Home > Reports > FanimeCon 2010 Convention Coverage Report

FanimeCon 2010 Convention Coverage Report

June 17th, 2010
Written By: Slade Hashimoto

Overview

FanimeCon 2010 started on a beautiful Friday morning on May 28th, lasting until May 31st for Memorial Day weekend.  Thousands of adults and teenagers alike swarmed the Downtown San Jose Convention Center to enjoy their Japan-filled-weekend.

The special guests for this year’s FanimeCon included the Visual Kei band LM.C, Halko Momoi, Daisuke Ishiwatari, Toshimichi Mori, Mamoru Yokota, FLOW, Karen Dyer, Reuben LangdonHiroyuki Yamaga, Carl Gustav Horn, Gilles Poitras, Jonathan Osborne, Ric Meyers, Keith Burgess and Ryan Gavigan.

FanimeCon first started out as a group of  anime clubs fifteen years ago in 1994 at California State University, Hayward. Today it has exploded as a leading convention on the West Coast with more than 15,000 attendees (according to their 2009 release).  FanimeCon catches the attention of approximately 2,000 new attendees each year with their new guests, events, and their famous Masquerade event.

Day One – Friday

FanimeCon started bright and early at 9:00AM. Cosplayers swarmed the main hall with groups and gatherings such as Heaven System, Capcom VS SNK, Fight Games, Avatar, and Tales Of (…). Friday also held anime shows like Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz, the re-made Jungle Emperor Leo 2009, Slayers, Akira, Baccano, and Durarara!!.

While there are always many things to do at FanimeCon, there are events that Fanime likes to highlight for con-goers, and they are generally where you can see the amazing guests that are invited. On Friday some of the guests got their time.

Jonathan Osborne had his “A Decade of Death” panel and Q&A in the Mariott starting at 5:00PM. Jonathan is also known as the “Man of 1,000 Deaths” for his many roles in anime voice acting with dying characters. If you aren’t one who knows much about anime, or a parent who was dragged along by your young ones, you could join the “Anime Expert” Gilles Poitras with his panel “Anime For Parents”. Gilles Poitras had written numerous book titles such as “The Anime Companion”, “Everything A Fan Needs To Know” and a routine writer for magazine Otaku USA and Newtype USA.

Other panels included “Anime is Pin-up!” with Keith Burgess; an anime voice actor, script writer, and graphic designer. His voice work included Street Fighter Alpha and Neon Genesis Evangelion movies, Dead Leaves and Karas.  “Reuben and CAPCOM – Mo-Cap and Action!” with Reuben Langdon.  Reuben is known for a lot of work, most notably Dante from the Devil May Cry series, in which he both was the motion capture actor and English voice actor. There was also a Kung-Fu extravaganza with Ric Meyers, a martial artist who worked with some documentaries and alongside Jackie Chan.

Toward the end of the day the music fest just began with the Japanese rock band FLOW in the Civic Auditorium. Their rocking out performance gathered a large crowd, filling out the Auditorium.  FLOW is comprised of 5 members KOHSHI (Vocal), KEIGO (Vocal, TAKE (Guitar), GOTS (Bass), and IWASAKI (Drums). They are known for their anime theme songs from shows like Naruto, Code Geass, Psalms of Planets, Eureka Seven, and Persona.

If music wasn’t your thing and you wanted to get some extra cash, or maybe wanted to find your Holy Grail item, at 8:00PM Fanime held its yearly Swap Meet. The swap meet is a treasure trove of used and new items that fans collected over time and now need to make a little room by selling their collections and goods.

Day 2 – Saturday

This is the big day for most conventions. Come Saturday morning the temperatures started to rise extremely high. Con-goers battled the heat by heading indoors for the opening of the Dealer’s Room starting at 10:00AM. The Dealer’s Room was packed full of people browsing around for the newest and coolest goods. Rows of vendor booths filled the large exhibit hall. Pokemon, Naruto, Bleach, K-ON, and more can be found stacked up, dangling, and taped down along the booths. You could buy the largest Pikachu plush or the cutest phone charm of your favorite anime character. The Dealer’s Room truly had it all.

Today was also the day of meeting up with the special guest Halko Momoi for Autographs. Halko Momoi is known as a spectacular musician and entertainer, for her roles in anime and video games such as Anise Tatlin from Tales of the Abyss, Komugi from Nurse Witch Komugi, and is also the star of her own Internet Video Channel called “Akihaba-Love”. She also founded a J-Pop label called AKIHABA LOVE RECORDS.

Later that night starting at 6:30PM came the biggest event of them all. As Fanime states “the cornerstone event of anime cons”. Thats right, the Fanime Masquerade! This year they had a whopping 46 entries. The crowd was packed, the stage was set, and the skits performed beautifully.

There were many spectacular performances. Some were extremely funny, some very dramatic. To top it off the cosplay was a sight to see as well with beautiful costumes being displayed across the stage. The winners of this excellent show are as follows:

  • Best Choreography, Group 24, Angel Hearts
  • Best Comedic Skit, Group 8, Super Yaoi Brothers
  • Best Dramatic Skit, Group 41, Paper Umbrella
  • Best of Division: Performance, Individual, Group 42, Animator
  • Best of Division: Performance, Group 11, The Coolest Geeks You Know
  • Junior/Youth Achievement, Group 0, Who’s Cosplay Production
  • Best of Division: Craftsmanship, Individual, Goup 16, ASKEW
  • Best of Division: Craftsmanship, Group, W5, Minna no Nur-Puppy
  • Best of Division: Advanced Craftsmanship, Individual, Group 7, Fujimoto from Face Full of Fire & We’re Not Twins
  • Best of Division: Advanced Craftsmanship, Group 10, LoLorado
  • Junior/Youth Achievement, Group 6, Spilled Milk Cosplay
  • **BEST OF SHOW** Group 32, 2D Costuming

Day 3 – Sunday

Sunday morning was the Grand World Cosplay Summit. There were many excellent Judges for the Cosplay Summit who were well qualified to Judge the event. The Judges were from the US Darryl Hwang, Die, Vince of Darkain Multimedia, Etaru, ThePrincessZelda and Tokyo Kitty and from Japan Yokota-san (TV Aichi), and Edo.

The winners were a pair of girls Kathryn Griffin and Krystal Stoner. They had a beautiful skit from Fushigi Yugi that did a choreographed dance with scroll ribbons to tell the story of their two characters.

After WCS, Consplayers stopped by the Artist Alley to check out the local artists and all of their fantastic work. Here one can buy prints, badges, buttons, bookmarks, and homemade goods and fanart. Many talented artists from around the US and locally come to sell their goods to the public.

They also had the Arcade hall full of different type of games for those avid gamers (much like us here at Consplayers!). Their room had standard Arcade style games, racing games, Para Para, Guitar Hero, Shooting Arcades and Dance Dance Revolution. There was the LAN/TV grouping where you could trade your ID for a controller to play some classics or fight in a Super Smash Bros. tournament.  There was also a table top section for card game classics like Apples to Apples, Magic the Gathering, and Pokemon. You could also play the traditional Table Top Role Play Games like Dungeons & Dragons as well. Overall there was something for everyone in this fun filled room.

Sunday night also held FanimeCon 2010’s Black and White Ball. It started at 6:00PM at the Fairmont Hotel Imperial Ballroom. It is typically a formal dance that starts out Ball-esque but quickly degenerates into another rave. Many cosplayers go dressed in formal attire such as tuxedos, suits, dresses, and gowns. Some even cosplay as fancified versions of characters and bring their dates to dance with.

Day 4 – Monday

Monday is the last day of Fanime and come noon everyone is busy checking out of their hotels. This Fanime was no exception with busy afternoons and hotel lobbys being full of luggage, costumes, and sewing machines. This is typically the best time to head over to the Dealer’s Hall and get some last minute bargaining before they also pack up and leave. Giving some final farewells, Consplayers took their leave as well. That concluded the 2010 FanimeCon convention for us!

Conclusion

Overall Fanime was an excellent convention. They had wonderful guests and great panels to attend. You can always find something worth your wallet in the Dealers Room. The cosplays are spectacular, the shows are grand. A very welcomed addition was the Express Walkway Lanes and also the Massage Booths. A popular complaint was the extremity of the Weapons Policy (which had written rules that were vague and threatened to damage costumes with their “bonding” of props to costumes). Not really within their control are the Convention Center food prices, which were charging $9.00 for a microwaved hotdog, bag of chips, and soda. They also only accepted cash which was disappointing. Luckily the San Jose Convention Center is surrounded by a multitude of restaurants for the con-goer to dine at. We are looking forward to Fanime 2011 and always recommend this convention to everyone as one of the, if not the best West Coast conventions.

Click Above To See More Fanime 2010 Con Photos!

consplayers Reports

Comments are closed.