This Week in Anime
Smoke 'Em If You Got 'Em
by Lucas DeRuyter & Steve Jones,
This week, Lucas and Steve take a look at the history of smoking in anime, how it is used as a story telling device, and gush about their favorite anime smokers.
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed by the participants in this chatlog are not the views of Anime News Network.
Spoiler Warning for discussion of the series ahead.
FLCL.
Peacock streams World Conquest Zvezda Plot are unavailable to stream Stateside.
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Steve, recently my partner and I watched all of Wes Anderson's filmography, and I was captivated by a particular scene in his best film, Rushmore. In this movie, a very young Jason Schwartzman smokes a cigarette while taking the trash out at his crappy parttime job after blowing up his entire life due to his baggage. On top of being a very real and quietly devastating scene, it made me realize that we don't see a lot of smoking in media anymore!
This is for good reason, as smoking is just about the worst thing a person can do to their personal health. It's completely understandable that creators don't want to depict characters who would harm a viewer if they tried to emulate them, but thankfully, anime is already so far removed from reality that it's (hopefully) harder to pick up bad habits from these characters!

Why not? Or rather, what have I got to lose? It's a topic I'm already on the record defending in a Call of the Night Twitter/Bluesky avatar for the past 2.5 years has been a screenshot of Anko smoking from that same episode, so I suppose it's about time I put my cartoon cigarette where my mouth is.

There are layers of nuance here in what constitutes depiction versus endorsement, but I think we can all agree to draw the line at, say, a Flintstones commercial for Winston Cigarettes.



From my own experience working in a kitchen, the cooks who kept their intense and addictive tendencies down to only having to smoke one pack a day were some of the best guys and gals on the crew, and I think that's what Sanji's smoking habit plays into that real-world dynamic.
Conveniently, there's a perfect example of the power of a well-placed cigarette airing right now in the form of Kowloon Generic Romance.


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© 眉月じゅん/集英社・「九龍ジェネリックロマンス」製作委員会
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© 眉月じゅん/集英社・「九龍ジェネリックロマンス」製作委員会
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© 眉月じゅん/集英社・「九龍ジェネリックロマンス」製作委員会
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© 眉月じゅん/集英社・「九龍ジェネリックロマンス」製作委員会
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© Buena Vista Home Entertainment, Inc. © The Criterion Collection
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© Buena Vista Home Entertainment, Inc. © The Criterion Collection
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I brought this up in my Call of the Night review, but in the right hands, you can't deny the cinematic potential of smoking. Visually, it just makes a scene more interesting. The character is doing something with their hands. The wisps of smoke can frame a scene or draw attention to something else. There's symbolic potential. The glow of the embers can become a focal point or even a light source. Anko's introduction was a great example of all of that.
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© 2022コトヤマ・小学館/「よふかしのうた」製作委員会
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© 2022コトヤマ・小学館/「よふかしのうた」製作委員会
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© 2022コトヤマ・小学館/「よふかしのうた」製作委員会
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© 2022コトヤマ・小学館/「よふかしのうた」製作委員会
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We can't talk about Takeshi Koike and tobacco without bringing up his take on Lupin the Third's characters.




I'd also be remiss not to mention Sayo Yamamoto, who has never shied away from depicting adults and their vices. In addition to Fujiko Mine, here's a scene from Michiko & Hatchin that features someone rolling their cig—another relative rarity in this department.
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© 2008 manglobe / Caliente latino
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© 2008 manglobe / Caliente latino
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© 2008 manglobe / Caliente latino
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© 2008 manglobe / Caliente latino
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Along those lines, I like how Chainsaw Man uses Himeno's cigarette as a symbol for Aki grieving and taking up her mantle against her wishes, for better or worse.


This sequence informs the audience about Aki's character and, if we can extrapolate the symbolism around his smoking habit, how Himeno is an anchoring presence in his life before her ing. That's a good writing in a two-minute-long clip that hardly has any dialogue!
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© Rei Hiroe / Shogakukan • Black Lagoon Production Team
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© Rei Hiroe / Shogakukan • Black Lagoon Production Team
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© Rei Hiroe / Shogakukan • Black Lagoon Production Team
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© Rei Hiroe / Shogakukan • Black Lagoon Production Team
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While not necessarily titillating, I'd also like to shout out how the almost hazy visual direction in Baccano! is meant to evoke a smoky barroom or hidden speakeasies. Even if there's not a lot of on-screen smoking in that anime that I can recall, that artistic choice is excellent!









To that end, it's only fair for me to bring up a vehemently anti-smoking example that also happens to be one of my favorite anime episodes of all time. And that's the third episode of World Conquest Zvezda Plot.
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© hunting cap brothers/Aniplex,Project ZP
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© hunting cap brothers/Aniplex,Project ZP
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© hunting cap brothers/Aniplex,Project ZP
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© hunting cap brothers/Aniplex,Project ZP
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© hunting cap brothers/Aniplex,Project ZP
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© hunting cap brothers/Aniplex,Project ZP
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© hunting cap brothers/Aniplex,Project ZP
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© hunting cap brothers/Aniplex,Project ZP
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© hunting cap brothers/Aniplex,Project ZP
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© hunting cap brothers/Aniplex,Project ZP
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People who do anything less than that are getting, at best, a side eye from me!

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