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Danger happened

Kaiju Big Battel at the Boston Anime Convention
By CAMILLE DODERO  |  May 27, 2006

anime_inside

Full disclosure comes first: I used to do Kaiju." Or so that’s what I’d say to mean that I once played a spatula-wielding minion in a KaijuBig Battel DVD, I co-authored  (and co-edited if wanna get all curriculum vitae about it)Kaiju Big Battel: A Practical Guide to City-Crushing Monsters (Hyperion), and I’ve sold moreDr. Cube thongs with Kaiju’s tagline "Danger Can Happen!" from behind the KBB merch booth than I can possibly count. But I didn’t have a hand in last night’s Battel at the Hynes Convention Center (the main event of the Anime Boston 2006); I just came to survey the scene because once you’ve dressed up like an anti-freeze-brained militiaman and mingled with a motley mob of G-rated mutations, this sort of thing tends to remain in your monster blood.

Kaiju Big Battel used to be a hipster thing   (they’d co-headline events with bands like Need New Body and Enon), not strictly an otaku-nerd thing. But since the Cambridge-based monster-mayhem landed a TV gig hosting Action Blast on the Cable network G4 earlier this year, it was pretty hilarious to see 100s of costumed, teenage, anime-con nerds snaking around the second floor of Hynes Convention Center, waiting for the early-evening doors to open. Kaiju also used to be a beer thing, not an underage water thing, so it was also amusing to watch everybody run for seats instead of PBRs. The demographic shift certainly makes sense for KBB’s bid for longevity: 23-year-old rock kids are permanently fickle and perpetually poor; 15-year-old anime kids are temporarily loyal and parentally rich.

The backstory of Kaiju is long and meandering (read this  if you want more conceptual info, since I co-wrote that too), but in a very-simplified nutshell, the Kaiju Universe is an underground network of city-crushing monsters who surreptitiously terrorize the earth: they’re really to blame for Hurricane-Katrina-like natural disasters, but humans are kept ignorant because they’d panic. And so the Kaiju Commissioner, a mysterious human mediator, oversees them somewhat badly, sort of like Kofi Annan leads the UN.

But Kaiju Big Battels are where they release all their pent-up monster aggression that they’d otherwise unleash on innocent civilians. And tonight’s event was one of those times. This one was a long time coming (the last local Kaiju Big Battel was two years ago at Avalon ) and so Kaiju’s version of Darth Vader, Dr. Cube, an evil incarnate creature with a helmet and a fugly mug, had declared, "Someone Must Die." (It said so on the event poster.) Since the KBB live spectacle is a series of matches determined by WWE-style shifting loyalties, always-fulfilled omens, and purposely-ridiculous subplots, you knew that some Kaiju-important character would kick the monster bucket. But who would it be?

That question was answered pretty quickly. After letting the 100s of elaborately costumed fans get settled into their general-admission seats and then inviting anyone to stand the "Danger Zone" (the area around the wrestling ring), thereby inciting a full-on cattle charge of giggly kids encircling the ring, Pablo Plantain, one-half the Plantain Twins, got mysteriously stabbed. This was during a tag-team match with his brother Pedro against the Apes of Wrath (Dr. Cube monsters Hell Monkey and the Grudyin). While Hell Monkey and the Grudyin continued to tear down a scaled model of the Prudential Center (marked PRODENTAIL), Pablo got rushed off to the fruit-hospital on a stretcher stenciled "Danger Happened."

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Comments
Danger happened
yeah, strange goo on your shirt? that's battel love, woman
By battelfriend on 05/29/2006 at 1:08:03
Danger happened
without openly delineating your disgust for the nerdy kids, your article sounds just like a match description, with passive-aggressive judgements in disguise as observations and maybe even some kinda nostalgia in there too. but none of this was clear because you were never brave enough to admit that your hatred for the nerds, which, as far as I could tell, was your only inspiration for writing this article the way you did, with some kind of attempt for some kind of glory days story that never went anywhere. so, what's it gonna be. will you convict yourself to the hatred of the harmless teenagers? or have you just written a lukewarm article with equal parts occasional cheapshots and sour grapes? you have to be either a shameless writer or boring one, but you have to pick one and commit to it.
By peco on 06/01/2006 at 11:29:20

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