otaku really envied German tanks, which
were considered the best.
From the late 60s to the 70s, Japanese boys like myself were
obsessed with making model kits of German tanks. Why tanks
in particular? Because tanks are giant monsters, just like
Godzilla! You can destroy anything with a tank and nothing
can stop you!
For generations, the words “plastic models” meant
German tank kits made by the Tamiya Company. Kids were crazy
about buying and building them. They even religiously studied
World War II history to help make their kits even more like
the real thing. The Bandai Company tried to cash in on the
craze by releasing their own 1/48th scale tank kits. But while
their tanks were very well designed, they were not successful
in the marketplace. Tamiya was the king.
It would take an entirely new war to help Bandai finally win
control of the plastic model kit world. The inspiration came
from the anime series Mobile Suit Gundam, which had stopped
airing on TV before the first Gunpla arrived in stores in
1980. This classic SF anime depicted a One-Year War where
both sides used robot-like machines to fight instead of conventional
weapons like tanks. But the show was a failure in the ratings
and, only a few years later, no one remembered it.
At first, I wondered what Bandai was doing releasing new models
for a then-dead property like Gundam. But in retrospect, it
was a stroke of genius. Gunpla sold like crazy from the moment
they arrived in stores and Gundam became a hot property again
in the world of anime. How did it happen?
In previous animation, like Tetsujin 28 or Mazinger Z, there
was only one version of the main character robot hero. But
in the world of Gundam, the “mobile suits” the
pilots commanded were mass-produced. They were just machines
that didn’t have any special character of their own.
This meant people who bought Gunpla were free to customize
their kits anyway they wanted to, just like hot rods! People
could paint their kits in camouflage colors, or mix-up body
parts, and create infinite variations. Then as now, Bandai
encouraged Gunpla lovers to use their imagination and creativity
when making a model kit.
But it wasn’t just Bandai alone that helped make the
Gunpla line a success. There was alsoHobby Japan magazine,
which had long been a very popular publication for modeling
fans. Before the Gunpla boom, Hobby Japan was mostly about
tanks and hardcore military knowledge. (To make proper kits
you have to learn things like which tank battalion went to
Africa, which one went to Russia. Nerdy stuff like that).
Since Gundam had only been around for a while, there wasn’t
so much detailed information about the world the story took
place in. So Hobby Japan began making up many things about
the fictional One-Year War. It was just like what the first
Star Trek fans did, inventing their own starships because
the TV show itself didn’t provide so much information
about the fleet itself. Through articles, illustrations, and
photos of custom-made kits, Hobby Japan provided lots of background
information about this huge space war, as well as modeling
tips on how to make your Gunpla more realistic.
Another thing that Hobby Japan encouraged was making Gundam
dioramas. The story of Gundam didn’t follow the lives
of too many combatants aside from the main characters. But
hardcore fans wanted to know about the Unknown Soldiers who
fought the other battles that raged through the solar system.
By modeling an entire environment around their kits, fans
could create their own unique characters and dramatic situations.
Also, Bandai ingeniously made their Gunpla kits at the same
scale as the military figures sold by Tamiya. Fans could repaint
and remold German soldiers into Gundam pilots and make dioramas
with them! It was a true mash-up of science fiction and World
War II!
The funny thing was that there was more to original Gundam
than just a war story. It was actually a dramatic depiction
about a boy’s transformation into a man. But the Gunpla
movement focused on the background, not the characters and
theme of the story. Gundam fans cared more about the mecha
and the military.
Maybe that’s why Gunpla became such a phenomenon. It
was finally a “good war” for Japanese people to
safely enjoy, because it was all fiction. BACK
TO TOP.
|
|
|
|
OTAKU
USA. Copyright 2007. |