I'm watching and ready to die! Or find a murderer.Aerosteam said:@crimson: No, just saying the focus of the thread at the moment will likely cause some people to not notice that someone has died.![]()
I'm watching and ready to die! Or find a murderer.Aerosteam said:@crimson: No, just saying the focus of the thread at the moment will likely cause some people to not notice that someone has died.![]()
Because nobody really questioned where the energy for the transmutation came from before then. I liked the answer.Secondhand Revenant said:Ah yes, right. But I meant before in the series. That's still like the last 2 episodes. Nothing hinted at this very bizarre revelation.crimson5pheonix said:Dante sends him to England and he ends up in the body of a kid until a zeppelin falls on him. When he performs the transmutation he brings his whole body over instead of just his soul.Secondhand Revenant said:It's been a long time, when did we see him cross over before? Not just into the weird white place but to somewhere else?crimson5pheonix said:We'd seen Ed cross over before, it's not far fetched. Envy's not really, but Hoenheim basically becomes Churchill iirc, we know how that goes. Not to mention Dante had become unstable because she couldn't accept her own mortality and probably had never had anyone get this far before. Her quick thinking got her killed. All it takes is one moment of incompetence, fitting right into the theme of the anime. It's basically what happens to everyone, long stretches of everything working until a single fuck up. Ed and Al? Prodigies until they try to bring back their mom. Sloth, Lust, and Pride? Kicking ass until someone else dicks them over ACCIDENTALLY. Same thing with Dante, she was successful for hundreds of years, then fucked up once and died.Secondhand Revenant said:That does seem like a fairly good analysis. The thing is about the 2003 one, it's not just that it'd not a happy ending, it's that it seems to come out of the blue. Last second introduction of something completely crazy that wasn't even hinted at before nor seemed to be possible by the rules of the world until that point. And you don't really see the outcome of Envy's actions in the anime itself, nor Hohenheim's. They just go offscreen. And Dante's death, while it does seem like a consequence of her actions, just seemed lame. It made her seem incompetent and weak as a villain. It made me think "This moron was in charge of them?"crimson5pheonix said:Sitting here thinking, I think I've finally found the most fundamental difference between them. Brotherhood is an eastern story, like most shonen anime, manga, and JRPGs. 2003 anime is a western story, specifically Gothic horror, more like Dracula or Frankenstein.Secondhand Revenant said:But they then get significantly weaker once you have it. And much like Voldemort they don't seem to go to far enough lengths to hide them. I'd still expect them to be harder to beat once you have their weakness.crimson5pheonix said:That fits in better with the first anime's theme of loss, redemption, nihilism, and horror. The first anime homonculi are more threatening because they can't just be beaten through effort, you have to have their weakness otherwise they're just unkillable. Envy is the best example of this. In Brotherhood he loses every fight he's in. He transforms into a giant monster at Roy and Roy just points out that it's not an advantage to do so. First anime Envy kills Ed because he spent 500 years learning things besides shape changing.Secondhand Revenant said:It's not every exciting if he only loses because his kid brought him a skull in a box though. I may be forgetting something but that means Roy essentially won by sheer luck without any kind of other effort. Like, anyone just had to be alive in there when the box arrived.crimson5pheonix said:Correction, TEH T0T411Y 1337 DUAL WIELDING BADASS loses to a warrior monk for reasons. The smart one walks into a "trap" by one of the best alchemists because Bradley knows it won't work out for Roy since he understands how Roy's alchemy works. He has to be dicked over by the universe.Secondhand Revenant said:Too dumb to breathe is terrible for a villain. Pride from Brotherhood is far more menacing.crimson5pheonix said:First anime wrath is a perfect example of a Brotherhood homonculus. He's objectively the strongest homonculus and he doesn't have a weakness. He gets his shit wrecked because he's too dumb to breathe and the other homonculi beat him up and take his lunch money because they have brains.Secondhand Revenant said:Pride and Wrath in Brotherhood >>>>>>>>>>>> Pride and Wrath in the first onecrimson5pheonix said:Aka SHUT YOUR WHORE MOUTH! First FMA anime best FMA anime.Secondhand Revenant said:Aka Brotherhoodcrimson5pheonix said:You mean the GOOD FMA, correct?Demagogue said:Also Pride, Gluttony, and Envy... really the only sin that 'should' always involve murder is wrath.EvilRoy said:This is clear discrimination against people who openly admit being evil. May I remind the court that sloth, greed, and lust are all evils that may be committed without the aid of murder (but bonus points if you do).
Annnnd.... now I want to watch FMA again... dammit! two games in a row! I resisted last time, lets see if I can do it again. (mainly because I couldn't find the old one on Netflix only Brotherhood)
Meanwhile, the Brotherhood homonculi get tricked and make stupid mistakes constantly. Because they're stupid. Thus they are less threatening than the supposedly weaker 2003 homonculi.
And the 2003 homunculi don't seem any more threatening. Compare Bradley to Bradley. One kills a tank with a sword and fights off several people, only losing due to relentless attacks and a bit of poor luck at the end. The other dies to a skull in a box.
And then there's the movie that have us the resolution for 2003. That was unforgivable
One can be beat in a straight fist fight because he's too dumb to do anything else, the other would win against anyone in a duel because he doesn't play games.
There's no sense of threat because Brotherhood heroes are kung-fu wizards who may or may not have 100 gallons of blood and unbreakable bones. First anime heroes are action scientists who fight and die like humans. So the first anime homonculi don't have to fight tanks to seem threatening, they just have to use their brains a bit and push their advantages. So the first anime homonculi have to be both outthunk AND have to be dicked over by the universe. Brotherhood homonculi usually just lose in a fight that they have little excuse for losing.
Also the big boss of 2003 got eaten by Gluttony. That's just not a good way to go.
Sure it took more special things to kill them in 2003, but they weren't always really exciting in any way. A piece of hair or a skull. 3 of them surviving into the awful movie to die there. Once you had the key to killing them they didn't seem all that great.
And the ending... Ending up in our world?! Just out of nowhere.
And let's not forget that Brotherhood ends with THE POWER OF FRIENDSHIP! #SailorMoon
And he doesn't get to die in 2003 because he runs off to Nazi Germany to get captured!
Power of friendship in that they're all fighting together. The enemy certainly seems more impressive if you have to bring a small army rather than let them get away in an elevator with their own minion.
And in the end Ed brings Al back by sacrificing his alchemy and not relying on it anymore. Some character growth there instead of Ed sending himself to Germany too to bring Al back after Al sacrifices himself.
The most telling difference is how they treat the idea of God. In Brotherhood you can talk to God and he's a dick. The main villain tries to take God's power, succeeds, and the main character have to effectively fight God. The power of friendship part btw was about how Hoenheim befriended all the souls in him and used it to undo Father's circle that killed the country. Which fits right in with the eastern themes because one of the central tenants ofthe Churchalchemy is that people stay dead. That particular transmutation flies right in the face of the alchemic dogma which is totally expected in an eastern story. Ed doesn't win until he rejects God.
In the first anime you can't talk to God. God is an inscrutable and intangible force exerting on the universe that can't be fought, bargained with, or talked to. It merely is. That's why only one person is ever brought back properly and it still cost a philosopher's stone and the alchemist doing it. Going against the laws of the universe is a monumental task and you still can never get what you truly want. That's why Dante and Hoenheim's plan doesn't really work. That's why Ed and Al never truly get back what they lost. Is it anticlimactic? Only if you expected to beat up the villain and get a happy ending. If you just want to see the outcome of everyone's actions, it's a great ending.
Also, Hoenheim becomes Envy's chew toy by the movie. I don't think he did much else there but I could be wrong.
Sure one fuck up can mean the end, but when it's your own guy just biting your head off in an elevator as you escape you kind of come off as incompetent. You lose respect for her as the villain, or at least I did.
While he was over there, he found Hoenheim who got sent earlier and people were calling him Churchill. Of course, Envy going over as a serpent probably changed a few things...
It's supposed to come off like that. Rather than being a villain who did EVERYTHING RIGHT, HOW COULD YOU HAVE STOPPED ME, I WAS PERFECT! (#PowerOfFriendship), she was a clever schemer trying to go against her fate and dealing with forces that could rek her if she's not careful. She forgot to look both way before crossing the street. That's typically how people die in these kind of stories. It's not common that you have a final climactic duel. Dracula gets killed because he was sleeping when the heroes show up and they hack off his head. Dante hastily threw a solution together and it bit her in the ass.
Double checked and apparently he was an advisor to Churchill. Which I suppose seems like a decent ending for him barring the movie. Not quite what I'd call him dealing with the consequences of his actions though.
I'm not saying it had to be a duel, I just think it should be something that doesn't make it harder to take the villain seriously. There are ways for villains to die by their own flaws while not seeming like a moron doing it. For instance Dracula's is due to his weaknesses as a vampire there.
It didn't need to be the souls of an entirely different world though. It's the other world part that gets me. It could easily have been the loose souls of everyone that died in their own world.crimson5pheonix said:Because nobody really questioned where the energy for the transmutation came from before then. I liked the answer.Secondhand Revenant said:Ah yes, right. But I meant before in the series. That's still like the last 2 episodes. Nothing hinted at this very bizarre revelation.crimson5pheonix said:Dante sends him to England and he ends up in the body of a kid until a zeppelin falls on him. When he performs the transmutation he brings his whole body over instead of just his soul.Secondhand Revenant said:It's been a long time, when did we see him cross over before? Not just into the weird white place but to somewhere else?crimson5pheonix said:We'd seen Ed cross over before, it's not far fetched. Envy's not really, but Hoenheim basically becomes Churchill iirc, we know how that goes. Not to mention Dante had become unstable because she couldn't accept her own mortality and probably had never had anyone get this far before. Her quick thinking got her killed. All it takes is one moment of incompetence, fitting right into the theme of the anime. It's basically what happens to everyone, long stretches of everything working until a single fuck up. Ed and Al? Prodigies until they try to bring back their mom. Sloth, Lust, and Pride? Kicking ass until someone else dicks them over ACCIDENTALLY. Same thing with Dante, she was successful for hundreds of years, then fucked up once and died.Secondhand Revenant said:That does seem like a fairly good analysis. The thing is about the 2003 one, it's not just that it'd not a happy ending, it's that it seems to come out of the blue. Last second introduction of something completely crazy that wasn't even hinted at before nor seemed to be possible by the rules of the world until that point. And you don't really see the outcome of Envy's actions in the anime itself, nor Hohenheim's. They just go offscreen. And Dante's death, while it does seem like a consequence of her actions, just seemed lame. It made her seem incompetent and weak as a villain. It made me think "This moron was in charge of them?"crimson5pheonix said:Sitting here thinking, I think I've finally found the most fundamental difference between them. Brotherhood is an eastern story, like most shonen anime, manga, and JRPGs. 2003 anime is a western story, specifically Gothic horror, more like Dracula or Frankenstein.Secondhand Revenant said:But they then get significantly weaker once you have it. And much like Voldemort they don't seem to go to far enough lengths to hide them. I'd still expect them to be harder to beat once you have their weakness.crimson5pheonix said:That fits in better with the first anime's theme of loss, redemption, nihilism, and horror. The first anime homonculi are more threatening because they can't just be beaten through effort, you have to have their weakness otherwise they're just unkillable. Envy is the best example of this. In Brotherhood he loses every fight he's in. He transforms into a giant monster at Roy and Roy just points out that it's not an advantage to do so. First anime Envy kills Ed because he spent 500 years learning things besides shape changing.Secondhand Revenant said:It's not every exciting if he only loses because his kid brought him a skull in a box though. I may be forgetting something but that means Roy essentially won by sheer luck without any kind of other effort. Like, anyone just had to be alive in there when the box arrived.crimson5pheonix said:Correction, TEH T0T411Y 1337 DUAL WIELDING BADASS loses to a warrior monk for reasons. The smart one walks into a "trap" by one of the best alchemists because Bradley knows it won't work out for Roy since he understands how Roy's alchemy works. He has to be dicked over by the universe.Secondhand Revenant said:Too dumb to breathe is terrible for a villain. Pride from Brotherhood is far more menacing.crimson5pheonix said:First anime wrath is a perfect example of a Brotherhood homonculus. He's objectively the strongest homonculus and he doesn't have a weakness. He gets his shit wrecked because he's too dumb to breathe and the other homonculi beat him up and take his lunch money because they have brains.Secondhand Revenant said:Pride and Wrath in Brotherhood >>>>>>>>>>>> Pride and Wrath in the first onecrimson5pheonix said:Aka SHUT YOUR WHORE MOUTH! First FMA anime best FMA anime.Secondhand Revenant said:Aka Brotherhoodcrimson5pheonix said:You mean the GOOD FMA, correct?Demagogue said:Also Pride, Gluttony, and Envy... really the only sin that 'should' always involve murder is wrath.EvilRoy said:This is clear discrimination against people who openly admit being evil. May I remind the court that sloth, greed, and lust are all evils that may be committed without the aid of murder (but bonus points if you do).
Annnnd.... now I want to watch FMA again... dammit! two games in a row! I resisted last time, lets see if I can do it again. (mainly because I couldn't find the old one on Netflix only Brotherhood)
Meanwhile, the Brotherhood homonculi get tricked and make stupid mistakes constantly. Because they're stupid. Thus they are less threatening than the supposedly weaker 2003 homonculi.
And the 2003 homunculi don't seem any more threatening. Compare Bradley to Bradley. One kills a tank with a sword and fights off several people, only losing due to relentless attacks and a bit of poor luck at the end. The other dies to a skull in a box.
And then there's the movie that have us the resolution for 2003. That was unforgivable
One can be beat in a straight fist fight because he's too dumb to do anything else, the other would win against anyone in a duel because he doesn't play games.
There's no sense of threat because Brotherhood heroes are kung-fu wizards who may or may not have 100 gallons of blood and unbreakable bones. First anime heroes are action scientists who fight and die like humans. So the first anime homonculi don't have to fight tanks to seem threatening, they just have to use their brains a bit and push their advantages. So the first anime homonculi have to be both outthunk AND have to be dicked over by the universe. Brotherhood homonculi usually just lose in a fight that they have little excuse for losing.
Also the big boss of 2003 got eaten by Gluttony. That's just not a good way to go.
Sure it took more special things to kill them in 2003, but they weren't always really exciting in any way. A piece of hair or a skull. 3 of them surviving into the awful movie to die there. Once you had the key to killing them they didn't seem all that great.
And the ending... Ending up in our world?! Just out of nowhere.
And let's not forget that Brotherhood ends with THE POWER OF FRIENDSHIP! #SailorMoon
And he doesn't get to die in 2003 because he runs off to Nazi Germany to get captured!
Power of friendship in that they're all fighting together. The enemy certainly seems more impressive if you have to bring a small army rather than let them get away in an elevator with their own minion.
And in the end Ed brings Al back by sacrificing his alchemy and not relying on it anymore. Some character growth there instead of Ed sending himself to Germany too to bring Al back after Al sacrifices himself.
The most telling difference is how they treat the idea of God. In Brotherhood you can talk to God and he's a dick. The main villain tries to take God's power, succeeds, and the main character have to effectively fight God. The power of friendship part btw was about how Hoenheim befriended all the souls in him and used it to undo Father's circle that killed the country. Which fits right in with the eastern themes because one of the central tenants ofthe Churchalchemy is that people stay dead. That particular transmutation flies right in the face of the alchemic dogma which is totally expected in an eastern story. Ed doesn't win until he rejects God.
In the first anime you can't talk to God. God is an inscrutable and intangible force exerting on the universe that can't be fought, bargained with, or talked to. It merely is. That's why only one person is ever brought back properly and it still cost a philosopher's stone and the alchemist doing it. Going against the laws of the universe is a monumental task and you still can never get what you truly want. That's why Dante and Hoenheim's plan doesn't really work. That's why Ed and Al never truly get back what they lost. Is it anticlimactic? Only if you expected to beat up the villain and get a happy ending. If you just want to see the outcome of everyone's actions, it's a great ending.
Also, Hoenheim becomes Envy's chew toy by the movie. I don't think he did much else there but I could be wrong.
Sure one fuck up can mean the end, but when it's your own guy just biting your head off in an elevator as you escape you kind of come off as incompetent. You lose respect for her as the villain, or at least I did.
While he was over there, he found Hoenheim who got sent earlier and people were calling him Churchill. Of course, Envy going over as a serpent probably changed a few things...
It's supposed to come off like that. Rather than being a villain who did EVERYTHING RIGHT, HOW COULD YOU HAVE STOPPED ME, I WAS PERFECT! (#PowerOfFriendship), she was a clever schemer trying to go against her fate and dealing with forces that could rek her if she's not careful. She forgot to look both way before crossing the street. That's typically how people die in these kind of stories. It's not common that you have a final climactic duel. Dracula gets killed because he was sleeping when the heroes show up and they hack off his head. Dante hastily threw a solution together and it bit her in the ass.
Double checked and apparently he was an advisor to Churchill. Which I suppose seems like a decent ending for him barring the movie. Not quite what I'd call him dealing with the consequences of his actions though.
I'm not saying it had to be a duel, I just think it should be something that doesn't make it harder to take the villain seriously. There are ways for villains to die by their own flaws while not seeming like a moron doing it. For instance Dracula's is due to his weaknesses as a vampire there.
He ends up being unable to stop the monster he inadvertently made (Dante) and shunted into another universe where he'll eventually get nommed on by his discarded child.
She doesn't come across as that dumb, poorly thought out at that one moment maybe, but not really dumb. And let's not forget that Father was beaten because he stopped to gloat instead of just winning right then and there when he could throw STARS at his enemies.
Possibly, but it's no worse this way.Secondhand Revenant said:It didn't need to be the souls of an entirely different world though. It's the other world part that gets me. It could easily have been the loose souls of everyone that died in their own world.crimson5pheonix said:Because nobody really questioned where the energy for the transmutation came from before then. I liked the answer.
He ends up being unable to stop the monster he inadvertently made (Dante) and shunted into another universe where he'll eventually get nommed on by his discarded child.
She doesn't come across as that dumb, poorly thought out at that one moment maybe, but not really dumb. And let's not forget that Father was beaten because he stopped to gloat instead of just winning right then and there when he could throw STARS at his enemies.
If we're including the nommed on part then are we including Conqueror of
Shamballa? His fate seems incomplete without it, but if you include it I think that's a pretty black mark against the 2003 version. You'd seemed to avoid touching on the movie before so I wasn't sure if you were or weren't including it.
Father gloating seems much the same as the reason the immortal homunculi didn't just constantly mob Ed and Al and deal with them easily. It doesn't fit a story like this to have the villains be utterly ruthless and intelligent the entire time without some pauses for the sake of the story. The heroes could have instantly reacted as well. The delay was for drama and tension.
Yeah I'm afraid you don't get to claim firstiest on the killing Frappe idea... although I know who I'm looking at if he dies. /eyes suspiciouslysnekadid said:@Frappe Well no one was really into the idea at the time, so I guess I'm just saying I wanted to kill you before it was cool /hipsterglasses
YES PLEASE!!Twintix said:Does anyone want some cotton candy? I can still make it, but I think the show's about to start...
/WhistlesinnocentlyDemagogue said:Yeah I'm afraid you don't get to claim firstiest on the killing Frappe idea... although I know who I'm looking at if he dies. /eyes suspiciously
No... He never PM'd me until after I assigned the roles. :<Aerosteam said:@Beer: DUDE! You included Tizzy into the game, right?!
tisk tisk Beer... he had posted in the thread waay early / in-timeBeerTent said:No... He never PM'd me until after I assigned the roles. :<
So, I was like, "I'm sorry, baby. But no Bueno." I encouraged him to keep an eye on the thread and group, and I'll give The Killer Tizzy's dibs for the next game.
I can knock out the Entwined (Remove their roles) and bring him in if that's what you would do. I'll need to double check with Tizzy and make sure he's still good for it.Aerosteam said:@Beer: ["YOU FUCKED UP!!"]
That was my line of thought, I'd have to knock out a few roles, or re-shuffle entirely. Let's leave it with "I fucked up." and give Tizzy an "I<3U" card so that if he needs any hugs in the future, I'd be there with a case of red and two warm, welcoming arms.Aerosteam said:@BeerTent: Now that we know he can't be the Killer, there's no point in him joining. :|