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Official Artist
Mark Allen
Director , Screenwriter , Composer
542,311 views| 255  Posts

Cosplay

I visited the anime expo, Los Angeles, this weekend.

As someone who creates and directs fantasy entertainment, I'm always curious as to who the audience is and what they are responding to. 

cosplay and characters

Being someone who invents characters, I think the ultimate goal would be to create a character people connect with on some level so strongly with that they want to embody them.

By "connect" - I don't mean they necessary feel the character is themselves, but the character takes them into a realm of thought where they enjoy living for a while.  It could be something they idealize as much as it could be something they fear.  It could be also just be something that simply opens up their imagination.

I think often people worry about the affect certain characters and games have on "youth" - but they miss the point that you cannot always take a literal interpretation of interest in characters. 

Just because someone is interested in a creature that kills people - doesn't mean "the kid" wants to kill people.  It is simply that the character is opening up their imagination and that is a fun (perhaps cathartic) experience to have.

Identification and rituals

Beyond identifying with the character - the cosplayers are mostly identifying with each-other.

They are their own biggest fans. 

Like any culture - there are rituals which identify them.  Many of the cosplayers here do not know eachother, yet they know their roles and therefore how to interact with eachother.

A secret handshake among children is no different than knowing the appropriate fork to use for the salad among the elite.  The little gestures and symbolic motions let us know that we're part of the pack.

The value of finding a place to belong is especially valuable for those who are not otherwise inclined to have one.

shame and beauty

One of the greatest things about cosplayers is that many of these people are not the kind of people who would become celebrities. 

But - when they wear the outfits, they are allowed to act as someone who is...  and by shedding that acquired shame of self, the act becomes a reality - they are able to shine and the photographers flock.  Watching someone discover their beauty is an enchanting thing. 

photographs and memories

While the cosplayers are there to be seen and photo'd... you'll notice that I never asked anyone to pose -  these are all stolen moments while they posed for others.  Perhaps it's because I'm not as much of a snapshot photographer or documentarian as much as I am someone who arranges the scene... or, perhaps, it's my own shyness and uncertainty of belonging.

almost 16 years ago 0 likes  23 comments  0 shares
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i did cosplay once,the very first event i did actually.i played a female robot from austin powers,the second thing i did from cos play was dress in a psycho nurse uniform for another interactive event.it was so fun,so fun.the third thing i played was a dominatrix with a whip,like catwoman for the launch of a new club.i did these for fun during college to pay my bills!
almost 16 years ago
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Thank u for writing thiseassy~ I like your analysis on cosplay too~~U get the right points~ Nowadays' cosplay have different mind on this~~I was starting playing cosplay at 1999...but some of them i know just so simply becos like the ani/com's characters are so cool or beauty and then people wanna imitate them, also like u said can be have another identy for themselves too~I think that is a kind of satisfication for themselve... Cosplay this culture was started at japan, the aim at that time just for promotion only.U know some people like the ani/com's will creat some new story and products to that characters too~~Then cosplayes can help for promote it~~ Now sometimes dont care about that ....just for fun and enjoy it is ok~~ I may cos at ani/com too~will u a HK??
almost 16 years ago
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Yes, to a couple of the comments... if you're at the expo there is no denying or hiding the tremendous Japan influence there. I just didn't go into that much in the blog as it was off topic. But there are tons of booths which are simply "get all the cool things you want from japan here!" I also didn't talk much about the fashion even though I took a bunch of picture of just the outfits for sale which were really cool and less cosplay than just anime influenced fashion - something I find really great.
almost 16 years ago
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ahh, I dropped by for a little bit one night. prob would've been more fun during the day! :P
almost 16 years ago
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wow hey mark so where was this? anaheim? looks fun, always wanted to do this sorta thing. but never got the chance... should get a buncha ppl to represent AnD next time. haha so who did you go as? =]
almost 16 years ago
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This was at the Convention Center in DTLA. I'm sure there will be some cosplay at comicon in San Diego next week - you should check that out, Quinn. What did I go as? uh... you know, I have this thing that I just cannot immitate someone else's thing... so I will not be a cosplayer... but that doesn't stop me from enjoying the show and spirit of it.
almost 16 years ago
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does that mean u've never been a pumpkin before during halloween Mark?aw.
almost 16 years ago
Mylovepuzzle ef mylovepuzzle
OMG ,She really got a pumpkin. . . HA
almost 16 years ago
Photo 22998
Sorica7 - Well... that's sort of an interesting question.... their intention is not to advertise - but to celebrate. They are, of course, advertising the franchicse they cosplay though. This is probably why they're not being sued to the ground. :) Well, in actuality - if you are doing something for non-profit, educational purposes only using less than 10% of the material, no trade secrets and not interfering with the rights owner's sales - then you're pretty safe. The cosplayers making the costumes themselves would actually fall into this "fair use" description. (Which, by the way, is what fair use means... I think some people have wildly misinterpreted that legal term - but it's very clear... furthermore, the US respects the copywrite of other countries and I'm not sure Japan has a fair use clause.) Anyway - so the cosplayers are safe. Now - the people who would be operating in the legal grey zone would be the young artists in the artist gallery who are selling their drawings of the characters. For this I think there might be some sort of understanding that conventions are a safe ground - but it's not a legal understanding - just a looking the other way - but copywrite owners are responsible for protecting their brand and if they don't, they'll lose it... so... there would come a time that someone would have to be sued. That usually happens when someone does something like a porn version of pokeman or something th rights owners feel upsets their brand. There is also room for "parody" - but that's very gray area. And none of this is really what you commented on or ask, but I think it's an interesting topic anyway. About advertising.... the answer is yes... they are advertising themselves, their groups, and their characters all at once - yet totally unintentionally.
almost 16 years ago
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If anyone wants to see a LOT more cosplay photos and find out more, thre is an obvious but good website: www.cosplay.com that has a whole community (worldwide) of cosplayers.
almost 16 years ago

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Languages Spoken
english
Location (City, Country)
Los Angeles, United States
Gender
male
Member Since
April 13, 2007