Aokigahara in popular culture
Aokigahara is frequently featured in popular culture due its historic association with "yūrei" or ghosts of the dead in Japanese mythology and is a notoriously common suicide site (in which 54 took place in 2010).[1] The forest is reportedly the most popular site for suicide in Japan, and among the top three most popular sites for suicide in the world. Statistics vary, but there were around 30 suicides documented every year during the period leading up to 1988.[2]
The rate of suicide has led officials to place a sign at the forest's entry, written in Japanese, urging suicidal visitors to seek help and not take their own lives. Annual body searches have been conducted by police, volunteers, and attendant journalists since 1970.[3]
This page lists Aokigahara in popular culture from both within Japan and abroad. It is not an exhaustive list of the many games, movies, manga and other cultural products that mention Aokigahara.
Aokigahara references in media
Anime and manga
- In the anime series Mazinger Z, Professor Juzo Kabuto's laboratory is set right next to Aokigahara, and he lives not too far from there with his grandsons Koji and Shiro.
- In the anime series Transformers: Super-God Masterforce, the location of the Cybertrons' main base is in Aokigahara.
- In the second season of Yowamushi Pedal, the first half of Day 3 of the 41st Inter High takes place on Route 139, and passes through the Fuji Five Lakes and Aokigahara
- In the anime and manga series The Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service, the central characters meet and discover their various supernatural talents while taking part in a Buddhist voluntary project to find and remove the bodies of people who have killed themselves in the forest.
- In the anime series Samurai Deeper Kyo, Demon-eyes Kyo's former body is hidden in Aokigahara, referred to as the "Sea of Trees" in the anime.
Films
- Forest of the Living Dead (2010), also known outside of the United States as The Forest, depicts the enacted vengeance of a jilted covergirl who supernaturally transforms into a demonic spirit when she kills herself in Aokigahara Jukai.
- In the American movie Grave Halloween (2013), a young woman journeys to Aokigahara with friends to find the body of her mother (who committed suicide there). A Found footage camera documents paranormal events in the forest.
- In the American movie 47 Ronin (2013), a half-breed servant named Kai (played by Keanu Reeves), servant to a provincial lord, was left as a child by his mother to die in the Aokigahara forest, where he is found by a race of demons. They raise him to manhood and teach him their supernatural ways of killing.
- In the American movie The Sea of Trees (2015), directed by Gus Van Sant, an American man (played by Matthew McConaughey) travels to Aokigahara to kill himself and meets a Japanese man (played by Ken Watanabe) who has the same thoughts.
- In the American film The Forest (2016), a woman (played by Natalie Dormer) travels to a ghost-filled Aokigahara to save her twin sister (also played by Dormer).
- In the Canadian film The People Garden (2016), directed by Nadia Litz, a Canadian woman travels to Japan and discovers her boyfriend has gone missing in the forest and is presumed dead.
Games
- In the fighting game Akatsuki Blitzkampf, the protagonist Akatsuki's stage is set in the bank of Lake Sai and the beginning of Aokigahara.
- Mount Hikami, the setting of the Wii U video game Fatal Frame: Maiden of Black Water, is based on Aokigahara.
- Aokigahara, referred to as the Sea of Trees in the Japanese version and Fuji Forest in English, appears in Inazuma Eleven 2 as the location of Aliea Academy's secret laboratory.
Literature
(Alphabetical by author's surname)
- Suicide Forest (World's Scariest Places) by Jeremy Bates is a 2015 horror novel that takes place inside the forest.[4]
- The Three: A Novel by Sarah Lotz is a 2014 novel that features Aokigahara as a place where several characters perished, either in plane crashes or by choice.[5]
- Kuroi Jukai (Black Sea of Trees) by Seichō Matsumoto is a 1960 novel that refers to the popularity of the forest as a suicide spot.[6]
- The Sea of Trees by Yannick Murphy is a 1997 novel about a young girl detained in an isolation camp during World War II.[7]
Music
- The mixtape "Grey Sheep II" by $uicideboy$ includes a track called "AOKIGAHARA"
- The album The Sea of Trees (2015) by Secret Grief is named after the forest and includes a track called "Aokigahara".
- Japanese metal band Dir En Grey includes an artist rendering of the forest on the cover of its album Dum Spiro Spero.
- The Album "Aokigahara" by Austrian Black Metal band Harakiri for the Sky was named after the forest.
- The song "Kuroi Ledge" (2013) by post-hardcore outfit A Lot Like Birds makes reference to the book named after the forest
- The song "Scorned (Aokigahara)" by Greek black/death metal band Burial Hordes directly references the forest.
- The album "Aokigahara Online" by Floridian vaporwave artist of the same name, in a play on words between America Online and Aokigahara
- The Japanese noise collective "Shroud of vapour" recorded three sessions in the forest, two of which appear on the album Suicide Forest Sessions.
- In a song by the VOCALOID producer Neru, Yasashii Hito ni Naritai / I Want to Become a Kind Person, one of the lines translates to online games, the famous sea of trees, bullying, aphorism.
- The song "Sea of Trees" (2013) by American Black Metal band Esoteric Burial depicts a psychometric paranormal event taking place in the forest and deals with the concept of internal struggle relative to the human experience.
- The album "Floor to Sky" (2013) by Durham, NC band Prypyat (now Beauty World) features a song entitled "Jukai". Lyrics refer to the sea of trees and death.
- Austin, TX hardcore band Cutting Losses have a track called "Jukai" on their album "Endless" (2011).
References
- ↑ Gilhooly, Rob (26 June 2011). "Inside Japan's 'Suicide Forest'". Japan Times. p. 7.
- ↑ Takahashi, Yoshitomo (1988). "EJ383602 - Aokigahara-jukai: Suicide and Amnesia in Mt. Fuji's Black Forest". Education Resources Information Center (ERIC). Retrieved September 20, 2008.
- ↑ "Kyodo News: 'Suicide forest' helps skew Yamanashi's statistics". Japan Times. May 9, 2012. p. 3.
- ↑ Bates, Jeremy (February 23, 2015). Suicide Forest (World's Scariest Places) (First; Hardcover ed.). Ghillinnein Books. ISBN 978-0993764684.
- ↑ Lotz, Sarah (May 20, 2014). The Three: A Novel (First; Hardcover ed.). Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 978-0316242905.
- ↑ Seichō Matsumoto (2009). Kuroi Jukai (Black Sea of Trees). Tōkyō: Bungeishunjū. ISBN 978-4167697235. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
- ↑ Murphy, Yannick (May 14, 1997). The Sea of Trees (First; Hardcover ed.). Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0395850121.