Ral
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Considering your definition of isekai, then there is actually so much about it.I'm looking into the intriguing aspects and concepts, the pitfalls, cliches, tropes, stereotypes, twists of the isekai genre and isekai plot devices. And the brilliant usage of these.
Express your own views and opinions of these ^, and feel free to have discussions. It's better if you state a specific aspect of an isekai story and elaborate it fully, but it is up to you on how you will state it. I'm also just very curious otherwise.
You can consider really old stories especially ones before transportation becomes reasonable to be isekai stories. The Odyssey, for example. In those times, what is beyond the sea is literally a different world to people back then; that is why these stories involve people sailing into the sea and arriving on mysterious magical worlds. These includes many mythological stories by the way. Other stories of this type includes Gulliver's Travels and Dinotopia.
The same thing happens with Science Fiction. We travel the vast space and discover alien lifeforms and worlds. The Barsoom series for example. When we become more knowledgeable about space, stories about aliens on Mars become rare(the only recent one I know was that uncanny film Mars Needs Moms). Other stories in this category include the Mass Effect franchise and a lot of those 1980s TV series about bunch of people sent into outer space.
Since you have included Spirited Away which is set in the spirit world, then you can include Dante's Inferno which is set in Hell.
The isekai genre seems to be a very common thing for video game movies. Mortal Combat (1995) does that, Sonic the Hedgehog movie does that. Even the first video game move Super Mario Bros. does that. Would the upcoming reboot, Super Marion Bros.: The Movie, do the same?
In a sense, Isekai and its deconstruction existed long before the term Isekai exist and before these typical Isekai stories become mainstream. It just that, these old isekai stories doesn't really receive much attention.
This really depends on what drama you have inserted. Also, dramas in wish-fulfillment isekai stories tends to be really bad and contrived.I tried throwing a little drama into my harem wish-fulfillment isekai. Ended up alienating a lot of my audience, resulting in quite the low score and growth in views.
Should've just stuck with the smart, overpowered MC trope that people love.
Considering that the original poster uses isekai as a catch-all term including such stories as Alice in Wonderland, Monsters Inc. and Coco.There are no intelligent deconstructions of the isekai genre. All isekai have fallen into the same uninspired tropes whether the authors realizes it or not. Breaking the 4th wall and acknowledging that yes the MC has been killed by a truck haha isn't deconstruction the genre nor is making the MC a cool guy or straight up suicidal. Seeing as the only way people can 'subvert' or 'deconstruct' this genre by adding small drama or a threat that gets solved within 2 chapters shows how lousy this genre as become. Stories I read that I thought were isekai were actually just regular fantasy, and good fantasy at that.
I could also add to the list some of the stories that I really liked: Digimon series, Yellow Submarine, Coraline, Vision of Escaflone, Peter Pan, The Twelve Kingdoms and Infinity Train.
Isekai is kinda broad really. It is just defined by a concept. It is similar to "talking animals" stories in that sense.
What have become stale, and what you seem to have described, are the Light Novel Isekais and the webnovel author that just copy the lighnovel's formulas. The ones that have are adapted into Anime are specially lacking in variety. They are mainly just those killed (by Truck-kun) and reincarnated into or transported into game-like world isekais. There are more to this trope than this considering all the isekai out there.
Also, acknowledging the tropes in the story that endangers one's suspension of disbelief is called Lampshade Hanging. Adding drama isn't subversion or deconstruction. Subversion is when the story leads you to believe a certain trope is going to happen but doesn't. Deconstruction is taking apart a trope to examine and explore it.
It is Looney Tunes (and its sister Merrie Melodies). It was inspired by Disney's Silly Symphonies.My favorite though is Looney Toons. It wasn't Looney "Tunes". It was Loony "Toons". Tunes doesn't even make sense and I don't get how no one sees the problem with this. It was Toons. Not Tunes. How can no one see the problem?
And Tunes make sense. Looney is just a synonym for Silly, while Tunes is just a synonym for music. Looney Tunes essentially just means silly music.
And here is a poster for Looney Tunes:
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