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The Giants of Anime are Coming

Wired is running a story about the Giants of Anime which discusses numerous things happening on the anime front, including the new Ghost in the Shell movie, and the upcoming Miyazaki release "Howl's Moving Castle". This is something of a background piece for people somewhat unfamiliar, but it also covers a lot of interesting bits that the fans might enjoy as well.

12 of 392 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Greatest Anime Film? by Icarus1919 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Duh. Everyone knows that the greatest anime movie is Pokemon: The First Movie.

  2. One of the Best things for Anime... by slipnslidemaster · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I think that one of the best things that could happen to Anime is the spotlight that Cartoon Network has put on it with Adult Swim.

    I think that they should find more quality shows and expand Adult Swim.

    --


    "What the hell is an aluminum falcon?"
  3. Re:Greatest Anime Film? by DJTodd242 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I would like to whole heartedly congratulate you for this post. I'm certain that this isn't a loaded question, and we'll see insightful discourse on the subject of Anime.

    People's mothers, including thier mating, and eating habits will not be mentioned at all. :)

  4. Steamboy by JanneM · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I saw Steamboy a month ago, and wrote a small review for my friends on my blog. May be of interest to some here:

    [Steamboy] is a new anime by Katsuhiro Otomo (of Akira fame), set in England in 1851, around the time of the world exhibition in Londons Crystal Palace.

    Visually, the movie is stunning. The characters are expressive and individualistic, the backdrops are beautiful, and, of course, the movie is replete with larger-than-life nineteenth-century steam technology. There is enough dramatic machinery and unlikely "science" in this movie to sate even the most rabid steampunk fetishist.

    The story is complex and varied. I'm not going to detail it here - mainly because my Japanese just isn't up to the task of actually understanding all the twist and turns. I lost track about halfway through, to be honest, and Ritsuko too had trouble follwing it, in part because the speech tended to be fast and garbled. Nevertheless, they have managed to create believable characters with at least some depth, while at the same time all the clichés we know and love are well and truly fulfilled. The villain, for example, has an partial facemask and mechanical hand - I guess that adding a white cat and a monocle would have been a little over the top.

    Did I like it? Yes, with a few reservations. This is a looong movie - 2h20m to be more precise. A bathroom break before seeing it is advisable. An of course, I can't really judge the story fairly when I don't really understand it - the end seemed to me to be a little artificial (not to mention wildly contrary to any scientific intuition), but as I couldn't follow the character motivations and interactions by that time, I can't be sure I understood it correctly.

    Should you see it? If you like anime or steampunk, absolutely! And even if you don't, it has enough of an Indiana Jones kind of feel to it that I think you'll be entertained in any case.

    --
    Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
  5. Links to IMDb by CaptainCheese · · Score: 5, Informative

    Innocence
    Steamboy
    Howl's Moving Castle

    You'll find links onward to trailers from here...I'd paste the direct links, but I don't want to /. anyone who can't handle it...

    --
    -- .sigs are a waste of data...turn them off...
  6. I can't watch Anime, I'm scarred for life... by craenor · · Score: 5, Funny

    It happened at DragonCon in 1996 when this 260 pound, middle-aged, hairy guy walked past me dressed as Sailor Moon.

  7. Re:Greater influence by RsG · · Score: 5, Interesting

    On the other hand, geeks are remarkably fickle about anything percieved as mainstream. I'm not saying that we automatically dismiss anything that is popular, but there is a strong preference for the exotic and unusual. Even when something is both normal and loved by geeks, we tend to take it to the next level (ala Star Wars/Star Trek and the flamewars fought over which is better).

    For Amine, I really can't see the genre maintaining it's geek cred as it becomes widely accepted and influential (note: I'm reffering to the west here, not Japan where Anime is obviously percieved quite differently). Ask youself: if this was Pokemon specifically, would it be featured on /.? I don't know if we can overcome this attitude that popular = bad, and unfortunately I'm not sure that this perception isn't justified in many cases; obscurity _is_ frequently good for artistic integrity. You might regret it if the genre becomes mainstream.

    --
    Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
  8. Re:Greatest Anime Film? by Mprx · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Akira has the most impressive animation, but My Neighbor Totoro is the greatest. It proves you don't need violence and conflict to have a great story, only great characters. I've seen it compared to the Winnie The Pooh stories (the originals, not the Disney crap), which also show how a flawless children's story can be enjoyed by everybody.

  9. Re:What's the fun... by 19Buck · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The appeal to animation is that the only limitation is in the writer and animator's imagination. You can do and visualize things with animation in order to more readily suspend disbelief than you can accomplish in a live action movie in a badly done effect can ruin said suspension of disbelief.

    I believe that it was the Spawn movie that first used CG in a well stated and obvious manner - and they did some amazing things with that cloak of his, but it still somehow looked "out of place" because of the unrealistically bright shading used in the coloring.

    and really, anime isn't about the drawings, it's about the story and the charecters. It's those same basic elements that drive the appeal of the movie, it's just that using animation removes all restrictions on visuals because you can make whatever you want look however you want without having to make any sacrifices in trying to find a location or actor that fits the director's vision - they can simply DRAW exactly what they want to show.

    Animation in movies is beginning to become very widespread in the past few years now that computers are capable of producing some very realistic looking renders. you didn't actually thing that was Toby Macguire or a stuntman doing all those amazing acrobatics did you? Even only a few years ago, you could not have readily achieved those effects on a believable level.

    Even if you prefer live action, and that's your perrogative if you do, you're still seeing the effects of animation in live action.

  10. Re:Greatest Anime Film? by The-Bus · · Score: 5, Informative
    According to the IMDB...

    Taking away non-animé animated animations, we come up with:

    1. Sen to Chihiro no kamikakushi (Spirited Away) * ^
    2. Mononoke-hime (Princess Mononoke) * ^
    3. Hotaru no haka (Grave of the Fireflies) ^
    4. Tenkû no shiro Rapyuta (Laputa: Castle in the Sky) * ^
    5. Sennen joyu (Millenium Actress) ^
    6. Tonari no Totoro (My Neighbor Totoro) * ^
    7. Majo no takkyubin (Kiki's Delivery Service) * ^
    8. Shin seiki Evangelion Gekijô-ban: Air/Magokoro wo, kimi ni (Neon Genesis Evangelion: The End of Evangelion)
    9. Kaze no tani no Naushika (Nausicaä of the Valley of the Winds) * ^
    10. Mimi wo sumaseba (Whisper of the Heart) * ^
    11. Akira
    12. Kurenai no buta (Flying Pig/Porco Rosso) * ^
    13. Kôkaku kidôtai (Ghost in the Shell)
    14. Jûbei ninpûchô (Ninja Scroll)
    15. Rupan sansei: Kariosutoro no shiro (Lupin III: The Castle of Cagliostro) * ^
    16. Vampire Hunter D
    17. Cowboy Bebop: Tengoku no tobira (Cowboy Bebop: The Movie)
    18. Jin-Rô (Jin Roh)^
    19. Perfect Blue ^

    * A Hayao Miyazaki film.
    ^ Not a film about giant robots, ninjas, or robot-ninjas fighting each other. Not a film set in a dystopian future or filled with demons.

    So, of the top 50, we've got 19 features being animé (and half of the Bottom 10 are animé). Of the top 10, 5 are animé, 4 are by Pixar, and one is Shrek.
    --

    Small potatoes make the steak look bigger.

  11. What a loaded question. What makes a movie great? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Should it be purely entertaining? Tell a involving story? Make you think? Is the animation important?

    Even then you aren't finished. Exactly what do you find entertaining. What does make a story involving. What stuff have you already thought about and don't need to be reminded by a movie?

    The one that made me think was "Grave of the fireflies" a movie you could compare with the western "Empire of the sun". Both tell the what happens to kids in times of war. I liked one review that claimed fireflies was the best movie he ever watched and never wanted to watch again.

    Of course if you like Akira and Ghost in the shell you might find fireflies very slow moving even boring. Perhaps. Depends for what reason you like the first two.

    Another highly regarded movie you don't list is "Angels egg". One of the few movies you could watch without knowing any japanese and still be able to "understand" what is going on.

    This will probabaly get me modded down but the movies you list are the typical "hollywood approved" anime movies people in the west have heard about. Doesn't mean the movies are bad or any less then their more unknown, in the west, siblings but if you really want to find the greatest anime movie ever you need to do a little bit more watching. Akira may then still be the greatest to you but at least you will have a longer list to show you watched anime other then the ones with a western approved release.

    Oh and my favorite movie? I don't really have such a thing. There are far to many great movies I have seen that I like for different reasons. I am afraid that if I pick a single movie that "scores" best in all my catogories that I am falling into the hollywood trap of creating movies to appeal to everyone that end up appealing to no-one. Just saw a docu on Red Dwarf. American movie studie wants to cast Hugh Grant as Lister.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  12. Re:Why are geeks so fascinated by anime? by azmodean · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The primary reason I tend to enjoy anime more than I enjoy hollywood produced movies is the lack of pandering present in much of anime (much, not all, there are many anime that do pander, but I digress). The reason this is so was touched on briefly in the article. Many artists have total or near-total control of their story from the time they first think of it untill it is released, that just doesn't happen too often in hollywood (and when it does, I tend to like those movies) Many anime producers are allowed to do their work unhampered by focus groups or executives telling them what can and cannot be in their work.

    Another reason I like anime is that much of it is not watered down as most hollywood fare is, when someone dies it isn't some quick event that is glossed over; it's messy, it's gory, and it looks painful. I think one of the most unhealthy concepts I have ever seen in mass media is the "looney tunes" treatment of violence. Portraying violence as harmless and fun is much more disturbing to me than seeing more realistic violence with reprecussions attached. I could go on and on, but it would likely fall on deaf ears anyway.