What is so great about Anime?

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The Diabolical Biz

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Hellsing is my recommendation. Hellsing Ultimate (better animation, better plot) if you've the time.

Over the top fun vampire on vampire overpowered badassery always seems to hit the spot
 

Glaive_21842

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Dec 21, 2009
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Here's an anime recommendation i found on another thread. Seems like it might be something worth looking into.
Arisato-kun said:
I do and I submit Baccano! to you.
Synopsis (via MyAnimeList): During the late 1930s in Chicago, the transcontinental train, Flying Pussyfoot, is starting its legendary journey that will leave a trail of blood all over the country. At the same time in New York, the ambitious scientist Szilard and his unwilling aide Ennis, are looking for missing bottles of the immortality elixir. In addition, a war between the mafia groups is getting worse. On board the Advena Avis, in 1711, alchemists are about to learn the price of immortality.

Watch it in English.
 

Jonluw

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May 23, 2010
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Texas America Murphy said:
Final Neon Genesis update:

Oh man. Shinji just got his ass whooped. Is he going to get up and save the day? Is Neo-Tokyo going to be destroyed? Will this tension be resolved?

The answer to all these questions is apparently in order, no, no and no.

Shinji wakes up in a bed. The city is not destroyed. The giant monster has vanished, and the blue haired ditz is being intentionally vague.

Am I going to find out what happened?

I guess not because the credits just rolled.

So all in all we can sum Neon Genesis Evangelion episode 1 by saying that:

-It introduced us with a whiny protaganist
-The only interesting character had maybe a minute of screen time
-Nobody did anything of value
-No tension was resolved.

Awesome. Great pilot episode guys. Y'all really make me want to watch more.

I'm going to keep going at this though. I'm not going to stop until I find an anime that I like.

Girlfriend is holding up two DVDs. Deathnote and Cowboy Beebop. Which one should I pick?
I think the problem you have is that you're trying to judge the entire show on the basis of one episode.
Am I going to find out what happened?

I guess not because the credits just rolled.
Of course you're going to find out what happened. They explain that in the next episode.

It seems you're not accustomed to anime's way of telling stories; and this might be part of why you have trouble enjoying it. You won't get any interesting look into the main-character's psychology(what the show is about) until a good few episodes into the series.

-The only interesting character had maybe a minute of screen time
-Nobody did anything of value
-No tension was resolved.
NGE isn't very fast paced. If you don't like the tension not getting resolved at the end of each episode, it's probably not for you. They don't really do anything of value for the next six episodes.

I saw someone in this thread saying that the father got a lot of screentime through the show. Well, he doesn't for the first six episodes; so clearly some development happens that brings the father more into the spotlight.


I, personally, have only watched five or six episodes of NGE, and I could not get myself to enjoy it. It may very well not be for you. It's not the kind of anime that hooks you and makes you want to watch on (For the first few episodes at least).

I haven't read the entire thread, so I don't know if you've tried out Death note or Cowboy bebop, but Death note is a good exciting/entertaining series, i.e. it's the kind of series where you want to know what happenes next. You might be a bit older than the target demographic though.

I haven't watched Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann, but from what I hear, it's pretty much a parody of anime conventions; so you won't be able to enjoy it if you're not experienced with anime.
Naruto, that you said you watched, is intended for boys aged 12-13. Basically, it's one step up from Pokémon. It's not very surprising that you did not enjoy it.

As for Code Geass, it seems like you watched only one episode. In the middle of the series even. As others have pointed out; anime can be very canonical in its presentation, and in the case of Code Geass, you need to watch it from the very beginning. Code Geass is not necessarily the kind of anime that hooks you from the start either. It sort of require that you involve yourself for a bit, and accept that presenting the setting can be sort of mundane; but once you get into it, it's rather good.

The reason I like anime, is that it has presented me with the deepest, most exciting, and most touching stories I have seen in any medium or genre.
Clannad (a great anime, but only for the experienced watcher), is the only story, presented in any form, that has made me shed a tear. And believe me, I do not cry easily. I was fighting it all the way too.

The problem, once again, is that you seem to be determined to only sample a single episode from each series, and try to judge the genre/medium on that ground. That simply won't do. Before you make an official statement on the quality of anime; please watch at least one series to its very end.

Of course, there is a lot of shit within anime as well; just like with all other mediums/genres. The trick is avoiding all the bad stuff.

Please reply with any questions you may have, so I can explain my view on anime in more detail. I would really like to explain why I enjoy it, and how or what you should watch to maybe be able to enjoy it too.

Also: What that girl said to you was either "Kawaii desu" or "Kowai desu" which means either "that's/it's cute" or "that's/it's scary".
 

Geekmaster

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Nov 22, 2008
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Taste I guess.
I don't get why anyone enjoys Friends, I think Sex and the City is a piece of shit, I hate all reality shows.
I'd rather watch Doom than Avatar....
 

UrbanCohort

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Nov 30, 2009
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Mimsofthedawg said:
Broderick said:
As people said above, you can replace the word "anime" with just about any other form of media. Words like "good" and "great" are subjective, and people just like different things. People also like different things for different reasons; one person may not watch, play, eat whatever for the same reasons another person might. So there you go.
The problem is that this isn't true. For almost every topic, every ideology, every religion, every aspect of human life there is a point of "Rights" and "Wrongs". Perhaps it could be argued that there's not absolute right or wrong, but there are at the very least things that are "more right" and things that are "more wrong". Yes this is altered by your specific perspective, but across cultures there are still fundamental truths found (or various degrees of such a fundamental truth).

As such, it is vague and false to say, "You can say that about any medium." Saying a medium is tasteless might be subjective. But if a medium lacks things that create a good story (adequate conflict, character development, backstory, coherency, etc.) a critic begins leaving subjectivity and crossing the line more towards objectivity.

Maybe question whether or not anime is art is a bit much, but is there something that can be more art than another thing? Absolutely, and from there a discussion can be made - a discussion that can go far beyond a simplistic and vague (as well as false) statement saying "it's just your preference! You can say that about anything!"
lolwut?

So...either you're saying that anime rarely has a coherent storyline/conflict/character development/etc., OR you posted an inadvertently incomplete argument.

If the first, I say "learn a bit about what you're talking about".

If the second, then please, continue your thought.

Lastly, some things, like this, really ARE that simple. Trying to see more than what's actually involved is pointless.
 

Jezzy54

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Oct 19, 2008
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Anime's a medium. It isn't inherently good or bad, but there re some great examples, like Gurren Lagann, or Cowboy Bebop. It depends on what you're into, though.
 
Dec 25, 2010
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Jezzy54 said:
Anime's a medium. It isn't inherently good or bad, but there re some great examples, like Gurren Lagann, or Cowboy Bebop. It depends on what you're into, though.
Yeah you don't like reading posts do you. It's not. It's a genre.
 

KarumaK

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Sep 24, 2008
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Opinions on opinions of opinions.

Everyone's got a few, taste differ, personal blahblahblah, etc. etc.

We've done this before for... everything before, can we just not today?
 

banksie

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Nov 27, 2007
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Just to provide another voice on the subject - anime is very much a wide sub-genre of animation. The major distinction is simply that the primary authors and animators are Japanese - which means they bring their cultural outlook and baggage with them. The actual subject matter varies wildly and can range from the banal aimed for children like Naruto to highly personal and difficult works of art like "Angel's Egg".

What makes anime often interesting is the different emphasis used on how the stories are told and what happens within them. A lot of more American media, especially series, tend to have a fairly central cast of characters who remain pretty static to their series bible descriptions because this allows teams of writers to work on the series. Usually long term continuity is sacrificed to let production of episodes be highly parallel in the background with multiple scripts being written and usually two or three going through pre and post production. Because there isn't long term continuity then production problems can be accomodated because the episodes can be released often in any order. A classic example of this would be the various Star Trek incarnations, TOS especially and Next Generation where any major continuity changes usually occured in the season finales where the series plan could be updated for the writers to work from for the next season.

Nothing wrong with this method per se, although it does lead to shows that have characters that don't develop or change much. TV production (and most anime is aimed heavily at TV consumption) is changing with the rise of more story arc driven series starting to become the norm. Dexter, the modern Battlestar Galactica, Stargate Universe, Rubicon and the like all show a trend towards more planned series that have strong continuity and development across the season. Sadly this is often punished - SGU and Rubicon both have been canceled despite being excellent series.

Where anime has been different is that usually the series is planned out from the start. Characters grow, change and frequently die - even in the more children targeted ones. The plot being known from the get go means that clues can be layered in from the very start allowing the alert user to try and puzzle it out. There also is a stronger emphasis on introspection and motivation for lead characters with quite a few series looking into the reasons why that character is making the choices they do. Add on top of it a different set of cinematic rules - most stemming from the lower budgets available and thus the widespread use of short cuts. (Like the teardrop, red hash or swirling curl for emotional states rather than animating the face in a detailed enough fashion to let the emotions be seen. Or the speed lines and frequent use of pan shots across a still frame to imply motion without having to animate it.)

It all adds up to a style of storytelling that is markedly different from the more usual Western fare. It doesn't hurt that animation in the west has been firmly relegated as being primarily for children and usually the tales told suffer. In Japan animation is heavily diversified across the age ranges and they also have differing standards as to what is acceptable for children to watch meaning that even the child oriented material is often more violent then western audiences expect.) Put simply it is different - and that often is enough for many people to argue erroniously it is superior. It isn't but those who argue that normally aren't aware that the anime we see has been often cherry picked to be both better quality and most likely to appeal to western tastes.

As has been said too like any medium it has a wide swath of fairly mundane to crap stuff. But it also has gems tucked away in there that few, if any, other mediums would attempt. I can't see another culture producing something quite like 'RahXephon' with its clay based giant robots and fusion of Nahuatl infused myths with science fiction. 'Paranoia Agent' with its musing on social memes and the cost they can have. 'PatLabor the movie' whose structure has an antagonist that you see once at the start of the film committing suicide but whose presence is felt through the rest of the film as the police team try to put together what he is doing and why. That why is an interesting meditation on the price of progress. 'Haibane Renmei' with its tale of an odd purgatory like space that reinforces the importance of social connection. 'Texhnolyze' that takes Buddhist thinking off into extremes and has a very David Lynch like first episode with minimal dialogue but strong visual and soundscape based storytelling.

So to sum up? People often like anime in the west because it is different and that difference means it can tell certain kinds of stories we often don't get here. Sturgeon's Law applies but a little bit of persistance and finding out what kinds of stories you like will net you interesting series and films to watch.
 

Lisiecki

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Dec 25, 2010
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Texas America Murphy said:
Listen Partner. I don't tell you how to deal with your woman. Some reciprocity might be nice.
I don't see where I told you how to deal with your woman. I'm just surprised that the one that belittles her in public is the best one shes had.
 

robotam

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Jun 7, 2010
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I don't know. There are some pretty darn good ones that I have watched. (I really liked Cowboy Bebob and Death Note) but even in then there does seem to be alot of stereotypical characters.
I can understand why you might find anime strange, but just remember
"Different strokes for different folks"
 

Kris015

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Feb 21, 2009
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Threads like this really should have it's own forum -.-'

It should be called The "Why I hate _____ Am I the only one?" Forum
 

General Vagueness

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Feb 24, 2009
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I smell a troll. As for actual issues, there are many, but anime is just a style of animation, it's not all the same any more than Loony Tunes, Rocko's Modern Life, and Dora the Explorer are the same as each other.
 

Vaccine

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Feb 13, 2010
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Texas America Murphy said:
So I walk into the living room and there are these girls dressed up in these weird costumes and stuff. One of them runs up to me and shouts something like ?Cowiie Desi.? So I?m put off, but still determined to see what the big fuss is about. DVDs go in the player and I?m treated to what my girlfriend tells me is the most popular Animes.
You got accosted by the side of anime fans most normal viewers of the medium don't like to pretend exist. Of course you weren't going to have a good experience.

Naruto is trash, think of it like that popular TV show everyone goes on about yet you hate it because it serves no purpose besides cheap entertainment value for the masses.
Code Geass was ok, but not something I'd try to follow in a group sitting, I mostly watched it for Lelouch being a total badass, but that's just me. Also a tad to colorful for me.
Gurren Lagann is pretty much selective viewing, it's either like or don't like from people.

Also, if you're really seeking advice on a topic you don't know much about, it helps to have an open mind, not berate the medium and its fans when asking them for information, because you're either trolling or just ranting on something you won't like either way, not looking to enlighten yourself.