Tourists, even locals of the right persuasion, often invoke the movie Blade Runner when talking about Tokyo. Director Ridley Scott’s 1982 science fiction film is full of evocative images, some of them clearly Japan-inspired, like that of a geisha popping pills on a giant advertising screen above a rain-drenched neon metropolis. Our first introduction to Rick Deckard, the film’s main character, played by Harrison Ford, comes outside a noodle bar, whose elderly counterman beckons him with Japanese greetings, like “Irasshai,” and “Dozo.” But to what extent, really, did Tokyo inspire the look of Blade Runner?
Read More#Kabukicho - Tweetstorm Travel Guide (Blog Version)
This post uses short self-quotes from a Twitter thread to narrate a photo tour of Kabukicho, the red-light district in Shinjuku, Tokyo. The pictures here are drawn from the Kabukicho photo gallery on The Gaijin Ghost home page.
Read MoreThe Shinjuku Shrine That Inspired the Face of Baymax in 'Big Hero 6'
In 2014, the Disney animated feature Big Hero 6 made its world premiere at the 27th Tokyo International Film Festival. It was an obvious choice for this film to debut in Japan’s capital, given that Japanese culture played such a heavy influence on the film’s production design.
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