Best. Wheelie. Ever! The Robotech Cyclone rocks! |
At the end of the 1970s as a nine year old I came across Star Blazers, the English version of Space Battleship Yamato. This was my first look at Japanese animation, which was quickly followed up by Battle of the Planets and Robotech. It’s safe to say anime was a major influence on my developing sense of aesthetics. Being Japanese, there were an awful lot of motorbikes in the various stories, probably because many of the people making the animation were riders.
I’ve written about motorcycles and anime before, in fact you could probably call it a recurring theme. The history of motorcycles in Japanese animation is a long and storied one. Motorcycles themselves are deeply embedded in the Japanese psyche, in much the same way they are in Western history. As a symbol of freedom and power, there is little that comes close.
If you haven’t dug into Japanese anime and you’re into two wheeling, you’re missing out. Anime offers a distinct angle on motorcycling that is often at odds with how it’s presented in film and TV. It’s also quite culturally distinct. Japan has a rebel biker culture similar to but distinct from Britain’s cafe racers or North America’s one percenters. Anime films like Akira make that culture a big part of their story-lines.
Sometimes I forget how many times my formative, young mind saw motorcycles in anime in the 1980s and filed the idea away. I’d actually forgotten that Princess rode a bike (albeit with rockets, missiles and it transformed into part of a spaceship – but who wouldn’t want that?).
My life-long mecha メカ fixation (one I share with Guillermo del Toro) often merges with motorcycles. The Japanese Shinto religion believes in a pan-theistic world where there are many gods or kami that can inhabit anything, including machines. Many motorcyclists are prone to this Shinto-ist belief – if you don’t believe me ask one what kind of personality their bike has.
Princess from Battle of the Planets rides like she stole it. |
Have you tried tickling the carbs? |
Akira is a seminal anime from the 1990s set in a dystopian future Tokyo where Bosozoku biker gangs have run amok! |
Like Kaneda’s bike? It’s two wheel drive pushed by a cold superconducting electrically driven power-train on a carbon/ceramic frame. The whole thing comes in at just over 150 kilos. You’re seeing it folded down in the lower profile high speed mode, but it bends in the middle into a more standard shaped machine when needed. It’s rumoured to be a Honda, but any manufacturer’s markings are gone from the stolen bike used by Kaneda in the film. Someone spent a mint making a working model of the thing.
20 best anime with motorcycles:
https://www.ranker.com/list/best-anime-about-motorcycles/ranker-animeKino’s Journey is a good one I forgot to mention – there are a pile on there I haven’t seen before that are now on the hunt list.
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