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Why Is Anime Obsessed With Power Lines? (atlasobscura.com)

An anonymous reader shares a report: Why are there so many shots of power lines in Japanese anime cartoons? The Tumblr Power Lines in Anime is dedicated to appreciating the truly lovely and surprisingly ubiquitous depictions of mundane power lines that appear in a large number of Japanese animation series. The blog is run by Tumblr user whitequark, who first started to notice the trend while watching a romantic comedy anime. Anime series can cover any number of genres, including sports, high fantasy, office life, and, of course, science fiction, but no matter what it's about, it seems that if the story is set on modern-day Earth, it will contain some amazingly detailed images of power lines, telephone poles, and other wired infrastructure. While a number of anime series (and cartoons in general), opt for a style of hyper-detailed backgrounds before which relatively simpler characters can interact, power lines stand out for the detail and complexity required to illustrate them.

6 of 233 comments (clear)

  1. Power lines equal western cultural encroachment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Before WWII, outside Tokyo - rural Japan didn't have as many power lines as western countries.
    With culture going back centuries... japanese perceived power lines as western encroachment and the loss of the authentic Japanese self.
    And since nearly all power lines come from and go to "someplace else", they are by definition "invasive" to the local world.
    And since power utilities are authoritative entities... they represent invasive authority.

  2. Because they're easy to miss by Ghostworks · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Back in the documentary "Crumb", on underground commix icon Robert Crumb, R.C. demonstrated how he took a lot of photos and drew scenes from them rather from memory, because it's easy to mentally tune-out a lot of very big, annoying things about modern life: billboards, power lines, transformers. He didn't want to miss them when he drew, so he took photos to force himself to acknowledge them with photos.

    Sure enough, once he pointed it out, I realized that was one of the things that made his work both very solid/real and also very gritty. When there's no panels with large swaths of empty, blue sky, it really forces you to acknowledge everything we've put in the way.

    In anime, it could be similarly an attempt at heightened awareness/realism, or a form of social commentary, or a subtle nod that the characters are in the Ugly Real World and not the Sparking Virtual Reality or Romantic Past.

  3. Because... by tarokejihi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    there are a lot of power lines in Japan you insensitive clod ! ^_^

    1. Re:Because... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Mod up (I don't have points today). I lived in Japan for ~ 4 years and all the utilities are on poles. Powerlines are a way of life and just everywhere. They are the backdrop for where these artists come from. I always put it down to it being earthquake protection.

  4. Because of how background art is made by XSportSeeker · · Score: 5, Informative

    I know this is supposed to be kinda tongue in cheek, but most animes have specific background artists that will be asked to portray some scenery as faithfully as possible, including stuff like worn down buildings, crusty old signs, overgrown lawns, faded out street signaling, corroded paintjobs... and yes, power lines.
    There are lots of titles that are specifically tied to a city, or even a specific neighborhoods... well, much like several TV series and movies.

    But picking half a dozen titles stretched over 2 decades or more that have power lines in them and saying it's an "obsession" has to be a joke right? Do people even realize hundreds of titles are released every year?

    In any case, it's not an obsession by any means... apart from Lain because it's thematic (it symbolizes how everything is connected), for the vast majority of titles it is just a staple of urban environments. It's part of the scenery. From another perspective, obsessive behaviour would be trying to hide them when they are quite obviously there.

  5. Re:Of all the things in Anime by jellomizer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I would think power lines are a good sign of the time the story is based. Where it is to represent the present.
    The near future normally would be wireless urban setting.
    The past 100 years or so, we wouldn't have power-lines, as most lights were still gas in an urban environment.

    Out of all other things, they can be drown without much animation.

    Also power lines don't date quickly. So a scene with with them will look as reliant for 2017 as it would for 1967 so such shows wont date as quickly.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.