Kill Bill’s Onitsuka Tiger sneakers turn Japan soft power into hard profits
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Uma Thurman's character The Bride wore the Onitsuka Tiger sneakers in Quentin Tarantino’s movie, Kill Bill.
PHOTO: GOLDEN VILLAGE
Gearoid Reidy
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TOKYO – The unlikely must-have item for tourists in Japan is the footwear of choice of the protagonist in the film Kill Bill (2003 and 2004).
Onitsuka Tiger, the fashion brand reborn when American actress Uma Thurman’s character The Bride wore its sneakers in American director Quentin Tarantino’s two-part revenge saga, is enjoying record sales. Asics discontinued the brand for decades until the early 2000s, but post-Covid-19 visitors cannot get enough of the comfy, timeless trainers.
Revenue in Japan has doubled in a year, with tourists accounting for almost all the surge. Onitsuka is by far Asics’ highest-margin segment, with a new flagship store on the Champs-Elysees in Paris and plans for shops in the United States. Shares are up eightfold in the past five years, helping its market capitalisation to recently pass US$20 billion (S$25 billion).
It is also more evidence that visitors to Japan are a growth driver.
Complaints about overtourism get the headlines;
The focus of the most recent earnings season might have been the impact of US tariffs, but a more interesting narrative is a surge in authentically Japanese brands reaching tourists or expanding abroad.
The weak yen is, of course, a factor.
Consider Hello Kitty’s maker, Sanrio. While it still generates its largest chunk of revenue domestically, tourists now account for around 40 per cent of its product sales here (the data is trackable thanks to Japan’s sales-tax exemption scheme). Shares are up more than 10 times from the 2019 level.
Or Food & Life, the owner of conveyor-belt sushi leader Sushiro. Its restaurants in Tokyo and other city centres are thronged with travellers, and it has been expanding abroad.
The company aims to have 320 stores overseas by fiscal 2026, from just 38 five years ago. The first Sushiro in mainland China opened in 2024, with reports of customers queueing for 10 hours for some chutoro.
Japanese retailer Ryohin Keikaku now has more Muji locations outside the country than at home, selling minimalist notebooks and no-brand cosmetics.
Without simplifying Japan into ikigai and other reductive nonsense, these firms do have a common link. It is some combination of affordability, high quality and an aesthetic minimalism that taps into feelings consumers have long associated with “Japan-ness”. (The same can be said about foreign brands that try to ape this look, such as the Chinese retailer Miniso Group Holding.)
Companies that can take this and tap into newfound customers at home or overseas have significant upside, as the country seeks to attract 60 million tourists spending an annual US$100 billion by the end of the decade.
The exemplar of this transformation is Fast Retailing, the operator of Uniqlo. It was once the poster child for how a deflation-beset country was turning to cheap fast fashion.
“Basic chic from Japan. But will it sell?” asked a New York Times headline in 2006, when Uniqlo opened its flagship outlet in the city; back in those days, 90 per cent of sales were in its home market. Since then, it has transformed itself into a minimalist yet iconic fashion brand, and overseas turnover overtook domestic in 2022.
Of course, not every successful company needs to be minimalist.
At the other end of the spectrum is retailer Pan Pacific International Holdings. Its Don Quijote stores are an assault on the senses, but it is a brand that tourists associate with the country – and in turn can generate higher margins than most discount retailers. It is expanding in Japan with even more shops to cater to visitors, with plans to more than double those sales to US$2.7 billion by 2035.
That is before we even get into more iconic names such as Nintendo and the gaming and comic giants that benefit from the recent infatuation with Japan’s soft power. If a traveller carries an Onitsuka Tiger bag, odds are the other hand holds one from Nintendo, Capcom or Sega Sammy Holdings’ merchandise stores.
More brands can tap into this, too: A recent collaboration between Sega’s Sonic The Hedgehog and VF’s Timberland shoes sold out in minutes.
Souvenirs of a trip can be quickly discarded. But these brands are positioned to better stand the test of time – and turn Japan’s soft power into hard profits. Bloomberg

