Posted by
ryuzaki0
on from the tentacle-porn-doesn't-count dept.
angkor writes "'More Animated than Life' - Fascinating article discussing the significance of animation to the Japanese and why it is not what Westerners expect."
293 comments
Slashdot.org
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0, Funny
News for Anime fans. Stuff that doesnt matter
Re:Slashdot.org
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
OMG you're really telling me you care so much about someone posting an anime post that you'd take the time to complain? It probably took you longer to post that than it took you to read the post.
Who cares? I like Tom&Jerry, it makes me laugh. But when a japaneze guy makes a cartoon, it suddenly has a higher purpose, it's So Cool (tm) by definition, and if you're not into it, or like/say the wrong things, you can't be a proper Nerd. PLEASE TELL ME, who did ever think up this scheme of things? Why not Daffy Duck?
Re:Slashdot.org
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
OMG you're telling me you are so offended by an anti-anime post that you reply. I'm certain that it took you longer to post your reply than it took you to read the shot at anime.
OTOH, I suppose anime lovers are such losers that they have lots of time on their hands. I suggest that a better use of your time would be masterbating to tentacle rape scenes.
Many Americans find anime a lot more appealing than a lot of stuff on TV because anime isn't as constrained by the American Standard that effects many of the popular programming.
I watch anime constantly, always on top of the latest fansubbed releases, picking up the DVDs of series that are especially good and make it to North America. I support the full circle of anime, and all of the fruit it bears.
Of it all, I've met new people, made some good friends, and experience a whole culture that I would have otherwise been completely oblivious to. I find anime to be informative, entertaining, and especially enjoyable.
Re:Why Anime?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
At least American animation (er, Korean) has more than 10 unique pictures ever minute. Anime lives on parallax too... that shit will rot your brain!
Re:Why Anime?
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Savage-Rabbit
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· Score: 5, Insightful
That is true, I like anime for that reason as well. Difference is that I am a European and from my point of view Japanese material is a good alternative to the flood of US made Formula films and sitcoms that we are drowning in over here. Dont get me wrong, I am not against American TV material, some of it is really good. I like the New Star Trek series, Six Feet under, Farscape and of course FUTURAMA. But too much of the US stuff is just mass manufactured blurb without caracter. Kind of a visual counterpart to the infamous "Replicator food" they are always complaining about on the Enterprise. These Anime films make a great change in the monotony of bad sitcoms and action films. I wish more original programming like this would find its way onto my television screen. Definetly more Asian material and perhaps some E-European material as well and not just Anime mind you but regular films and series as well.
-- Only to idiots, are orders laws.
-- Henning von Tresckow
Re:Why Anime?
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Wonko+the+Sane
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· Score: 2, Insightful
But too much of the US stuff is just mass manufactured blurb without caracter. Don't worry, many people here in the US feel the same way.
Many Americans find anime a lot more appealing than a lot of stuff on TV because anime isn't as constrained by the American Standard that effects many of the popular programming.
That's definately part of the appeal. I think another part is that most of the crud (See Sturgeon's Law) never gets exported to the US. We see the same effect with British TV shows. Monty Python, Doctor Who, Red Dwarf, etc make it over here, but most of the bad stuff doesn't.
If you look back at mainstream American TV, there's been a fair amount of really good stuff (e.g. Babylon 5, original Star Trek, Twilight Zone, Buffy) and a lot of decent stuff (I won't list examples out of fear of controversy). We just don't notice because we're getting all the crud mixed in with it. Unfortuantly, throught the miracle of American Media Dominance, the rest of the industrialized world gets our crud unfiltered. Those countries where English is not the primary language get our crud badly dubbed on top of everything, but I digress.
Another factor is the way Anime is promoted in the US: almost entirely by word of mouth recomendations. By only watching stuff that our tasteful - if more adventurous - friends have pre-screened, we avoid whatever crud does manage to make its way over here.
But too much of the US stuff is just mass manufactured blurb without caracter.
As opposed to anime? Well, I'm sorry to disappoint you, but it can also be told of anime that too much of it is pure hackneyed commercial drivel. It's just that not many of the bad works gets to permeate through the West.
On the other hand, there are many great movies pertaining to anime, to the point that it has been labelled the "secong golden age of Japanese cinema". See this New-York Times article.
Farscape is Australian by the way. Kudos to them for making an outstanding Sci-Fi series. Is there some reason why local Australian TV doesn't pick it up?
Re:Why Anime?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
You list "Babylon 5" in the same league as ST, TZ and "Buffy?!? You have been blinded by the effects, because honestly, none of the stories got me hooked.
Re:Why Anime?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
"but at least you americans have LARGE penises" - southpark
Re:Why Anime?
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b1t+r0t
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· Score: 4, Interesting
You got it right there. Producers in the US are more interested than following the latest "formula" (and cheezy CGI special effects) than in things like good writing and a good story. Hollywood couldn't write their way out of a wet paper bag, which is why two of the biggest films last year were Harry Potter and LOTR-FOTR.
The US music industry is even worse. Almost everything new these days is crap, and the '70s and '80s stuff (even though I like it) is just plain old. So I listen to anime theme song music with a bit of regular J-pop mixed in. Remember folks, '80s music happened because of Brit groups (and the occasional non-english song like 99 Luftbaloons and Der Komissar) getting so much airtime on MTV (back when MTV actually played music). Unfortunately J-pop has a bit of a language barrier to deal with, plus the same US producers' urge to "sanitize" anything Japanese language from anime because it's not in their "formula".
--
-- "Open source is good." - Steve Jobs
"Open source is evil." - Microsoft
You forgot to mention that a lot of the good stuff gets cancelled after (or sometimes during) its first season, while (gag) Friends keeps right on churning out more episodes.
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-- "Open source is good." - Steve Jobs
"Open source is evil." - Microsoft
Farscape is an American show filmed in Australia. It is produced by the Jim Henson company and Hallmark Entertainment for goodness sakes.
There are a whole lot of American shows that are not filmed in the United States, for instance Smallville (Canada), Survivor (all over the damn place) and of course all sorts of movies like The Matrix (Australia), Dark City (Australia), Spiderman (Australia.)
The choice of location really has to do with where the director believes is the best place to be.
-- The world is neither black nor white nor good nor evil, only many shades of CowboyNeal.
This sounds more like PR hype for the anime industry than a real, substantive comment on the art. Plus, it sounds like you're trying to convince yourself that your private little vice isn't so bad by giving it pretensions of pedagogical worth: "informative"??! Since when are science fiction stories chocked full of blood and sex praised for their educational qualities. Oh, and "entertaining and especially enjoyable", aint that a bit redundant?
Ok, about the subculture you're right--lotsa interesting geeks interested in anime and manga, a bit like D&D used to be. But hey, what about the culture behind the subculture--i.e., Japan? Its weird that your comments, like alot of things I read about anime, never seem to connect these visually stunning sci-fi adventure pieces to the Japanese culture that gives them birth...Why is this ?
Re:Why Anime?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
God, you are one dumb bitch.
Re:Why Anime?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1, Informative
Maybe the quality of US productions would increase if there was less concentration of media ownership. President Clinton changed the media ownership rules in 1997, allowing big companies to buy up radio stations, tv stations, production companies, and anything related to media in the name of 'convergence'.
Ask yourself, has the quality of media improved since 1997? For me, the quality has fallen off a cliff. The homogenized crap that comes out these days is a direct result of this. There are some articles about media ownership here:
The FCC has begun a review of the current ownership system, you can see it here:
http://www.fcc.gov/ownership/ [FCC.gov]
Maybe this is why US productions strip out Japanese language material, and anything else that does not have the widest possible audience. People are desperate for anything non-sanitized and good, so they go to Japanese Anime.
That's actually true. I tried to compare American cartoons with that of anime, and I saw a "big" difference. It wasn't only the animation that made me think that it was different but the impression and the emotion that each cartoon character possess. REALLY COOL AND GREAT!!! Where in the world did the Japanese got such manner of cartooning? =)
There are a whole lot of American shows that are not filmed in the United States, for instance Smallville (Canada), Survivor (all over the damn place) and of course all sorts of movies like The Matrix (Australia), Dark City (Australia), Spiderman (Australia.)
The choice of location really has to do with where the director believes is the best place to be.
I think you'll find it's more a case of "The choice of location really has to do with where the production company can get the biggest tax breaks from local government desperate to get hold of some foreign cash, and where the local actors don't have the US Actors Guild behind them in contract negotations"
Legally, the governmental regulations prohibit showing genital regions "interacting" un-censored (fuzzed out)... however, since they are tentacles... and not genitalia... I'm sure you can figure the rest out.
Re:tentacles
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infonography
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· Score: 2, Insightful
First off they are Japanese, so they eat things with Tentacles, you know -- Sushi. We eat Hotdogs, pickles, carrots, and other long things. Haven't you every played with your food????
-- Sorry about the writing. Robot fingers, you know? Cliff Steele in DOOM PATROL #23
Re:tentacles
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 2, Interesting
Tentacle porn may go back a ways before anime. In the 70s, Heavy Metal ran a few strips by some artists that were messing around with some fairly creepy stories involving a disease that caused some bizarre shapechanging mutations. Symptoms of the disease included the formation of large fleshy tentacle-like protruberances of immense power, and an overwhelming desire to rape people and tear them limb from limb. Once someone caught the disease, they became fugitives, since it was only a matter of time before they would succumb to their perverse desires.
The story that I remember (cut me some slack on errors - it was a long time ago) followed one character who had the disease, but thus far seemed to have the ability to maintain mental control and not go berzerk. Of course, they could still have some pretty outrageous and twisted nookie. The storyline, with sex, power, violence, and intrigue, was of course a winner, and may have inspired boatloads of imitators in a number of countries. Many of the artists during Heavy Metal's heyday were from all over as I recall.
Re:tentacles
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DragonMagic
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· Score: 5, Informative
It is illegal in Japan to show uncensored penises, but it is legal to show uncensored tentacles. This is why you often see them with a little mushroom tip, as well...
More than just symbolic, it's a way to bypass certain laws.
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Human nature is the same everywhere; the modes only are different. -- Earl of Chesterfield
bullshit do you know how much origianl hentai sex is not fuzzed out. i don't know where you got this from but i assume you've encounted very little hentai. go to some japanese hentai sites and translate them through google (not that you need them translated) and i'm sure you will find at least one that's not censored.
Not to nitpick, but I love sushi. The only thing I have had with tentacles and it was just a cut piece of octopus. Typically sushi is just fish. I'm sure in Japan you would find some of them eating whole squid with tentacles and all, but of all the sushi places in the US I have never come across anything like that. Once at an Italian place I got a seafood soup dish that a whole squid, but cooked of course.
-- Understanding is a three-edged sword. -- Kosh Naranek
Re:tentacles
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Well, you're totally off here. Actually people in Japan and other asian maritime nations squid of all shapes and sizes are eaten whole cooked in many different ways. The reason you don't see this in the States is because it's the fucking States for jeebuz's sakes. Any meat that looks like it did when it was alive is strictly forbidden. In Asia it's the opposite. Nobody wants a chicken without the head and the feet. People line up to eat organs it's not even legal to sell for human consuption in the States. And, it's the States that is fucked up in this equation because the Asian diet is far superior in color, flavor, variety and nutritional value.
Re:tentacles
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
The reason you don't see this in the States is because it's the fucking States for jeebuz's sakes. Any meat that looks like it did when it was alive is strictly forbidden.
Son, you need to get yourself down to Boston and eat some lobster. In some places you can even go to the tank and choose which one you wanna eat.
Of course the veggie activists are trying to put a stop to this, but it's only in California that anyone listens to them.
Which is why I specifically said "in the US", and said "I'm sure you would find them eating whole squid in Japan." You just reiterated everything I just said for the sake a trolling.
-- Understanding is a three-edged sword. -- Kosh Naranek
Re:tentacles
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
DragonMagic is mostly correct. Those laws were repealed a few years ago. You don't know much about the history of anime/hentai.
The Anime boom began long before that. I hate articles that begin with broadly incorrect generalities.
Re:1977 my ass
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
No, that's a specificality!
Re:1977 my ass
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Exactly! When I was in Japan during the early 50's, I knew several guys that were addicted to animated Japanese porn. I never understood why they "got-off" on anime. Little girls with shreiking voices and huge heads animated very poorly (less than 1 fps at times!) just doesn't seem very stimulating to me. Now Betty on the other hand, she's kinda cute...
Re:1977 my ass
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
You misread the article. His point was not that anime did not exist prior to 1977, but that 1977 was when anime first began to be taken seriously, rather than being automatically dismissed as "kids stuff". Not unlike what happened to SF and fantasy in the wake of the Star Wars movie success in 1977.
Animation in Netherlands
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new_breed
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· Score: 5, Interesting
On a related note, here is a link for the Dutch Animation Festival that will be held the upcoming weekend. www.haff.nl
Re:Animation in Netherlands
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
And in February we'll have a big convention in Haarlem:) Possible guests are people from Studio IGI, and The Pillows (J-Rock band from FLCL soundtrack) See http://www.animecon.nl for info and reservation
Re:Animation in Netherlands
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FooBarWidget
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· Score: 2
But anime is still underappriciated by the majority. Look at TV for example. FoxKids only broadcasts *old* kiddie anime like Pokemon/Digimon/Flint/Medabots/Hello Kitty (*gasp*)! Cartoon Network broadcasts DBZ (better than all the cr4p from FoxKids though). And Yourin broadcasts Sailor Moon season 1 (season 1! *gasp*!) and Card Captor Sakura, which is actually the American censored and edited dub dubbed to Dutch using horrible voices.
If things continue like this, it may do more bad than good to people's general view of anime.
Re:Animation in Netherlands
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DNS-and-BIND
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· Score: 2
Maybe because most Anime is actually made for children? It's not Japan's fault if misguided foreigners mistake it for genuine works of merit, instead of the 30-minute toy commercials they actually are.
-- Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
Re:Animation in Netherlands
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parliboy
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· Score: 2
Sigh... Most anime distributed in America is for children. There's a lot of non-shonen and non-shojo stuff. It's not Japan's fault if misguided foreigners mistake them for 30-minute toy commercials, instead of the genuine works of merit they actually are.
-- "You're never ready, just less unprepared."
Re:Animation in Netherlands
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Digimon old? No way, it's on the 4th season not just because of its video game origin (even though it helps). Besides, it has better plot than just going to another gym and beating the same dumb old Team Rocket with Pikachu, then drag the plot 4ever until Nintendo make another Pokemon game. In fact, some of the TV-made digimon make it back to the games!
BTW, Fox Kids just changed to Fox Box.
Re:Animation in Netherlands
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
It's an interesting article but it still doesn't explain why gay people are so drawn to it.
CmdrTaco wa okama yo!
Re:Animation in Netherlands
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
+1, Insightful!
Re:Animation in Netherlands
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DNS-and-BIND
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· Score: 2
Err, no. Ever watched anime in Japan? There are three channels with it on right now, and all are obviously targeted at children, to judge from the toy commercials that play during the station breaks. Doesn't stop foreigners from gobbling them up, though...there are a few people here who get in front of the TV and won't stop all day.
-- Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
so how did anime porn come about?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
I think it was from poorly paid animators cartooning porn on the side for cash?
Re:so how did anime porn come about?
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Ninja+Master+Gara
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· Score: 1
Cuz men were making the animation. Just like how porn games came about.
--
--- When I grow up, I want to be a kid again.
Re:so how did anime porn come about?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Some of the animation/comic book studios are female driven, and they still produce porn.
Re:so how did anime porn come about?
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Ninja+Master+Gara
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· Score: 1
I have no doubt they're capitalizing on the market. But "came about"?
--
--- When I grow up, I want to be a kid again.
Spirited Away
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rufusdufus
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· Score: 5, Informative
Let me recommend "Spirited Away" to everyone. This is not your typical jerky graphics, guns blazing loud obnoxious Anime film. The graphics are great. But more important is the story line and the pacing. Its slow and methodical and completely enthralling. Groundbreaking even.
Great movie even for people who don't appreciate Anime.
Re:Spirited Away
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screwballicus
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· Score: 2, Funny
And let's not forget the stirring romantic and philosophic exploration of the epic Legend of Overfiend series.
*wipes away a tear*
Re:Spirited Away
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gl4ss
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· Score: 3, Informative
i'd recommend laputa - castle in the sky too.
especially if you liked spirited away..
-- world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
I really enjoyed the first shocking scene with the parents gluttony... man was that unexpected. Everything until the end when it kind of wrapped up a little too neatly and everyone became happy in a very Disney bank-rolled sort of way.....
-- A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
"Typical" jerky graphics and guns blazing loud obnoxious anime? Oh, you must mean those 10+ years old movies released by Manga (the company)?
Watch some recent anime movies, like Inu Yasha or Slayers Premium, or even the somewhat older movies like The Vision of Escaflowne. *Extremely* smooth and beautiful graphics.
Hey, rent all the hentai you want, just be sure to stay away from manga, especially if you live near an elementary school.
Me, I think anime's a legitimate style that's only recently coming into its own and transcending what traditional animation can do for you. Two words: Cowboy Bebop.
Scott
Re:Spirited Away
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Ponty
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· Score: 4, Insightful
Does it have an obnoxious little kid who screams and jumps around? Every time I try and get into an anime at my friends' request, I am repulsed by the outrageously obnoxious characters. Most specifically, small round girls who shriek and bounce around. Really annoying. Even 'serious' ones like a movie about Hiroshima (I forget the name, it's been a couple of years.)
Let me recommend "Spirited Away" to everyone. This is not your typical jerky graphics, guns blazing loud obnoxious Anime film. The graphics are great. But more important is the story line and the pacing. Its slow and methodical and completely enthralling. Groundbreaking even.
Heh, yes, escaflowne has one of these characters.. The cat-girl, which I cannot remember the name of.
Here's a little activity for owners of the series. Watch one of the first episodes, and count the amount of times the Cat-Girl says "Lord Van!". If 5 minutes have passed and you still have fingers and toes, you are not watching that early of an episode:)
Re:Spirited Away
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Minna+Kirai
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· Score: 2, Insightful
Not exactly in a Disney-like way. In every major Disney animation I can recall*, the hero's problems are the work of a villian (usually a magician or, prototypically, a witch) who is defeated at the end.
Sometimes its merely her plan that's foiled, but usually the villian's existence is terminated as well. Death, dissolution, imprisonment, or at least public humiliation- the Wicked Witch is not allowed to return to her tower with pride & power intact. The villian doesn't get to become happy with everyone else.
Unlike 2 other Miyazaki movies that Disney has imported (Kiki's Delivery Service and Mononoke Hime), Spirited Away had a well defined antagonist in the person of "Ubaba". In fact, she was even a witch! But her comeupance was not nearly the simplistic Good-Conquerors-Evil that a Mouse storyboarder might create. Her pride was hurt a little, maybe she learned a lesson about caring, but her livelihood and position of control were not harmed.
* I haven't watched enough Disney movies to tell if this is really the pattern, but its the impression I get from a small sample (Cinderella & Alladin, Beauty&Beast). Its notable that the Pixar movies, although influenced by Disney writers, haven't fallen much into the "hero vs villan" mold either. They're more "man against nature".
But more important is the story line and the pacing. Its slow and methodical and completely enthralling.
Oh there are plenty of other boring animes around, nothing special there. (Although, I did cry during Graveyard of the Fireflies, but then again, I'm pretty sure my brain is broken somehow.)
Re:Spirited Away
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Perhaps you mean Grave of the Fireflies, though it's not about Hiroshima itself. It's about the same war and includes one of those kids though.
As I said, it's been a few years. I seem to recall it being principally purple with some gruesome scenes of people burning up in the nuclear explosion. But re. my original question: what's up with the annoying kids? Are they that much a part of the Japanese culture? They're beyond awful in the kids' shows (Tenchi, Dragonball, etc.) and they're annoying enough to make me not like the shows that people have thought I'd like (Cowboy Bebop [which I was really close to not minding], others.)
I don't think is part of the Japanese culture, since USA animation movies also have plenty of those characters (see Disney's and Dreamworks'...)
Maybe you would enjoy Akira. As long as I can remember it has no annoying bouncing kid. Rather the opposite;)
-- Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
Re:Spirited Away
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
I don't recall Fist of the North Star having an annoying kid who bounced around. It had a little girl who couldn't talk for most of the movie, but had this annoying sound assosciated with her being in trouble. Oh, and there was her "brother" who was slightly annoying, and bounced around a bit, but not a lot.
Yes@! This is exactly my complaint. I love Cowboy Bebop, a great series, but they had to add that stupid annoyingass character 'Ed' who does nothing but detract from the feeling they're trying to create (or are they -trying- to piss me off?).
--
--
grep "xercist"/dev/random...you'll find me in there someday
Please. Akira is all about annoying bouncing kids. Where "bouncing" means either "bursting with deadly psychic power" or "member of a punkass motorcycle gang", or both, depending on the character.
--
Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.
No, there are some very good works. Particularily, hotaru no haka (grave of the butterflies) talks the very short story of two orphaned kids. I found it its not as sad as kuro ame (black rain, or maybe death rain) wich is not an anime, but treats the same topic (in other context).
Beauty and the Beast was a bad example for you to pick. Gaston only acts like a villain & causes problems near the end of the movie. The rest of the time he is just an ordinary jerk.
Re:Spirited Away
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Disney movies do not have annoying bouncing kids. They do have annoying animal companions.
The villian in B&B, I'm thinking, was the wicked witch who laid the curse in the beginning. She's not seen except as a shadow in the very beginning. But still, the problems are caused by one evil person, whose scheme is defeated. (We don't know if she had any other plots to fall back on. The Spirited Away witch had a job to return to)
I agree as I watched the DVD (region 2) three times.
As the director said
"For the people who used to be 10 years old,
and the people who are going to be 10 years old."
Japanese look bad on screen?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0, Funny
The guys maybe, but I got a couple of gigs of porn to show my disagreement.
Fascinating article????
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Dot.Com.CEO
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· Score: 5, Informative
I am pretty sure the person who submitted the article either did not read it thoroughly or did not really understand it. It is more of an insight into why Japanese people like anime rather than why Westerners do not.
If anything, it analyses why anime tends to reject Japanese characters and ideals in favor of Western ones.
By the way, since the server is completely/.ed, here is the google cache
-- Mother is the best bet and don't let Satan draw you too fast.
Re:Fascinating article????
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Minna+Kirai
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· Score: 1
Reading the submission text, I think not what westerners expect applies not to animation, but to significance of animation to the Japanese.
And few people would guess that it's all an expression of submerged racial self-loathing...
(I sure attributed blandness of anime characters more to lazy artists than anything else...)
Re:Fascinating article????
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
There is another side to anime acceptance and in particular the greater accetence of cute big eye characters by Japanese is the development of young Japanese. The educational system which forces young Japanese to conform to a prescribed formula results in their emotional development being locked in a child-like state before Japanese children get to take on and understand adult responsibilities. They are told what to do at every step never having to think for themselves. Another way to look at is that many people in the West would harp back to their adolescent days and think that that was some of the best times in their life but in Japan it is closer to childhood that people yearn for. These ideas are expressed in such works by Fukuda Kazuya (Why have Japanese Become Such Infants) & Merry White (The material Child; Coming of Age in Japan and America). The majority of anime is cute eyed creatures and while subject matter is often adult in nature there is that distance from real life and adult responsibilities. Anyone who has been to Japan would know how ubiquitous cute child like merchandise is from little dolls on peoples bags and mobile phones to stores that have some deal with Kitty Chan or some other big eyed creature. I think a lot of these changes have happened in the last 30 or so years with economic development and social change that came with it but also in the post-war education system and the rebuild mindset creating diligent workers that don't need to think
I do see merit in the argument that the author puts forth about "Ethnic Bleaching" and this kinda of inferiority complex which is/was somewhat real. Japan in many ways is a post-modern country in a pre-modern mindset, the need to build, concrete everything in sight, the desire to develop when they already have; stuck on a point they have alread achieved. I think this type of thinking has been lessening lately but its probably a long road for Japan to fix its current woes. Anyway I have gone OT...
Re:Fascinating article????
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HiThere
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· Score: 2
"lazy artists"??? I guess you've never done any animation, even at a flip-book level. You don't do animation if you're at all interested in being lazy. (Not unless you are so strongly pulled to the art that it just doesn't matter.)
All cartoonists simplify. This is mandatory. The only attempted exceptions to this rule that I can think of are the Hyper-Realists, and they were painters, not cartoonists.
Art is, almost by definition, the process of abstraction. And good abstraction is itself a lot of work. True, once someone has designed a style, a lot of the simplification has already been done, and the work becomes much more technical. But this doesn't mean that turning out thousands of slightly differing images at consistent resolution and with consistent distortions of perspective is easy.
--
I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
Re:Fascinating article????
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Minna+Kirai
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· Score: 1
I have in fact created cell-based animation at somewhere above flipbook quality...
Note that this comment was in response to an article which was stupid and funny, trying to construct grand sociological insights from an art style. If one must draw a conclusion from Anime's visually-ambiguous ethnicity, then lazy artists is as good as any. (Publishers angling for overseas sales is a good one too, but not applicable to early anime development).
Nonetheless, if you look at the faces of Anime characters and compare them to faces from "Western" comic books or cartoons, or even from manga, you'll see a whole lot of near uniformity. Within the works of a studio/artist there's sameness, and there's sameness within anime as a whole as well. When a work is transitioned from manga to anime, some distinctness is always removed. (And not just to simplify, but other changes too)
I'm not talking about the effort of animation, but the creativity invested in character design. That's a process done once per show, and is no more tedious than a detailed imaginary sketch- the finger-cramping labor of animating by hand isn't involved. (Although its true that designers simplify partly to reduce the chances of a low-paid animator screwing up. In anime this is a constant threat- compare Evangelion episodes 4&5. The "laziness" isn't as much an individual failing as a business decision to reduce the man hours of Korean pencil-jockeys they're paying for. They don't want to retrain those people, so they tend towards the same old character shapes)
I remember when Escaflowne(TV) was released. Anime fans were caught off guard by the astounding character design- everyone had detectable noses! Even girls!
Even the best fall into this. Miyazaki's Chihiro, Kiki, San, and Nausicaa are indistinguishable from each other without the differences in age and costume.
When an Anime character designer needs to create a new leading female, the only real tool he can call on is a unique hairstyle. At best, it must be something that no Anime girl has worn before, leading to a competitive plumbing of ever-greater depths of weirdness. Search for images from recent series like "Piano" or "Generator Gawl" to see how bad it can get.
My wife and I rented two adult anime videos some years ago. We watched 15 minutes on the first tape, before realizing how sick it was... what a heck, it might have been a bad anime... we watched 10 minutes of the second video, and it was even more weird and perverted than the first one. I guess we weren't enough pervs to get something out of it... 8P
Re:Adult anime
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1, Insightful
There's anime that covers every possible category that a TV or film can cover. I think a better question would be what the hell are you doing renting sick anime?:)
Re:Adult anime
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hatchet
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· Score: 2, Interesting
You mean hentai. I relly like it... you watch such movies to see what you can't in real life. Why would you want an ordinary fuck porn, if you can fuck your wife in real?! We watch hentai to statisfy our fetishes which we can't exercise in real life.
You had to be pretty clueless to rent such a pair of movies. First, they had to be marked as rated R/ adults only. Second, adult anime is a pretty small genre compared to the whole of anime, just like the porno industry here is pretty small compared to hollywood.
Many animes do have sexual themes in them, even if they are not explicitly about sex. But they're usually well done and suggestive, just like sexual references are in everyday life.
Sounds like you just hit the wrong two rentals. Frankly, I doubt that you picked two adult-only rentals on accident; I think you knew what you were getting into (hardcore animated sex), but didn't realize how sick it would be.
Why would you want an ordinary fuck porn, if you can fuck your wife in real?!
Why we rented anime? (I'm pretty sure it said anime on the video shelf) I'll let you figure that one out... you'll probably figure out the answer after you've been married and faithful to the same partner for a couple of years.;)
Frankly, I doubt that you picked two adult-only rentals on accident; I think you knew what you were getting into (hardcore animated sex), but didn't realize how sick it would be.
You're right... We had no problems understanding that it was an adult anime. My wife and I were shopping in China town when we saw these videos on the shelf, and they looked okay on the cover. (We'd never rented any animated porn before, so we were quite curious about it) The store owner didn't speak good English and he didn't tell my wife (who's fluent in both Cantonese and Mandarin) a lot about the content since he was slightly embarrassed of chatting about adult movies with a woman. Maybe we'll try it out one more time later on... but the first experience was rather discouraging.
Yeah, goodness knows, it's virtually impossible to rent a random Anime that has female characters that are not sexually appealing to 15-year-old boys. Or who don't show their tits at some point during the show. Or an Anime that actually has a single unattractive female character under 40. Face it, Anime is sexist as hell, and it won't change until Japan does.
-- Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
Main Entry: 1partner Pronunciation: 'pärt-n&r also 'pärd- Function: noun Etymology: Middle English partener, alteration of parcener, from Anglo-French, coparcener -- more at PARCENER Date: 14th century 1 archaic : one that shares : PARTAKER 2 a : one associated with another especially in an action : ASSOCIATE, COLLEAGUE b : either of two persons who dance together c : one of two or more persons who play together in a game against an opposing side d : either of two people living together; especially : SPOUSE 3 : a member of a partnership; also : such membership 4 : one of the heavy timbers that strengthen a ship's deck to support a mast -- usually used in plural
By using partner, I include both heterosexual and gay couples. Do you get it or shall I explain it on the same level I explain things to my seven-year old boy?
And you can find unattractive women in American shows? Sure anime is just as sexist as American televison but at least not all the shows aimed at girls are "Fairy Magical Unicorn Dust in Barbie Land."
-- Feminism is the radical notion that women are people.
Re:Adult anime
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
From someone who has lived in Japan, you'll have to be very careful buying anime if you don't want explicit content. In fact, many consider animated Japanese movies to not be anime if it isn't (to use the word you used) sick. As I understand it, movie houses have recently began making children's versions of anime, but that's just strange. Could you imagine Playboy trying to make a book for children? It just doesn't work.
My local "alter-native" video store puts a little red dot on the anime that may not be for everyone. A red dot means "warning! tentacles and demon-sperm rape scenes!"
This is handy for people who may not be in the mood (now, or ever) for such fare, but also helps against simple mistakes.
"Honey, this cover looks cool, let's get this"
"Ok"
Note to self: "Urotsukidoji: Legend of the Overfiend" is not a first date movie.
-- --
clvrmnky
Re:Adult anime
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Clueless? You must be clueless if you think most of those movies are rated. I've looked for "clean" anime to buy for my grandkids, but it's very, very hard to find. With US movies, since most are rated by the MPAA, you can just pick-up a G-rated movie, and you know what you're getting.
Re:Adult anime
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
"Facially deformed and morbidly obese soldier Sailor Moon."
(from a great discussion on alt.fan.sailor-moon)
Somehow, I just don't see it being terribly popular.
There you go.
One of the best ways to diminish sexism is to allow young females access to society without the term "pretty girl" hanging around their necks like stocks in the town square.
you could say the same thing about..
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512k
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· Score: 2, Insightful
Civil war documentaries, or porn
Many Americans find porn a lot more appealing than a lot of stuff on TV because porn isn't as constrained by the American Standard that effects many of the popular programming. I watch porn constantly, always on top of the latest fansubbed releases, picking up the DVDs of series that are especially good and make it to North America. I support the full circle of porn, and all of the fruit it bears. Of it all, I've met new people, made some good friends, and experience a whole culture that I would have otherwise been completely oblivious to. I find porn to be informative, entertaining, and especially enjoyable.
that being said, I couldn't come up with an explaination of why I like Anime, other than, it's high quality animation, and the allure of something from a culturally different background.
-- ------
Work is so much easier when you don't
Re:you could say the same thing about..
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 2, Funny
I'll admit, I've seen my share of both.
Let's just hope they never combine civil war documentaries *with* porn.
*shudder*
It'd bring new meaning to the words, "We should flank to the left, and then take 'em from the rear!"
Re:you could say the same thing about..
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blowhole
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· Score: 1
If you're watching Yankee porn, does that makes you a Yanker?
-- "Ask me about Loom"
Re:you could say the same thing about..
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parliboy
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· Score: 3, Funny
It'd bring new meaning to the words, "We should flank to the left, and then take 'em from the rear!"
At least we'd know why they really called General McClellan "Little Mac".
-- "You're never ready, just less unprepared."
Re:you could say the same thing about..
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Wolfrider
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· Score: 1
...And if you do it while calling random people and bugging them, does that make you a Crank Yanker? .
-- .
== WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
slashcache.org!
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 5, Insightful
Two comments and the link (and possibly an intercontinental internet pipe) has been slashdotted!
The question of a cache should not be met with a vague grumbling about "content owner permission" rights.
Stop being so damned irresponsible! Cache the complete first page of any linked articles!
Hell, this could even be done without slashdot footing the bill for the extra bandwidth. Before posting an article:
(1) compress the first page of every article link to a single file. (2) share that through a peer-to-peer system such as bittorrent.
It would work. Everyone would win - slashdot readers and linked sites. AND it would be a Genuinely Good Use(tm) for the peer to peer tech.
----
Tech notes:
Internet Explorer can save complete pages as a single.MHT compressed file - there must be something else equivalant that works with all other browsers - hell, even make it a standard zip file with the.slash extention and associate that extension with a script or batch file that uncompresses and views when clicked on.
Bittorrent: It's seriously underappreciated, and - the part I love - it ONLY shares the CURRENT FILE that you're downloading. As soon as you close the "file download" box when your download is done, you drop out of the peer to peer network that was made specifically for that file. It is neat.
mhtml is not compressed afaik. some browsers have web archive capability; konqueror has a format called.war (Web ARchive) which is just a.tar.gz, read like a directory (index.html loads if there).
there is nothing like this for mozilla, here are the requests: MHTML http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=18764 Web Archive http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64286
given how there is no standard, any slashcache would have to not be compressed. besides, web servers automate compression to a certain degree on their own....this should not detract from the point that if google can do it, so too can slashdot.
Same reason. American Hardcore porn lacks any real emotion or acting or plot. American softcore porn lacks any hardcore action.
Anime porn has more emotional content, better plots, etc. Plus you can really dive into darker things like domination, shame, without creating a snuff film. That can make things more exciting and makes topics available for self-examination without actually watching a real person get beat up or whatever.
--
He painted a unicorn in outer space. I'm askin' ya, what's it breathin'?
Only on TV (NS)
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Nuff Said.
The Article
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
I don't think the author has actually watched all the programs they are discussing. They made a few statements about NGE that I found questionable but they may have just been avoiding spoilers.
I havn't read the whole article yet however since it experienced a sudden surge in activity for some reason.
That was Anno's idea when he made Evangelion. He was sick of the same type of anime series being released with the same type of ending that you could work out after watching 1 episode.
So he made Evangelion end the way he did, partly because the real story in Eva was about Anno and his battle with depression (expressed mostly in Shinji, but part of his pesonna is in Rei and Asuka too), and the other part is Anno wanting everyone to make their own conclusions and not be told what to think.
If, like Anno, you can analyse yourself and identify flaws in yourself (like at the end when all the characters are being interrogated), perhaps you can make changes and maybe become a better person because of it.
End of Evangelion was, when it comes down to it, nothing more than a more visual representation (easier to follow) of episodes 25 and 26.
It can take a number of viewings of the final episodes to make any sense of them, but understanding that it was never about a boy and his robot saving the world (hence the illuminated stage, which is Anno saying that the story leading up to this was nothing more than a show, a facade), it was the story of a man who's mother died, who became a recluse and was neither living or dead for 4 years, but this man was able to face himself, and with the saying, I musn't run away, he was able to accept himself for who he was (a coward, just like Shinji) and he was able to, in his mind, make the changes necessary to become a better person.
In the end, isn't accepting yourself for who you are half the battle, rather than trying to be something you're not?
Anime is a natural evolution.
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infonography
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· Score: 2, Interesting
If you can forget for a few minutes that it's a drawing, it's the best bang for your buck in Special Effects.
Japan being short on space can't really throw togeather resources like big studios. And if your market doesn't care why should you. Hong Kong had the Martial Arts traditions, lots of Jackie Chan and Jet Li types. It's cheap. Europe, has classy people like James Bond.
Here in the US we got more money then sense so we get Attack of the Colons. (not a typo, my colon twists up everytime that #2 is mentioned).
The only feature I like about you humans is that you do adapt very well. (a feature as in a bug for which documentation exists).
-- Sorry about the writing. Robot fingers, you know? Cliff Steele in DOOM PATROL #23
Re:Anime is a natural evolution.
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Japan being short on space can't really throw togeather resources like big studios.
I love this type of generalization. Let me try one:
American people, having fat asses, don't like small automobiles.
Re:Anime is a natural evolution.
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Put down the crack pipe before posting, troll.
Re:Anime is a natural evolution.
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
I love this type of generalization. Let me try one: American people, having fat asses, don't like small automobiles.
You just demonstrated that generalizations are usually not completely false. In order to generalize, there must be a trend to pick up on.
Being an American who is well over 6 feet tall, with an enormous ass (48 waist), I don't like small automobiles. So I fit your generalization perfectly.
As for the "generalization" about Japan not being able to film big studio pictures due to lack of space, it's true. Land values are so insanely expensive that Japanese executives often find it cheaper to fly to the US when they wanted to play golf than to pay the huge green fees in Japan. A full-size film or TV studio in Japan could easilly cost billions. Producing Anime side-steps this problem nicely.
Was Fat Albert anime? I could have sworn I saw a Kamehameha in one episode...
"Hrey hrey hrey...suck on this, Mush Mouth!"
"ARRRRRRRRRRRRRR!"
-- I'll form my OWN solar system! With blackjack! And hookers!
MANGA better than animae porn....
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
I think that MANGA better than animae porn.which mean MANGA does not contain porn.example,SHONEN JUMP japanese comic magazine each contents are very heroism.....
Re:MANGA better than animae porn....
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elveu
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· Score: 1
manga is just a comic. it is quite possible to have manga hentai, in fact quite a few exist. personally aside from porn manga tends to have better storys (in the same way a book does to a movie) as they don't have to fit it into a few hours or a group of half hour segments. a particually strong example of this is the gunsmith manga compared to the anime, completly diffrent storylines and while the anime was good tehre was more to the manga.
Overanalyzation
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FooBarWidget
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· Score: 5, Insightful
"One should also note that Rei has blue hair and red eyes ?rather remarkable traits for a Japanese girl!!" Uhm... unnatural hair colors like purple, blue, white and green look nice. That's it, they look nice. No need to think about *why* they chose that color, it just looks nice!
I think the author of the article is overanalyzing things.
Re:Overanalyzation
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
True. Not a lot of girls do dye their hair in purple, red or green, but if it's done right and if it goes well to the rest, then it can look really good.
Re:Overanalyzation
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Graspee_Leemoor
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· Score: 5, Informative
The reason for different hair colours was originally to make it easier for the audience to tell different characters apart.
(I claim my +5 informative!)
Nowadays not many anime use hair colour for this reason. Sometimes a certain hair colour is used because it associated with a certain character stereotype.
Totally agree, the visual appearance of anime characters is very much appreciated. The style is leaking out of the films and back into real life through Cosplay.
Even here on the streets in Stockholm Sweden its beginning to look like a Cosplay convention must be in town from the number of people walking around with primary colour hair, and they look great. It seems that anime has just as great a cultural impact world-wide as live action movies.
However it is obvious that the author of the article does not like anime and only dwells on its questionable aspects.
It would be just as easy to criticise Hollywood for producing anodyne pap with shallow meaningless characters and a tendency for cultural imperialism. However that would miss the point, if you want to see an art movie with real characters and emotional depth then you don't go to see "Terminator II". However lots of people do go to see "Terminator II" to be entertained.
Anime probably reflects the mostly suppressed desire for rebellion or escape in the Japanese character. After a decade of low growth and further erosion of traditional Japanese virtues, it is hardly surprising that there is a thriving industry in fantasy escapist-entertainment. What better medium than animation to express unfulfilled desires and potentialities.
What is maybe more surprising, is that these films have such a strong following in the west. It may be that even some of us would rather not conform to the current Hollywood zeitgeist and find welcome relief in the fantasy world of anime.
The author complains that the characters in anime are not Japanese, whilst by default being unable to give us an example of a live action movie containing stars that the Japanese would like to emulate. It must be a reality then, that the Japanese people are floating without a strong sense of who they are. If they are culturally drifting, then it is totally appropriate that the films they see contain imaginary people, not "as a rejection of who they are" but more of a question "who could we be?". No doubt the characters will change over time as fashion and new ideas dictate.
Anime is a fascinating art form and for once I think a cliché is totally appropriate "Fiendishly clever these Japanese!"
-- Facts are history now plebs have politics for religion on social media.
Re:Overanalyzation
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1, Insightful
A lesson I learned from a Japanese friend as a kid:
Anime characters incorporate wildly different, unrealistic, and brightly-colored hairstyles as a matter of differentiation.
Anime characters, by and large, look remarkably similar. Its the BESM (Big Eyes - Small Mouth) effect: by accentuating only two features on the face, giving all characters pallid skin, and having all characters visually perfect (no moles, acne, dimples) all anime characters start to look alike, especially to new viewers, and even mor. By giving each character a distinctive hairstyle, with a special color, it is extremely easy to tell characters apart without drawing small facial features over and over.
"One should also note that Rei has blue hair and red eyes ?rather remarkable traits for a Japanese girl!!"
Uhm... unnatural hair colors like purple, blue, white and green look nice. That's it, they look nice. No need to think about *why* they chose that color, it just looks nice!
And obviously has never been to Japan. I couldn't keep track of all the girls I saw with blue or pink hair. (I never saw any red eyes, but if I started examining the faces of every japanese girl I saw, I think I might have gotten slapped.)
"AIEEE! Etchi Gaijin!!!!" *POW!*
-- --------
Nothing can be done before the tremendous power! RabidComics
Re:Overanalyzation
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
You guys are missing the point. So what if the oversimplified, cartoonish characters use hair color as a means of differentiation.
The point is that not all anime characters are simplistic; many of them are fairly realistic, and they all tend to have caucasian features. It would be tedious to list them all, but even though I watch hardly any anime, I can cite Princess Monoke and Sailor Moon as obvious examples.
Anime preference for white caucasian features does reflect a degree of Japanese self-loathing; this does not seem to clash, interestingly, with the famous Japanese ethnocentrism and racialism. Apparently it is possible to be ethnocentric and self-loathing at the same time.
No problem with that... I think it's pretty too... Damnit, some colors are really beautiful and I think it can be used in real life too. I saw some girl with some dark violet in her hair, it was damn pretty, and not "freaky"...
I never saw any red eyes, but if I started examining the faces of every japanese girl I saw, I think I might have gotten slapped.
When my middle school (a long while back) had a cultural exchange and we took them to a waterpark, the boys absolutely went nuts! Their eyes were out of their sockets, very much like you see in anime. They were following women around just drooling.
I'm not sure you'd get much difference in reaction over there than here depending on your age group. Although, I have never been to Japan.
-- "Would you rather have a playstation addicted dork wearing a star wars t-shirt?"
I agree. Particularly because Rei, while I cannot recall exactly where I heard this, is supposed to be an albino. She's not ``just your average Japanese girl'' and anyone who's seen the series will know precisely what I mean, whether you agree on the albinism or not.
Many characters in Crest of the Stars have blue hair as well, but that is due to genetic modification. On the other hand, Akane in Ranma seems to have dark navy blue hair, and Shampoo has really bright blue hair, and I don't see any particular reason for it. But then again, it's Ranma.
I also think he's reading too much into character drawing. Eyes are drawn large in all animated features in order to express emotions more clearly. Eyebrows appearing on top of hair are also drawn for this purpose. The customs and habits of the characters generally seem to match whatever nationality they are supposed to be: if they are Japanese then they behave Japanese, whatever the look might be.
-- Those who do not know the past are doomed to reimplement it, poorly.
Re:Overanalyzation
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Rei isn't even human. This would be obvious to anyone who has seen the series from start to finish. I don't want to go into what she really is because it would spoil the show for those who haven't seen the ending.
Re:Overanalyzation
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Well another reason they chose those colors is because she is different then the other characters. Actually
~Spoiler~ Rei is a clone of Shinji's mother. ~End Spoiler~
Anime sucks
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1, Informative
No really!
http://www.anzwers.org/free/moonxtal/essay/censo re danime.html
Eh?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Rei is also a multitude of clones, genetically engineered, and depending on what translation/subtitling you believe, is far from human.
In other words, just browse this article, and you'll find nothing strange about the character. Nine out of ten Slashdotters would genetically engineer chicks with cat ears, if they could.
The Significance of Anime
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jukal
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· Score: 5, Funny
is a derivate of the amount of comments posted on a story titled "The Significance of Anime". Based on a recent empirical study, the significance of Anime is just a bit less than that of a "Indiglo Clock Case Mod".
Re:The Significance of Anime
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Hehe - well put.
Re:Why Anime Porn?
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Erik+Hollensbe
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· Score: 5, Funny
Emotional Content?
When I watch porn, I want to see acts of sex. If I wanted 'emotional content', I'd watch a soap opera.
Play jazz more freely as they wish
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D+iz+a+n+k+Meister
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· Score: 2, Insightful
Cowboy Bebop is great SciFi. The way music is used is really creative--sax solo during a space ship chase scene. The world-view is also very interesting: a BladeRunner like gel of every culture. Basically can't say enough good things about the show.
Law & Order, CSI, sitcoms, American TV in general have nothing on it.
--
He painted a unicorn in outer space. I'm askin' ya, what's it breathin'?
yeah its /.'ed so here's the text .
by
8282now
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· Score: 3, Informative
By Sato Kenji Japan's animation boom began in the summer of l977, when the movie Uchu Senkan Yamato (Space Cruiser Yamato) captivated teenagers and young adults to emerge as a major box-office hit. The success of this sci-fi "anime" prompted a fundamental shift in the cultural status of animation.
Even before Space Cruiser Yamato, Japan had produced a considerable number of animated films, but they were generally regarded as children's fare or, at best, family entertainment; the few adult-oriented animated movies were not successful commercially. Space Cruiser Yamato was the first anime to demonstrate that the medium need not restrict itself to kiddie fare. Following suit, from the late l970s, Japan put out a steady stream of animated films geared to young adults, including Ginga Tetsudo 999 (Galaxy Express 999) and Kido Senshi Gandamu (Mobile Suit Gundam). Most of these were commercial successes as well, although critics dismissed these as exploitation films pandering to teenage tastes. The attitude of film critics changed abruptly, however, with the 1984 release of Kaze no Tani no Naushica (Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind), a film whose artistic quality was widely regarded as more than sufficient to hold the attention of adults. With this movie, writer-director Miyazaki Hayao overturned the conventional image of the anime director as a versatile hack, and was soon crowned as anime's first genuine auteur.
Of course, not all anime rose to the level of non-juvenile entertainment or art. In fact, in the late 1980s, with young adult anime showing signs of staleness, the focus began to revert to children's films. Nevertheless, the genre never relinquished the commercial foothold it had gained during the young adult anime craze; furthermore, Miyazaki began to enjoy a large degree of freedom in his filmmaking, as did several other directors who subsequently achieved the status of anime auteur. The results of those efforts, particularly the anime produced by Miyazaki's Studio Ghibli, are not simply movies with high box-office potential; they are in many instances artistically superior to the live-action films made in Japan, and they have won growing legions of fans overseas.
During the 1990s, animation, spearheaded by the work of a few anime auteurs, emerged as the face of Japanese film, positioning Japan as the world's undisputed "anime superpower." And in 1997 -- a full twenty years since anime took off -- animation's preeminence over live-action films in Japan was more apparent than ever. In a matter of months after its release, Mononoke-hime (Princess Mononoke), Miyazaki's latest film to date which was then alleged to be his last directorial effort, broke every box-office record to become the biggest domestic movie hit of all time in Japan. In the languishing field of young adult anime, the avant garde sci-fi work Shin Seiki Evangerion (Neon Genesis Evangelion) scored a major box-office hit and won a huge cult following. Moreover, children's anime are as popular as ever. In all, it appears that anime has taken center stage in the Japanese film industry, pushing live-action movies into the wings.
Fleshless reality
The simplest explanation for this reversal of fortune between animation and live-action is that the former has ridden to success on the coattails of its older cousin, Japanese comics, or manga, a medium that emerged as a main focus of Japanese popular culture after World War II, and has grown particularly pervasive since the 1970s. It is true that many successful anime were based on popular manga and anime have been heavily influenced by manga's pictorial conventions. Another important factor is cost. Hollywood has made successful live-action films based on such popular comics as Superman and Batman, but the need for expensive sets and special effects to create the necessary visual realism has resulted in extremely high production costs. Japan's film industry, with its much smaller market, cannot afford such high-budget pictures To put it another way, animation offers a means of producing slick, stylish films without spending much money.
Still, this ignores the fact that anime's very format has an inherent weakness. Because its characters are relatively small and simplified pictures painted on cels (thin pieces of plastic), they lack the fleshy presence of actors, nor can they rival the subtlety of good actors' performances. Compared with live-action films, their reality is literally two-dimensional, which is why animated films were for so long regarded as fit only for children's (or family) entertainment. The reason Hollywood elected to make live-action films out of Superman and Batman is that they could be counted on to attract wider audiences and larger profits, notwithstanding the much higher costs of production.
It may be that Japanese under a certain age, having been weaned on manga and anime, are not bothered by the lack of visual realism. But this begs the question: Why is the cultural status of animation so much higher in Japan than in America, the home of Walt Disney? To be sure, ever since the anime boom began animated films have sought ever greater realism in both form and content, refining the animation itself and looking to more serious subject matter. They have gone far beyond Disney films, which remain essentially animated musicals performed by conspicuously cartoonish characters. Films like Studio Ghibli's Mimi o Sumaseba (Whisper of the Heart) and Omoide Poroporo (Only Yesterday) portray Japan's urban and rural landscapes with a realism that puts many live-action movies to shame. Visually, however, Japanese anime by no means transcend the medium, even though viewers may find some of them remarkably realistic for animated features.
In any case, a growing number of people accustomed to animation's lack of visual realism cannot in itself explain why anime has come to represent Japanese cinema in toto. For animation to push aside live-action films, a growing number of people had to prefer the thin, insubstantial reality of animation to the flesh-and-blood world of live-action -- they had to be cool or even hostile to the real image. This, in fact, is precisely what began to occur in Japan in the 1990s.
Why, then, did the Japanese take a disliking to live-action? One reason is that most Japanese films are made on a low budget and look it, with low production values. Second, there is no denying that in theme and subject matter, some anime are more thoughtful and ambitious than their live-action counterparts. Miyazaki's Princess Mononoke, a fantasy-adventure set in medieval Japan, is a critique of modernity founded on a deep concern for the environment. Neon Genesis Evangelion describes an individual's existentialist search for identity, calling to mind Jean-Paul Sartre's famous desperate axiom: "Hell is other people." And Kido Keisatsu Patoreiba 2 (Patlabor 2: The Movie), released in 1992, lashes out at postwar society with its depiction of Tokyo under siege by urban terrorists -- a portrayal eerily prophetic of the Aum sect's 1995 poison gas attack on Tokyo subways.
Of course, the artistic success of each individual film is open to debate. (Evangelion, in particular, is so incoherent that it virtually defies any real comprehension.) But to my knowledge, Japan's live action films today offer nothing at all to compete with anime when it comes to tackling such ambitious themes. Suo Masayuki's Shall We Dance?, crowned as the best Japanese live-action film of 1996, is a lightweight comedy about a middle-aged office worker who finds release from his humdrum life through ballroom dancing. And the big hit of 1997, Shitsurakuen (Paradise Lost), is a melodrama about another middle-aged salaryman who is demoted at work and eventually commits suicide with his married lover.
Ethnic Bleaching
Still, there is a more alarming reason for moviegoers' rejection of live-action Japanese films. Their flight to anime is an inevitable result of the ethnic self-denial that has suffused Japanese society ever since the Meiji era, and especially since the end of World War II. Bent on achieving the goals of modernization and Westernization, the Japanese, in rejecting their own history and traditions, have sought to become Nihonjin-banare (de-Japanized) -- a generally complimentary term, implying that one looks and acts more like a Westerner or a Caucasian than the average Japanese. "Japaneseness-free" might convey the nuance of the term even better.
Take a look at the animated characters featured in anime. Physically they are "de-Japanized Japanese" -- a blend of Japanese and Caucasian characteristics. Given the setting of Princess Mononoke, it is obvious that the characters are intended to be pure Japanese (or at least Mongoloid), yet their features are nearly identical to the presumably Caucasian characters in Miyazaki's earlier work, Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind, a fantasy set in a future world suggestive of medieval Europe. (The heroine herself is named after the daughter of King Alcinous of Homer's The Odyssey). In Miyazaki's animation there is no physical distinction between Japanese and Caucasians. Evangelion features a Japanese girl, Rei, and Asuka, a girl who is one-quarter German and three-quarters Japanese. Apart from Asuka's Caucasian attributes of light brown hair and blue eyes, there are no significant differences in the facial features or physical development of the two girls. One should also note that Rei has blue hair and red eyes -- rather remarkable traits for a Japanese girl!
In short, the characters of anime show the Japanese -- who so aspire to Western traits -- as they would like to see themselves. It is an effect that cannot possibly be duplicated by live actors, who -- being alive -- can never really change the physical characteristics determined by their genetic makeup. They can dye their hair and even change their eye color with contact lenses, but they cannot fundamentally alter their skin color, facial features, or physique. And even if they tried, using special make-up effects or plastic surgery, the result would be unnatural.
Only anime, and its cousin manga, can convincingly meld Japanese and Caucasian attributes into a natural-looking human being. This is because the upside of these genres' inherent lack of realism is their unique ability to exploit the appeal of and fascination for the unreal. And that is why manga and anime have attained such a high status in the popular culture of Japan, compared to that of other countries. These are the only two media capable of portraying reality the way Japanese feel it should be. By comparison, live-action films sacrifice appeal from the outset simply because they feature Japanese actors. Fashion illustrator Nagasawa Setsu expressed the feelings of many Japanese in an essay he wrote in 1983 for the Japanese playbill of the British film Don't Look Now: "With their sharp-featured faces and long-limbed bodies, Westerners (read Caucasians) are physically suited to the movie screen; everyone looks almost too beautiful, down to the minor characters . . . . Japanese are just the opposite. Even people who appear delicately beautiful in person look round and dumpy and totally unstylish on camera. The reason many people today say they dislike the "ugliness " of Japanese films -- content notwithstanding -- is that the looks of Japanese screen actors put domestic films at a crucial disadvantage. Period pieces at least allow one to cover up these failings with elaborate costumes. But when they take off their clothes for bedroom scenes, even the most glamorous Japanese actors and actresses look hopelessly unattractive -- which is why you can't pay me to watch Japanese porn." That Nagasawa is not alone in his preference is attested to by the growing number of animated pornographic videos that have been produced in Japan since the mid 1980s. Thus, the history of the past twenty years, during which anime has pushed live-action to the side and emerged as the face of Japanese cinema, has in essence been the history of "ethnic bleaching" in Japanese film. Incidentally, it was also during the last two decades that manga, originally regarded as kids' stuff, truly came into its own as adult entertainment.
Dismantling the Cultural Framework
The tendency of Japanese to reject their own history and traditions in favor of a Western ideal has undermined live-action film also by affecting the performances of Japanese screen actors. An obvious example is the inability of today's younger actors to portray Japanese of earlier eras with authenticity. A live-action version of Princess Mononoke, for example, would be impossible to produce even if one could overcome budget constraints and the difficulty of its special effects. There are simply no young actors in Japan today who can wear the traditional clothing, duel with swords, or shoot arrows on horseback as convincingly as the animated characters in Miyazaki's film.
It is not only in period pieces, however, that the rejection of our country's history and tradition robs actors' performances of authenticity. In postwar Japan's cultural climate, it is exceedingly difficult for actors in any type of role to convincingly express complex, deep or intense emotion -- in fact, any dramatic emotion at all. To appear real, this sort of emotional expression demands exactly the right modulation and combination of subtle elements, including not only choice of words and facial expression, but also posture, gesture, tone of voice, direction of gaze, and distance from other actors. And the "right" modulation and combination differs from culture to culture. Every culture has its own framework of expressive conventions from which actors must draw in order to express emotion that will strike their audience as authentic. As long as Japanese actors refuse to work within the framework of emotional expression stipulated by Japanese culture, they cannot express dramatic emotion in a convincing manner. The famed Meiji-era novelist Natsume Soseki once taught his students that the true Japanese translation for "I love you" is "Tsuki ga tottemo aoi na" (The moon is so blue tonight); what he meant was that to express within the Japanese cultural framework the same emotion expressed in English by "I love you," one must choose words like "The moon is so blue tonight."
Since every culture evolves naturally over time, the cultural framework for emotional expression is by no means immutable. But in post-war Japan the process of change has been unnatural and rushed. Regarding their traditional modes of expression as archaic and feudalistic, and eager to Westernize, the Japanese have attempted to adopt the Western (more specifically, the American) expressive framework wholesale. Yet given that they continue to use the Japanese language as their vehicle for verbal expression, any attempt to affect a "de-Japanized" manner at this level is half-baked. Today, one might say, a Japanese person is unable to convincingly express passion for another either by the English "I love you" or by the Japanese "The moon is so blue tonight." This may be why, since the 1980s, young people in Japan have increasingly disdained the expression of serious or dramatic emotion as kusai, or corny, and prized the appearance of emotional detachment as kakko-ii, or cool.
In terms of dramatic expression, then, the Japanese film labors under a heavy burden. If it portrays emotion within the traditional Japanese framework, it may achieve authenticity, but the effect is antiquated. If it portrays emotion within the Western framework, it comes across as meretricious and unconvincing. Films that try to blend the two modes often end up antiquated and unconvincing. Yet in animation, which lacks visual realism and features de-Japanized characters to begin with, the expression of emotion paradoxically takes on a more convincing sense of reality. This may explain why most of the serious and ambitious film efforts have used the vehicle of anime. Given the serious dramatic deficiency, Japanese live-action films can no longer tackle any serious or profound subject matter.
In the context of contemporary Japanese film, then, anime often conveys a greater sense of reality than live-action films. The thin, insubstantial reality of animated film, that is to say, is more alive -- literally, more animated -- than the flesh-and-blood reality. And if anime is perceived as more real (i.e, closer to physical reality) than live-action, this means that, increasingly, anime embodies the Japanese consciousness of reality. The Japanese conception of reality is undergoing a process of animation.
The rise of anime as well as manga, is a cultural by-product of modern Japan's tendency to promote modernization and Westernization while rejecting its history and traditions. A medium that fuses elements of East and West, and lacks a clear national identity, could be considered international in a certain sense, and this is doubtless a major reason why anime has so many fans overseas. But the current state of affairs, in which anime represents the mainstream of Japanese cinema, is by no means desirable, inasmuch as it signifies an ever-widening gap between physical reality and people's conception of it.
Meanwhile, ever since the huge international box office success of Star Wars (released, coincidentally, in 1977, the same year as Space Cruiser Yamato), a growing number of Hollywood blockbusters might best be described as "live-action anime." Kathleen his girlfriend Terasawa Shinko shouting, "I love Terasawa Shinko! I love her, I do!" Ide reveals the script originally had him yelling , "I hate Terasawa Shinko! I hate her, I do!"
Of course, this is simply an example of reverse psychology at work. Everyone knows Rokusuke is in love with Shinko. However, such rewrite kills the nuance conveyed by the original line, namely that Rokusuke is trying (rather transparently) to conceal his emotional vulnerability. How, then, did "I hate you" become "I love you"? Ide describes how the revision came about. In those days we had to translate scripts and have them reviewed by GHQ (the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers). The young censor, a second-generation Japanese-American, said to me, "Your script is very interesting and democratic. The only thing that bothers me is why do Japanese say they hate someone when they should be saying they love them? If you love someone, isn't it better to come right out and say so?" Completely overwhelmed by this epiphany, I said, "You're absolutely right. Thank you," and then and there rewrote the line to read, "I love Terasawa Shinko! I love her, I do!" (Shogen no Showa-shi7: Wanman saisho funto su (The Showa Era Speaks, Volume 7: Prime Minister Yoshida Soldiers On], Gakken, 1982) Unable to trust his own intuitive judgement as to the most genuine Japanese-style expression of emotion, Ide went along with a foreigner's opinion and turned the line on its head. Bowing to the idea that an American-style, forthright mode of expression was more suitable to the new "democratic" Japan, he made his character say something that went counter to his own Japanese impulse. Under the circumstances, one could hardly expect the actor to come up with a convincing performance. And indeed, film director Oshima Nagisa recalls going to see Green Hills when he was in high school and finding the last scene "so embarrassingly awkward that I could hardly bear to watch." (Taikenteki sengo eizo ron [Imagery of Postwar Japan: A Personal Recollection], Asahi Shimbun, 1982)
The problem is that these days it would seem just as false to say "I hate you" in such a scene. How, then, is an actor to perform? This is precisely the problem Aoi Yoji confronts when he criticizes Japanese dramatists for reeling off "line after self-satisfied line that actors are viscerally unable to make their own, justifying it by saying 'that's my style.'" Aoi complains with good reson that actors are forever struggling with dialogue that has "little style and even less substance, and since they have to render the material in some way, they have no choice but to resort to cheap theatrics."
The idea of ethnichat even with a ghost as a main character, a program in which tatami appears is simply not fanciful enough for anime. Tomino's reaction to tatami mats -- an integral element of the traditional Japanese house -- is a clear indication of the deep-rooted presumption that a typically Japanese setting precludes the qualities of fancy and wonder.
Then there is the story told by Ide Toshiro, who co-wrote the script for the movie Aoi sanmyaku (The Green Hills of Youth, directed by Imai Tadashi), an enormous hit in 1949, during the Allied Occupation. Speaking of the movie's last scene, where the high school hero Rokosuke walks along the shore with his girlfriend Terasawa Shinko shouting, "I love Terasawa Shinko! I love her, I do!" Ide reveals the script originally had him yelling , "I hate Terasawa Shinko! I hate her, I do!"
Of course, this is simply an example of reverse psychology at work. Everyone knows Rokusuke is in love with Shinko. However, such rewrite kills the nuance conveyed by the original line, namely that Rokusuke is trying (rather tranthe first animated movie in history that was as realistic as live action. Inasmuch as Star Wars Episode 1 is fundamentally a live-action movie, saying it could also be called an animated movie with all the realism of live action not only places animation on a par with live action but also implies that there are live-action movies without the realism of live action.
By ignoring the difference between reality pretending to be cartoons and cartoons pretending to be reality, McCallum's words eloquently attest to the fact that the gap between live action and animation is closing in the West as well. It would seem that Japan is not the only country where people's vision of reality is undergoing a process of animation.
This essay was previously published in KJ#41, but unfortunately at that time approximately one paragraph was deleted in production (following the pivotal example of Natsume Soseki's translation "The moon is so blue tonight...") We are pleased to present the essay here in entirety, with a new afterword. It has also been reprinted in Japan Echo's anthology Years of Trial: Japan in the 1990s (ed. Masazoe Yoichi).
Sato Kenji graduated from the University of Tokyo, where he majored in international relations. He is the author of Chingu: Kankoku no yojin (Chingu: a Korean Friend), Gojira to Yamato to bokura no minshushugi (Godzillanian Democracy: Ideological Subtexts of Japanese Popular Culture) Genmetsu no Jidai no yoake (Dawn of Disillusionment) and most recently a forthcoming collection of essays entitled Mirai soshitsu (Future Lost).
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With the soap opera, you get no hardcore action. Anime porn can give you both; there is no western equivalent. Plots and fantasy are important when you've watched as much porn as I have, and find most of it boring.
--
He painted a unicorn in outer space. I'm askin' ya, what's it breathin'?
Some recommendations
by
Graspee_Leemoor
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· Score: 5, Informative
Yawn- yet another article that praises "worthy" anime like Mononoke Hime and Spirited Away, and ignores the massive diversity of popular TV series and OAVs.
Here is a mini-guide to some slightly more obscure anime to watch for fans of certain series that are well known:
If you like Ed in Cowboy Bebop then you will like the title character in NieA Under 7.
If you like Tenshi, you will probably like Love Hina and Happy Lesson TV.
If you like Oh My Goddess, you will probably like Chobits.
If you like anime with lots of fighting action then take a look at Beserk, Noir, Scryed, Hellsing.
Other good romantic comedy animes are: Onegai Teacher, I my me Strawberry Eggs, Ai Yori Aoshi, Hanaukyo Maids.
There are many more than this. Most of the ones I mentioned came out in the last year or two.
graspee
Re:Some recommendations
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
I'd recommend Lain; it is a very beautiful, very mysterious anime. It is much like the Matrix, but surpasses it, though everyone overlooks it in their list =)
Re:Some recommendations
by
CynicTheHedgehog
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· Score: 5, Informative
I don't really know where to put these in relation to other anime, but I'd also recommend:
Trigun - Kind of like Slayers meets Cowbody Bebop
Saber Marionette J - I don't know how to describe it really, but Megumi Hayashabara does the voice of the main heroine, Lime (she plays Haruka in Love Hina)
All-Purpose Cultural Cat Girl Nuku Nuku - Another one for Megumi fans (this one reminded me of Urusei Yatsura if you like that one)
My Dear Marie - 3 episode OAV, similar to Hand-Maid May
Witch Hunter Robin - A "goth" Cowboy Bebop I guess
Serial Experiment Lain - If you like Neon Genesis Evangelion you'll probably like this one
I love the recommendations in the parent comments, but it may be a really good idea to list some "starter" anime. Some anime series are just really, really good at getting people interested in the genre and opens peoples minds (specifically, my girlfriend). Here are a few of my favorites, which my family or friends really enjoyed for their "first anime":
Original plot: Perfect Blue Serial Experiements Lain
Funny: Golden Boy (the dubbed version of this is unbelievably funny) Ranma 1/2
Romantic (watch with your significant other): New Kimagure Orange Road: Summer's Beginning Sakura Diaries
For the younger folk: Sailor Moon Pokemon Yu-Gi-Oh Dragonball Princess Mononoke (more PG than G) Kiki's Delivery Service
What if I liked Cowboy Bebop *except* for Ed and watched most of the series wishing for Ed to be violently killed so I wouldn't have to be annoyed by the stupid kid?
--
--
grep "xercist"/dev/random...you'll find me in there someday
I started with Rurouni Kenshin, Kodomo no Omocha (great series), Ranma 1/2, and Tenchi Muyo OAV. I haven't yet found anything my girlfriend can tolerate other than a rare episode of Love Hina.
I will break her or die trying.
Which reminds me (I don't know why)...I forgot about Full Metal Panic. Great show. Doesn't really fit into any category (kind of mecha I guess, but it's got romantic and high school themes).
Re:Some recommendations
by
Tetsujin28
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· Score: 2
There was a scene in Evangelion where Kaji and Misato were making whoopie. You could see the lovers' clasped hands, and hear some moans, but nothing else.
It was strange to me. Part of it was, this wasn't the normal anime peekaboo "fan service"; it was a television show that showed, in however limited and discreet a fashion, two people in the act of making love. American soap operas usually don't go that far; they'll show a man and woman between the sheets kissing, and then cut to a scene where the evil midget doll is concocting a love potion that will enable her to steal Celeste's fiancee or whatever. To keep the camera on any part of the actors while they do "the act" is a bit much for American censors. Thus, that little scene struck me as being simultaneously totally discreet and totally explicit.
That scene caused a huge fuss in japan. The PTA went crazy over it and it started a huge hubub in japan. Something about the PTA saying an ep was okay before it aired. Im not sure tho.
Hmm. . a romantic depiction of sex done with some artistic license. Of course it'd be much for American censors. If you can't see tits bouncing, it's too mushy for Americans to handle.
You've just violated one of the rules of standard anime communities...
NEVER, EVER, post spoilers without noting: "SPOILERS FOR AHEAD!!":(
-- ^_^
And then watch Kiki's. . .
by
Fantastic+Lad
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· Score: 4, Informative
One of my other favorite films of all time, (animated or otherwise.) Zero violence, yet plenty of story stresses and growth. That scene where Kiki and the painter were talking, (where Kiki was losing her magic), really blew me away. It's not often when I'm struck to the quick like that! And it also struck me that the artist was somehow aware, (at least on her level), of the various realities which Miyazaki visits with each of his films. (They're nearly all telling a version of the same story; of different lives where different choices were made and different levels of awareness are ripe). --The painting of the winged horse and the Kiki/Nausicaa/Princess Mononoke/etc., on its back was like a window connecting all the various realities. And I don't know if Miyazaki meant it this way, but I bet the stunned moment Kiki experienced in looking at that painting of her was partly due to her feeling a connection with all those other lives. (At least, I would have had that in the back of my mind if I were Miyazaki!) A very powerful scene, nonetheless, which worked on many levels!
Anyway, kudos for the recommend on Spirited! See it now while it's still on the big screen!
-Fantastic Lad
Re:Why Anime Porn?
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
You watch porn for the stories? What, are you gay or something?
And speaking from a Japanese viewpoint, let me clarify one thing.
Miyazaki's works are not the norm.
Its uniqueness, yet similarities to real life is what makes Studio Ghibli's works such blockbuster hits. However, other animations also do rake in cash for studios.
Every spring, when kids get out of school for spring break, the movie studios release several animated features, much like Disney.
Doraemon, an anime about a futuristic cat-like robot helping out a puny kid, is seen every week on television. In its extended movie version, the group goes on a journey to unique lands.
Each flick (which has been released every spring for the past two decades) brings in about $20 mil (2bil yen). Not too shabby, considering it's a domestic release.
Another is Detective Conan - a high school sleuth is turned into a boy and solves crimes.
Noticing a trend here? Childrens' films - those that are despised by anime freaks in the US - are those that gain the most popularity. Keep in mind that it's not only the kids who like them, as opposed to the popularity of Pokemon in the states.
"Classics" such as Cowboy Bebop and other mature-themed anime exist in large numbers, but they do not gain the widespread acknowledgement that kid-oriented shows do.
On the other hand, comic books (mangas) are split in half between the kids and the adults. The mature-themed manga is a booming industry, mostly focusing on modern themes such as corporations and sports. The unique few get turned into anime, and end up in the hands of American viewers who think that what they're watching reflects the Japanese phyche.
Bottom line: The Japanese animation industry is hardly different from the Disney of America - child-oriented shows sell. Mature anime are not the norm, and do not reflect the culture of Japan. For that, you need to watch television programs, domestic films (not Godzilla), fiction books.. and so on.
Having seen some Doraemon episode , the show is actually quite a lot of fun because that robotic cat tries to help and things often go unexpectedly worng (misspelling is deliberate, but you know what I mean ^_^ ).
The reason why Detective Conan is very popular in Japan is the fact the Japanese LOVE detective mystery stories in general. That does explain why the Sherlock Holmes stories are quite popular in Japan.
Another enormously popular series in Japan is Osamu Akimoto's Kochikame (as the series is affectionately called in Japan--the full name is actually quite long--I believe it's Kochira Katsushikaku Kouen-mae Hasutsujo or something very close to that). Poor Ryoutsu Kankiichi--every crazy scheme he tries usually ends up being a major disaster one way or another.:-) The manga serial has been running in Shounen Jump since 1976, and the anime series has been running since 1996. Akimoto's keen sense of every major Japanese fad makes it a very fun series to read and/or watch if you are fluent in Japanese.
If Japan is anything like the United States, I'd say you should find talk shows and watch those.
Re:I'm Japanese.
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
The biggest reason, I think, that these "kid's" series are not distributed here in the States is that the anime distributors 'think' there is no market for them. Give it a little time. Once the distributors see the HUGE market demand, we will see the older good series showing up.
My prediction is for the return of "GO SPEED RACER".
"those that are despised by anime freaks in the US"
Sure, I consider digi-charat a waste of time and I can't stand pokemon/dbz/yugi-oh or just about every anime on the air in the US. But it doesnt mean we hate the kid-oriented shows!
Some of my favorites I don't consider mature-themed at all.
Galaxy Angel Tokyo Underground Fruits Basket Angelic Layer Azumanga Daioh
Everyone has their own preference, the US distributors just don't understand that.
-- my associative arrays can kick your hash - TCL
Re:I'm Japanese.
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Can you recommend any television shows or domestic films that give a good feeling for Japanese culture?
Well, speaking as another Japanese, (yes, we are out there... many eloquent in the language of English... surfing the web... in multitude... PH34R us!).. Uhm, where was I? Right. Perception Japanese culture through media. Well, it's hard to put one nation's culture in a nutshell, because, if I use the States, for example, that means you're putting the trailor park white trash and the business executive cocaine smoker and the religious conservative and the goth and the hippies ALL in one nutshell. So, chances are, any media targeted towards the Japanese would show a NEW culture of Japan, but never the whole. Some sources I reccomend:
News. This includes TV and Newspapers. Unfortunately these don't get translated to English very often. However, street interviews (ankeeto) etc. Show populous opinions. (Ever wonder what the people think of corporal punishment in schools? About whaling? And so on?) Another thing that may be interesting is how they are presented. Most morning news shows have an astrology segment, and also a big bold clock near the bottom to indicate time so people won't be late to work or school.
Movies. It's notable that many, many titles in Japanese movie theaters are American or European titles (sometimes renamed, for example: "Resident Evil" =< "Biohazar") with subtitles. Some amazing phenomenons include "Otoko wa tsurai yo" (rough translation: "A man's got it tough") went through 48 episodes! This movie, by the way, is also a big hit in Indonesia. Go figure. Doraemon also has a lot of movie episodes, not just TV episodes.
TV. A poster's remark suggested that "Iron Chef" ("Ryori no Testujin") isn't a good representation of Japanese culture. I counter this opinion - I think it gives a fairly accurate depiction of TV shows. Lots of cooking shows, and female casts are quiet and smiling, often (N.B. - this doesn't say anything about women in their households). Sazae-san is one of the most peaceful anime you will see - a calmer version of U.S. family sit-coms. There are less conflict, nothing about sex, dating, violence, not at all political as the Simpsons. This anime was quite popular.
Books. The academics and the educated will certainly suggest this. Even though not everyone may be fond of reading, those who are affect the people and culture around them.
Dive right in. Go to Japan. You see, this is really an incomplete list. I can't give you a Top Ten list, because media, esp. TV shows, does a good job of filtering out one aspect or the other of Real Life. One should surely never be xenophobic of other cultures, or stereotype, for such arguments are mostly gross exaggerations of misconceptions or weak theories. They aren't much different from us. Where-ever you go. Trust me on this.
Grouping anime is as easy as grouping movies. Anime of all type exists, from psychological thrillers to adult drama to action to fantasy to pr0n and still more divisions below.
There are certainly trends in anime, but I can't accept that all anime (and so all anime fans) be grouped into a single stereotype.
The only thing I think that makes an anime fan an anime fan is the willingness to suspend reality (the super buzzword of the entertainment industry) for the animated medium. Their choice of anime beyond that is as varied as people's tastes in movies or books.
--
--- When I grow up, I want to be a kid again.
Amazingly misinformed article...
by
ookaze
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· Score: 5, Insightful
Well, I'm used to read such nonsense from people which don't know a thing about anime. It's really sad. The article is seriously stupid, and the author doesn't know a thing ! Point by point: - Yes, Yamato was a shift in anime, but it didn't cause a boom : the boom was a long time before 1977, and that's why Yamato came. The major thing Yamato changed, was in the songs used in anime. Before Yamato, there were 5 assigned singers (3 men, 2 women) for anime (I remember some names like Mizuki Ichirou, Kooro Gi, and of course the great Horie Mitsuko). Since the Yamato film, which used pop artists, every anime started to use people whose it was the job to sing:) - A lot of anime were indeed adult and successful before 1977, Yamato being one of them. The guy is sickening now... - Nausicaa was NOT a big success ! Nausicaa was renowned among anime fans, that's true. Miyazaki didn't overturn anything. Toei made more bucks with his films than those of Miyazaki, until Mononoke. Miyazaki started to be a success in Japan since Mononoke Hime, when more money was put on ads. Only anime fans reverred Miyazaki well before that time. - The gold years of anime where the 80s, NOT 90s ! 90s where the decline, and then, the end of cellulo. It seems to be going back nowadays. - this guy clearly doesn't know a thing about animation : the biggest mistake he makes is the same 99% of people do. He takes it all backwards, thinking anime is a subset of live movie. But it's the other way : live movie is the simplest and less powerful animation : it's limited to still images of reality, and not even perfect images at that. That's why there was always the need to blend special effects or other forms of animation (like CG) in live action films, because it's too limited. On the other hand, drawn animation is the most powerful of animation (the only limit is your imagination and skills), but as such, the most difficult to master. Some people I know who study animation don't even know when live animation started to be predominant, but I think one of the reason was that it looked more real ! Remember the Frères Lumières and their first show:) - The only thing that made people think that animation is for children is Dysney !!!! Animation, in the start, was NOT considered for children !!! It was for adults, were presented in theater, and even served as propaganda during war ! Sone like this guy saying anime was for children principally is a cretin which doesn't even know history... And to add to the bad things Dysney have done, they shut down every other animation (be it japanese or from east Europe), threatening festivals were they were broadcasted, from the start until now. But I guess a lot of people do not know that, taht was the goal. They even continue nowadays. - Anime can be as, even more convincing than live. But a lot of the performance is dependent on the voice actors. The "fleshy presence" is a nonsense. Anime can be more powerful than any live. You can't dismiss the power of pictures because they are not taken from "reality". Sone tell this guy that horror or porn in anime can not be shown to small kids : even without "flesh" presence, the subjective power is still stronger than anything. Imagination has always been more powerful than reality. - The guy is stuck on "visual realism". That is, he can't even understand animation, as "visual realism" is only one feature of live animation. You can not judge anime by "visual realism", that's not one of it's features, though you can put such pictures in anime (it has even been done already). The purpose of anime is to present sth, not to be "realist". - Another common pitfall. The author himself falls in it without even knowing. One of the power of anime, is that you can more easily identify yourself to a character. I mean, a japanese, looking at an anime character, will see a japanese. And an european will see an european, an american will see an american (except if it's too "realistic"). That's why the guy doesn't see a japanese in the characters. And the eyes have nothing to do with nationality : look at Tintin ! Or think that nobody has so wide round open eyes as you can see sometimes, or has blue or pink hairs:) And then I read nonsense about asians not beinat advantages on screens : very sad to read such stupid things... - The author apparently comes from the "caste" of people which rejects Japan history. All japanese are not among this group, and there is conflict, even in manga, on the subject. This turns into politics after that, and I'm tired already of this guy. Surely, I don't love all japanese (and surely not this one)...
Re:Amazingly misinformed article...
by
susano_otter
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· Score: 2
Live action and anime are both human artifacts. They mean whatever we humans say they mean. If "99%" of humans classify anime as a subset of (live action) movies, then isn't that exactly what they are?
If you're going to insist that it's the other way around, then you should at least establish a criteria for classifying movies that's independent of human culture and perception. Without that other criteria, your assertion is untrue.
Additionally, a huge portion of the article is about how real animation can be, especially in context. Did you even read the article?
--
Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.
Re:Amazingly misinformed article...
by
KH
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· Score: 2
- Yes, Yamato was a shift in anime, but it didn't cause a boom : the boom was a long time before 1977, and that's why Yamato came. The major thing Yamato changed, was in the songs used in anime. Before Yamato, there were 5 assigned singers (3 men, 2 women) for anime (I remember some names like Mizuki Ichirou, Kooro Gi, and of course the great Horie Mitsuko). Since the Yamato film, which used pop artists, every anime started to use people whose it was the job to sing:)
Huh? Yamato used Isao Sasaki who sang lots of animated or live TV series themes. And you forgot the great Masato Shimon:) Are you talking about Kenji Sawada who sang the theme for the second Yamato movie?
Yamato was totally different from whatever I had seen before. There was none like it--be it anime or not. I was 11 when it was shown as a TV series. I missed the first episode, but a friend of mine told me there is a cool TV show running, so I watched. It was in the second episode when the sunken imperial navy battleship Yamato was made to a spaceship. I can still vividly remember the shill I got when I saw old Yamato's skin, consisting solely of stained steel fell and saw the shining (I suppose) skin of beautifully designed spaceship appeared. I still remember the thrill I got when the crew, who were hurriedly recruited, powered the ship, fired the main gun just in time before a planetry (?) bomb hits it. I still don't think I had seen anything like it before--or I haven't seen something like it many times since. The difference was that there was no fighting robot(!), there was not an ultimately evil (this was revealed toward the end of the series). That was not simply kid's stuff.
That was in 1975, and there was not word ``anime'' before Yamato. The author of the article is right in attributing the beginning of anime to Yamato, because the show, which was not very popular at that time, and subsequent movie, which was actually a 2 hours version of copied-and-pasted TV series created the word anime. The reason why they made the movie from the TV series was that it had die-hard fans who demanded to see it again. They were the forerunners of the people who later became anime otaku.
- A lot of anime were indeed adult and successful before 1977, Yamato being one of them. The guy is sickening now...
Care to cite more examples? Are you talking about the original Lupin III series or Cutie Honey or Dororo? They did have adult oriented theme or sex or nudity, but TV stations still considered them to be for kids. Some of or most of them short-lived because the TV stations realized that they were not for kids:) Ironically Yamato was one of them. And again, they were never called anime.
- Nausicaa was NOT a big success ! Nausicaa was renowned among anime fans, that's true. Miyazaki didn't overturn anything. Toei made more bucks with his films than those of Miyazaki, until Mononoke. Miyazaki started to be a success in Japan since Mononoke Hime, when more money was put on ads. Only anime fans reverred Miyazaki well before that time.
You are right. I remember sitting in a theater all by myself watching Nausicaa on a big screen. Oh, and by the way, I hated to consider myself to be an anime fan in those days, let alone an anime otaku. The word otaku did not come into existence till late 80s, though. I still feel a bit embarrassed when I tell people that I saw Nausicaa in a theater:(
- The gold years of anime where the 80s, NOT 90s ! 90s where the decline, and then, the end of cellulo. It seems to be going back nowadays.
From an anime otaku's point of view, it might seem like that way. I know quality of drawing was going downwards when anime studios had to outsource the job to other countries. They couldn't hire highly paid Japanese artists to do the job. But it was in the '90s when regular people began to be able to talk about animes and even go to a theater to see animes. In that sense, '90s seem to be better days.
I skip some discussions here... For, I don't care about the philosophy of anime. I don't care a story is an anime or a live action or a book or on radio or on TV. I just want good stories. I don't care about formats. Many animes suck, and many live movies suck. Japanese live movies suck worse than live Hollywood, while many Japanese TV shows rule.
- The author apparently comes from the "caste" of people which rejects Japan history. All japanese are not among this group, and there is conflict, even in manga, on the subject. This turns into politics after that, and I'm tired already of this guy. Surely, I don't love all japanese (and surely not this one)...
I don't like ad hominem attack. Or I don't understand ``reject Japan history.'' What is it supposed to mean?
Re:Amazingly misinformed article...
by
Fruit
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· Score: 1
still feel a bit embarrassed when I tell people that I saw Nausicaa in a theater:(
Embarrassed?! If they'd show Nausicaa in a theater again you'd find me at the front row on the first showing!
what about soap opera porn. now that's an idea, some of those chicks in the soap operas are pretty hot. alright for anyone who works in film this is an idea and it's got to sell, everyone can watch it, the women can enjoy the story lines and the guys can watch hardcore porn at the same time.
ENOUGH with the anime evangilism, please.
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 2, Funny
OK, slashdot. WE GET IT. Anime is SO IMPORTANT that we all must stand up and take notice. We all must worship the silly cartoons where women are drawn like 12 year-olds with eye problems. We get it. Anime is SO important and SO beyond our conceptions that only you few nerds are capable of understanding. Right. We bow down before the might of Japanese animation. Only the elect nerds of slashdot "Get it". Verily they must bring the gospel of Japan to the world because god help us, the rest of the world JUST DOES NOT UNDERSTAND how IMPORTANT and AWESOME and SIGNIFICANT Japanese cartoons really REALLY are.
Sorry Rob, we haven't been paying Anime-fu enough attention. The world has not taken notice of your holy apostolic Anime web site. We have sinned, verily, and thy wrath is shown to all the world on Slashdot.org. You were right--maybe if you post JUST ONE MORE ARTICLE about how AWESOME and SIGNIFICANT anime is, and how we JUST DON'T UNDERSTAND, we'll all change our ways. We great unwashed JUST DON'T GET IT. North American culture == bad, neurotic Japanese culture == god. WE GET IT. Loud and clear, A-OK! North american animation is JUST NOT GOOD ENOUGH.
Re:ENOUGH with the anime evangilism, please.
by
toriver
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· Score: 2
Here the poor/. admins have gone to great lengths to ensure Anime is a separate category that people not interested can choose not to see.
And then an AC barfs.
Register, dorkhead, and choose not to read Anime stories!
Re:ENOUGH with the anime evangilism, please.
by
nutshell42
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· Score: 1
Geez, there are more than enough articles about Futurama and Simpsons and the myriads (=zero) of other american animation with adults as target audience.
You can block the category so stop the bitching and karma whoring and get a life
-- Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage
Re:ENOUGH with the anime evangilism, please.
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Ahh-aha! Ha! Ha! So significant! But so very smarr compared to American counterpart!!
But seriously, I was pretty much thinking the same thing when I saw the article header.
Re:ENOUGH with the anime evangilism, please.
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
...and I like anime, even!
Re:ENOUGH with the anime evangilism, please.
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Heh lighten up, the OP was being funny.
Re:ENOUGH with the anime evangilism, please.
by
eumenides
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· Score: 1
Quit being a jerk Don't complain about the existance of articles and news. Complain about the content. Point out specific things wrong.
This is Slashdot, and if you had care to read, it says news for nerds. Anime is generally considered a nerdly thing. I honestly don't see people complaining about Farscape news or SG1 news.
You complain about the style in which anime is drawn, but do you have nearly as much rage for Picasso and his cubism period? I doubt it.
The point is, don't complain about the news variety. Nobody is forcing anime down your throat. Nobody forced you to read the article.
It is also evidently clear that you didn't read the article because the article covers anime vs live-action movies in japan. Thoughts on why certain things are the way they are.
The article however did not cover the aformentioned, cult-like semi aposotlic tripe you believe it might contain.
Thanks for comming out
Re:ENOUGH with the anime evangilism, please.
by
drivers
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· Score: 2
Why not just unselect the Anime category and shut the f up?
Simply a continuation of the printmakers legacy...
by
httpamphibio.us
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· Score: 2
I'm constantly disappointed by peoples utter lack of knowledge about exactly how far back the tradition goes. I'm not a fan of anime, and I've never been one, but even I can see that the roots of anime go back several centuries. To say that they come from manga is only one step in the right direction. Japanese printmakers such as Hokusai and others in the Edo period are the ones that really started the ball rolling.
-- sig.
There are all these cds full of anime under my bed
by
tenjah
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· Score: 2, Insightful
Yeah, very interesting article.
Sad that there is alot of "Nihon-jin banare" is still around. It has really been pumped into Japanese culture over the decades. Especially during the 80s. I reckon that there is a collective rejection of this way of thinking coming to the fore however. The "White way" is becoming less popular with the yute, and, unlike Michael Jackson, the Japanese are proud to appreciate and celebrate the inherent non-whiteness of their condition. In time, I believe we will see more and more anime, manga, video games etc propogating the "obviously" Japanese as main characters.
On a racially neutral aside,. I've noticed that anime are extremely popular in the US aswell as the mother-land. I read an article saying that you will be getting plenty of anime on cartoon network etc. The same just doesn't apply here in Europe. They're really popular with you guys eh?
I am in the UK and speak from the viewpoint of having a Japanese wife who has downloaded loads and loads of anime.
I like most of the biggies, Ghost in the Shell being my fave. A truly exceptional animated movie. Akira, Fist of the North star etc. But I aint overly crazy about them. I saw the first couple of stand alone complexes too.
Ghibli Studio work is certainly of a higher standard than Disney too, for the most part. Maybe its just me, but I think that culturally we in Europe/UK really don't appreciate anime half as much as you do in the US.
Anyway, this is a good topic for me. A car will be arriving in less than 2 hrs to take me to the airport where we will be getting on the wonderful 12hr flight to Tokyo. FUckin' A. HEere I come!
I'd love to see Spirited Away, but ...
by
Lumpish+Scholar
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· Score: 4, Informative
... I just wish they had shown it, even once, anywhere near my house. I would have had to go into New York City to see it; maybe worth the trip for me, but how many of my nearby friends and family would bother?
I'm not the only one who's annoyed; IMDB ran this story:
Is Year's Best-Reviewed Film the Worst Marketed?: New York Daily News film critic Jack Mathews has chided Walt Disney Studios Chairman Dick Cook for rolling out Hayao Miyazaki's animated Spirited Away "as if it were some experimental gruel from Cremoria." Noting that the film received nearly unanimous rave reviews when it was released, Mathews asks in an "open letter" to Cook appearing in today's (Thursday) [October 24, 2002] edition of the newspaper: "Why didn't you treat it like any other Disney animated feature, with a wide release and a big-bucks ad campaign?" Instead, Mathews noted, the film, which opened in 26 theaters on Sept. 20, is now showing on only 151. He concludes: "I hate to say it, Dick, but you had a tap-in putt here and you blew it."
-- Stupid job ads, weird spam, occasional insight at
Re:I'd love to see Spirited Away, but ...
by
gozilla
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· Score: 1
Lucked out and saw Spirited Away at the Northampton Independent Film Festival over the weekend. A Disney film at an indie film festival.......strange days indeed. The disney rep seemed surprised that the audience was well acquainted with the works of Hayao Miyazaki and more surprised by the sellout crowd.
Re:I'd love to see Spirited Away, but ...
by
nordicfrost
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· Score: 2
While doing a story for my paper, I talked to the Disney films distributor here. Buena Vista AS told me that films like Princess Mononoke (Mononoke Hime) will not get a marketing budget. I'm guessing theis is because large-scale marketing is reserved for Disneys own films like Cinderella II (Cinderella I was the first (animated) film to win a Golden Bear, Spirited Away the seconf) and smaller films gets fuck all.
Now, if I could just go to the store and buy the DVD, things would be a little better. But noooo... The film industry are actively stopping me from buying region 1 films. Fine. When will the film I've been waiting to see for two years be released on region 2 dvd? Oh, never. Pissants.
MORE anime evangelism, please.
by
deek
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· Score: 2, Informative
I'm a fairly casual fan of anime, and I really enjoy anime articles when I see them on Slashdot. So please Slashdot, I'd like to see more anime evangelism.
BTW, I don't think that anyone really believes that North American animation is not good enough. It's just different from Japanese animation. The world would be a poorer place if either style didn't exist.
DeeK
The moe genre
by
Sexy+Commando
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· Score: 2, Interesting
The article didn't mention that the reason anime got so popular in Japan is the "moe" genre. "Moe" anime is the type that somewhat arouses sexual fantasies.
More than half of the anime contains at least one of the following components: cat ear, uniform, lolita, maid, nurse, baby sister, female teacher... And I don't mean anime pr0n. These are the anime that turned lonely boys into otakus.
Of course many of these anime are excellent in terms of intriguing plot and excellent story, but they wouldn't be nearly as popular if the moe element were removed.
Here are some names of the anime that falls in to the moe category:
Love Hina
Ah My Godess
Sister Princess
DiGi Charat
Onegai Teacher
Handy Maid May
Chobits
Hanaukyo Maids...
Oh and I got hooked on Hanaukyo Maids (Shame on me!)
SHAME ON YOU!!! The dogma amongst Anime advocates is that there is no sex in Anime, there would never be disgusting, sexist material in Anime if it were not for the demands of gaijin consumers. Sexy cartoons have nothing to do with the appeal of Anime. NONE!!!
-- Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
Re:There are all these cds full of anime under my
by
Endimiao
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· Score: 2
Thats cause your not in Portugal, where people droll over locomotion, a channel that playes here, in brazil and spain with loads of Anime, not counting with every single national channels. Portugal youth is crazy about anime:p Spain had hentai freaks and anime fans even before we did. Not counting with france, wich even translates a good deal of original comics *want the comics of sailormoon, dragonball, and almost everything you can imagine? get it from france.*
UK isnt EUrope *it was suposed to be part of it*, and by the current political affairs, its in danger of becomming more of an American probe preventing Europe from gaining ascension, than a true ally.
Re:There are all these cds full of anime under my
by
guybarr
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· Score: 2
I reckon that there is a collective rejection of this way of thinking coming to the fore however. The "White way" is becoming less popular with the yute, and, unlike Michael Jackson, the Japanese are proud to appreciate and celebrate the inherent non-whiteness of their condition.
Aha ! I knew there was a reason japanese animators were using so much color ! It is due to the inherent non-whiteness of their condition ! They will never pull a vile Casper tfg !
go, purple, go !
(exclamation marks are the vilest form of sarcasm !!! )
-- Working for necessity's mother.
Oh please.
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1, Funny
Quote: "A live-action version of Princess Mononoke, for example, would be impossible to produce even if one could overcome budget constraints and the difficulty of its special effects. There are simply no young actors in Japan today who can wear the traditional clothing, duel with swords, or shoot arrows on horseback as convincingly as the animated characters in Miyazaki's film."
There obviously is an abundance of young American actors which can convincely duel with light sabers and crawl walls.
I have to agree. Today's special effects can do ANYTHING... and more. But that does mean that both analog and digital animation does not have it's place. They are just other colours of the pallet.
I LOVE ANIME!
This is a great time for film!
Re:There are all these cds full of anime under my
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
well, i don't know about UK, but here in Italy there is a good number of people that REALLY appreciate anime. Just think that every tuesday MTV Italy does "anime night", i think that is significative. Anyway i'm an Evangelion addicted so i don't think i can speak with any form of intelligence involved since trying to understand Evangelion only drives you MAD:D
Starter pack for Anime
by
kev0153
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· Score: 2, Interesting
Can anyone recommend a good site or list of Anime titles for a person thats wants to get more into it? I've started watching Cowboy Bebop on the Cartoon Network and really like it. Any more titles like this one?
Thanks
Amazon lists are a good start. If you search Amazon for Bebop you'll get recommendations from similiar minded folks. As discussed in prior comments there are many different flavors. Anime Turnpike is also a good resource. Cartoon Network edits sucketh, but they do introduce people to the genre....
Personally Bebop is one of my favorites. Some 'classics' you might start out with:
Ghost in the Shell
Akira
Serial Experiments Lain
Fist of the Northstar
Princess Mononoke
My Neighbor Totoro
Re:Starter pack for Anime
by
Escaflowne
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· Score: 1
Well although these are not necessarily like Cowboy Bebop, here are my favorites:
-The Vision of Escaflowne: This anime is about a girl on earth named Hitomi that is transported to the magical world of Gaea. There she meets a swordsman, Van (Vaughn in the original sub ^_^. My friend subtitled the commercial release) and the guymelef (mecha) Escaflowne. The story revolves around Hitomi, Van and others trying to save the planet Gaea from the Zaibach Empire. The story is great (yeah I know it sounds like a typical magical girl anime) and the characters (although somewhat stereotypical) are interesting. The art is superb (especially for a TV series) and the music is top notch (Yoko Kanno - Cowboy Bebop). I like this show because of the story and characters, but I have never met anyone who hated it. I think the reason is that it encompasses a little bit of every genre (romance, drama, mecha, sci-fi, fantasy, etc.). I highly recommend this as a starting point since you'll probably find something you like.
-Neon Genesis Evangelion: In terms of character development, this is *the* anime (IMHO). Eva revolves around Shinji Ikari, a reluctant mecha pilot who must save the world from an invading force known only as 'Angels.' Now the story sounds like a typical boy piloting a mecha, but it's far from it. In actuality, it can get *a bit* confusing, but remember that it's just a vehicle for the character development. IMHO, Eva is about people, but most people like it for the awesome action and mecha.
-Rurouni Kenshin: Kenshin is about a swordsman named Kenshin (duh) who goes around Japan protecting people with his reverse blade (can't cut). The story becomes quite enthralling around episode 30 which begins the "Kyoto Arc." The Kyoto Arc goes till about episode 62 and it's amazing that a show can have such a great consistent story for 32 episodes! This anime is similar to Escaflowne in that it has comedy, action, romance, etc. elements. Be warned though, anything after episode 62, IMHO, is quite a bit less in quality. Also, the first 20 or so episodes are a bit episodic, but they build the characters up and get you ready for the Kyoto Arc. Trust me it's worth it.
Well...you already mentioned Cowboy Bebop so...
BTW if possible, watch these subtitled. I personally like hearing the director's originally intended voices and feel that watching a dub isn't watching the original (but that's just my opinion and call me an elitist). I *think* you may hate some of these dubbed, but maybe I have high standards. Although, the Bebop dub is pretty good (although I like the sub better ^_^). In any case, I hope that helps...
Here's a link to a list by Gilles Poitras who has written several books on anime:
http://www.koyagi.com/recAnime.html
His list isn't as up to date as I'd like but it's a good starting point.
Another thing you could do is see if there is an anime club in your area and attend one of the meetings. Usually these things are just a couple hours of watching cartoons but they often come up with stuff you wouldn't have thought of on your own. If you live in the San Francisco bay area check out no name anime (www.nnanime.com)
I agree with all of the other recommendations but would add the following:
Blue Submarine 6 Grave of the Fireflies Perfect Blue Castle of Cagliostro Night on the Galactic Express Urusei Yatsura: Beatiful Dreamer 2
That last one is a little surrealistic and unusual but still one of my all time favorites.
Re:Starter pack for Anime
by
Escaflowne
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· Score: 1
Dang! I forgot about the movies:).
I definitely agree with Grave of the Fireflies (Ebert loved it...not that that says much), Perfect Blue and Castle of Cagliostro.
I'd also suggest Laputa, Naussicaa (IMHO Miyazaki's best work), Mononoke and Porco Rosso.
Daniel ^_^
Re:Starter pack for Anime
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Some of my favorite Anime's:
Akira Black Magic M-66 AD Police/Bubblegum Crisis/Bubblegum Crash Ghost in the Shell Wings of Hominase Grave of the Fireflies Gunsmith Cats Riding Bean
And stay away from this crap: Vampire Hunter D Fist of the Northstar
Or just get the "Anime Movie Guide" by Helen McCarthy, ISBN: 0879517816 for a boatload of recommendations.
If you haven't seen it in CN already, Outlaw Star is fairly similar to Cowboy Bebop. The artwork and the content aren't quite as mesmorizing as Bebop, but it's still worth the ride.
Also, if you haven't, you need to see Akira, Ghost in the Shell, Princess Mononoke, and Spirited Away too, if at all possible. Even if you end up not liking them, the quality of these works is undenyable. Rent 'em if nothing else.
While not exactly like Cowboy Bebop, Escaflowne is a fantastic fantasy series. And the music is done by the same composer as Cowboy Bebop, the extrordinarily gifted Yoko Kanno (suck it, John Williams).
Also, as you're a slashdotter and presumably into technology and communications, go check out Serial Experements Lain. Very different. Very mind-blowing. Very cool.
Re:Starter pack for Anime
by
mrdlinux
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· Score: 1
Don't forget the Kenshin OAV---it's a superb story and excellent technically as well. It's a ``pre-quel'' to the main series.
-- Those who do not know the past are doomed to reimplement it, poorly.
Re:Starter pack for Anime
by
Escaflowne
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· Score: 1
Ooh, good point, but *definitely* watch it AFTER watching the show. IMHO I liked not knowing what the OVA reveals and then having Kenshin's past explained.
Daniel ^_^
Re:Starter pack for Anime
by
mrdlinux
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· Score: 1
Argh. Oh well. I haven't actually seen the series yet: I was planning on seeing it very soon though. I saw the OAV well before I ever conceived that I would consider watching a series such as Kenshin (it's such a commitment!). But having just finished Ranma 1/2, mostly, I guess I have no excuse anymore.
-- Those who do not know the past are doomed to reimplement it, poorly.
Re:Starter pack for Anime
by
Escaflowne
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· Score: 1
Sort of spoilers??
Basically...the entire series you wonder how he got the scars and what event in his past that made him become a Rurouni. I think it really builds up to the OVA real well. Also in the Manga, the "Revenge" arc is after "Kyoto" because...a certain someone wants revenge. Wow...I should stop replying to threads that are a day old:-P
Daniel ^_^
some thoughts on anime...
by
Ubergrendle
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· Score: 2
I'd have to agree with the commentary on the rejection of the japanese self in alot of anime. If you look at the big-budget space operas, alot of them have to deal with thematic apocalypse/destruction, a social afterthought of Nagasaki and Hiroshima. Yamamoto, Macross, Akira...big things go boom!
Also, consider this -- there are alot of old school Hollywood directors who feel that b&w is an integral element of being able to carry a fantastic story -- something about colour becoming a distraction. Very few directors use colour as a dramtic/thematic device successfully (exmaple: Antonioni; Kubrick). The colour element brings you too close to reality to believe in the farce such as "Some Like it Hot" (2 cross dressing guys escaping the mob), and Citizen Kane would not look as good if shot in colour. In this way, abstracting a fanastic theme from reality by presenting it in an anime style allows you to appreciate the story much more effectively... I would be postively scared of watching Ranma 1/2 in live action...ewwwww....
-- John Maynard Keynes: "When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do?"
Re:some thoughts on anime...
by
b1t+r0t
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· Score: 2
there are alot of old school Hollywood directors who feel that b&w is an integral element of being able to carry a fantastic story
The frame rate and lack of excessive movement is just as important in anime as B&W is to Hollywood. Has anyone seen any of "Platonic Chain" yet? (One liner: Japanese schoolgirls with video cellphones become a sort of P2P network of cable public access shows.) It's done with full CGI (cel shading on the characters) and motion capture (and the camera viewpoint moves like crazy too). The CGI is technically interesting, but all that motion capture is annoying as hell.
On the other end you have Violinist of Hamelin, which is basically a slide show with voice actors. Some of the scenes aren't even fully painted, but are just pastel sketches! The few sequences with full frame rate animation tend to get re-used in flash backs. Low-budget at its lowest.
--
-- "Open source is good." - Steve Jobs
"Open source is evil." - Microsoft
Re:some thoughts on anime...
by
bicho
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· Score: 1
kuro ame is a b/w movie about a woman that got struck by the black rain after the bomb in hiroshima. According to the director (if im not wrong and remember well) It was filmed ib b/w because it would have been too gross to do it otherwise.
Not an anime nor a hollywood prod though.
--
errera hunamum ets
Re:some thoughts on anime...
by
mrdlinux
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· Score: 1
Ranma 1/2 in live-action... that would be amazingly high-budget and to no good purpose! The characters often defy physics but that isn't what the story is about.
(I'm trying to picture Akane getting mad at Ranma in live-action, and it's not working. Not to mention it would bring a whole new meaning to the term ``double'' =)
Another element you see in anime is the alteration of animation style as a device. I really liked the use of this in the end of Evangelion TV, and FLCL makes good use of it too.
-- Those who do not know the past are doomed to reimplement it, poorly.
I'm not Japanese but I Play One on TV
by
Greyfox
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· Score: 4, Interesting
They used to do some pretty severe stuff in the children's anime back in the early 70's, at the tender age of 2 through 5. Despite this, the typical Japanese boy tended to be quiet, meek and not at all inclined to pick up an AK47 and stalk from classroom to classroom pumping round after round into tearchers and classmates. Kind of makes me wonder if more politically correct cartoons is really what this country needs...
Of course, everything else in the culture is pretty severe too, but at the same time very people-oriented. In times gone past, massive rounds of layoffs due to poor stock performance was unheard of. I don't know if this is still the case; Western values might be creeping in and causing the companies to treat their people more like the robotic drones as most western companies do.
I think that of all the cultures and people on the planet, the one least likely to ever be understood by any American (including myself) are the Japanese. Even if you spend your whole life among them, I think that from time to time something will happen that will surprise and befuddle you. But that depth of culture is also what makes them so cool, so it's OK.
--
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
Re:I'm not Japanese but I Play One on TV
by
The+Kow
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· Score: 1
I've spent my whole life among Americans, and from time to time things surprise and befuddle me here, too.
-- Moo
Not just the Japanese
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1, Informative
One of the lasting effects of the cultural & accidemic reactions in the 1960s to the history of Hitler/Nazism/Stalinsim/Colonialism has been the same sort of 'political incorrectionalisation' of the European identity, particularily in Scandinavia, Germany and especially the UK. The new social age of the past several decades has falsely associated the whole of European identity, culture and history with those evils. You're meant to accept cultural 'pluralism' (multiculturalism) meaning the swamping of your country by Muslims, while 3rd world countries are meant to be culturally 'pure', and if they're not, it's because of the bad whiteys again. If anyone shows they're 'too white', that's 'bad' for being 'racist', like how in Japan being too Japanese is 'bad'.
Reading this text is very familiar to me, different causes, but the same effect of self-negative-association on different societies. And like in Japan, the few who are prepared to ignore the social stigma of having anything to do with their own culture either fall into the far-right trap, or end up going all new-age and the like. I've had to go through school with resentment-filled teachers handing out short stories about the good illegal immigrant and the bad exploitative whitey among other things. I'm sure others have had similar experiences.
Anime: As relevant as the bologna sandwich
by
HeadRusch
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· Score: 2, Interesting
Whats next..."Bugs Bunny, He's Significant! More Significant than YOU anyhow!"...
Anime:
In the 80's I was really into it, trouncing upong any mecha-space-scifi I could find (yeah, Robotech peaked my interest just as GForce and StarBlazers did a decade earlier).
Sadly, today all the anime I see makes me generally cringe. Much in the same way American movies feature the same stereotypical characters, so does much of the Anime I'm seeing now.
They all have the same cast of characters and I've grown weary. The brooding anti-hero, the gender-ambiguous guy/girl/silent character, the screechy young female character....the fat "comic relief" character...and must every anime film on earth have at least one pantyshot per episode?
I mean, I'm starting to thinkt hat all anime is good for is Tentacle Pr0n.:P
I've tried watching the incredible Gundam series (all of them), and find the animation on the newer ones to be jaw dropping, and the stories to be convoluted and ridiculous. I guess I dont buy "kids in giant mecha suits".
Oh, and voiceovers....dubbing basically destorys anime, period. Then again, you might get tired of hearing every single character in non-dubbed anime sounding like a gravel-throated Japanese warlord.:P
I love the Japanese culture, or rather...Japanese Pop Culture.....but at the same time, I'm finding all that made Anime so great to me back in the day to be tired and rehashed today. Oh well, I'm jaded;)
God, I hate the stuff. The over sexualization of young girls. The goofy big eyes, the mannerisms with odd grunting and huhs. The pointy hair that could kill someone if they fell into into it. The mouths often being bigger than most of the face, the odd expressions that make no sense to us.
It is rare to find non offensively annoying animae.
Give me Chuck Jones or give me death.
-- - Zav
- Imagine a Beowulf cluster of insensitive clods...
You know that the "goofy big eyes" are used either to portray the innocence of a character or because the Japanese use eyes to portray emotions. Since this isn't live action, over-emphasizing the eyes gives the artist more room to portray emotion. If the eyes were "normally-sized," it would be very difficult to portray the emotions "real eyes" can.
The funny thing is, over there, with all their 'over sexualized young girls' in anime and manga, young and very attractive women and girls can and do fall sound asleep on the subway, day or night, and no one bothers them.
You know, some of us "anime freaks in the US" like anime because we like anime. The anime we enjoy has things that we just can't find in most American TV shows. Plot and characterization, for example. Writing that doesn't treat us like drooling morons. (Though that could be the translations) Half-decent science fiction or fantasy. Good action sequences. (Voice) Actors who can, you know, act.
Second thing to remember: there has never, as far as I can remember, been a single "mainstream" article written about anime that gets this. They all seem to try to portray it as some "artistic" thing or some such. None have considered the fact that people might enjoy a medium for other reasons...
These series aren't very obscure. Love Hina, Happy Lesson and Ai Yori Aoshi are quite similiar. If you like fanservice Hanaukyo Maids is an entertaining anime but it isn't a very ingenious anime. From your list I would suggest watching Love Hina, Noir and Onegai Teacher. (To be released by Bandai and ADV) Here is my suggestion list for some more obscure anime:
Jungle Wa Itsumo Hale Nochi Guu
Description from the fansubbers:
In the Middle of the jungle all is quite and peaceful, then came Guu. A mysterious little girl that seems to have a split personality and an appetite for, well, everything.
Hale's life is changed forever when his mother adopts this strange girl into the family. A lazy teacher, a perverted doctor, a beer drinking mom, Pokute, The Mysterious Guu, and Poor little Hale stuck in the middle of all this Is a recipie for comedy. Azumanga Daioh
Well, here another description from fansubbers, but no one can be told what "Azumanga Daioh" is, you have to see it for yourself.
Everyday life of highschool students? Experience Highschool with hilariously over-the-top characters and tempermental English teacher Yukari and her colleague, P.E. teacher Kurosawa.
Azumanga Daioh is a very "japanese" show, so I'm not sure if you will enjoy it if you know almost nothing about Japan and haven't watched a lot of anime.
Guu is very insane and just a lot of fun.
Azumanga and Guu aren't commericially available outside of Japan yet, but you can download them as fansubs. If you want to download them, just use google to find the homepages of the fansubbers.
Dude, like I said, they're "slightly more obscure".
The pattern of obscurity would probably go something like:
a) shown on cartoon network or similar- tie-in products available in the west. b) available on dvd in the west, but only in dubbed form c) available to buy on ebay etc because there are HK (Hong Kong) DVDs of it- but with bad subs. d) only available on video or dvd in japan- has a small following, very obscure material, no fansubber likes it so it has never been subbed for the English-speaking market.
Obviously there are lots of shades of obscurity between these example levels...
Second on the Jungle Wa Itsumo Hare Nochi Guu and Azumanga Daioh.
Regarding Azumanga Daioh, it's sort of like Peanuts, except the cast is a group of Japanese Highschool girls as they go through the Japanese Highschool system. It's appeal is actually quite universal. Even if you don't know the first thing about Japan and anime, it's still a good show to watch.
Right, they're slightly more obscure, but they aren't obscure enough to really show "the massive diversity of popular TV series and OAVs". Love Hina, Happy Lesson, Chobits, Onegai Teacher, I my me Strawberry Eggs, Ai yori Aoshi und Hanaukyo Maids are all quite similiar. They are all from the same genre and many of them aren't much better than average in my opionion. If you like the genre, they are entertaining, but if not, you don't miss much if you don't watch all of them but only 2-3 of them.
Beserk, Noir, Scyred and Hellsing are all quite regular action anime. Not bad, but I don't know if they are slightly obscure. I think they will maybe run on Cartoon Network or ADV's Anime cable anime channel sometimes.
In your pattern of obscurity, points b) and c) are a bit illogical. Nowadays only anime shown on tv is sometimes released as dub-only dvd. Everything else is released as Sub/Dub DVD or sometimes Sub-Only DVD. So your point b) is nearly identical with your point a). I think b) should be:
b)available on DVD in the west, but wasn't shown on tv
You also should add fansubs to your point c). I think they are much more common than bootleg HK DVDs.
-- Jan
Drawn animation has inherent limitations
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Animators only have so much time to spend on a frame.
The human form certainly has many more behavioural cues than an animator could ever hope to handle at the moment. In the future 3D modelling and AI might let animators direct avatars as well as todays actors, but we aint there yet by a long shot... and it wouldnt be drawn animation anyway, so I would not call drawn animation the most powerfull form.
As far as representing people go drawn animation is a little like stage acting, not very nuanced.
and while u r at that, catch 'princess mononoke' as well. it's graphics rock. both animes r by the same director i think... animations are wonderful in the sense that they are not constrained by the reel/real world physical limitations. it's a fantastic medium for portraying fantasy.
Give enough information about the subject at hand and article being linked to that people with only a cursory interest in the subject don't feel the need to click on the link just to find out what the hell the article is about.
Sheesh, one sentence. The art of the abstract is dead.
Re:Simply a continuation of the printmakers legacy
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
The old drawing were relatively benign, then the "classic" animations were very graphic, now that corporations are trying to pimp it to a wider audience, it's more like it used to be. I wonder if one would it as a three stage progression or a two stage progression by leaving-out all of the original animated graphic content?
The REAL importance of anime...
by
DeathPenguin
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· Score: 0, Troll
...for many is to circumvent child pornography laws (you sick fucks).
Re:The REAL importance of anime...
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
That's one thing I didn't understand when I was in Japan. The wide acceptance child pornography in anime was shocking to me.
Re:The REAL importance of anime...
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Skip666Kent
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· Score: 2
They're funny that way. They seem to know, instinctively, what is real and what isn't.
-- **>>BELCH
Re:The REAL importance of anime...
by
DeathPenguin
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· Score: 1
I'll be the first one to defend video game violence should a debate arise, but seeing a picture of a very young-looking animated schoolgirl getting gangraped is too far, even for me.
"what he meant was that to express within the Japanese cultural framework the same emotion expressed in English by 'I love you,' one must choose words like 'The moon is so blue tonight.'"
Does this mean that for Japanese to truly express the emotion behind, "You're so hot, I can't stand it!" they have to resort to phrases like, "My twin moons are so blue for you tonight."?
I would think that they just are a little reluctant to do so, in the language itself, when friends greet each other, generally, the weather is one of the first things to be discussed. As for expressing feeling, I am not quite sure in that situation, but sayings like "I like you" and "I like you a lot", are actually better replacements for "I love you", becuase it allows for the emotions to be expressed somewhat, but still played down, becuase I would assume that it isn't a trait to openly express emotions from within the Japanese culture. Although I am not Japanese myself, I have just taken some classes on the language for a few years, and have learned a bit about the culture, Although I didn't actually start watching anime myself until after two or so years of high school japanese classes.
To tell you the truth, the blue moon sounds more romantic and realistic than simply saying, 'I love you," or Asiteru... Someone help me with the spelling please!
How would you like it if the person who was wooing you (guys included) simply kept saying "I love you, I love you" over and over again? Sure, it sounds great, but it gets a little stale after a while.
By the way, for a race that is supposed to be 'conservative' (please don't flame me) the Japanese make great horror movies!
Maybe it's a bad translation (See: AYB) I mean, of course, one can't really get "My twin moons.." from "Nice shoes. Wanna..." without proper inebriation. However, maybe it's a symbolic detatchment from "reality" as anime is from live action. Of course, you wouldn't blurt out "My twin moons..." at a restaurant, but say "I love you" or whatever it is, and save time and keep your girl/boy (if an airhead) from sitting there wondering "What the heck did THAT mean!?!?" Again, all IMHO.
-- Now watch this drive.
Transformers
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
The first cartoons that I remember watching (4-5 years old) was Transformers. Is this cartoon considered anime? I am not sure, but I always liked it better than Looney Toones®
I *think* Transformers is a collaboration of the Japanese and Americans. The Americans came up with the story and the Japanese animated it (which is evident in the movie).
Then again, I also have heard that Transformers started out as a toy-line in Japan and from that...who knows...I guess I don't know either ^_^
It depends on your definition of anime. The Japanese would call it anime since they call any animation "anime". Some anime fans use anime to refer to anything animated in Japan, so Transformers would still qualify. However, some people only define anime as that which is completely done by the Japanese, so they wouldn't count Transformers since although it was animated in Japan, it was written and acted by Americans.
I would not put the Transformers in the "anime" category, but the Americanized version of anime, as well as G.I. Joe and other cartoons with the same artistic style of both Transformers and G.I. Joe. In fact, there was an episode where the Transfomers and G.I. Joe characters where in the same show! Remeber that?
P.S. I still have some transformers from about 15 years ago.
Sometimes people read to deep
by
MoneyT
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· Score: 2
From the article:
This may be why, since the 1980s, young people in Japan have increasingly disdained the expression of serious or dramatic emotion as kusai, or corny, and prized the appearance of emotional detachment as kakko-ii, or cool.
Anyone else seem to think this same description fits any adolecent of America and other countries? Let's face at, as a world, drama and love emmotions are generaly regarded as corny. The best hero's, the people we look up to are the ones that are stoic.
-- T Money
World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
Discussion On The State of Anime Fandom In Japan
by
TomHandy
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· Score: 5, Interesting
This was a very interesting discussion thread that occurred on animeondvd.com recently that I think people would do well to read through, as it contains some very interesting information:
Regarding some of the general comments people are making, they seem a bit extreme on both ends, which I guess is to be expected.....both the people saying "anime sucks, it's all porn" and the people who say that "anime rules, it's the only thing that has real plot and characterization and isn't tainted by commercialization like American stuff is" are both equally ridiculous statements. Anime in fact isn't all porn, and like any other medium it has had its share of good stuff as well as a lot of bad shows. And of course, the notion some extreme anime fans have that anime is good because it isn't commercialized is ridiculous, as anime is heavily commercialized, and many shows are made solely based on how well they will sell, which is why you often see a lot of recycled plots, character designs and story concepts.
Just in general, anime is way too broad for I think many of the comments being made here to be very relevant....it has its share of crap and its share of brilliant work. I could say the same thing about movies, television, books, comic books, etc.......take almost any of the comments being made in this thread and replace "anime" with "movies", "television", "books", "comic books" etc. and perhaps this will give you a better indication of how ridiculous some of the statements are.
Anime is not all stale and recycled plots, and it is not all the same big eye style of animation......a few shows that wouldn't fit this mold would include Boogiepop Phantom, Niea_7, Now And Then Here And There, etc. If I had to guess I would say that a lot of the negative comments are being made by people with a very limited exposure to only certain kinds of anime, which would be about on par with making a value judgement on "movies" after watching some pornography tapes.
Tom
Space Battleship Yamato rocks
by
master_p
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· Score: 1
It is the best anime ever. Period. It has everything: romance, friendship, big battles, space, mad emperors, big guns, the Yamato, super cool characters (cool not by US standards but by global ones), magic...it is so much an epic, I dare put it only after Homer's Iliad and Odyssey!!!
And it has the best music EVER. EVER!!!
I wonder how this made it to /.
by
phooka.de
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· Score: 2, Insightful
the author starts from a perspective where animated film (not necessarily anime) is inherently inferior to live-action because it has less visual depth and detail. what he disregards is, that as with any book, a good story only has to provide the necessary elements and hooks for your imagination to kick in and fill in the details.
The best images come from the viewer's inmagination. I wonder what books he reads if he has to be spoon-fed every detail.
A good example is the movie "Pink Floyd - The Wall". It has both, good live-action and stunning animation. But the animation is far more intense than the live-action here.
How did this link make it to/.? The "review" of anime isn't even starting on good premises for a decent review of animated film. In short: he doesn't get it.
Re:I wonder how this made it to /.
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
The best images come from the viewer's inmagination. I wonder what books he reads if he has to be spoon-fed every detail.
Personally, I think this is the same thing that is happening in the video game industry and especially in PC gaming. We are being spoon-fed every detail. By supplying all these details, they take away the imagination part of the equation and to me it makes the games feel empty, boring and ultimately very forgettable.
- akamichi
Re: High Quality Animation???
by
JonKatzIsAnIdiot
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· Score: 2, Interesting
High Quality Animation??
I gotta call you on that one. I haven't seen any anime that even comes close, in terms of quality, to the animation coming out of Disney and Pixar these days. Mouths that are actually lip-synced with the words, rather than alternating between large and small ovals. Body parts move and bounce realistically. Hair that moves. Human heads and eyes are actually in porportion to the rest of the body. Not to mention that some female characters are drawn that don't conform to the doe-eyed-Japanese-schoolgirl look.
The best that can be said of anime is that the storylines are very different than that of North American cartoons. NA cartoons are aimed at kids, where anime is aimed squarely at the prepubescent crowd, or adults that haven't progressed beyond that stage. The quality, however, is absolute crap.
Japanese ethinicity and their caucassian obsession
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
At the heart of this difference lies the Japanese people's deeply entrenched sense of self-loathing, extending even to their own ethnic traits.
Wow, I knew something was terribly wrong when I watched all that anime. The characters didn't look Japanese at all. They look very very Caucasian with little or no Japanese elements to them. The few minutes of non-animated film-footage on Evangelion was such a huge visual sore.
Anyway, another quote - With their sharp-featured faces and long-limbed bodies, Westerners (read Caucasians) are physically suited to the movie screen; everyone looks almost too beautiful, down to the minor characters. Though scientific studies that I have read about say otherwise, that's a weird cultural obsession. Maybe their gene pool has gone a little shallow all breeding in those islands.
But I do have to admit that in the USA, Hollywood can find an actor to play any character. Those Japanese in the anime do not exist. A lot of disney characters are after real people (unless it's animals or other talking stuff).
Though as much as animated porn is fun once in a while, doesn't beat real porn. And, I have some seen 1 or 2 good Japanese porn that was really good (even with the goods fuzzed out).
I remember Liam Gallager (of Oasis) said he hated Japan because all the women were ugly. I though he was just being super obnoxious and unpleasant. And there was an episode of "Son of the beach" where the entire Japan gets obsessed with this blonde lifeguard. Is there an anime viewing guy who has made a trip to Japan and make comments on those.
Re:Anime: As relevant as the bologna sandwich
by
TomHandy
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· Score: 1
It sounds like you are hunting out the wrong anime then......it very clearly
Regarding the Gundam series, you mentioned the animation on the newer ones being "jaw dropping" and the stories "convoluted and ridiculous", but which ones did you have in mind? If you meant Gundam Wing and G Gundam, then yes. But if you meant the more recent series, Turn A Gundam, I'd wonder about this, as I think it has one of the best stories I've ever seen (I can only think someone would find the plot convoluted if they watched it with the terrible subtitles from the bootleg release of it, since it was never fansubbed). Your kids in giant mech suits comment makes me think you are talking about Gundam Wing.
Also, just to clarify, if you saw Robotech, G-Force and StarBlazers in the 80's, those were ok, but they were not the same as experiencing the original animation.....many had significant story changes and edits, etc. that changed their tone and impact....Robotech in particular. Was hard to tell where you were on this one since you didn't mention subsequently if you ever saw the original shows like Macross, Gatchaman and Space Battleship Yamato.
Anyway though, your comment that all anime you see has the same character stereotypes definitely makes it sound like you are only looking at some specific shows that are cliched, and perhaps missing or ignoring some of the more original and interesting shows that come out each year.
Some new stuff I can recommend coming out in the US recently are Now And Then Here And There, Gasaraki, Niea_7, Boogiepop Phantom, FLCL, Berserk, You're Under Arrest, GTO, Crest of the Stars (and the sequel series Banner of the Stars coming out soon)Revolutionary Girl Utena, Kurogane Communication, His and Her Circumstances.
These are excellent shows which are just recently coming out in the US, and none of them really feature the cliches and stereotypical character archetypes you mentioned......I think there is no reason for you to be jaded, just that you have gotten tired of certain kinds of anime (which many people have gotten tired of, the same reason that many of the tried and true staples of anime don't have nearly the same impact they might have had at an earlier time).
Although two exceptions I think will be the upcoming Macross Zero OVA (the first episode of which debuts in Japan in December...Macross was the series that the first arc of Robotech took footage and story elements from) and the upcoming 52 episode epic Great Yamato Arc, the latest series in the Space Battleship Yamato series (the one that StarBlazers was made from)
-Tom
Unattractive women in American show
by
Wyatt+Earp
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· Score: 1
Rosanne Barr.
Ellen DeGeneres.
The cast of Golden Girls.
American censors? WTF?
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
I'd just like to point out that in America the broadcast media decides what is acceptable largely without outside interference from the government. Anything short of obscenity is legally acceptable for braodcast including most forms of explicit sexuality, it's the media groups themselves like the MPAA and the networks who make these decisions about what is appropriate. But it's all voluntary so censorship isn't really the appropriate term because generally censorship means you are forced to make changes rather than volunteering to edit the work because of some marketing decisions made by some executive. This might seem like a minor point, but I think it's an important one for net users in the US to stay clear on. There are no censors besides the MPAA and the corporate masters of the broadcast media.
Oh deer
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Oh deer lord, WHAT on earth is HE on. I wach Japanese Animations because I enjoy them. I also enjoy Kun Fu Action Theater reruns. Now go back to the nufcking cofepot and drink more you poor dilusional PGP wanting comunist want smoke wanting Creden Man
More on hentai...
by
GuyMannDude
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· Score: 3, Interesting
Anime porn has more emotional content, better plots, etc. Plus you can really dive into darker things like domination, shame, without creating a snuff film. That can make things more exciting and makes topics available for self-examination without actually watching a real person get beat up or whatever.
You have done a very good job of explaining why people like hentai films. Allow me to elaborate...
I watch American porn because the women are really sexy. But you're right that there is no plot to speak of and the acting is rediculous. There is no way around it: porn is full of stupid white trash. And there's a limit as to how exciting that can be, especially when it's all the same. The most important organ in sexual arousal is the brain. When I see some sexy female ninja or spaceship captain in a hentai flick, I feel attracted to her in a much different way than I do to the bimbos in American porn. This hentai woman actually has skills and capabilites. She's compatent! And her face and body is at least as sexy as those of real women. For me, that's a great combination. I'd rather fuck hentai girls than the sluts in American porn.
The other advantage hentai has over real-life porn is the ability to display some real hardcore stuff. It's just not very much fun watching a real woman being raped. Even if you know it's just a movie, it's hard to get around the fact that it looks an awful lot like what happens in real life. However, the non-consentual scenes in hentai are so over-the-top and rediculous that it's very clear this is not realistic at all. When you watch some sexy 19 year old girl with green hair and 38DDs being attacked by a monster with tentacles, it's very, very clearly an absurd bondage fantasy. It's something that could never, ever happen. And it's something that you're certainly never going to experience. So it's exciting. There are some live-action japanese porn films where they try to do the tentacle thing and it just doesn't work.
American Hardcore porn lacks any real emotion or acting or plot. American softcore porn lacks any hardcore action.
Exactly right. The hardcore stuff is actually kind of boring. You're just watching some stupid guy screw some stupid chick. You know that these people are pathetic. There's a limit how much fun you can have watching these losers fuck each other. The softcore stuff you find on Cinemax and such can be much more exciting because there is actually a story and motivation for the characters to screw. But you don't get to see the goods. Hentai provides the best of both worlds, plus it also shows some stuff that is too hardcore for American hardcore films. The Onion had an interview with (porn producer) Ron Jeremy once where he admitted that American porn is so tame that they can't sell their stuff overseas. Everyone else thinks it's boring. Of course, they can't make it any more hardcore than it is now or the feminists will scream bloody murder. So if you want to see something really kinky and naughty, hentai anime is for you!
I'm white. Here's my perspective.
by
RyuuzakiTetsuya
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· Score: 1
The difference here is that while the childish series are often big hits in Japan, the amount of stuff that isn't childish/childlike(not that it matters. I -liked- the first pokemon movie goddamit, dubbing be damned) exceeds the amount of stuff released on television and theatres that gets released in america. Not given Japanese exports.
The last animated movie released in the states targeted at a more mature audience was Titan A.E. And that quite honestly sucked. The CG didn't blend well with the cel painted work. Even more so than Initial D. Atleast Initial D is interesting... But that's an unfair comparison, given that one's a movie and the other's a series.
There are three animated shows on Network prime-time as of this writting, King of the Hill, Simpsons, and Futurama. And Futurama's future, ironically enough, is hazy. I'm probably wrong, but anyway... While King of the Hill and the Simpsons do tend to have serious overtones, the actual content rarely goes beyond that of a Situational Comedy. With the odd exception of "The PJ's", this is how the Network prime-time animation scene's been like since 1998, the year of Futurama's debut.
While there have been sporatic random television series in america on this coveted timeslot, off hand I can recall "The Critic" and most recently, "The Family guy", both of which have not survived more than 4 seasons on television, there hasn't been anything that hasn't been comedic. Not that comedy is wrong, but variety is what is lacking.
While I don't mind the somewhat sophisticated humor from "The Critic", I wouldn't mind something screwed up like "Evangelion" or "Utena" was, despite thier age.
Despite the fact that I'm quite sure that the whole point behind utena was to get softcore lesbian porn past Japanese censors somehow. And yes, Japan does have censors.
-- Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
Re: High Quality Animation???
by
susano_otter
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· Score: 3, Interesting
Many of your complaints seem to be about differences of style, rather than differences of skill.
As far as animation techniques go, don't you think it's a little naive to compare CG studios like Pixar to manual and mixed-media studios?
I'll admit that there's a lot of ass "anime" out there--just like there's a lot of ass "cartoons" out there (seen the new He-Man recently?). Compare the majority of the two animation genres (American and Japanese), and it feels like you're juding a competition for the worst animation ever.
On the other hand, if you look at the high end of manual and mixed-media Japanese animation, you get things like Akira, Ghost, Lain, Metropolis, and Princess Mononoke. All of these compare favorably with the best American and European works, not just in story, but also in animation techniques and and artistic merit. I can't do anything about your style complaints, but if the biggest problem you have with anime is that "everybody's drawn funny", then anime at least has The Simpsons for company.
--
Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.
Missing Something...
by
ronfar
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· Score: 4, Informative
Hmm, what is missing in the article is the way Japanese and American society diverged on the subject of comic books due to the intervention of the State. Back in the 1950's (the time of the Cold War, the Korean War, Joe McCarthy and the like) American comic books were being squarely aimed at older teenagers and young adults. They were becoming very popular and experiencing tremendous growth. Popular titles dealt with War, Crime, Horror and Science Fiction.
What happened? Well, a status seeking psychologist by the name of Frederick Wertham wrote a book called Seduction of the Inncoent and the Senate Subcommitee on juvenile deliquancy decided to hold hearings. Certain comic book companies were practically blacklisted (E. C. Comics ended up with only Mad Magazine being available, and even that was often watched by the F.B.I.). It was a bad time to be a comic artist or writer.
The effects of this assault on comics as an art form can still be felt today in the United States, and as far as I can tell a similar crackdown did not occur in Japan at any point in recent history. (At any rate, I haven't read anything in the history of manga that would suggest it.)
-- All the creatures will die,
And all the things will be broken.
That's the law of samurai. (Jubai, 1605)
Re:Anime: As relevant as the bologna sandwich
by
Mitreya
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· Score: 1
The voiceovers do not ALWAYS destroy Anime. They only do if they are crappy (which is often the case, I agree...).
I can definately tell you that dubbing in Cowboy Bebop is amazing. It is really well done and does not feel inferior to the original (I am amazed and happy they have taken their time to do it properly). Also, for the other cases (like Kenshin) where the dubbing completely destroys the original... well, that's why we have DVDs nowdays - they have subtitles and you get to hear the original sound. That's the proper way to watch foreign works, for the most part.
Anime is mostly trash but
by
Goalie_Ca
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· Score: 1
Transformers seems to stand above it.
--
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Go canucks, habs, and sens!
Re:I'm NOT Japanese.
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
...because we like XXXXXX. The XXXXX we enjoy has things that we just can't find in most American XXXXXX.
You could use that rationalization for almost anything. But, who are we kidding? It's different enough to do something with your friends and not have other people understand it. And, that's the primary reason.
I think it sucks that you can hardly see a video on MTV anymore. Though in fact they still play videos, they're just on in the middle of the night/early morning. So I got a season pass on my TiVo to record the morning wake up (6am-8am). I've seen a couple videos I liked, and fast forwarded through the rest. I can usually watch the 2 hour block in under 45 minutes.
Still can't belive MTV is filled with so much crap that I record stuff while I'm sleeping. Used to be I'd turn on MTV and then figure out what was on to watch. Those days are long gone.
-- Brought to you by Team SPAM! where we believe: "Information in the noise!"
This article is somewhat outdated. The recent movie by MIYAZAKI Hayao is Spirited Away (Sen to Chihiro Kamikakushi) even The Cat Return (Neko no Ongaeshi) is around the corner.
Re:There are all these cds full of anime under my
by
NDPTAL85
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· Score: 1
Hey, the US and the UK share a "Special Relationship" so back off pal. Just because the UK has seen the light with respect to its own policies verses the usual European drivel of tax and tax some more for good measure doesn't mean its not still a part of Europe. The UK just learned sooner than the rest of you guys, and you will learn eventually, that no matter how hard you try you cannot provide for everyone and expect to produce and or maintain productive innovative socities.
-- Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
That would be "Grave of the Fireflies"
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
That would be "Grave of the Fireflies".
Re:ENOUGH with the linux evangilism, please.
by
MoneyT
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· Score: 2
OK, slashdot. WE GET IT. Open Source is SO IMPORTANT that we all must stand up and take notice. We all must worship the haphazzardly thown together OS that represents the boredrum of a college student. We get it. Open Source is SO important and SO beyond a normal computer user that only you few nerds are capable of understanding. Right. We bow down before the might of the Penquin. Only the elect nerds of slashdot "Get it". Verily they must bring the gospel of Linux to the world because god help us, the rest of the world JUST DOES NOT UNDERSTAND how IMPORTANT and AWESOME and SIGNIFICANT Open Source really REALLY is.
Sorry AC, we haven't been paying OSS enough attention. The world has not taken notice of your holy apostolic Open Source web sites. We have sinned, verily, and thy wrath is shown to all the world on Slashdot.org. You were right--maybe if you post JUST ONE MORE ARTICLE about how AWESOME and SIGNIFICANT Open Source is, and how we JUST DON'T UNDERSTAND, we'll all change our ways. We great unwashed JUST DON'T GET IT. Applications developed and supported by paid developers == bad, haphazzard, often sub-par software with lousy interfaces and plenty of inconsistancies == god. WE GET IT. Loud and clear, A-OK! A commercial application is JUST NOT GOOD ENOUGH
[Note to Moderators: This is not flamebait, it is merely to illustrate that people have different viewpoints as to what matters to them and what doesn't. If you don't want to read something do read it.]
-- T Money
World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
"those that are despised by anime freaks in the US"
as a japanese, you should be more careful about using language like this... perhaps you speak english too well for your own good?
most "anime freaks" in america have never even seen either of the two shows you are talking about.
the anime industry in japan is very different from that in america--where there are only a few shows on during the evening/early morning hours (ignoring cable).
Name five science-fiction or fantasy American TV shows from the last two years that have had good special effects, action sequences, a definite plot with a start and a finish, and decent writing.
I know I can't.
I enjoy anime because it has elements I enjoy. I enjoy American science fiction and fantasy novels for the same reason. What American TV or movies I enjoy, I enjoy for the same reason. Having other people not understand it doesn't come into things. On the contrary, I try to get others to at least try watching anime whenver possible.
Ne? Your comments did not really make much sense, but I guess you guys get diff. anime than we do here in Southeast Asia.
By the way, for romantic anime, watching Curious Play and Ayashi No Ceres is better. At all costs...
STAY AWAY FROM SAILORMOON!
By the way, try to check out Gensomaden Saiyuki, Vandread (the 3D graphics is great!) and my all-time favourite, You're Under Arrest. The movie was funny.:p
-- 1 + 1 = 3?
I'm Japanese...
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
...and therefore automatically an expert on any differences between Japan and America, unlike an American.
The large supply of high-quality adult-oriented anime is irrelevant because kids go fad-crazy over children's anime which then gets watched more and makes tons of money on merchandising, while most adults only show moderate appreciation of the best works. This difference between adult and child attitudes toward entertainment is obviously a unique feature of Japanese culture.
On the other hand, the most popular works from the booming field of mature manga get made into mature anime. Obviously, this anime is culturally irrelevant, unlike the manga it was based on.
Bottom line: Children's anime is more profitable, and therefore the norm, and that makes Japan's animation industry just like Disney. Despite the amount of anime set in Japan, referencing Japanese folklore, customs, superstitions, fads, popular culture, regional peculiarities, and history, it has no cultural significance, while Japan's unremarkable novels, live-action films, and TV shows capture the essence of the Japanese soul.
Quality of Japanimation - 1/2
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
>>it's high quality animation...
Now that is not true. It is very low quality animation compared to disney and pixar. They only use about 1/2 the frames that disney and pixar use. That is why anime is so choppy.
...everything on this earth has a purpose, every disease an herb to cure it, and every person a mission. This is the Indian theory of existence. Mourning Dove, (Salish 1888-1936)
- this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...
News for Anime fans. Stuff that doesnt matter
Many Americans find anime a lot more appealing than a lot of stuff on TV because anime isn't as constrained by the American Standard that effects many of the popular programming.
I watch anime constantly, always on top of the latest fansubbed releases, picking up the DVDs of series that are especially good and make it to North America. I support the full circle of anime, and all of the fruit it bears.
Of it all, I've met new people, made some good friends, and experience a whole culture that I would have otherwise been completely oblivious to. I find anime to be informative, entertaining, and especially enjoyable.
So what's the significance of tentacles, then?
OLPC Australia
The Anime boom began long before that. I hate articles that begin with broadly incorrect generalities.
On a related note, here is a link for the Dutch Animation Festival that will be held the upcoming weekend.
www.haff.nl
I think it was from poorly paid animators cartooning porn on the side for cash?
Let me recommend "Spirited Away" to everyone. This is not your typical jerky graphics, guns blazing loud obnoxious Anime film. The graphics are great. But more important is the story line and the pacing. Its slow and methodical and completely enthralling. Groundbreaking even.
Great movie even for people who don't appreciate Anime.
The guys maybe, but I got a couple of gigs of porn to show my disagreement.
If anything, it analyses why anime tends to reject Japanese characters and ideals in favor of Western ones.
By the way, since the server is completely /.ed, here is the google cache
Mother is the best bet and don't let Satan draw you too fast.
My wife and I rented two adult anime videos some years ago. We watched 15 minutes on the first tape, before realizing how sick it was... what a heck, it might have been a bad anime... we watched 10 minutes of the second video, and it was even more weird and perverted than the first one. I guess we weren't enough pervs to get something out of it... 8P
Civil war documentaries, or porn
Many Americans find porn a lot more appealing than a lot of stuff on TV because porn isn't as constrained by the American Standard that effects many of the popular programming.
I watch porn constantly, always on top of the latest fansubbed releases, picking up the DVDs of series that are especially good and make it to North America. I support the full circle of porn, and all of the fruit it bears.
Of it all, I've met new people, made some good friends, and experience a whole culture that I would have otherwise been completely oblivious to. I find porn to be informative, entertaining, and especially enjoyable.
that being said, I couldn't come up with an explaination of why I like Anime, other than, it's high quality animation, and the allure of something from a culturally different background.
------ Work is so much easier when you don't
Two comments and the link (and possibly an intercontinental internet pipe) has been slashdotted!
.MHT compressed file - there must be something else equivalant that works with all other browsers - hell, even make it a standard zip file with the .slash extention and associate that extension with a script or batch file that uncompresses and views when clicked on.
The question of a cache should not be met with a vague grumbling about "content owner permission" rights.
Stop being so damned irresponsible! Cache the complete first page of any linked articles!
Hell, this could even be done without slashdot footing the bill for the extra bandwidth. Before posting an article:
(1) compress the first page of every article link to a single file.
(2) share that through a peer-to-peer system such as bittorrent.
It would work. Everyone would win - slashdot readers and linked sites. AND it would be a Genuinely Good Use(tm) for the peer to peer tech.
----
Tech notes:
Internet Explorer can save complete pages as a single
Bittorrent: It's seriously underappreciated, and - the part I love - it ONLY shares the CURRENT FILE that you're downloading. As soon as you close the "file download" box when your download is done, you drop out of the peer to peer network that was made specifically for that file. It is neat.
Same reason. American Hardcore porn lacks any real emotion or acting or plot. American softcore porn lacks any hardcore action.
Anime porn has more emotional content, better plots, etc. Plus you can really dive into darker things like domination, shame, without creating a snuff film. That can make things more exciting and makes topics available for self-examination without actually watching a real person get beat up or whatever.
He painted a unicorn in outer space. I'm askin' ya, what's it breathin'?
Nuff Said.
I don't think the author has actually watched all the programs they are discussing. They made a few statements about NGE that I found questionable but they may have just been avoiding spoilers.
I havn't read the whole article yet however since it experienced a sudden surge in activity for some reason.
Japan being short on space can't really throw togeather resources like big studios. And if your market doesn't care why should you. Hong Kong had the Martial Arts traditions, lots of Jackie Chan and Jet Li types. It's cheap. Europe, has classy people like James Bond.
Here in the US we got more money then sense so we get Attack of the Colons. (not a typo, my colon twists up everytime that #2 is mentioned).
The only feature I like about you humans is that you do adapt very well. (a feature as in a bug for which documentation exists).
Sorry about the writing. Robot fingers, you know? Cliff Steele in DOOM PATROL #23
Was Fat Albert anime? I could have sworn I saw a Kamehameha in one episode... "Hrey hrey hrey...suck on this, Mush Mouth!" "ARRRRRRRRRRRRRR!"
I'll form my OWN solar system! With blackjack! And hookers!
I think that MANGA better than animae porn.which mean MANGA does not contain porn.example,SHONEN JUMP japanese comic magazine each contents are very heroism .....
"One should also note that Rei has blue hair and red eyes ?rather remarkable traits for a Japanese girl!!"
Uhm... unnatural hair colors like purple, blue, white and green look nice. That's it, they look nice. No need to think about *why* they chose that color, it just looks nice!
I think the author of the article is overanalyzing things.
No really!
o re danime.html
http://www.anzwers.org/free/moonxtal/essay/cens
Rei is also a multitude of clones, genetically engineered, and depending on what translation/subtitling you believe, is far from human.
In other words, just browse this article, and you'll find nothing strange about the character. Nine out of ten Slashdotters would genetically engineer chicks with cat ears, if they could.
is a derivate of the amount of comments posted on a story titled "The Significance of Anime". Based on a recent empirical study, the significance of Anime is just a bit less than that of a "Indiglo Clock Case Mod".
Emotional Content?
When I watch porn, I want to see acts of sex. If I wanted 'emotional content', I'd watch a soap opera.
Cowboy Bebop is great SciFi. The way music is used is really creative--sax solo during a space ship chase scene. The world-view is also very interesting: a BladeRunner like gel of every culture. Basically can't say enough good things about the show.
Law & Order, CSI, sitcoms, American TV in general have nothing on it.
He painted a unicorn in outer space. I'm askin' ya, what's it breathin'?
K J #4 6 : M E D I A I N A S I A
©San and Ashitaka, Princess Mononoke
More Animated than Life
By Sato Kenji
Japan's animation boom began in the summer of l977, when the movie Uchu Senkan Yamato (Space Cruiser Yamato) captivated teenagers and young adults to emerge as a major box-office hit. The success of this sci-fi "anime" prompted a fundamental shift in the cultural status of animation.
Even before Space Cruiser Yamato, Japan had produced a considerable number of animated films, but they were generally regarded as children's fare or, at best, family entertainment; the few adult-oriented animated movies were not successful commercially. Space Cruiser Yamato was the first anime to demonstrate that the medium need not restrict itself to kiddie fare. Following suit, from the late l970s, Japan put out a steady stream of animated films geared to young adults, including Ginga Tetsudo 999 (Galaxy Express 999) and Kido Senshi Gandamu (Mobile Suit Gundam). Most of these were commercial successes as well, although critics dismissed these as exploitation films pandering to teenage tastes. The attitude of film critics changed abruptly, however, with the 1984 release of Kaze no Tani no Naushica (Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind), a film whose artistic quality was widely regarded as more than sufficient to hold the attention of adults. With this movie, writer-director Miyazaki Hayao overturned the conventional image of the anime director as a versatile hack, and was soon crowned as anime's first genuine auteur.
Of course, not all anime rose to the level of non-juvenile entertainment or art. In fact, in the late 1980s, with young adult anime showing signs of staleness, the focus began to revert to children's films. Nevertheless, the genre never relinquished the commercial foothold it had gained during the young adult anime craze; furthermore, Miyazaki began to enjoy a large degree of freedom in his filmmaking, as did several other directors who subsequently achieved the status of anime auteur. The results of those efforts, particularly the anime produced by Miyazaki's Studio Ghibli, are not simply movies with high box-office potential; they are in many instances artistically superior to the live-action films made in Japan, and they have won growing legions of fans overseas.
During the 1990s, animation, spearheaded by the work of a few anime auteurs, emerged as the face of Japanese film, positioning Japan as the world's undisputed "anime superpower." And in 1997 -- a full twenty years since anime took off -- animation's preeminence over live-action films in Japan was more apparent than ever. In a matter of months after its release, Mononoke-hime (Princess Mononoke), Miyazaki's latest film to date which was then alleged to be his last directorial effort, broke every box-office record to become the biggest domestic movie hit of all time in Japan. In the languishing field of young adult anime, the avant garde sci-fi work Shin Seiki Evangerion (Neon Genesis Evangelion) scored a major box-office hit and won a huge cult following. Moreover, children's anime are as popular as ever. In all, it appears that anime has taken center stage in the Japanese film industry, pushing live-action movies into the wings.
Fleshless reality
The simplest explanation for this reversal of fortune between animation and live-action is that the former has ridden to success on the coattails of its older cousin, Japanese comics, or manga, a medium that emerged as a main focus of Japanese popular culture after World War II, and has grown particularly pervasive since the 1970s. It is true that many successful anime were based on popular manga and anime have been heavily influenced by manga's pictorial conventions. Another important factor is cost. Hollywood has made successful live-action films based on such popular comics as Superman and Batman, but the need for expensive sets and special effects to create the necessary visual realism has resulted in extremely high production costs. Japan's film industry, with its much smaller market, cannot afford such high-budget pictures To put it another way, animation offers a means of producing slick, stylish films without spending much money.
Still, this ignores the fact that anime's very format has an inherent weakness. Because its characters are relatively small and simplified pictures painted on cels (thin pieces of plastic), they lack the fleshy presence of actors, nor can they rival the subtlety of good actors' performances. Compared with live-action films, their reality is literally two-dimensional, which is why animated films were for so long regarded as fit only for children's (or family) entertainment. The reason Hollywood elected to make live-action films out of Superman and Batman is that they could be counted on to attract wider audiences and larger profits, notwithstanding the much higher costs of production.
It may be that Japanese under a certain age, having been weaned on manga and anime, are not bothered by the lack of visual realism. But this begs the question: Why is the cultural status of animation so much higher in Japan than in America, the home of Walt Disney? To be sure, ever since the anime boom began animated films have sought ever greater realism in both form and content, refining the animation itself and looking to more serious subject matter. They have gone far beyond Disney films, which remain essentially animated musicals performed by conspicuously cartoonish characters. Films like Studio Ghibli's Mimi o Sumaseba (Whisper of the Heart) and Omoide Poroporo (Only Yesterday) portray Japan's urban and rural landscapes with a realism that puts many live-action movies to shame. Visually, however, Japanese anime by no means transcend the medium, even though viewers may find some of them remarkably realistic for animated features.
In any case, a growing number of people accustomed to animation's lack of visual realism cannot in itself explain why anime has come to represent Japanese cinema in toto. For animation to push aside live-action films, a growing number of people had to prefer the thin, insubstantial reality of animation to the flesh-and-blood world of live-action -- they had to be cool or even hostile to the real image. This, in fact, is precisely what began to occur in Japan in the 1990s.
Why, then, did the Japanese take a disliking to live-action? One reason is that most Japanese films are made on a low budget and look it, with low production values. Second, there is no denying that in theme and subject matter, some anime are more thoughtful and ambitious than their live-action counterparts. Miyazaki's Princess Mononoke, a fantasy-adventure set in medieval Japan, is a critique of modernity founded on a deep concern for the environment. Neon Genesis Evangelion describes an individual's existentialist search for identity, calling to mind Jean-Paul Sartre's famous desperate axiom: "Hell is other people." And Kido Keisatsu Patoreiba 2 (Patlabor 2: The Movie), released in 1992, lashes out at postwar society with its depiction of Tokyo under siege by urban terrorists -- a portrayal eerily prophetic of the Aum sect's 1995 poison gas attack on Tokyo subways.
Of course, the artistic success of each individual film is open to debate. (Evangelion, in particular, is so incoherent that it virtually defies any real comprehension.) But to my knowledge, Japan's live action films today offer nothing at all to compete with anime when it comes to tackling such ambitious themes. Suo Masayuki's Shall We Dance?, crowned as the best Japanese live-action film of 1996, is a lightweight comedy about a middle-aged office worker who finds release from his humdrum life through ballroom dancing. And the big hit of 1997, Shitsurakuen (Paradise Lost), is a melodrama about another middle-aged salaryman who is demoted at work and eventually commits suicide with his married lover.
Ethnic Bleaching
Still, there is a more alarming reason for moviegoers' rejection of live-action Japanese films. Their flight to anime is an inevitable result of the ethnic self-denial that has suffused Japanese society ever since the Meiji era, and especially since the end of World War II. Bent on achieving the goals of modernization and Westernization, the Japanese, in rejecting their own history and traditions, have sought to become Nihonjin-banare (de-Japanized) -- a generally complimentary term, implying that one looks and acts more like a Westerner or a Caucasian than the average Japanese. "Japaneseness-free" might convey the nuance of the term even better.
Take a look at the animated characters featured in anime. Physically they are "de-Japanized Japanese" -- a blend of Japanese and Caucasian characteristics. Given the setting of Princess Mononoke, it is obvious that the characters are intended to be pure Japanese (or at least Mongoloid), yet their features are nearly identical to the presumably Caucasian characters in Miyazaki's earlier work, Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind, a fantasy set in a future world suggestive of medieval Europe. (The heroine herself is named after the daughter of King Alcinous of Homer's The Odyssey). In Miyazaki's animation there is no physical distinction between Japanese and Caucasians. Evangelion features a Japanese girl, Rei, and Asuka, a girl who is one-quarter German and three-quarters Japanese. Apart from Asuka's Caucasian attributes of light brown hair and blue eyes, there are no significant differences in the facial features or physical development of the two girls. One should also note that Rei has blue hair and red eyes -- rather remarkable traits for a Japanese girl!
In short, the characters of anime show the Japanese -- who so aspire to Western traits -- as they would like to see themselves. It is an effect that cannot possibly be duplicated by live actors, who -- being alive -- can never really change the physical characteristics determined by their genetic makeup. They can dye their hair and even change their eye color with contact lenses, but they cannot fundamentally alter their skin color, facial features, or physique. And even if they tried, using special make-up effects or plastic surgery, the result would be unnatural.
Only anime, and its cousin manga, can convincingly meld Japanese and Caucasian attributes into a natural-looking human being. This is because the upside of these genres' inherent lack of realism is their unique ability to exploit the appeal of and fascination for the unreal. And that is why manga and anime have attained such a high status in the popular culture of Japan, compared to that of other countries. These are the only two media capable of portraying reality the way Japanese feel it should be. By comparison, live-action films sacrifice appeal from the outset simply because they feature Japanese actors. Fashion illustrator Nagasawa Setsu expressed the feelings of many Japanese in an essay he wrote in 1983 for the Japanese playbill of the British film Don't Look Now:
"With their sharp-featured faces and long-limbed bodies, Westerners (read Caucasians) are physically suited to the movie screen; everyone looks almost too beautiful, down to the minor characters . . . . Japanese are just the opposite. Even people who appear delicately beautiful in person look round and dumpy and totally unstylish on camera. The reason many people today say they dislike the "ugliness " of Japanese films -- content notwithstanding -- is that the looks of Japanese screen actors put domestic films at a crucial disadvantage. Period pieces at least allow one to cover up these failings with elaborate costumes. But when they take off their clothes for bedroom scenes, even the most glamorous Japanese actors and actresses look hopelessly unattractive -- which is why you can't pay me to watch Japanese porn." That Nagasawa is not alone in his preference is attested to by the growing number of animated pornographic videos that have been produced in Japan since the mid 1980s. Thus, the history of the past twenty years, during which anime has pushed live-action to the side and emerged as the face of Japanese cinema, has in essence been the history of "ethnic bleaching" in Japanese film. Incidentally, it was also during the last two decades that manga, originally regarded as kids' stuff, truly came into its own as adult entertainment.
Dismantling the Cultural Framework
The tendency of Japanese to reject their own history and traditions in favor of a Western ideal has undermined live-action film also by affecting the performances of Japanese screen actors. An obvious example is the inability of today's younger actors to portray Japanese of earlier eras with authenticity. A live-action version of Princess Mononoke, for example, would be impossible to produce even if one could overcome budget constraints and the difficulty of its special effects. There are simply no young actors in Japan today who can wear the traditional clothing, duel with swords, or shoot arrows on horseback as convincingly as the animated characters in Miyazaki's film.
It is not only in period pieces, however, that the rejection of our country's history and tradition robs actors' performances of authenticity. In postwar Japan's cultural climate, it is exceedingly difficult for actors in any type of role to convincingly express complex, deep or intense emotion -- in fact, any dramatic emotion at all. To appear real, this sort of emotional expression demands exactly the right modulation and combination of subtle elements, including not only choice of words and facial expression, but also posture, gesture, tone of voice, direction of gaze, and distance from other actors. And the "right" modulation and combination differs from culture to culture. Every culture has its own framework of expressive conventions from which actors must draw in order to express emotion that will strike their audience as authentic. As long as Japanese actors refuse to work within the framework of emotional expression stipulated by Japanese culture, they cannot express dramatic emotion in a convincing manner. The famed Meiji-era novelist Natsume Soseki once taught his students that the true Japanese translation for "I love you" is "Tsuki ga tottemo aoi na" (The moon is so blue tonight); what he meant was that to express within the Japanese cultural framework the same emotion expressed in English by "I love you," one must choose words like "The moon is so blue tonight."
Since every culture evolves naturally over time, the cultural framework for emotional expression is by no means immutable. But in post-war Japan the process of change has been unnatural and rushed. Regarding their traditional modes of expression as archaic and feudalistic, and eager to Westernize, the Japanese have attempted to adopt the Western (more specifically, the American) expressive framework wholesale. Yet given that they continue to use the Japanese language as their vehicle for verbal expression, any attempt to affect a "de-Japanized" manner at this level is half-baked. Today, one might say, a Japanese person is unable to convincingly express passion for another either by the English "I love you" or by the Japanese "The moon is so blue tonight." This may be why, since the 1980s, young people in Japan have increasingly disdained the expression of serious or dramatic emotion as kusai, or corny, and prized the appearance of emotional detachment as kakko-ii, or cool.
In terms of dramatic expression, then, the Japanese film labors under a heavy burden. If it portrays emotion within the traditional Japanese framework, it may achieve authenticity, but the effect is antiquated. If it portrays emotion within the Western framework, it comes across as meretricious and unconvincing. Films that try to blend the two modes often end up antiquated and unconvincing. Yet in animation, which lacks visual realism and features de-Japanized characters to begin with, the expression of emotion paradoxically takes on a more convincing sense of reality. This may explain why most of the serious and ambitious film efforts have used the vehicle of anime. Given the serious dramatic deficiency, Japanese live-action films can no longer tackle any serious or profound subject matter.
In the context of contemporary Japanese film, then, anime often conveys a greater sense of reality than live-action films. The thin, insubstantial reality of animated film, that is to say, is more alive -- literally, more animated -- than the flesh-and-blood reality. And if anime is perceived as more real (i.e, closer to physical reality) than live-action, this means that, increasingly, anime embodies the Japanese consciousness of reality. The Japanese conception of reality is undergoing a process of animation.
The rise of anime as well as manga, is a cultural by-product of modern Japan's tendency to promote modernization and Westernization while rejecting its history and traditions. A medium that fuses elements of East and West, and lacks a clear national identity, could be considered international in a certain sense, and this is doubtless a major reason why anime has so many fans overseas. But the current state of affairs, in which anime represents the mainstream of Japanese cinema, is by no means desirable, inasmuch as it signifies an ever-widening gap between physical reality and people's conception of it.
Meanwhile, ever since the huge international box office success of Star Wars (released, coincidentally, in 1977, the same year as Space Cruiser Yamato), a growing number of Hollywood blockbusters might best be described as "live-action anime." Kathleen his girlfriend Terasawa Shinko shouting, "I love Terasawa Shinko! I love her, I do!" Ide reveals the script originally had him yelling , "I hate Terasawa Shinko! I hate her, I do!"
Of course, this is simply an example of reverse psychology at work. Everyone knows Rokusuke is in love with Shinko. However, such rewrite kills the nuance conveyed by the original line, namely that Rokusuke is trying (rather transparently) to conceal his emotional vulnerability. How, then, did "I hate you" become "I love you"? Ide describes how the revision came about.
In those days we had to translate scripts and have them reviewed by GHQ (the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers). The young censor, a second-generation Japanese-American, said to me, "Your script is very interesting and democratic. The only thing that bothers me is why do Japanese say they hate someone when they should be saying they love them? If you love someone, isn't it better to come right out and say so?" Completely overwhelmed by this epiphany, I said, "You're absolutely right. Thank you," and then and there rewrote the line to read, "I love Terasawa Shinko! I love her, I do!" (Shogen no Showa-shi7: Wanman saisho funto su (The Showa Era Speaks, Volume 7: Prime Minister Yoshida Soldiers On], Gakken, 1982) Unable to trust his own intuitive judgement as to the most genuine Japanese-style expression of emotion, Ide went along with a foreigner's opinion and turned the line on its head. Bowing to the idea that an American-style, forthright mode of expression was more suitable to the new "democratic" Japan, he made his character say something that went counter to his own Japanese impulse. Under the circumstances, one could hardly expect the actor to come up with a convincing performance. And indeed, film director Oshima Nagisa recalls going to see Green Hills when he was in high school and finding the last scene "so embarrassingly awkward that I could hardly bear to watch." (Taikenteki sengo eizo ron [Imagery of Postwar Japan: A Personal Recollection], Asahi Shimbun, 1982)
The problem is that these days it would seem just as false to say "I hate you" in such a scene. How, then, is an actor to perform? This is precisely the problem Aoi Yoji confronts when he criticizes Japanese dramatists for reeling off "line after self-satisfied line that actors are viscerally unable to make their own, justifying it by saying 'that's my style.'" Aoi complains with good reson that actors are forever struggling with dialogue that has "little style and even less substance, and since they have to render the material in some way, they have no choice but to resort to cheap theatrics."
The idea of ethnichat even with a ghost as a main character, a program in which tatami appears is simply not fanciful enough for anime. Tomino's reaction to tatami mats -- an integral element of the traditional Japanese house -- is a clear indication of the deep-rooted presumption that a typically Japanese setting precludes the qualities of fancy and wonder.
Then there is the story told by Ide Toshiro, who co-wrote the script for the movie Aoi sanmyaku (The Green Hills of Youth, directed by Imai Tadashi), an enormous hit in 1949, during the Allied Occupation. Speaking of the movie's last scene, where the high school hero Rokosuke walks along the shore with his girlfriend Terasawa Shinko shouting, "I love Terasawa Shinko! I love her, I do!" Ide reveals the script originally had him yelling , "I hate Terasawa Shinko! I hate her, I do!"
Of course, this is simply an example of reverse psychology at work. Everyone knows Rokusuke is in love with Shinko. However, such rewrite kills the nuance conveyed by the original line, namely that Rokusuke is trying (rather tranthe first animated movie in history that was as realistic as live action. Inasmuch as Star Wars Episode 1 is fundamentally a live-action movie, saying it could also be called an animated movie with all the realism of live action not only places animation on a par with live action but also implies that there are live-action movies without the realism of live action.
By ignoring the difference between reality pretending to be cartoons and cartoons pretending to be reality, McCallum's words eloquently attest to the fact that the gap between live action and animation is closing in the West as well. It would seem that Japan is not the only country where people's vision of reality is undergoing a process of animation.
This essay was previously published in KJ#41, but unfortunately at that time approximately one paragraph was deleted in production (following the pivotal example of Natsume Soseki's translation "The moon is so blue tonight...") We are pleased to present the essay here in entirety, with a new afterword. It has also been reprinted in Japan Echo's anthology Years of Trial: Japan in the 1990s (ed. Masazoe Yoichi).
Sato Kenji graduated from the University of Tokyo, where he majored in international relations. He is the author of Chingu: Kankoku no yojin (Chingu: a Korean Friend), Gojira to Yamato to bokura no minshushugi (Godzillanian Democracy: Ideological Subtexts of Japanese Popular Culture) Genmetsu no Jidai no yoake (Dawn of Disillusionment) and most recently a forthcoming collection of essays entitled Mirai soshitsu (Future Lost).
©Illustrations used with permission.
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With the soap opera, you get no hardcore action. Anime porn can give you both; there is no western equivalent. Plots and fantasy are important when you've watched as much porn as I have, and find most of it boring.
He painted a unicorn in outer space. I'm askin' ya, what's it breathin'?
Yawn- yet another article that praises "worthy" anime like Mononoke Hime and Spirited Away, and ignores the massive diversity of popular TV series and OAVs.
Here is a mini-guide to some slightly more obscure anime to watch for fans of certain series that are well known:
If you like Ed in Cowboy Bebop then you will like the title character in NieA Under 7.
If you like Tenshi, you will probably like Love Hina and Happy Lesson TV.
If you like Oh My Goddess, you will probably like Chobits.
If you like anime with lots of fighting action then take a look at Beserk, Noir, Scryed, Hellsing.
Other good romantic comedy animes are: Onegai Teacher, I my me Strawberry Eggs, Ai Yori Aoshi, Hanaukyo Maids.
There are many more than this. Most of the ones I mentioned came out in the last year or two.
graspee
There was a scene in Evangelion where Kaji and Misato were making whoopie. You could see the lovers' clasped hands, and hear some moans, but nothing else.
It was strange to me. Part of it was, this wasn't the normal anime peekaboo "fan service"; it was a television show that showed, in however limited and discreet a fashion, two people in the act of making love. American soap operas usually don't go that far; they'll show a man and woman between the sheets kissing, and then cut to a scene where the evil midget doll is concocting a love potion that will enable her to steal Celeste's fiancee or whatever. To keep the camera on any part of the actors while they do "the act" is a bit much for American censors. Thus, that little scene struck me as being simultaneously totally discreet and totally explicit.
N4st0r, trixx0r h0bb1tz0rz! Th3y st0l3 0ur pr3c10uzz!
Anyway, kudos for the recommend on Spirited! See it now while it's still on the big screen!
-Fantastic Lad
You watch porn for the stories? What, are you gay or something?
And speaking from a Japanese viewpoint, let me clarify one thing.
Miyazaki's works are not the norm.
Its uniqueness, yet similarities to real life is what makes Studio Ghibli's works such blockbuster hits. However, other animations also do rake in cash for studios.
Every spring, when kids get out of school for spring break, the movie studios release several animated features, much like Disney.
Doraemon, an anime about a futuristic cat-like robot helping out a puny kid, is seen every week on television. In its extended movie version, the group goes on a journey to unique lands.
Each flick (which has been released every spring for the past two decades) brings in about $20 mil (2bil yen). Not too shabby, considering it's a domestic release.
Another is Detective Conan - a high school sleuth is turned into a boy and solves crimes.
Noticing a trend here? Childrens' films - those that are despised by anime freaks in the US - are those that gain the most popularity. Keep in mind that it's not only the kids who like them, as opposed to the popularity of Pokemon in the states.
"Classics" such as Cowboy Bebop and other mature-themed anime exist in large numbers, but they do not gain the widespread acknowledgement that kid-oriented shows do.
On the other hand, comic books (mangas) are split in half between the kids and the adults. The mature-themed manga is a booming industry, mostly focusing on modern themes such as corporations and sports. The unique few get turned into anime, and end up in the hands of American viewers who think that what they're watching reflects the Japanese phyche.
Bottom line: The Japanese animation industry is hardly different from the Disney of America - child-oriented shows sell. Mature anime are not the norm, and do not reflect the culture of Japan. For that, you need to watch television programs, domestic films (not Godzilla), fiction books.. and so on.
Grouping anime is as easy as grouping movies. Anime of all type exists, from psychological thrillers to adult drama to action to fantasy to pr0n and still more divisions below. There are certainly trends in anime, but I can't accept that all anime (and so all anime fans) be grouped into a single stereotype. The only thing I think that makes an anime fan an anime fan is the willingness to suspend reality (the super buzzword of the entertainment industry) for the animated medium. Their choice of anime beyond that is as varied as people's tastes in movies or books.
---
When I grow up, I want to be a kid again.
Well, I'm used to read such nonsense from people which don't know a thing about anime. It's really sad. : :) :) :) And then I read nonsense about asians not beinat advantages on screens : very sad to read such stupid things...
The article is seriously stupid, and the author doesn't know a thing !
Point by point
- Yes, Yamato was a shift in anime, but it didn't cause a boom : the boom was a long time before 1977, and that's why Yamato came. The major thing Yamato changed, was in the songs used in anime. Before Yamato, there were 5 assigned singers (3 men, 2 women) for anime (I remember some names like Mizuki Ichirou, Kooro Gi, and of course the great Horie Mitsuko). Since the Yamato film, which used pop artists, every anime started to use people whose it was the job to sing
- A lot of anime were indeed adult and successful before 1977, Yamato being one of them. The guy is sickening now...
- Nausicaa was NOT a big success ! Nausicaa was renowned among anime fans, that's true. Miyazaki didn't overturn anything. Toei made more bucks with his films than those of Miyazaki, until Mononoke. Miyazaki started to be a success in Japan since Mononoke Hime, when more money was put on ads. Only anime fans reverred Miyazaki well before that time.
- The gold years of anime where the 80s, NOT 90s ! 90s where the decline, and then, the end of cellulo. It seems to be going back nowadays.
- this guy clearly doesn't know a thing about animation : the biggest mistake he makes is the same 99% of people do. He takes it all backwards, thinking anime is a subset of live movie. But it's the other way : live movie is the simplest and less powerful animation : it's limited to still images of reality, and not even perfect images at that. That's why there was always the need to blend special effects or other forms of animation (like CG) in live action films, because it's too limited. On the other hand, drawn animation is the most powerful of animation (the only limit is your imagination and skills), but as such, the most difficult to master. Some people I know who study animation don't even know when live animation started to be predominant, but I think one of the reason was that it looked more real ! Remember the Frères Lumières and their first show
- The only thing that made people think that animation is for children is Dysney !!!! Animation, in the start, was NOT considered for children !!! It was for adults, were presented in theater, and even served as propaganda during war ! Sone like this guy saying anime was for children principally is a cretin which doesn't even know history... And to add to the bad things Dysney have done, they shut down every other animation (be it japanese or from east Europe), threatening festivals were they were broadcasted, from the start until now. But I guess a lot of people do not know that, taht was the goal. They even continue nowadays.
- Anime can be as, even more convincing than live. But a lot of the performance is dependent on the voice actors. The "fleshy presence" is a nonsense. Anime can be more powerful than any live. You can't dismiss the power of pictures because they are not taken from "reality". Sone tell this guy that horror or porn in anime can not be shown to small kids : even without "flesh" presence, the subjective power is still stronger than anything. Imagination has always been more powerful than reality.
- The guy is stuck on "visual realism". That is, he can't even understand animation, as "visual realism" is only one feature of live animation. You can not judge anime by "visual realism", that's not one of it's features, though you can put such pictures in anime (it has even been done already). The purpose of anime is to present sth, not to be "realist".
- Another common pitfall. The author himself falls in it without even knowing. One of the power of anime, is that you can more easily identify yourself to a character. I mean, a japanese, looking at an anime character, will see a japanese. And an european will see an european, an american will see an american (except if it's too "realistic"). That's why the guy doesn't see a japanese in the characters. And the eyes have nothing to do with nationality : look at Tintin !
Or think that nobody has so wide round open eyes as you can see sometimes, or has blue or pink hairs
- The author apparently comes from the "caste" of people which rejects Japan history. All japanese are not among this group, and there is conflict, even in manga, on the subject. This turns into politics after that, and I'm tired already of this guy. Surely, I don't love all japanese (and surely not this one)...
what about soap opera porn. now that's an idea, some of those chicks in the soap operas are pretty hot.
alright for anyone who works in film this is an idea and it's got to sell, everyone can watch it, the women can enjoy the story lines and the guys can watch hardcore porn at the same time.
OK, slashdot. WE GET IT. Anime is SO IMPORTANT that we all must stand up and take notice. We all must worship the silly cartoons where women are drawn like 12 year-olds with eye problems. We get it. Anime is SO important and SO beyond our conceptions that only you few nerds are capable of understanding. Right. We bow down before the might of Japanese animation. Only the elect nerds of slashdot "Get it". Verily they must bring the gospel of Japan to the world because god help us, the rest of the world JUST DOES NOT UNDERSTAND how IMPORTANT and AWESOME and SIGNIFICANT Japanese cartoons really REALLY are.
Sorry Rob, we haven't been paying Anime-fu enough attention. The world has not taken notice of your holy apostolic Anime web site. We have sinned, verily, and thy wrath is shown to all the world on Slashdot.org. You were right--maybe if you post JUST ONE MORE ARTICLE about how AWESOME and SIGNIFICANT anime is, and how we JUST DON'T UNDERSTAND, we'll all change our ways. We great unwashed JUST DON'T GET IT. North American culture == bad, neurotic Japanese culture == god. WE GET IT. Loud and clear, A-OK! North american animation is JUST NOT GOOD ENOUGH.
I'm constantly disappointed by peoples utter lack of knowledge about exactly how far back the tradition goes. I'm not a fan of anime, and I've never been one, but even I can see that the roots of anime go back several centuries. To say that they come from manga is only one step in the right direction. Japanese printmakers such as Hokusai and others in the Edo period are the ones that really started the ball rolling.
sig.
Yeah, very interesting article.
Sad that there is alot of "Nihon-jin banare" is still around. It has really been pumped into Japanese culture over the decades. Especially during the 80s. I reckon that there is a collective rejection of this way of thinking coming to the fore however. The "White way" is becoming less popular with the yute, and, unlike Michael Jackson, the Japanese are proud to appreciate and celebrate the inherent non-whiteness of their condition. In time, I believe we will see more and more anime, manga, video games etc propogating the "obviously" Japanese as main characters.
On a racially neutral aside,. I've noticed that anime are extremely popular in the US aswell as the mother-land. I read an article saying that you will be getting plenty of anime on cartoon network etc. The same just doesn't apply here in Europe. They're really popular with you guys eh?
I am in the UK and speak from the viewpoint of having a Japanese wife who has downloaded loads and loads of anime.
I like most of the biggies, Ghost in the Shell being my fave. A truly exceptional animated movie. Akira, Fist of the North star etc. But I aint overly crazy about them. I saw the first couple of stand alone complexes too.
Ghibli Studio work is certainly of a higher standard than Disney too, for the most part. Maybe its just me, but I think that culturally we in Europe/UK really don't appreciate anime half as much as you do in the US.
Anyway, this is a good topic for me. A car will be arriving in less than 2 hrs to take me to the airport where we will be getting on the wonderful 12hr flight to Tokyo. FUckin' A. HEere I come!
I'm not the only one who's annoyed; IMDB ran this story:
Stupid job ads, weird spam, occasional insight at
I'm a fairly casual fan of anime, and I really enjoy anime articles when I see them on Slashdot. So please Slashdot, I'd like to see more anime evangelism.
BTW, I don't think that anyone really believes that North American animation is not good enough. It's just different from Japanese animation. The world would be a poorer place if either style didn't exist.
DeeK
More than half of the anime contains at least one of the following components: cat ear, uniform, lolita, maid, nurse, baby sister, female teacher... And I don't mean anime pr0n. These are the anime that turned lonely boys into otakus.
Of course many of these anime are excellent in terms of intriguing plot and excellent story, but they wouldn't be nearly as popular if the moe element were removed.
Here are some names of the anime that falls in to the moe category: Love Hina Ah My Godess Sister Princess DiGi Charat Onegai Teacher Handy Maid May Chobits Hanaukyo Maids ...
Oh and I got hooked on Hanaukyo Maids (Shame on me!)
Thats cause your not in Portugal, where people droll over locomotion, a channel that playes here, in brazil and spain with loads of Anime, not counting with every single national channels. :p Spain had hentai freaks and anime fans even before we did. Not counting with france, wich even translates a good deal of original comics *want the comics of sailormoon, dragonball, and almost everything you can imagine? get it from france.*
Portugal youth is crazy about anime
UK isnt EUrope *it was suposed to be part of it*, and by the current political affairs, its in danger of becomming more of an American probe preventing Europe from gaining ascension, than a true ally.
I reckon that there is a collective rejection of this way of thinking coming to the fore however. The "White way" is becoming less popular with the yute, and, unlike Michael Jackson, the Japanese are proud to appreciate and celebrate the inherent non-whiteness of their condition.
Aha ! I knew there was a reason japanese animators were using so much color ! It is due to the inherent non-whiteness of their condition ! They will never pull a vile Casper tfg !
go, purple, go !
(exclamation marks are the vilest form of sarcasm !!! )
Working for necessity's mother.
Quote:
"A live-action version of Princess Mononoke, for example, would be impossible to produce even if one could overcome budget constraints and the difficulty of its special effects. There are simply no young actors in Japan today who can wear the traditional clothing, duel with swords, or shoot arrows on horseback as convincingly as the animated characters in Miyazaki's film."
There obviously is an abundance of young American actors which can convincely duel with light sabers and crawl walls.
well, i don't know about UK, but here in Italy there is a good number of people that REALLY appreciate anime. Just think that every tuesday MTV Italy does "anime night", i think that is significative. :D
Anyway i'm an Evangelion addicted so i don't think i can speak with any form of intelligence involved since trying to understand Evangelion only drives you MAD
Nayone have one of this site Hanging around for the rest of us that didn't flood the site first to have a peek into?
Just being Hopeful on this one...
Magic Knight Rayearth rules, BTW...
Luke-Jr
Can anyone recommend a good site or list of Anime titles for a person thats wants to get more into it? I've started watching Cowboy Bebop on the Cartoon Network and really like it. Any more titles like this one? Thanks
I'd have to agree with the commentary on the rejection of the japanese self in alot of anime. If you look at the big-budget space operas, alot of them have to deal with thematic apocalypse/destruction, a social afterthought of Nagasaki and Hiroshima. Yamamoto, Macross, Akira...big things go boom!
Also, consider this -- there are alot of old school Hollywood directors who feel that b&w is an integral element of being able to carry a fantastic story -- something about colour becoming a distraction. Very few directors use colour as a dramtic/thematic device successfully (exmaple: Antonioni; Kubrick). The colour element brings you too close to reality to believe in the farce such as "Some Like it Hot" (2 cross dressing guys escaping the mob), and Citizen Kane would not look as good if shot in colour. In this way, abstracting a fanastic theme from reality by presenting it in an anime style allows you to appreciate the story much more effectively... I would be postively scared of watching Ranma 1/2 in live action...ewwwww....
John Maynard Keynes: "When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do?"
Of course, everything else in the culture is pretty severe too, but at the same time very people-oriented. In times gone past, massive rounds of layoffs due to poor stock performance was unheard of. I don't know if this is still the case; Western values might be creeping in and causing the companies to treat their people more like the robotic drones as most western companies do.
I think that of all the cultures and people on the planet, the one least likely to ever be understood by any American (including myself) are the Japanese. Even if you spend your whole life among them, I think that from time to time something will happen that will surprise and befuddle you. But that depth of culture is also what makes them so cool, so it's OK.
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
One of the lasting effects of the cultural & accidemic reactions in the 1960s to the history of Hitler/Nazism/Stalinsim/Colonialism has been the same sort of 'political incorrectionalisation' of the European identity, particularily in Scandinavia, Germany and especially the UK. The new social age of the past several decades has falsely associated the whole of European identity, culture and history with those evils. You're meant to accept cultural 'pluralism' (multiculturalism) meaning the swamping of your country by Muslims, while 3rd world countries are meant to be culturally 'pure', and if they're not, it's because of the bad whiteys again. If anyone shows they're 'too white', that's 'bad' for being 'racist', like how in Japan being too Japanese is 'bad'.
Reading this text is very familiar to me, different causes, but the same effect of self-negative-association on different societies. And like in Japan, the few who are prepared to ignore the social stigma of having anything to do with their own culture either fall into the far-right trap, or end up going all new-age and the like. I've had to go through school with resentment-filled teachers handing out short stories about the good illegal immigrant and the bad exploitative whitey among other things. I'm sure others have had similar experiences.
Whats next..."Bugs Bunny, He's Significant! More Significant than YOU anyhow!"... Anime: In the 80's I was really into it, trouncing upong any mecha-space-scifi I could find (yeah, Robotech peaked my interest just as GForce and StarBlazers did a decade earlier). Sadly, today all the anime I see makes me generally cringe. Much in the same way American movies feature the same stereotypical characters, so does much of the Anime I'm seeing now. They all have the same cast of characters and I've grown weary. The brooding anti-hero, the gender-ambiguous guy/girl/silent character, the screechy young female character....the fat "comic relief" character...and must every anime film on earth have at least one pantyshot per episode? I mean, I'm starting to thinkt hat all anime is good for is Tentacle Pr0n. :P
I've tried watching the incredible Gundam series (all of them), and find the animation on the newer ones to be jaw dropping, and the stories to be convoluted and ridiculous. I guess I dont buy "kids in giant mecha suits".
Oh, and voiceovers....dubbing basically destorys anime, period. Then again, you might get tired of hearing every single character in non-dubbed anime sounding like a gravel-throated Japanese warlord. :P
I love the Japanese culture, or rather...Japanese Pop Culture.....but at the same time, I'm finding all that made Anime so great to me back in the day to be tired and rehashed today. Oh well, I'm jaded ;)
God, I hate the stuff. The over sexualization of young girls. The goofy big eyes, the mannerisms with odd grunting and huhs. The pointy hair that could kill someone if they fell into into it. The mouths often being bigger than most of the face, the odd expressions that make no sense to us.
It is rare to find non offensively annoying animae.
Give me Chuck Jones or give me death.
- Zav - Imagine a Beowulf cluster of insensitive clods...
You know, some of us "anime freaks in the US" like anime because we like anime. The anime we enjoy has things that we just can't find in most American TV shows. Plot and characterization, for example. Writing that doesn't treat us like drooling morons. (Though that could be the translations) Half-decent science fiction or fantasy. Good action sequences. (Voice) Actors who can, you know, act.
Second thing to remember: there has never, as far as I can remember, been a single "mainstream" article written about anime that gets this. They all seem to try to portray it as some "artistic" thing or some such. None have considered the fact that people might enjoy a medium for other reasons...
These series aren't very obscure.
Love Hina, Happy Lesson and Ai Yori Aoshi are quite similiar. If you like fanservice Hanaukyo Maids is an entertaining anime but it isn't a very ingenious anime. From your list I would suggest watching Love Hina, Noir and Onegai Teacher. (To be released by Bandai and ADV)
Here is my suggestion list for some more obscure anime:
Jungle Wa Itsumo Hale Nochi Guu
Description from the fansubbers: In the Middle of the jungle all is quite and peaceful, then came Guu. A mysterious little girl that seems to have a split personality and an appetite for, well, everything.
Hale's life is changed forever when his mother adopts this strange girl into the family. A lazy teacher, a perverted doctor, a beer drinking mom, Pokute, The Mysterious Guu, and Poor little Hale stuck in the middle of all this Is a recipie for comedy.
Azumanga Daioh
Well, here another description from fansubbers, but no one can be told what "Azumanga Daioh" is, you have to see it for yourself.
Everyday life of highschool students? Experience Highschool with hilariously over-the-top characters and tempermental English teacher Yukari and her colleague, P.E. teacher Kurosawa.
Azumanga Daioh is a very "japanese" show, so I'm not sure if you will enjoy it if you know almost nothing about Japan and haven't watched a lot of anime.
Guu is very insane and just a lot of fun.
Azumanga and Guu aren't commericially available outside of Japan yet, but you can download them as fansubs. If you want to download them, just use google to find the homepages of the fansubbers.
Jan
Animators only have so much time to spend on a frame.
... and it wouldnt be drawn animation anyway, so I would not call drawn animation the most powerfull form.
The human form certainly has many more behavioural cues than an animator could ever hope to handle at the moment. In the future 3D modelling and AI might let animators direct avatars as well as todays actors, but we aint there yet by a long shot
As far as representing people go drawn animation is a little like stage acting, not very nuanced.
I second that. Soap operas have been lacking something I couldn't pinpoint... naked chicks!
Understanding is a three-edged sword. -- Kosh Naranek
and while u r at that, catch 'princess mononoke' as well. it's graphics rock. both animes r by the same director i think... animations are wonderful in the sense that they are not constrained by the reel/real world physical limitations. it's a fantastic medium for portraying fantasy.
Give enough information about the subject at hand and article being linked to that people with only a cursory interest in the subject don't feel the need to click on the link just to find out what the hell the article is about.
Sheesh, one sentence. The art of the abstract is dead.
The old drawing were relatively benign, then the "classic" animations were very graphic, now that corporations are trying to pimp it to a wider audience, it's more like it used to be. I wonder if one would it as a three stage progression or a two stage progression by leaving-out all of the original animated graphic content?
...for many is to circumvent child pornography laws (you sick fucks).
"what he meant was that to express within the Japanese cultural framework the same emotion expressed in English by 'I love you,' one must choose words like 'The moon is so blue tonight.'"
Does this mean that for Japanese to truly express the emotion behind, "You're so hot, I can't stand it!" they have to resort to phrases like, "My twin moons are so blue for you tonight."?
The first cartoons that I remember watching (4-5 years old) was Transformers. Is this cartoon considered anime? I am not sure, but I always liked it better than Looney Toones®
Cat ear? Um, can anyone explain this one to me.
From the article:
This may be why, since the 1980s, young people in Japan have increasingly disdained the expression of serious or dramatic emotion as kusai, or corny, and prized the appearance of emotional detachment as kakko-ii, or cool.
Anyone else seem to think this same description fits any adolecent of America and other countries? Let's face at, as a world, drama and love emmotions are generaly regarded as corny. The best hero's, the people we look up to are the ones that are stoic.
T Money
World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
The State of Anime Fandom in Japan
Regarding some of the general comments people are making, they seem a bit extreme on both ends, which I guess is to be expected.....both the people saying "anime sucks, it's all porn" and the people who say that "anime rules, it's the only thing that has real plot and characterization and isn't tainted by commercialization like American stuff is" are both equally ridiculous statements. Anime in fact isn't all porn, and like any other medium it has had its share of good stuff as well as a lot of bad shows. And of course, the notion some extreme anime fans have that anime is good because it isn't commercialized is ridiculous, as anime is heavily commercialized, and many shows are made solely based on how well they will sell, which is why you often see a lot of recycled plots, character designs and story concepts.
Just in general, anime is way too broad for I think many of the comments being made here to be very relevant....it has its share of crap and its share of brilliant work. I could say the same thing about movies, television, books, comic books, etc.......take almost any of the comments being made in this thread and replace "anime" with "movies", "television", "books", "comic books" etc. and perhaps this will give you a better indication of how ridiculous some of the statements are.
Anime is not all stale and recycled plots, and it is not all the same big eye style of animation......a few shows that wouldn't fit this mold would include Boogiepop Phantom, Niea_7, Now And Then Here And There, etc. If I had to guess I would say that a lot of the negative comments are being made by people with a very limited exposure to only certain kinds of anime, which would be about on par with making a value judgement on "movies" after watching some pornography tapes.
Tom
It is the best anime ever. Period. It has everything: romance, friendship, big battles, space, mad emperors, big guns, the Yamato, super cool characters (cool not by US standards but by global ones), magic...it is so much an epic, I dare put it only after Homer's Iliad and Odyssey!!!
And it has the best music EVER. EVER!!!
The best images come from the viewer's inmagination. I wonder what books he reads if he has to be spoon-fed every detail.
A good example is the movie "Pink Floyd - The Wall". It has both, good live-action and stunning animation. But the animation is far more intense than the live-action here.
How did this link make it to /.? The "review" of anime isn't even starting on good premises for a decent review of animated film. In short: he doesn't get it.
High Quality Animation??
I gotta call you on that one. I haven't seen any anime that even comes close, in terms of quality, to the animation coming out of Disney and Pixar these days. Mouths that are actually lip-synced with the words, rather than alternating between large and small ovals. Body parts move and bounce realistically. Hair that moves. Human heads and eyes are actually in porportion to the rest of the body. Not to mention that some female characters are drawn that don't conform to the doe-eyed-Japanese-schoolgirl look.
The best that can be said of anime is that the storylines are very different than that of North American cartoons. NA cartoons are aimed at kids, where anime is aimed squarely at the prepubescent crowd, or adults that haven't progressed beyond that stage. The quality, however, is absolute crap.
At the heart of this difference lies the Japanese people's deeply entrenched sense of self-loathing, extending even to their own ethnic traits.
Wow, I knew something was terribly wrong when I watched all that anime. The characters didn't look Japanese at all. They look very very Caucasian with little or no Japanese elements to them. The few minutes of non-animated film-footage on Evangelion was such a huge visual sore.
Anyway, another quote - With their sharp-featured faces and long-limbed bodies, Westerners (read Caucasians) are physically suited to the movie screen; everyone looks almost too beautiful, down to the minor characters. Though scientific studies that I have read about say otherwise, that's a weird cultural obsession. Maybe their gene pool has gone a little shallow all breeding in those islands.
But I do have to admit that in the USA, Hollywood can find an actor to play any character. Those Japanese in the anime do not exist. A lot of disney characters are after real people (unless it's animals or other talking stuff).
Though as much as animated porn is fun once in a while, doesn't beat real porn. And, I have some seen 1 or 2 good Japanese porn that was really good (even with the goods fuzzed out).
I remember Liam Gallager (of Oasis) said he hated Japan because all the women were ugly. I though he was just being super obnoxious and unpleasant. And there was an episode of "Son of the beach" where the entire Japan gets obsessed with this blonde lifeguard. Is there an anime viewing guy who has made a trip to Japan and make comments on those.
Also, just to clarify, if you saw Robotech, G-Force and StarBlazers in the 80's, those were ok, but they were not the same as experiencing the original animation.....many had significant story changes and edits, etc. that changed their tone and impact....Robotech in particular. Was hard to tell where you were on this one since you didn't mention subsequently if you ever saw the original shows like Macross, Gatchaman and Space Battleship Yamato.
Anyway though, your comment that all anime you see has the same character stereotypes definitely makes it sound like you are only looking at some specific shows that are cliched, and perhaps missing or ignoring some of the more original and interesting shows that come out each year.
Some new stuff I can recommend coming out in the US recently are Now And Then Here And There, Gasaraki, Niea_7, Boogiepop Phantom, FLCL, Berserk, You're Under Arrest, GTO, Crest of the Stars (and the sequel series Banner of the Stars coming out soon)Revolutionary Girl Utena, Kurogane Communication, His and Her Circumstances.
These are excellent shows which are just recently coming out in the US, and none of them really feature the cliches and stereotypical character archetypes you mentioned......I think there is no reason for you to be jaded, just that you have gotten tired of certain kinds of anime (which many people have gotten tired of, the same reason that many of the tried and true staples of anime don't have nearly the same impact they might have had at an earlier time).
Although two exceptions I think will be the upcoming Macross Zero OVA (the first episode of which debuts in Japan in December...Macross was the series that the first arc of Robotech took footage and story elements from) and the upcoming 52 episode epic Great Yamato Arc, the latest series in the Space Battleship Yamato series (the one that StarBlazers was made from)
-Tom
Rosanne Barr.
Ellen DeGeneres.
The cast of Golden Girls.
I'd just like to point out that in America the broadcast media decides what is acceptable largely without outside interference from the government. Anything short of obscenity is legally acceptable for braodcast including most forms of explicit sexuality, it's the media groups themselves like the MPAA and the networks who make these decisions about what is appropriate. But it's all voluntary so censorship isn't really the appropriate term because generally censorship means you are forced to make changes rather than volunteering to edit the work because of some marketing decisions made by some executive. This might seem like a minor point, but I think it's an important one for net users in the US to stay clear on. There are no censors besides the MPAA and the corporate masters of the broadcast media.
Oh deer lord,
WHAT on earth is HE on.
I wach Japanese Animations because I enjoy them. I also enjoy Kun Fu Action Theater reruns.
Now go back to the nufcking cofepot and drink more you poor dilusional PGP wanting comunist want smoke wanting Creden Man
Anime porn has more emotional content, better plots, etc. Plus you can really dive into darker things like domination, shame, without creating a snuff film. That can make things more exciting and makes topics available for self-examination without actually watching a real person get beat up or whatever.
You have done a very good job of explaining why people like hentai films. Allow me to elaborate...
I watch American porn because the women are really sexy. But you're right that there is no plot to speak of and the acting is rediculous. There is no way around it: porn is full of stupid white trash. And there's a limit as to how exciting that can be, especially when it's all the same. The most important organ in sexual arousal is the brain. When I see some sexy female ninja or spaceship captain in a hentai flick, I feel attracted to her in a much different way than I do to the bimbos in American porn. This hentai woman actually has skills and capabilites. She's compatent! And her face and body is at least as sexy as those of real women. For me, that's a great combination. I'd rather fuck hentai girls than the sluts in American porn.
The other advantage hentai has over real-life porn is the ability to display some real hardcore stuff. It's just not very much fun watching a real woman being raped. Even if you know it's just a movie, it's hard to get around the fact that it looks an awful lot like what happens in real life. However, the non-consentual scenes in hentai are so over-the-top and rediculous that it's very clear this is not realistic at all. When you watch some sexy 19 year old girl with green hair and 38DDs being attacked by a monster with tentacles, it's very, very clearly an absurd bondage fantasy. It's something that could never, ever happen. And it's something that you're certainly never going to experience. So it's exciting. There are some live-action japanese porn films where they try to do the tentacle thing and it just doesn't work.
American Hardcore porn lacks any real emotion or acting or plot. American softcore porn lacks any hardcore action.
Exactly right. The hardcore stuff is actually kind of boring. You're just watching some stupid guy screw some stupid chick. You know that these people are pathetic. There's a limit how much fun you can have watching these losers fuck each other. The softcore stuff you find on Cinemax and such can be much more exciting because there is actually a story and motivation for the characters to screw. But you don't get to see the goods. Hentai provides the best of both worlds, plus it also shows some stuff that is too hardcore for American hardcore films. The Onion had an interview with (porn producer) Ron Jeremy once where he admitted that American porn is so tame that they can't sell their stuff overseas. Everyone else thinks it's boring. Of course, they can't make it any more hardcore than it is now or the feminists will scream bloody murder. So if you want to see something really kinky and naughty, hentai anime is for you!
GMD
watch this
The difference here is that while the childish series are often big hits in Japan, the amount of stuff that isn't childish/childlike(not that it matters. I -liked- the first pokemon movie goddamit, dubbing be damned) exceeds the amount of stuff released on television and theatres that gets released in america. Not given Japanese exports.
The last animated movie released in the states targeted at a more mature audience was Titan A.E. And that quite honestly sucked. The CG didn't blend well with the cel painted work. Even more so than Initial D. Atleast Initial D is interesting... But that's an unfair comparison, given that one's a movie and the other's a series.
There are three animated shows on Network prime-time as of this writting, King of the Hill, Simpsons, and Futurama. And Futurama's future, ironically enough, is hazy. I'm probably wrong, but anyway... While King of the Hill and the Simpsons do tend to have serious overtones, the actual content rarely goes beyond that of a Situational Comedy. With the odd exception of "The PJ's", this is how the Network prime-time animation scene's been like since 1998, the year of Futurama's debut.
While there have been sporatic random television series in america on this coveted timeslot, off hand I can recall "The Critic" and most recently, "The Family guy", both of which have not survived more than 4 seasons on television, there hasn't been anything that hasn't been comedic. Not that comedy is wrong, but variety is what is lacking.
While I don't mind the somewhat sophisticated humor from "The Critic", I wouldn't mind something screwed up like "Evangelion" or "Utena" was, despite thier age.
Despite the fact that I'm quite sure that the whole point behind utena was to get softcore lesbian porn past Japanese censors somehow. And yes, Japan does have censors.
Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
Many of your complaints seem to be about differences of style, rather than differences of skill.
As far as animation techniques go, don't you think it's a little naive to compare CG studios like Pixar to manual and mixed-media studios?
I'll admit that there's a lot of ass "anime" out there--just like there's a lot of ass "cartoons" out there (seen the new He-Man recently?). Compare the majority of the two animation genres (American and Japanese), and it feels like you're juding a competition for the worst animation ever.
On the other hand, if you look at the high end of manual and mixed-media Japanese animation, you get things like Akira, Ghost, Lain, Metropolis, and Princess Mononoke. All of these compare favorably with the best American and European works, not just in story, but also in animation techniques and and artistic merit. I can't do anything about your style complaints, but if the biggest problem you have with anime is that "everybody's drawn funny", then anime at least has The Simpsons for company.
Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.
What happened? Well, a status seeking psychologist by the name of Frederick Wertham wrote a book called Seduction of the Inncoent and the Senate Subcommitee on juvenile deliquancy decided to hold hearings. Certain comic book companies were practically blacklisted (E. C. Comics ended up with only Mad Magazine being available, and even that was often watched by the F.B.I.). It was a bad time to be a comic artist or writer.
The effects of this assault on comics as an art form can still be felt today in the United States, and as far as I can tell a similar crackdown did not occur in Japan at any point in recent history. (At any rate, I haven't read anything in the history of manga that would suggest it.)
All the creatures will die, And all the things will be broken. That's the law of samurai. (Jubai, 1605)
I can definately tell you that dubbing in Cowboy Bebop is amazing. It is really well done and does not feel inferior to the original (I am amazed and happy they have taken their time to do it properly). Also, for the other cases (like Kenshin) where the dubbing completely destroys the original... well, that's why we have DVDs nowdays - they have subtitles and you get to hear the original sound. That's the proper way to watch foreign works, for the most part.
Transformers seems to stand above it.
----
Go canucks, habs, and sens!
You could use that rationalization for almost anything. But, who are we kidding? It's different enough to do something with your friends and not have other people understand it. And, that's the primary reason.
I think it sucks that you can hardly see a video on MTV anymore. Though in fact they still play videos, they're just on in the middle of the night/early morning. So I got a season pass on my TiVo to record the morning wake up (6am-8am). I've seen a couple videos I liked, and fast forwarded through the rest. I can usually watch the 2 hour block in under 45 minutes.
Still can't belive MTV is filled with so much crap that I record stuff while I'm sleeping. Used to be I'd turn on MTV and then figure out what was on to watch. Those days are long gone.
Brought to you by Team SPAM! where we believe: "Information in the noise!"
This article is somewhat outdated. The recent movie by MIYAZAKI Hayao is Spirited Away (Sen to Chihiro Kamikakushi) even The Cat Return (Neko no Ongaeshi) is around the corner.
Hey, the US and the UK share a "Special Relationship" so back off pal. Just because the UK has seen the light with respect to its own policies verses the usual European drivel of tax and tax some more for good measure doesn't mean its not still a part of Europe. The UK just learned sooner than the rest of you guys, and you will learn eventually, that no matter how hard you try you cannot provide for everyone and expect to produce and or maintain productive innovative socities.
Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
That would be "Grave of the Fireflies".
OK, slashdot. WE GET IT. Open Source is SO IMPORTANT that we all must stand up and take notice. We all must worship the haphazzardly thown together OS that represents the boredrum of a college student. We get it. Open Source is SO important and SO beyond a normal computer user that only you few nerds are capable of understanding. Right. We bow down before the might of the Penquin. Only the elect nerds of slashdot "Get it". Verily they must bring the gospel of Linux to the world because god help us, the rest of the world JUST DOES NOT UNDERSTAND how IMPORTANT and AWESOME and SIGNIFICANT Open Source really REALLY is.
Sorry AC, we haven't been paying OSS enough attention. The world has not taken notice of your holy apostolic Open Source web sites. We have sinned, verily, and thy wrath is shown to all the world on Slashdot.org. You were right--maybe if you post JUST ONE MORE ARTICLE about how AWESOME and SIGNIFICANT Open Source is, and how we JUST DON'T UNDERSTAND, we'll all change our ways. We great unwashed JUST DON'T GET IT. Applications developed and supported by paid developers == bad, haphazzard, often sub-par software with lousy interfaces and plenty of inconsistancies == god. WE GET IT. Loud and clear, A-OK! A commercial application is JUST NOT GOOD ENOUGH
[Note to Moderators: This is not flamebait, it is merely to illustrate that people have different viewpoints as to what matters to them and what doesn't. If you don't want to read something do read it.]
T Money
World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
"those that are despised by anime freaks in the US"
as a japanese, you should be more careful about using language like this... perhaps you speak english too well for your own good?
most "anime freaks" in america have never even seen either of the two shows you are talking about.
the anime industry in japan is very different from that in america--where there are only a few shows on during the evening/early morning hours (ignoring cable).
"Do you get it or shall I explain it on the same level I explain things to my seven-year old boy?"
Whoa! Totally uncalled for. You just went from zero to asshole in about 2.5 seconds, I reckon. Lookin' for a record?
Happy people make bad consumers.
Name five science-fiction or fantasy American TV shows from the last two years that have had good special effects, action sequences, a definite plot with a start and a finish, and decent writing.
I know I can't.
I enjoy anime because it has elements I enjoy. I enjoy American science fiction and fantasy novels for the same reason. What American TV or movies I enjoy, I enjoy for the same reason. Having other people not understand it doesn't come into things. On the contrary, I try to get others to at least try watching anime whenver possible.
Ne? Your comments did not really make much sense, but I guess you guys get diff. anime than we do here in Southeast Asia.
:p
By the way, for romantic anime, watching Curious Play and Ayashi No Ceres is better. At all costs...
STAY AWAY FROM SAILORMOON!
By the way, try to check out Gensomaden Saiyuki, Vandread (the 3D graphics is great!) and my all-time favourite, You're Under Arrest. The movie was funny.
1 + 1 = 3?
...and therefore automatically an expert on any differences between Japan and America, unlike an American.
The large supply of high-quality adult-oriented anime is irrelevant because kids go fad-crazy over children's anime which then gets watched more and makes tons of money on merchandising, while most adults only show moderate appreciation of the best works. This difference between adult and child attitudes toward entertainment is obviously a unique feature of Japanese culture.
On the other hand, the most popular works from the booming field of mature manga get made into mature anime. Obviously, this anime is culturally irrelevant, unlike the manga it was based on.
Bottom line: Children's anime is more profitable, and therefore the norm, and that makes Japan's animation industry just like Disney. Despite the amount of anime set in Japan, referencing Japanese folklore, customs, superstitions, fads, popular culture, regional peculiarities, and history, it has no cultural significance, while Japan's unremarkable novels, live-action films, and TV shows capture the essence of the Japanese soul.
>>it's high quality animation...
Now that is not true. It is very low quality animation compared to disney and pixar. They only use about 1/2 the frames that disney and pixar use. That is why anime is so choppy.
...everything on this earth has a purpose, every disease an herb to cure
it, and every person a mission. This is the Indian theory of existence.
Mourning Dove, (Salish 1888-1936)
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