GOOD GOD MANStorytellingIsAMust said:SNIP
Spoiler that quote, you're making this page massive! XP
GOOD GOD MANStorytellingIsAMust said:SNIP
You're quite welcome!StorytellingIsAMust said:Fun little read there. Thanks for the informative food for thought.
Well, kinda, the guy who made that video also made a counter video featuring anime with unique openings (followed by a brief trolling):Redlin5 said:
And I'm wrong?
Hmmm, I need to rethink my entire philosophy on anime now.
[sub][sub]Nice read![/sub][/sub]
Actually... that's sort of accurate. Say what you will about Anime, it sure does love its formulaeic openings.Redlin5 said:
And I'm wrong?
Hmmm, I need to rethink my entire philosophy on anime now.
[sub][sub]Nice read![/sub][/sub]
I guess we could settle for half and call it a "genrium"?OniaPL said:I do still think that anime is a genre rather than a medium. It is just a Japanese variant of animation/television.
Thanks, glad to hear you're open-minded!MPerce said:Very nice read. I've seen enough of a variety of anime to know not to treat it all the same. While all Japanese animation has some fundamental differences from American animation due to cultural differences, each anime show in itself is its own thing. I would never think about comparing Ouran High School Host Club to Paranoia Agent. Because the only thing they share in common is their country of origin.
Maybe someday people will stop throwing all of anime into one basket and hating it collectively, and instead hate certain shows on their own.
But that won't happen.
Just curious, do you consider yourself a "fan" or are you more casual? I mean, I know I love really niche anime, but if you consider yourself a "fan" and you don't know half of the anime I mentioned... Well, I'm pretty far down the rabbit holeJestertrance said:Wow, I haven't heard of half of this stuff. I think I need to get out more...
I have tried pitching stuff to The Escapist before, but I never thought of ANN... Though, this article would be preaching to the choir for themSandytimeman said:A great read, you should have submitted that article pitch to the escapist, ANN, or 918thefan and get featured XD.
OH GOD I LOVE SHAFT SO HARD. Wait, that sounded kind homoerotic... Anyway, I love studio SHAFT's work so much, while other studios are content to do what's been done before, SHAFT is all "you know what? The hell with it, we're doing something new!" and they continue to do so in everything they work on. I'll even watch series based on eroge if SHAFT worked on it.Sandytimeman said:But lets be honest Shaft sudios does some of the most orginal art direction and beautiful style in the medium second only to Ghibli...hell if I sit down and really look at it, Ghibli may be taking a silver medal for once.
If I made someone think of Weird Al, then it was a success in another waychris11246 said:
Thats what came to mind when I saw the title.
First Brofist for fellow shaft lover. Also to answer the quote's questionFireAza said:Just as a general question for you guys, how many of you were able to read my OP in it's entirety? I know it's long, but I'm curious if I was able to hold your attention all the way though, and why. Thanks!
A pie is fine too. However i want you to tell me how the Hanna Barbera shaped so strongly the minds of everyone to the point of believing that all cartoons are children's thing. In fact, how is it possible in this day an age of information to PERSISTENTLY remain ignorant about cartoons when the motherfucking Simpsons have do it for 20+ years(it extends to comics and video games that people think its for children) Hmm... maybe this is why Disney got away with The Hunchback of Notre Dame, no one expected it to be THAT dark.FireAza said:apple pie
Ah, Witch Hunter Robin... Awesome series. Great soundtrack too.FireAza said:Witch Hunter Robin
As someone who is in the middle of reading the original novel of The Bourne Identity, I'd have to recommend it to anyone who found the movies bland. They're actually /less/ faithful to the source material than the James Bond movies, which is just sad, because those almost never had anything to do with each other aside from the general feel and certain characters. The Bourne Identity pretty much only kept Bourne himself, the name "Treadstone," and the idea that Bourne had amnesia and didn't know who he was. The explanation I remember for the changes at the time was that it was so mired in cold war paranoia that they couldn't just update the time period without reworking the whole story, but it's not true; the book is more "CIA vs. apolitical criminals" than "CIA vs. KGB." Seriously, read the book; it's awesome.cnaltman62 said:If you're unfamiliar with anime, but want to consider getting into it, a good series to try is "Eden of the East." I guess the best way to describe it is "The Bourne Identity" if it were made in Japan.
Except, where "Bourne" was generic and forgettable, "Eden" manages to hit the sweet spot where you want to set aside an entire day and marathon all 12 episodes (and 2 movies).
No, you're pretty right there, most anime do "end", and I think this is what makes the stories a little more satisfying. This is thanks to the fact they're usually based on source material that has already been running well before the anime version, so they know where things are headed. Also, animation is expensive, and can't go on forever unless the name of your show is "Bleach" or "Naruto" in which case, it's a licence to print money.Irridium said:One big difference between anime and western shows, or at least it's more prevalent in anime (or anime that's available in the US, at least), is that anime actually ends. Compared to western animated shows (or, really, shows in general), which are either cut off before their prime or continue to go on and die slow, painful deaths.
In anime, things change, the story moves forward. In the west, everything stays more or less the same all the time. While that's not a bad thing in and of itself, the fact that essentially all shows ever do that. Which tends to lead to the first three seasons being strong and great, but most after that tend to decline.
Again, not sure if having definitive "ends" in anime is a standard or just what they decide to advertise more in the west, but it just seems more prevalent from what I've seen. Which I find rather refreshing.