Sexual
Tropical locales such as beaches are convenient places to showcase sexual fanservice.
The typically understood definition is inclusion of racy or sexual content (usually female, but also male[4]) to titillate the viewer, such as nudity, and other forms of eye candy[1][2]. Lesbian or gay activity is another form of fan service. Shower scenes[1] are very common in movies, and in anime of the 1980s and 1990s, while many more recent TV series use trips to onsen (Japanese hot springs) or "obligatory" holiday episodes. These latter are often to tropical locales, in order to showcase the characters in bathing suits[2]; all aim to depict characters in states of relative undress when it would otherwise be out of place with the tone of a series. In anime, two common types of fanservice are the panty shot and jiggling breasts. Fan service permeates almost all anime, but obvious examples can be seen in the OVA series Eiken, as well as the series Tenjo Tenge. Even shōnen anime such as Naruto, Bleach and One Piece will occasionally contain sexual fan service. Similarly, Studio Fantasia's Agent Aika and Najica Blitz Tactics are known as the epitome of the panty-shot anime. A third type is the nude transformation sequence, first introduced in Go Nagai's Cutie Honey (1973–1974). One of the most renowned examples of fan service is the Chun-Li shower scene in Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie. These scenes were subsequently cut from the U.S. translation of the film, but were added back in the newest DVD release of the movie. First panty shot scene was in Astroboy in 1963. These are all seen as fan service, but can also be used for non-sexual references, like for comedy. Cosplay
Characters drawn wearing maid uniforms are a common form of fan service.
In anime and manga, another type of fan service is having one or more of the characters cosplay, usually female, particularly in a costume that is part of a Japanese clothing fetish. Common costumes include:
Side charactersSome television series make a habit of bringing back previously-introduced minor characters that audiences particularly loved or found amusing. Examples include the frequent returns of the Duane Dibbley alter-ego character in Red Dwarf, or the development of "That Man" in Excel Saga from a one-shot gag character into a main antagonist. CameoOften, movies will attempt to include cameo appearances by prominent figures who are or were associated with the work on which it is based. This either takes the form of actual appearances or character names. In the popular anime series Excel Saga, adapted from the manga of the same name by Koushi Rikudou, the afro-wearing producer "Nabeshin" (Shinichi Watanabe) is a regular character with superhero-like powers (he also appears in the related anime Puni-Puni Poemy.) Ken Akamatsu appeared in the Christmas and Spring special episodes of the Love Hina anime along with the relevant volumes of the manga. Akamatsu, being the creator of the original manga, has his studio featured and has a small speaking role at the end of the episode. Stan Lee makes regular cameo appearances in movies based on Marvel Comics characters that he created: in the crowd scene in Spider-Man, reprised with a speaking part in Spider-Man 2; as a security guard alongside Lou Ferrigno in Hulk; as a man mowing his lawn in X-Men: The Last Stand; as the postman Willie Lumpkin in Fantastic Four; and as "Hef", a Hugh Hefner sendup, in Iron Man. The Aliens vs. Predator movie included a character named Mark Verheiden[5]—the writer of the early Aliens comic book series as well as the comic book on which the movie is based. The inclusion of Chewbacca in Star Wars: Episode 3 - Revenge of the Sith, and indeed the inclusion of Wookiees in general could be considered fanservice as their inclusion does little to advance the plot, but show characters that the audience is already familiar with. TechnicalsHeavily used in much of science fiction, these are technical details sometimes bordering on arcane knowledge that hardcore fans are versed in, to show an author (often an admitted fanboy/fangirl themselves) pays attention to detail. For example, Lagrange points in Gundam, the CZ-75 pistol in Gunsmith Cats, or the use of an SSH exploit in The Matrix Reloaded. Sometimes fictional technology invented by another author is used in this way; for instance the ansible in Ender's Game is a reference to Ursula K. Le Guin's Hainish Cycle. There are similar references in Doctor Who to "reversing the polarity of the neutron flow". HomageOften, a movie or television show will make a pastiche reference to another work of which the creators are particularly fond. Examples can be found in movies by Quentin Tarantino and Kevin Smith, both of whom are admitted fanboys. Quentin Tarantino himself has been paid homage to by animation: in the second episode of Aaron MacGruder's The Boondocks, which features Charlie Murphy (voice-acting Ed Wuncler III, a privileged white soldier returned from Iraq), his partner, Gin Rummy (voiced by Samuel L. Jackson) berates the main characters with part of a speech used by Jules Winfield, Jackson's hitman character in Tarantino's Pulp Fiction. Star Trek, Star Wars, and the Matrix trilogy are perpetual choices for homage. The Weyland-Yutani logo from Aliens appears several times on weapons in Joss Whedon's Firefly. Other homages exist that refer to works that have receded into fan nostalgia. Also, many remakes of movies employ throwaway lines that serve nothing more than to "tip the hat" to the original classic:
References
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