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Role Model?
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Japanese adult video star turned TV Tarento
Ai
Iijima has been almost impossible to avoid over the
past year.
Aside from her ubiquitous appearance on the
countless variety shows that clog the TV
schedules, her autobiographical bestseller
(published last autumn) which has sold over a
million copies here in Japan has been adapted not
only into a four hour TV drama screened last month,
but also as a feature film to be released October
2O through Toho Films.
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This best selling memoir Platonic Sex,
follows in the footsteps of other "confessional"
autobiographies such as model Anna Umemiya's
Minikui Ahiru No Ko Datta Watashi (I Was An
Ugly Duckling) and novelist Yu Miri's
Inochi which describes how she became a
single mother while caring for a dying former
lover.
Platonic Sex tells the story of how a young girl,
then known as Mitsuko Ishi, was driven by away
from home by the pressure to excel at school that
her parents placed on her, and found herself on a
slippery slope that led from hanging out in
discos to enjo kosai or "compensated companionship",
hostessing, and finally to entering the porn industry.
Making over 100 porn
films, including classic titles such as T
Back Panty Queen , Used Panty of Sister
in Law and Ai's Raped Maniac in two
years Ai Iijima, as she was by now known, quickly
established herself as the "queen of adult
videos." She quit the porn business while still
on top, so to speak, and started a career as a TV
personality.
Known for her straight talking, Iijima holds
nothing back and is open about being raped when
she was a young girl, going through an
abortion, as well as details about the Japanese
porn industry.
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16 year old high schooler Saki Kagami
was chosen from 1200 young hopefuls who
auditioned to play the role of Aoi, who is based
upon Iijima, in the movie adaption of the book.
When asked how she felt when she read the book,
Kagami said that it really made her think about
who she was, and that in a time when teenagers
often feel that they are completely alone she
really identified with what Iijima went through,
and help her believe she too could change her
life.
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 Iijima and Kagami |
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A spokesperson from Fuji TV, which produced the
TV adaptation of the book, stated that "although
the content of the book is very strong, the themes
of loneliness and anxiety are universal ones."
Indeed, the book has become something of a "bible"
for a whole generation of teenage girls, not only
in Japan, but in Taiwan and Korea too. In fact
High School girls will be able to see the movie
for the discount price of ¥1000 during the
first week of its release, ensuring that Iijima's
"message" gets through to those she feels can
learn from her experiences, and that the movie
has a good opening box office.
But what is Iijima's message? Is a former porn
star really the right kind of role model for Asia's
troubled generation of teenage girls?
Iijima and
her fans claim the message isn't "How to use the
sex industry to get what you want," but how to
overcome great obstacles and see the value of
yourself. Some of the people who have written
reviews of the book on amazon.co.jp complain
that Iijima doesn't spell out clearly enough
that selling yourself is not good. However, perhaps
in Iijima, Japan's teenage girls have found
someone with whom they can identify and respect
because she tells it how it is rather than just
preaching at them.
Platonic Sex is showing at Takarazuka Cinema from
Oct 27
10/2001
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