|
Tentacle rape is a concept found in some erotic horror hentai titles, where various tentacled monsters violently rape or otherwise impale young women (or, less commonly, men).
According to Toshio Maeda, whose anime Urotsukidoji pioneered the concept of tentacle porn, explained that he invented the practice to get around strict Japanese censorship regulations. These regulations prohibit the depiction of the penis but apparently do not prohibit showing sexual penetration by a tentacle or similar (often robotic) appendage.
Examples include:
- The Urotsukidoji Saga - Starting in 1987 the Overfiend series is the most well-known title in the genre.
- La Blue Girl - a series of films that moved from animation to live action.
- Injukyoshi ("Obscene Beast Teacher") - a live action film.
- Shokushu High School - an online "intercatove" site where you can chose your route through the school all of which usually rapidly turn into alien tentacles attacks on the schoolgirls.
At times, the genre also seems to exploit the more controversial realms of bodice ripper genre, particularly rape fantasies, with the "safety" that the scenes being depicted are so absurd or fanciful they do not have parallels in the real world. The genre is sometimes called "Tentacle Sex" or "Monster Sex" if the depiction is at all consensual.
Tentacled creatures have appeared in Japanese erotica long before animated pornography appeared; among the most famous of the early instances (and perhaps the first) is a Hokusai (the original creator of manga) woodcut called The Dream of the Fisherman's Wife, depicting a woman entwined and sexually molested by a pair of octopuses. This woodcut arose in the Edo period in Japan when Shinto was making a resurgence and the resulting Animism and a more playful attitude to sexuality combined powerfully in Hokusai's piece. It is a celebrated example of shunga and has been reworked by a number of artists including:
- Victorian artist David Laity reworked the woodcut into a painting of the same name.
- Masami Teraoka brought the image up to date with his 2001 work "Sarah and Octopus/Seventh Heaven (http://www.lava.net/~artbeat/prints.html) part of his "Waves and Plagues" collection.
The topic is also ripe for parody as shown by such things as:
References
- Japan SAQ (http://www3.tky.3web.ne.jp/~edjacob/saq.html) - seldom asked questions about Japan
- Manga Artist Interview Series (http://www.bigempire.com/sake/manga1.html) Part I, Sake-Drenched Postcards - interview with Toshio Maeda.
External links
|