Animeland: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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{{quote|"Uh, folks, we're experiencing some moderate Godzilla-related turbulence at this time, so I'm going to go ahead and ask you to put your seatbelts back on. When we get to 35,000 feet, he usually does let go, so from there on out, all we have to worry about is Mothra, and, uh, we do have reports he's tied up with Gamera and Rodan at the present time. Thank you very much."}}
{{quote|"Uh, folks, we're experiencing some moderate Godzilla-related turbulence at this time, so I'm going to go ahead and ask you to put your seatbelts back on. When we get to 35,000 feet, he usually does let go, so from there on out, all we have to worry about is Mothra, and, uh, we do have reports he's tied up with Gamera and Rodan at the present time. Thank you very much."}}
* ''[[Teen Titans: Trouble in Tokyo]]'' is like this. It's definitely an [[Affectionate Parody]], though, since the series is [[Animesque]].
* ''[[Teen Titans: Trouble in Tokyo]]'' is like this. It's definitely an [[Affectionate Parody]], though, since the series is [[Animesque]].
* ''[[Phineas and Ferb]]''{{'}}s special "Summer Belongs To You" has [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guQPUBecZRs this little sequence.]
* ''[[Phineas and Ferb]]''{{'}}s special "Summer Belongs To You" has [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guQPUBecZRs this little sequence.]{{Dead link}} <!-- MOD: Would any P&F fan have a clue what "this sequence" actually was, so we can find a new link? -->
* The season two finale of ''[[Dexter's Laboratory]]'' starts off here with Dexter accidentally awakening a [[Kaiju]], while trying to one-up two mecha pilots his age (who both look like ''[[Go Nagai]]'' characters). The rest of the episode has him and his entire family fighting said Kaiju back home, with the help of a [[Combining Mecha]], under the guidance of a [[Kid Samurai]].
* The season two finale of ''[[Dexter's Laboratory]]'' starts off here with Dexter accidentally awakening a [[Kaiju]], while trying to one-up two mecha pilots his age (who both look like ''[[Go Nagai]]'' characters). The rest of the episode has him and his entire family fighting said Kaiju back home, with the help of a [[Combining Mecha]], under the guidance of a [[Kid Samurai]].
* Japan in [[Pixar Shorts|''Tokyo Mater'']], and as an extension, the Japan segment of ''[[Cars]] 2''.
* Japan in [[Pixar Shorts|''Tokyo Mater'']], and as an extension, the Japan segment of ''[[Cars]] 2''.

Revision as of 19:18, 7 December 2023

The country of Japan, but portrayed as a world that works like what Anime taught us.

In western works, it might serve as a parody of the anime fandom in general. In Japanese works, it might be a jab at Occidental Otaku who seem to actually believe in this, or lampshaded to emphasize that this particular work is more realistic than that.

The most common examples are:

Due to the Lowest Common Denominator, it might also include other Japanese pop cultural references, that are not really anime-specific, such as Ninjas, Kaiju or the Yakuza.

This is a part of the Hollywood Atlas, like Eagle Land, Igloo Land, Yodel Land and the Land of Dragons. Hollywood Japan is similar, but unfiltered (or at least less so) through the lens of anime, and can be considered the parent trope due to this trope emerging only [I]after[/I] anime gained a larger part of Western pop-culture in The Eighties, The Nineties and during the Turn of the Millennium.

Not be confused with the French magazine Animeland

If the work is made outside of Japan, don't expect anyone to acknowledge that most anime are adapted from manga[1].

Examples of Animeland include:

Advertising

Anime and Manga

Film

Literature

Live-Action TV

  • In Lexx‍'‍s last season, a giant plant person invaded Japaneseland.
  • Animeland and the fan culture surrounding it were the object of satire in the Saturday Night Live skit "J-pop America Fun Time Now!"
  • In 30 Rock Tracy believes he is giving a speech over a live feed to a Japanese award show. He thanks all his Japanese fans, especially Godzilla. The he laughs and says he's just kidding...he knows Godzilla doesn't care what humans do.

Video Games

Web Comics

Western Animation

"Uh, folks, we're experiencing some moderate Godzilla-related turbulence at this time, so I'm going to go ahead and ask you to put your seatbelts back on. When we get to 35,000 feet, he usually does let go, so from there on out, all we have to worry about is Mothra, and, uh, we do have reports he's tied up with Gamera and Rodan at the present time. Thank you very much."

  1. For the uninitiated, that's like if every well-received Western Animation cartoon from Plane Crazy to Captain Lazerhawk and onwards was a DC or Marvel or Image Comics comic book series first.