Owyn_Merrilin said:
About the only thing I didn't know was that some of those shows with the more unusual art styles existed (I did, however, know that studios with unique art styles existed. Ever watch Batman: Gotham Knight?) There's new Weaboos being born every day, though, and they do need to hear this stuff. Incidentally, I /wish/ anime designs were stuck in the late 80's-early 90's.
As an Animator in training, Realism is the nemesis to Animation. I can't comprehend why people would sit down to watch something like Akira, a film about post apocalyptic dystopian Tokyo, Psychics and living gods, would have a grind against unrealistic aesthetics. Also, from my point of view, pre-90's Anime was pretty rigid and unchanging from each decade back. Much like how Hanna Barbera cartoons of the 50s and 60s looked blatantly like Warner Brother and Disney serials from the same time (though much lower budget), the Anime of the 70's and 80's had a very distinctive look (I Grant you), but varied little from piece to piece (beyond themes and settings). Heck, though part of their charm, Studio Ghibli films haven't really changed aesthetically since after the Little Norse Prince. The fidelity has improved and the budget has obviously allowed for much higher quality animations (bigger studios and such).
Owyn_Merrilin said:
K-On and the like may look more realistic than the ones from the mid-late 90's, but none of it looks more realistic than it did from the late 70's through the early 90's. I don't know why everything got so much less realistic (on the whole; there's always been a range, it's just that the average character proportions have shifted from the more realistic style to the more cutesy style, even though examples of both styles have pretty much always existed), but it did, and I never did like that change, at least outside of most Shonen and certain Shojo series (where the characters are essentially superheroes, so the brighter colors and more flamboyant designs make sense.)
You may not have noticed but every medium goes through trends. Music, Film, Animation, Literature, Graphic Design, Architecture etc. differ from decade to decade (and even year to year) quite significantly. These trends always happen in large scale industry. Sometimes the change is so gradual it takes a retrospective look to go "Holy fuck! When did that change!". As far as I can tell, the last Decade of anime, though far less memorable then the 90's and 80's, is more stylistically liberal then those 2 decades combined. In the last 12 years, we've seen quite a variety in styles within anime. Look at shows like XXX holic, Ergo Proxy, Full Metal Alchemist, Serial Experiments Lain, Bunny Drop, Death Note and movies like Ghost in the Shell 2, Tokyo Godfathers, Summer Wars, Eden of the East (anime and OVA) ... to name but a few. There is a lot of variety in styles between each of them and each of them is great in their own right. You might be blinded by your retro goggles. Those Eras were great, but gold still flows in these rivers now.
Owyn_Merrilin said:
Incidentally: any animation fans, let alone anime fans, who haven't done it yet owe it to themselves to watch Akira(second pic in the first spoiler). I watched it for the first time last Spring, and it was one of the most beautiful animated films I've ever watched. It's like Disney decided to make an R-rated Cyberpunk movie that was otherwise in their traditional style.
It makes not a lick of sense though. Course thats part of it's charm I guess. Recommended none the less.
SmashLovesTitanQuest said:
bbobjs said:
SmashLovesTitanQuest said:
Name one Live Action TV series aimed at adults starring a child or an adult with extremely childish proportions in the main character role. Go.
Sup!
I dunno man. He seems to have facial hair. (By the way, might wanna add something to your post to avoid mod wrath. Did not report and telling you because im nice.)
That was probably a stupid choice. Try this one:
or this one:
Both characters are primary characters in the Game of Thrones series. The show has no archetypal lead, but disperses it's plot from character to character. These two have as much screen time as Tyrion (the dwarf) does over the course of the 1st season.