GaijinPunch wrote:Randorama wrote:GP:
I would like to open an anime review site called "Nietzsche maido nyan nyan!", in which I give only 1 Icycalm out of 5 to just any series I discuss. The reviews would be endless drivel about a series not having enough moe, and would be shot in your typical hikikomori room.
Do you think I would have a winning market?
Possibly. How much are you charging for a forum membership?
Hmm, a small sum (30 cents of any currency) per single review, so that users are seldom aware of their pocket money being chipped off.
I still haven't done my math and marketing studies (ah!).
On a more appropriate note...
Maison Ikkoku smokes them both. I've tried Urusei Yatsura and will probably go full on at some point, as I do think it has some qualities.... but the perviness is a bit weird these days. Ranma even more so. I guess since it was authored by a female it's okay?
I would say that, in modern terms,
Maison Ikkoku is an extremely well-crafted seinen/Josei manga, and
Urusei and
Ranma are silly ero-shonen stuff.
Erotic light comedies may even be targeted at adults, but you generally need a certain cultural background to appreciate them or, well, even endure them.
Italy has its own tradition on erotic light comedies (and hundreds of movies with starlets like "Edwige Fenech", in the '70s), so
Urusei and
Ranma were (and still are!) very popular.
I *believe* that Japan had and still has a similar tradition, and that there are no particular stigmas on authors' sex (!!!).
If you lack that kind of background (in whatever form), the "one-trick pony" nature of the genre will tire you very quickly, I believe.
I never absorbed any appreciation of this genre even if I am technically Italian (not culturally so, I daresay!), so I never went too deep in either series.
As a comparison, I guess that US and S.Korean fans can easily appreciate baseball manga/anime (but not everyone, of course!).
I had cases in which I simply couldn't stand a few episodes, even if technically superb (
Cross Game, for instance).
Maison Ikkoku should be taught in schools. As an anecdote, I know that a fellow colleague (she works at Stockholm U. but was in Kyoto for decades) does use this series as a cornerstone of her reading list for a "Manga 1.01" course ("this is quintessential slice of life for adults").
"The only desire the Culture could not satisfy from within itself was one common to both the descendants of its original human stock and the machines [...]: the urge not to feel useless."
I.M. Banks, "Consider Phlebas" (1988: 43).