Dekotora


Dekotora or decotora, an abbreviation for "decoration truck", are extravagantly decorated trucks in Japan. Commonly displaying neon or ultraviolet lights, extravagant paints, and stainless or golden parts, dekotora may be created by workers out of their work trucks for fun, or they may be designed by hobbyists for special events. They are sometimes also referred to as art trucks.

History

In 1975, Toei released the first in a series of 10 movies called Torakku Yarō that featured a trucker who drove his garishly decorated truck all over Japan. This movie was a hit with both old and young, and the dekotora fad swept the country. While dekotora were present throughout the 1970s, they were restricted to north-eastern fishing transport trucks prior to the movies. In those days, ready-made parts for trucks were not easily available, so these trucks took parts from sightseeing buses or American military vehicles.

Modern times

Since the late 1990s, dekotora have been heavily influenced by the art of Gundam. Other decorations are more akin to modern art and retro designs that closely resemble those found in the movie.

Styles

After Torakku Yarō, dekotora were referred to in various films and TV shows. Video games and model cars adopted the fad. Two monthly dekotora magazines are published, namely Camion by Geibunsha and Truck King by Eiwa Publishing.

In films

Other dekotora-oriented films include:
The American film Black Rain features a couple brief scenes that include dekotora. In the Initial D film, the "Emperor" Race team carries one of their cars around in a dekotora truck. The film Millennium Actress directed by Satoshi Kon includes a scene meant to evoke an old Torakku Yarō film, in which the actress Chiyoko is trying to get to Hokkaido; her train is stalled by an avalanche, but she gets a lift from a Dekotora truck driven by the documentarian Genya. A Dekotora truck is briefly seen in the French film Enter the Void, directed by Gaspar Noé.

On TV

Dekotora TV series include:
In Tokusatsu series, we have in Engine Sentai Go-Onger, one of its weekly monstrous antagonists has the ability to turn into a dekotora, and in Kamen Rider Drive one of the Shift Cars, the sentient transformation trinkets used by some of the Riders, is a dekotora named Deco Traveler.

In manga

In the later parts of the Great Teacher Onizuka manga series, the character Eikichi Onizuka ends up living in a dekotora-styled garbage truck.

In video games