In the anime, but not in the novels, some characters mention events which still have to occur, according to the linear plot. One occurs somewhere in the second or third episode, and there should be another 3 or or 4 in the rest of the series. Those are "problems", though, not problems, which very likely arise from the anime team not being careful enough in the adaptation.Obiwanshinobi wrote: What plot inconsistencies? Use spoiler tags or small font. PLEASE? (N.D. Randorama)
These "problems" remain even if you watch the episodes in a linear fashion (obviously). However, a few are witty enough to conflate these small "problems" with the lack of a linear narration in the series, and conclude that Haruhi sucks "because the plot is confusing".
Mistery solved.
Please! I am in the prime of my youth and exuding with manhood, of course, I watch Toriko and reminisce about Saint Seiya. Yesterday I even opened a sports web site, and looked at the gym before going out for work. Could I be more manly than this?Besides, I wonder where you old chums
I don't really care about "meaning", nor about background occurrences which require careful observation to be spotted at first view.pull the words like "meaning" from in times like this. "Hidden stuff" may be not "meaning", but some details of depicted world, or the sort of background occurences Haruhi is choke-full of that don't appear to carry much meaning but are just there for your viewing pleasure, nigh on impossible to spot first time around.
If any work includes a passage that requires requires a second-third reading to make sense, whether the "plot" is linear or not, it's the author's fault in not being clear in the presentation. Some authors and related fans (young and old) confuse this lack of basic skills with the need of finding "hidden meanings" or being "indie". Such streak of artfaggery seems to have not plagued too many anime, now, as in the past, although we all must agree that DragonBall Z requires more work of hermeneutics than being and time from Heidegger.