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girls band cry shorakuji temple

Girls Band Cry

Tokyo

Episode
Ep. 2
Time
18m 59s
girls band cry shorakuji temple
  • Nearest Station: Keikyu Kawasaki Station (Keikyu Main Line / Daishi Line)
  • Walk: 15 minutes on foot
  • Best time to visit: Late morning or early afternoon on a clear day for matching light and easier street comparison
  • Crowd level: Usually quiet
  • Nina Iseri walks alone past the street in front of Shorakuji Temple, framed in a quiet urban moment in Girls Band Cry Episode 2.
  • This moment appears in Episode 2 as Nina walks alone through the streets of Kawasaki, still carrying the anxiety and confusion of leaving home behind. She wants to prove that she can keep going by sheer will, yet the loneliness of reality keeps pulling at her, giving the scene a tense but stubborn emotional tone. The shot briefly captures her passing the street in front of Shorakuji Temple, reinforcing the feeling that she has just stepped into a new life without a place to fully belong yet; soon after, the story begins moving her toward meeting the other members and forming new connections. In real life, the scene is based on the road in front of Shorakuji Temple in Kawasaki, and the anime reproduces the street alignment, walls, building placement, and the open space before the temple with impressive accuracy. Although the image is simplified and stylized, the location is still easy to match. The real area feels more lived-in, with denser signage, utility wires, and road details, while the anime intentionally reduces visual noise to keep the focus on Nina's solitude. Compared with the real site or Street View, the composition is very faithful, though seasonal plants, parked vehicles, and camera angle can create small differences, so visitors should use the road outside the temple as the main reference point and avoid disturbing the religious site or nearby residents.
Can I take photos right in front of Shorakuji Temple for the Girls Band Cry shot?
Yes, you can photograph the public road outside the temple, but avoid entering private or temple-only areas without permission. Be especially careful not to block traffic or point cameras toward nearby homes.
Is this location officially recognized by local tourism or mainly by fan mapping?
It is mainly identified through fan pilgrimage databases and scene matching rather than a large official anime tourism sign on site. That means the spot is visitable, but you should not expect dedicated plaques or event displays.
What is the best way to match the exact frame from Episode 2?
Use Google Street View first to align the road shape, wall line, and temple frontage, then fine-tune your position on foot. The view is easiest to recreate in daylight when parked cars are minimal.

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