Hachigakari is a Japanese television serial which English
meaning is “Active Raid”. The serial is computer animated and produced by the
IMS. Orange. This serial was totally
animated and makers used the latest technologies in it. Hanamichi is an old
concept of the stage. This is a Japanese word and it means the main flower
path. The Hanamichi is considered a wooden path and it reaches from the stage
to middle of the audience. Hanamichi and Hachigakari are two different terms
and they both relate with the theater and television.
The main difference
between Hanamichi and Hachigakari is so commendable. Hachigakari is a japans
series full of animation. Latest technology used to make the serial more
technical and full of the latest technical effects. Hanamichi is a japans old
and traditional way to present the dramas and theaters. Hanamichi can be a path
that connects with the stage and it also covers the middle of the audience. It
is a very old technique that presented in old theater plays. That path usually
used after the drama when all the drama artists come in the stage after theater
drama and people shower them with flowers.
Hanamichi stages also for the entry and exits of the actors.
The way usually used to appearance and entrance of the audience’s favorite
actor. These both terms are different from each other and they both represent their
specific area. The Hanamichi represents the closer experience of spectator and
people can see their favorite actors with less distance. These both terms
represent the dramas and theater and both are a way of entertainment. The
evolvement of Hachigakari into the Hanamichi is the theater and entertainment.
They both concepts are different from each other but both relate to
entertainment and theater. (Smithfield, 2018)
Reference of How
did Hachigakari evolve
into the Hanamichi
what is the
difference between the two
Smithfield, B. (2018, January 21). Hachiko: The dog who
continued to wait his owner for more than nine years after his death. Retrieved
from https://www.thevintagenews.com/2018/01/21/hachiko-the-dog-2