February 5, 2010

Meet the Manekineko at Imado Jinja shrine in Asakusa / Hibotan Bakuto O-Ryu Sanjo

    




For those who don't not know what Manekineko is...


Today's post is about my visit to a shrine in January. Paying homage to shrines and/or temples to make good wishes for new year is a common practice amongst many Japanese. Some waits for the midnight at the shrines and temples and many goes within the first three days of January. Feeling too reluctant and lazy, my new year visit to a shrine (or a temple), however, never happened in time.  In some years, I even decided to follow the old luna calender which new year starts in February.


However this year, I made it on January 3! Hooray!


The shrine I paid homage with my family is called Imado Jinja shrine in Asakusa.



The 6th film of Hibotan Bakuto series, "O-Ryu Sanjo" (means here comes O-Ryu or O-Ryu returns), story takes place in Asakusa. In the film, you will see then-existed (in Meiji era, late 19th - early 20th century) Imado bridge in somehow romantic setting.


Tsunejiro joins O-Ryu for the last duel on Imado bridge.


Imado bridge used to be across the Ohaguro gutter surrounding Yoshiwara Yukaku or Yoshiwara licensed red light district. By the way, prostitution is illegal since 1958/1959 in Japan and there is no sign of the district left now in the area. The gutter is filled and only the railing part of Imado bridge is still there as a monument.


In the film, you will also see then-the-tallest building Ryouunkaku or Asakusa Junikai (Asakusa 12 stories building).


Old postcard of Rouunkaku




As a background, on Imado bridge...




Last duel, eventually a raid, takes place at Ryouunkaku.




Major earthquake in Tokyo area, Kanto Daishinsai, destroyed Ryouunkaku in 1923 and the building you see in the film is a beautiful reproduction by the artistic department. Nice work! Hooray!




Hibotan Bakuto O-Ryu Sanjo / 1970




Now what is Manekineko?


If you want to know the look of typical Manekineko, see the photo above my Profile.
Yes, Manekineko is statue of cat beckoning with an upright paw. Inviting customers, visitors, friends and luck with the paw, Manekineko is a symbol and good luck charm mainly for business.


For the details, I would lead you to Wikipedia's Manekineko. It describes  much better than I do.


Imado is known as one of the birthplaces of Manekineko. There are some stories as to the origin of Manekineko and the Imado version goes like this...


In Edo era (16th - 19th century Shogun era), there was an old woman living in Imado. She loved her cat but got so poor that she had to give it away. One night, the cat appeared in her dream and told her that it should be a good idea to make small statues of the cat in clay and sell them. She followed the cat's advice and made the statues in Imado Yaki pottery. Imado had its local pottery craft, it still does. The statues sold very well and she became wealthy. Hooray!


Imado style Manekineko


Imado style Manekineko usually comes in pairs
therefore Imado Jinja shrine is worshiped as a god of marriage ♡♡


Many young people mainly girls were buying good luck charms and amulets
for good marriage at the shrine office.



I am not interested in marriage but I know exactly what to do.
Getting Manekineko Mikuji!


O-Mikuji or Mikuji is a fortune telling draw you find at shrines and some temples. Pay small amount of money and you can draw an O-Mikuji which tells your fortune. What good about Manekineko Mikuji at Imado Jinja shrine is that it comes with a tiny Manekineko good luck charm. The good luck charm Manekinekos come in all sorts of colors and outfits for different fortunes.


My Manekineko Mikuji had a red one and my mother's had a white one. The color combination of red and white represents happiness, good luck and festival! Hooray!


You see the size of the Manekineko charms? Only if you know the size of 100 Yen coin.


There was an old house next to the shrine and the entrance was open to the public.
Take a look at the entrance. There are hundreds of Manekineko statues displayed.



On the TV monitor at the entrance, I could learn how to dance Manekineko Ondo. 
Ondo is music and dance for local festivals. 

A beautiful Kan-Nushi woman was showing good luck charms and amulets to the people on the line.
She should be doing a very good business with so many good luck charms for the very purpose!


It was the first time for me to witness a female Kan-Nushi.
Kan-Nushi is a Shinto priest. Later, I found out that Imado Jinja shrine has more than a few Kan-Nushi women. All look so pretty. Is this a new trend? Hooray!


Shinto is  the natural spirituality of Japan and the Japanese people, so Wikipedia says. It is, for me, more like a manner of purification in everyday life. It is also a religion the Japanese royal family worships. 


Buddhism has temples and for Shinto, there are shrines.


Before we make our wishes, we throw Saisen money into Saisen Bako box located at the main building of the shrine where we pray. Saisen is like a donation but whenever we give Saisen money, we make wishes. So it is not exactly a donation, is it? I always give 5 Yen (like 5 cents). 


If you see a big bell or bells above the Saisen Bako box, ring them with a thick rope attached instead of shouting "I'm here!" to attract the god's attention. 


Then...


Here are two ladies praying and making wishes...
The Saisen Bako box is conveniently located right in front of them.
Don't miss the big pair of Imado Manekinekos!


But there was a long queue to stand in before I reached to the Saisen Bako box.



Don't worry! 
Meanwhile, there are other ways to spend some changes you carry in your pocket.

On our way home, we decided to take a bus to Asakusa station. 
Let's try Panda Bus service!

Panda Bus stop

Panda Bus service is free of charge. It takes more time than taxi (by taxi Imado Jinja is approx 5 minutes and 800 Yen away from Asakusa station) but it's more fun.

Each seat has a white seat cover with black Panda ears. Grab the ears when you stumble!?

The bus does not exactly look like panda bear after all but never mind. 

Panda Bus goes around the Asakkusa touristic spots and service runs every 40 minutes approx. 

There is a much bigger and more famous temple in Asakusa, the Sensoji, but visiting smaller Imado Jijna shrine was a good fun. The best part was less crowded. 

Walking to the shrine from Asakusa station should be a good exercise, too!

So for the next new year, go visit Imado Jinja shrine to meet the Manekineko and get a Manekineko Mikuji for the-year-round good luck!

And don't forget about the Panda Bus. 







February 3, 2010

Hibotan Bakuto Series / Who is Lady Snowblood?










Some of you may think Hibotan Bakuto series is the same kind as Lady Snowblood. 
Yes, in some ways the two movie series are quite similar. 

1. A heroine fights against her enemies for vengeance. (Both had their fathers being murdered)
2. Stories take place in the late 19th / early 20th century. 
3. She can gamble as a professional dicer and/or card player. 
4. She hides her weapon in a handy equipment i.e. flute bag and umbrella



Lady Snowblood / 1973



However Hibotan Bakuto and Lady Snowblood are completely different in some essential ways. A definite fact is that O-Yuki (means snow) is not Yakuza whereas O-Ryu of Hibotan lives her life tenaciously following the rules of Yakuza society. Even though O-Ryu eventually punishes the baddies at the end of each story, she waits patiently for the last moment before she finally takes her sword to keep the order of the society. On the other hand, O-Yuki lives solely for vengeance, to kill the enemies who murdered her father and destroyed her so-to-be happy family. O-Yuki does not follow any rules of any society but her own. 

Another difference is the two women's upbringings. O-Ryu of Hibotan was born as a daughter of Yakuza boss but nurtured as a modest girl with intelligence happily only until her father got killed and the Yakuza family scattered. O-Yuki was born as a child of her mother and one of the men who killed her father. Having been raped by the man, O-Yuki's mother kills him and goes to the jail where she gives birth to O-Yuki. After the delivery, she leaves a curse to kill all the men and woman who murdered her husband on O-Yuki and dies in prison. So from the day she was born, O-Yuki's is totally controlled by the lifelong purpose; vengeance. She is then raised and trained by her mentor who completes his job to transform the young girl into a killing machine. Each day training session in her early days is almost hilarious. 






Although I personally prefer Hibotan Bakuto mainly because of O-Ryu's good manners as Yakuza woman, I am still fascinated by the almost perfect beauty of the actress Meiko Kaji who played the role of O-Yuki in Snowblood.




This is the lady who mesmerized Quentin Tarantino and had him make Kill Bill!






What about take a brief look at the Kimono fashion in Lady Snowlood;
O-Yuki is not living in Yakuza world therefore her Kimono style is different from Hibotan O-Ryu.




Sometimes in stripes...




And in white with butterfly patterns




Hairdo can be more feminine like this






Another striped Kimono




Watch out! Snowblood has a blade hidden in her umbrella.




And feminine purple Kimono...




Readers who have gone through my last topic about Hakata Obi belt and different ways of Obi tie may notice that O-Yuki shares a very similar taste with O-Ryu as to the Obi belt style.


Red and black Hakata Obi belts with Dokko patterns



In Koken Musubi or Koken tie style






Actually, Hakata Obi belt is designed for casual scenes. And not like other silk Obi belts, Hakata can be worn all year round. Well, some Kimono items are very strict for when to be worn according to each month. Hakata Obi belt represents casually fashionable Kimono way very well just like denim garments.  







Hibotan O-Ryu always stays calm and somehow elegant.
Her Kimono fashion is simpler and more stylish than O-Yuki who is rather sexy and feminine.








It is the most attractive element of the Hibotan Bakuto series that this beautiful, lady-like young woman who strictly follows the rules of her society eventually takes her weapon and fights in major Yakuza raids to straighten things.








Once her vengeance on the murderer who killed her father accomplished in the first film of the series, O-Ryu's lifelong purpose now is shifted to reestablish her own Yakuza family. She inherited it from her father. She is much more privileged than O-Yuki the Snowblood.


After all, Hibotan Bakuto is Ninkyo Eiga or chivalrous Yakuza gamblers films whereas Lady Snowblood is all about bloody vengeance just like Tarantino's Kill Bill!





Lucky Manekineko made Intro Movie called Kill Ebi (Kill the shrimp)





Lady Snowblood @ Wikipedia



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February 2, 2010

Hibotan Bakuto Series / Kimono Fashion - Hakata Obi Belt








One of my favorite movie series is called "Hibotan Bakuto" meaning Red Peony Gambler. The heroine, O-Ryu, has a tattooed shoulder with red peony flowers and therefore she is called Hibotan O-Ryu. The time is late 19th century / early 20th century, since she had her father killed, she is trying to find the murderer for a revenge. The word Bakuto means gamblers but the word only refers to the ones in the underworld or Yakuza society. As you may or may not know, Japanese Yakuza families can be categorized into a several different origins and one of these categories is Bakuto which means the ones who run and organize gambling business and/or professional gamblers. O-Ryu's family had been scattered because of the death of her father who was the boss. Once a modest, beautiful but an ordinal girl, O-Ryu is now alone and became a professional gambler herself and well trained to fight with a short sword she hides in a flute bag. And she goes on traveling to find and kill her enemy...



Hibotan Bakuto / 1968




There are 8 movies for this series from 1968 throughout to 1972 all starring beautiful Junko Fuji as the heroine Hibotan O-Ryu. 







Topics in the Japonica Labels' Hibotan Bakuto introduce not only the details of the series but also O-Ryu's beautiful costume, Kimono, and other tips which may lead you to the depth of the Japanese popular sub-culture! 







O-Ryu's Kimono fashion is rather plain but cool. She wears her Kimono in a simple and mono-tone stylish manner but once or so in each film, she shows off her beauty by wearing dressy Kimono as well. My favorite is the Obi belt she usually puts on. It is called Hakata Obi which is a special silk-woven craft product and the design was originally created in Hakata area in Kyushu Island. Colorfully designed and meticulously embroidered Obi belts may be more well known but the fine and cool Hakata Obi design is still very well appreciated in Japan. The craft, Hakata Ori or Hakata fabric, also known as HAKATA JAPAN TM, produces various kinds of accessories and decorations besides Obi belts. 






The most standard pattern on Hakata Obi belts is called Dokko pattern. Dokko is an instrument carried by Fudo Myo-Oh or the God of Fire (Acala) and it is still used for Buddhism ceremonies to the present day by the monks. The Hakata's pattern design had been inspired by the shape of the traditional instrument.


Dokko patterned Hakata Obi belts can be as gorgeous as this photo!



Yes, they are Japanese Geisha women in Hakata area participating a local festival. 


Obi belts can be tied in various different shapes. How you finish it is one of the most important aspects to decide the style of your Kimono fashion. The Geisha's beautiful Obi tie is called Yanagi (means willow) yet O-Ryu prefers Kohken Musubi or Kohken tie in a mannish way instead. It is, of course, because that she is not a Geisha but a professional Yakuza gambler in a man's man's man's world! 



Koken Musubi tie style




In the first movie of the series, O-Ryu finds her enemy and successfully takes a revenge on him. However her journey continues not only because the series became so popular but also she has to reestablish her family..... 






Also see a very impressive review of the film in English!