Kagerou Shinjuku RARE
Kagerou: Shinjuka,album, review, tracklist, mp3, lyrics.
—, There is something creepy about people in jars., even. So just like most everything else people find creepy for various reasons, writers like putting people in jars. Experimentation, containment, study,, medical reasons or just plain old sucking out their. Some writers just love putting people in jars, and especially love comparing them to insects or pickled specimens. The people themselves are almost always alive, but unconscious, usually in some form of.
If these are being used to make, it's often easy to tell when they're at full power, as it's quite common for the specimen to. Oh, call them pods, tanks, containment units or chambers all you like. These are people in jars.
If the goal is specifically to extract some resource from the people, it's a form of. This is often how, but is absolutely nothing like any equivalents. Compare,, and, a gender-specific form of this trope.
See for the audience's reaction. •: Aleister Crowley floats upside-down in one, having his entire body save his consciousness rely entirely on machinery. In Volume 22 of the novels, however, it's revealed that he may be capable of omnipresence, appearing before Fiamma of the Right to while simultaneously still being in his. • In 's second season, the comatose Princess Asseylum is seen like this after having been shot by Saazbaum at the end of the first part. She wakes up and leaves the pod towards the end, and is not exactly happy when she learns what Slaine has been doing during her coma. •: Metal Face was in one after his big fight with Teppei. During the Season 15 'Gotei 13 Invading Army' arc Kagerosa Inaba is shown keeping reigai in large liquid-filled cylinders while performing experiments on them.
In episode 336 both Kagerosa and Nozomi are shown inside the tubes as Kagerosa tries to fuse them together. •: In a flashback, Rosette tries to scare her brother Joshua away from joining the order by warning him that they'll conduct experiments on him, and he's 'gonna end up pickled in formaldehyde!' The anime shows a scene in her imagination of Joshua floating naked in a jar while a looks on with a creepy grin. There was also the other five Apostles that the Sinners kept in jars, and the clone of Azmaria's foster father's wife. •: Freeza's forces have a few types of these, all of which use to greatly accelerate healing.
Celty's head is kept in a little people jar. •: Asami is put in a tank as a form of being Brainwashed. •: It turns out that the humans who survived the ecological collapse were modified humans left behind and grown from the cells of 'proxies,' creatures at the heart of each city, meaning everyone probably started this way. The proxies themselves, or at least the one from Romdeau, were kept in people jars as well. •: The first anime has the chimera clone of Tucker's dead daughter Nina. •: Plenty of unfinished hanging out in jars.
And one of the few instances where you actually see someone leaving one of the jars without someone having to smash said jar first. • La Verite: In Episode 11 Taro finds Mariel stored in a jar of liquid in an underground room. •: After their deaths, and being spat back out of the Daze, Takane and Haruka were put into large tanks beneath the school basement. Haruka (now ) was woken up, but Takane's consciousness was somehow separated from her body, resulting in her transformation into (and vicious ) Ene. • has Mukuro chained in a jar after certain plot points. •: The dead body of Fate Testarossa's older sister Alicia or better said, the girl Fate was cloned from is kept in a jar. Also, in, there are scores of said girls in Scaglietti's lair, which are revealed to be his illegally-created minions, and some broken in his abandoned labs; this has something to do with the forbidden research of the first season, as well as its presumed-dead.
•: Noel and Coco are imprisoned in underwater fish tanks. Gackto also wants to trap the girls in this. •: In the Shinjuku arc, Rain Mikamura is briefly mind controlled into walking inside an odd lair containing several people in jars like this, who happen to be the crewmates of other Gundam Fighters (Chibodee's, Argo's jailer Natasha, Sai Saici's tutors Keiun and Zuisen, and George's Raymond; she probably would've 'joined' them, had she not woken up at the last second.
Then, she frees them from their collective before they're forcefully infected with the DG Cells. • Later, an injured Allenby Beardsley is briefly kept in a 'jar' before she's into fighting Domon and Rain in the Rantao Island Battle Royale • and: Several characters were grown in jars.
They all have issues. • In, the that were used to power up the huge device Angel Halo were put in a trance and then locked inside pods in the Halo itself.
• The anime has this. We find out that a majority of Monsters were born in test tubes. Moo was engineered to be a to end the Last War, but was too strong to control. This ends up disturbing the characters when they eventually find a Monster manufacturing plant, with Mocchi asking if he was born there. •: Orochimaru's bases often have people in jars in them as experiments.
A more recent one is Suigetsu, who is released by Sasuke to join him. •: • Rei spent long time floating in a jar filled with LCL. Later dozens of mindless clones of Rei grown as substitute Eva pilots showed up. • It's implied that there is a similar tank full of Kaworu clones, as Units 05-13 use Kaworu-powered dummy plugs. In the manga, we see the original in a jar. • (Mou hitori no kimi e): The people from the possible future tried to put Haruka in a people jar.
•: In chapter 839, Sanji is horrified to discover a room in the Germa Kingdom full of all kinds of soldiers in capsules. •: Melfina, climbed into a tank naked to provide special navigation. • In, all of the clones are kept like this. Much of Mewtwo's such life is shown. •: Lord Renard planned to used followers from the Browning Church to power a to annihilate the city of St.
Grendel, home to the Church of Mauser. He himself is actually a Mauser inquisitor, and promptly when he finds out that Pacifica and her party are in the area. • OVA: The Asgard ranch had these. • OAV: Ryoko ends up put in one of these via Kagato. She releases herself when Tenchi is almost killed. And almost at the same time, Mihoshi finds Washu in a similar situation, only it's a.
•: Former Lordgenome is revived as a 'biological computer' after the, which means he's now living life as a -style head in a jar. This was also his, as he started relaying truth and about the Anti-Spirals and the series' backstory.
In the very end, he does get his body back, and goes out in. •: In the manga version of the flashback, after the crew studied Tessla so extensively that they gave her cancer and she died, they dissected her corpse and left it floating in a giant jar. Where Vash and Knives found it, some years later, prompting cute little Knives' and determination to. • Plus all the normal plants live in big glass bulbs and produce goods and energy. They're not human, but they are people. • Manga Knives recovers in one.
Comes out naked. Does not seem to care. •: Several Moonrace people are kept in jars and in suspended animation.
Two of them are Queen Dianna Soleil and Teteth Halleh's mother Linda (it's all but stated that Teteth's reason to fight the heroes was to wake her up). •: Cheza was in a jar being studied by Cher Degre before she got busted out by Darcia. In this case, she's not being imprisoned — just studied and kept alive. The second time she gets put in a jar, it follows the trope much more closely because 1) she's been forcibly taken, 2) her Kiba has also been locked in a nearby jar and is having his blood drained out, and 3) Jagara and her guests are drinking WOLF BLOOD in front of her, which may or may not be Kiba's. Did I mention that spilled wolf's blood in general triggers Cheza's •: Subverted.
The lab in Kaiba Corp's basement is meant for testing holographic projectors, so none of the monsters floating inside the glass tubes are real. There is an actual person in one of the tubes, but he put himself in there as a practical joke and can easily let himself back out. •: After being cut in half, Hiei is put in a tank to heal. • The all-too-brief 'Stealing Thunder' arc of had the entire metahuman community put in jars, with a few exceptions—mostly escapees and specific heroes that he needed for his own purposes. This was achieved by taking over the mind of Johnny Thunder and recalling the Thunderbolt genie from Jakeem Thunder. • had quite a few of the 'humans are bugs' variety.
One involved an alien lab tech getting scolded by his mentor for putting 'two incompatible species in the Earth Terrarium', panning to a tiny human in a terrarium getting mauled by a tiny bear. Another one has one giant alien reminding the other to poke holes in the jar.
• Then there was the incidents with the Hatfields and McCoys being put in the same jar, and On The Sixth Day, when God was adding Humans to his recipe for Earth, Jerks in a spice jar. • And the one where a boy liberates a genie and uses his first two wishes to put his parents in jars. The third wish is just the icing on the cake.
• In, kidnapped the world's greatest geniuses, imprisoned them in pods and mind-controlled them into working for him. : The Hell is this place?: It's a computer.
A neural network of ridealongs inside cryogenically frozen geniuses. A super-cooled processor made of human brains—and every one of them has at least three PhDs at the end of their name. We're looking at the smartest people in the world.: Oh, Lex. You never did like competition. • In: The Conqueror Worm, the hollow mountain under Hunte Castle is full of grotesque homunculi in jars, left behind by and their experiments.
• Abe Sapien's origin story was that he was found by workers underneath a hospital in Washington DC, floating in a suspended animation tank with a note that had the date of Abraham Lincoln's assassination and the word icthyos sapien. •: When he decided to try to ruin Tony Stark's life a second time, Obadiah Stane kidnapped several of his friends and colleagues, and imprisoned them in tubes in a state of suspended animation. The room in which these people jars were in was also rigged with motion sensors that, once activated, would cause the occupants to be, in the event Iron Man attempted a rescue.
Stane didn't quite count on catching Tony in just the right position to permit him to disable the trap with his, though. • In, Ramona's 7th evil ex, Gideon has some sort of big spaceship thing, in which he keeps his OWN 7 evil exes frozen in tubes, awaiting the day they will go out with him. • Young Clark Kent from the: Secret Identities after being captured by the American Government wakes up floating in one and surrounded by dozens of similar jars containing the murdered victims of others from infants to adults that the government had captured and experimented on. • After is infected with the zombie virus, keeps him in one of these until he can find a cure, as seen in Amazing #622. •: Rei spent most part of chapter 8 stuck inside a transparent vat filled with LCL while her body healed and her most recent memories were uploaded to her clones.
•: In the sequel Rei spends a while floating inside a cylindrical transparent tube, wondering whether she should terminate the remaining Yui clones -and finally becoming her own person- or leave them alone in case her current body gets destroyed in battle. Later the remaining clones appear, floating in their liquid-filled tank. •: Rei spends several scenes floating inside a transparent vat filled with LCL, healing her body or downloading her memories in her clones' brains.
•: In the Apex, the core of the four Quadrants. There's the first five failed Takato bodies, a spot for the sixth one:, the seventh one:, and a spot for the eighth one: Takato •, naturally, showcases Supers from the Golden Era in these, particularly in the first two parts. • Thunderstorm of plays with this - there are several people in one jar.
• In, it turns out that the HCS was 'killing' nations by shutting off their healing abilities, shooting them up with deadly poison, and freezing them into stasis in a pod. It's revealed later that the only reason they bothered preserving them instead of killing the nations outright is that they were afraid doing so would somehow hurt the people living in the nations. • In the first chapters of, Rei and her clones are seen several times floating in their fluid-filled tank. • In chapter 20 of, the clones of Rei are seen swimming inside their huge liquid-filled tank (and trying to break the glass to escape). • In, Rei's clones are shown floating in their “aquarium” right after defeat. •: In a less squicky moment, Luke Skywalker recovers from ice monster injuries and near hypothermia in a bacta tank. • The and had clones in jars.
On Kamino, the cloned fetuses are grown in pods filled with nutrients. Pretty creepy, but even worse is the part about the clones' training: 'If clones showed any signs of abnormality, they often mysteriously disappeared in the late hours of night. Crack Hardware Fingerprint Generator here. This was the case of a batch of young clones whose vision was not 100% perfect.'
• Han Solo getting frozen in carbonite could be seen as a variation of the trope. • puts the protagonist into a jar while a surgical robot fixes a large gash in his leg.
• reconstructed the rest of Leeloo around her hand. Later, the heroes are shown recuperating in the said jar. Hp 510 Audio Drivers Free Download. • The had this. Colonel Stryker collected mutants in glass tanks, where they stayed naked in suspended animation and covered in white powder.
Stryker's own son was one of these. •: Various Ripley clones, in jars. Since the Ripleys in question are the least successful of a batch of, this is stretching the definition of 'people' quite a bit. • The exact same scene happened in the. • Used beneficially in, where Abe is placed in a water-filled glass tube to recuperate after being injured by Samael.
Due to his fishy nature it was probably more comfortable and useful than putting him on a hospital bed—although it's not clear how he was supposed to get out again. •: Humans are kept in jars and used as batteries for the machines. The Resistance's job is to free them by first freeing their minds from the Matrix and then freeing them from their jars.
• featured a warehouse, one of many, where brain dead people were kept in storage within what at best described as giant, airtight ziplock bag for backup food supply. • This actually was already in of the first movie in the series. • The Spacing Guild navigators in were essentially mutated ex-humans in jars. • Spoilerific movie example: ends with the revelation that the main character has been cloning himself with Tesla's machine each night, before arranging for the original to die in the water-tanks stored below the stage. • In the 1976 book and 1978 movie Coma, Robin Cook managed to come up with something even creepier than people in jars: rooms full of people in artificially-induced comas, suspended from the ceiling by wires to keep them from developing bedsores, used as raw material for organ transplants. • In, clones are stuffed into giant plastic bags before being shipped to America.
• Not jars precisely, but those convicted of 'future murders' in are kept in an artificially induced coma in a warehouse-like facility. • The precogs themselves, who float/are submerged in a pool of pale liquid. • The movie shows Jean-Baptiste Grenouille dipping a woman in a vat full of molten grease in a failed effort to extract her scent. • The pickled fetuses with the eponymous deformity in. Oddly, the doctor who keeps these curiosities is a good guy. • There's a bizarrely funny scene in where Dr.
Praetorius shows off his work in creating life— little people (and a mermaid— 'an experiment with seaweed'— in jars. In an FX shot that's damned impressive for 1935, when one of them climbs out of his jar Praetorius picks him up with tweezers and puts him back where he belongs. • In Unrest, a large tank of formaldehyde is used to hold an autopsy lab's cadavers between med students' dissection exercises. This being a horror movie, some living people get dunked, too.
• Messing with Dead People Jars started the whole brain-eating incident in, when two employees of a medical-supply company carelessly rupture a zombie's containment tank. • ◊ is used to store the humans being harvested for blood in. • Combined with in (2011). The bodies are stored separately in a cave which the protagonist later enters, horrified to find the headless corpse plugged into tubes and twitching as if still alive. Freeze's wife suffers from a fatal disease called MacGregor's Syndrome.
He keeps her in suspended animation in a liquid-filled tube while he works on a cure. • - actually, his entire live, sentient head. Clearly an influence on.
• In, there is a cryogenic storage facility with frozen celebrities in pods. Amongst them ◊. • combines this with in the form of Princess Mombi's hall of in display cases., and Mombi can and. • In The City of Gold and Lead ( novels by ), the narrator wonders why no women are seen in the Tripod city. Then his Master takes him to a place were human females are kept preserved like butterflies. While investigating the crashed Pass Christian saucer, the heroes discover giant tanks containing living human beings in suspended animation (but not frozen).
• Anne McCaffrey, in series has 'shell people', who are placed in containers as infants and essentially become cyborgs, many becoming spaceships (one book has a shell person as a sentient city). In fairness, this is only done with infants with severe birth defects and does give a much better quality of life than said birth defects would normally allow the child to have. • In, a girl about the age of ten (If I remember correctly) goes through the process of her own free will. She does fine and eventually buys a company and makes them build her a robotic body she can use, but only within her ship. And it sounds like they're working on giving her more range.
Even in this case, she only signs up after being rendered quadriplegic by some alien disease. • Some related stories have adult soldiers being converted into cyborg ships, again only after being severely injured in the line of duty.
In general the world seems to consider it better than being extensively paralyzed, and it's treated as an extensive prosthetic option. • Aldous Huxley's had the human race conditioning each member of the species by birthing them in jars. Some jars were induced with alcohol and others violently shaken so as to cause the embryo to experience arrested development — so as to make the individual more suitable to the mundane task to which it had been predestined. • In the, human clones were grown in 'Spaarti cylinders', which were more or less. It was generally accepted that it took three to five years or a year at the very most to grow a trained, battle-ready clone whose; any less than than a year and the clone tended to be unstable and develop Clone Madness, though if a was nearby the process could be shortened to under thirty days. In the duology find a clone of Thrawn floating in a cylinder under a base.
After came out, things were retconned a little — the Republic and the early Empire used Kaminoan-style clones which needed about ten years of raising, and as time wore on they were replaced by quicker-growing Spaarti clones and, eventually, normal recruits. •: Ghost of the Jedi features a morgue full of bodies in cryogenic tanks. Turns out they're alive in stasis. Their has been siphoned away for study, but it can be put back. • In Glenn Kleier's The Last Day, the Negev laboratory keeps its (and the control copy) suspended in a clear glass tube, while innumerable tubes and cables enter from above to attach to her skull (to feed her information) and abdomen (to feed her.) The control copy is only attached to feeding tube, with no augmentations.
Neither unit had ever existed outside the tube until the meteor hit. • Sylvia Plath used this trope metaphorically in The Bell Jar to describe alienation. • Used and subverted in Frank Herbert's universe, in which genetic clones (and other creatures) are grown in 'Axolotl tanks'. The tanks are revealed to be 'people' as well.
• Used twice in the book 'The Five Greatest Warriors'. The first appearance is when the team's Israeli defector is handed over to Mossad.
He is suspended upside down in a tank, kept alive in order to spend the rest of his life as a living trophy alongside terrorists and Nazis (at least until his friends break him out). The second use is by a Russian general who created the method, only he doesn't limit his 'trophies' to just terrorists. • The of the books by keeps himself in such a device.
Even holding rare audiences from his tank. • In the third story from the: Further Reminiscences of Ijon Tichy by, there's a creepy scientist, who keeps speciments obtained by cloning experiments in such a jars. For the most part they aren't humans, but in one large tank there's the body of the scientist himself, whose clone the current host of the laboratory turns out to be. • In, the embalmers of Djelibeybi preserve the dead by pickling their remains. At one point, the late king's spirit looks in on the process, and sees his own body lying rather sadly in a vat of fluid 'like the last gherkin in the jar'.
• In the Spatterjay series by Neal Asher, some of the mostly immortal villains are trapped in large jar prisons. These are normally filled with a non-breathable gas, but for celebrations they will be filled with oxygen and the villains will be given food. • In 's short story Sergeant Nice, aliens are seen to have some of these. Specifically, they have a set of what are described as 'huge glass bottles, like in the biology lab at school'; in which are the various organs and parts of the cats and dogs and the one little girl they've vivisected. The heads of the unfortunates are still alive, set on top of each bottle.
• In the novels, this is how Earth women are transported to Gor to become Gorean slavegirls. In particular, Assassin of Gor has a scene where women in jars are delivered from a transport ship, and then removed from the jars and tied up for transport by more mundane (for Gor) means to the slave kennels. • One memorable scene in by has Marco taken captive and locked into a large clay jar full of sesame oil, with a collar around his neck. While he's locked in, he has a visitor who explains that the victim's neck eventually softens,. He manages to break the jar and escape, but as he runs away he steps in a large,.
• The book has these in the story 'The Grief Collector' — the title character is a who likes to collect others' tears of grief. He does this by kidnapping their loved ones (who seem to simply vanish) and putting them in jars in his mansion. Then he heads out to collect the tears of the bereaved and store those in jars. •: • The Sisters of Plenitude in keep thousands of infected humans(ish) sealed in tanks.
• And don't forget the Face of Boe — a giant (human-sized) head floating in a jar, said to be as old as the Universe. •: Max spent some time in a jar. • Tank people have shown up in and in. In the, Data found a cryogenic pod containing three frozen American humans from the early 21st century; in the latter, the ship found pods containing people kidnapped from Earth in 1937. • In the episode ', Kirk, Spock, and McCoy find the bodies of two missing researchers encased in jars. Ominiously, they then discover three empty jars labelled with their names. • ' shows Khan and his followers in cryogenic storage.
• Borg Maturation Chambers are seen to be this, at least for a certain stage in the humanoid growth cycle. Children (as young as newborns) are placed in until they've grown into adulthood. While inside, the assimilation process makes them more cybernetic than if they were assimilated as an adult, and f.
To celebrate the newest installment of the novel, “KAGEROU DAZE VI” by JIN, and the release of special soundtrack boxset titled “MEKAKUCITY M’s” from “MEKAKUCITY ACTORS”, (the anime adoption of KAGEROU PROJECT), Kinokuniya Seattle will premiere the art exhibition by the illustrator, SHIDU who created the original KAGEROU PROJECT characters. “KAGEROU PROJECT EXHIBITION” will showcase many of SHIDU’s rare and outstanding work which should grab heart of many KAGEROU fans in the US! Kinokuniya will also have a special booth for the latest merchandizes at the store and also host an exclusive concert movie screening at Sakura Con on April 3rd as a sequel to the previous session held last December. It will include unseen KAGEROU PROJECT live concert footage from last summer as well as the most recent IA performance on Nico Nico Live.