Recommended Anime/Manga?

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xbl0x180
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by xbl0x180 »

Siren2011 wrote:The URL of that image says "Resort Boin," so out of intrigue, I torrented it.
Weeeell, I just finished watching ep. 1 and the girls look nothing like the sultry one in the image above does. Instead they have flabby, over-exaggerated titty/body proportions and are ugly as sin. Are there multiple spins on the show like Full Metal Panic/Full Metal Panic: Fumoffu, Mezzo/Mezzo Forte, etc.? I've even found an image on Google of the apple girl getting fucked after using the words "Resort Boin" in the search box... I'm completely confused here.

I still need to see Kite (I've only seen the classic bathroom fight on youtube), though I suggest you guys get ahold of the visual novel called "Saya no Uta," or in English, "Song of Saya." If you love dark themes and great plots, I guarantee you won't be disappointed.
Holy s**t, man. You're expecting Urushihara or Kawajiri smoothness in designs and animation for pornime?! Hahahah. Good luck with that. After viewing a ton of hentai videos back in the day, I thought these new ones had okay animation and designs (compared to other oavs in the genre). This being an oppai video, your description doesn't surprise me because it's supposed to look that way; just like in live-action pornography: you'll see some grotesque-looking women with giant breasts (natural and fake). The character in the picture is in the second and third oav. The shot itself is either a teaser or part of some CG set, definitely not from the videos. Unless you like tentacle rape in your videos, I think the only two adult cartoons I can recommend based on designs and animation quality are Dokyusei and Front Innocent. Coincidentally, one is directed by Yoshimoto Kinji and the other is directed by Urushihara Satoshi - both are from Earth Works studio.

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It would've been better to ask which ones you've seen and liked before I suggested something I liked. Even though there's a lot of it, there's actually little to choose from if you're looking for great designs and high-quality productions (and this includes classic series such as Cream Lemon, La Blue Girl, and Cool Devices Series). Hell, I've rarely heard complaints about Iria: Zeiram The Animation until now, but, then, I didn't grow up watching the stuff being currently made, so back then that was considered a good show (I saw it screened at San Diego's Comic Con in the mid-to-late 90s 8) ).

Kite is also pretty good in an "NC-17 La Femme Nikita" kind of way. It's not really hentai pornography because there's more focus on story than sex - and they actually went ahead and made a sequel for it. Besides, Umetsu Yasuomi isn't just some random guy with a penchant for making pervy anime. This director is responsible for the "Presence" segment in Robot Carnival. At the time I saw that in the cinema, my mind was blown. Kite is definitely a lower budget production, so there's still choppy animation to contend with.

Steering away from hentai, I'd much rather recommend you see Robot Carnival first and see if Umetsu's style is to your liking.

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Last edited by xbl0x180 on Fri Aug 12, 2011 2:40 am, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by greg »

Siren2011 wrote:EDIT: I don't think you understand, Greg. While I agree that many dubs are bad, this one was G.I. Joe Youtube parody bad. I can't remember the last time I have been this dissatisfied with voice actors. :?
I can believe it. Iria was put out by Central Park Media/US Manga Corps, and they were well-known for having terrible dubs. I own the DVD, but I've never watched it dubbed. I once read a review for Gall Force (a USMC title), and the reviewer trashed it big-time because of it's bad dubbing. I happen to love the series, and I love the bending lasers and space opera premise.

The worst dub I saw was Bubblegum Crisis. I love the crap out of that series (I won't bother with the remake series), and I've bought it on VHS and again on DVD. I'd buy it on LD if I have the chance. It's that dear to me. But anyhow, I rented the English dub to see what it was like and it was so puke-inducingly terrible. It's like the "actors" were reading the script cold for the first time. It was that lifeless and monotone. but yeah, CPM/USMC dubs are craptastic.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by xbl0x180 »

greg wrote:
Siren2011 wrote:EDIT: I don't think you understand, Greg. While I agree that many dubs are bad, this one was G.I. Joe Youtube parody bad. I can't remember the last time I have been this dissatisfied with voice actors. :?
I can believe it. Iria was put out by Central Park Media/US Manga Corps, and they were well-known for having terrible dubs. I own the DVD, but I've never watched it dubbed. I once read a review for Gall Force (a USMC title), and the reviewer trashed it big-time because of it's bad dubbing. I happen to love the series, and I love the bending lasers and space opera premise.

The worst dub I saw was Bubblegum Crisis. I love the crap out of that series (I won't bother with the remake series), and I've bought it on VHS and again on DVD. I'd buy it on LD if I have the chance. It's that dear to me. But anyhow, I rented the English dub to see what it was like and it was so puke-inducingly terrible. It's like the "actors" were reading the script cold for the first time. It was that lifeless and monotone. but yeah, CPM/USMC dubs are craptastic.
Viz wasn't any better, neither were Streamline Pictures, Manga Video, and U.S. Renditions. What sucks is that "Mermaid's Scar" and Orguss were released as dubs only. Those f***ers managed to ruin some of the best oavs from the 90s. Suffice to say, I absolutely abhor most dubbing. After that, it was pretty much set in stone that I would never pay for any dub.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by Randorama »

Greg is completely right: subs are the way to go. I can't really think of any form of dubbing which is not atrocious, regardless of the language.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by greg »

I hate dubs. But to be fair, there are some decent ones. I was introduced to Cowboy Bebop through the exceptionally dubbed version that was aired on Cartoon Network. Unamned introduced me to the Cromartie High School dub, which was done rather well. And Disney does top notch jobs on their Miyazaki dubs, but those hardly count since they are done in a totally different caliber than average anime is dubbed.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by Obiwanshinobi »

Czech dubs I've heard on ČT tend to be good. French dub for Doubutsu Takarajima was very decent. America seems to have just as big a problem with voice acting as it has with animation in video games and cartoons (I once tried to recall some platformers developed in the US where animations didn't suck and came up with, like, 5), but exceptions occur now and then.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by StarCreator »

There were definitely a lot of bad dubs made in the late 80s and early to mid 90s, but I don't think it's fair to completely rule them out. A lot of anime productions in particular improved tremendously when the bubble was at its peak, and the talent didn't really go anywhere after the bubble burst (heck, a lot of the studios that formerly made their living off anime dubbing are now making it big recording video games as well as still doing a little anime on the side). It's really at a point where I don't care which language I'm hearing it in, I'll get a performance of around the same quality either way.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by PC Engine Fan X! »

xbl0x180 wrote:Kite is also pretty good in an "NC-17 La Femme Nikita" kind of way. It's not really hentai pornography because there's more focus on story than sex - and they actually went ahead and made a sequel for it. Besides, Umetsu Yasuomi isn't just some random guy with a penchant for making pervy anime. This director is responsible for the "Presence" segment in Robot Carnival. At the time I saw that in the cinema, my mind was blown. Kite is definitely a lower budget production, so there's still choppy animation to contend with.

Steering away from hentai, I'd much rather recommend you see Robot Carnival first and see if Umetsu's style is to your liking.
Umetsu Yasuomi also did the character designs for the second Megazone 23 OVA (quite a different approach from the character designs of Mikimoto featured in the first MZ-23 OVA indeed). I liked the cool Silverhawks themed pinball machine that one character plays inside the bar scene. Bought the bundled 3 DVD disc set of all three MZ-23 OVAs when it was still available to get at retail. It'd sure be nice if MZ-23 was properly released on Blu-Ray format. There was even a PS3 MZ-23 import game released (but it wasn't an action game per se but more of an interactive visual comic).

There was the bonus "present" of an all-new original MZ-23 anime ending (that was done for the new Robotech anime film that Cannon Pictures film studio wanted to distribute nationwide but they went bankrupt, so it was never properly released) that was included with the second MZ-23 OVA on VHS format.

Yeah, the sequel of "Kite: Liberator" really didn't match on par with the super tight pacing set in the first Kite OVA -- I was hoping that the sequel would be top notch but it does have those cool switchable on-the-fly handguns, nevertheless. Also a special cameo appearance by what looks like Saya -- another insider tribute/nod to the original Kite OVA in this sequel.

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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by TrevHead (TVR) »

(Dunno if this anime has already been mentioned)

Ive just watched the first 2 episodes of Blade which takes the Wesley Snipes movie series and puts him in Japan. From what ive seen so far its more or less faithfull to the original setting. The main change Ive seen is that he is hunting the vampire (called Dexter) who killed his mum while carrying him inside her. I like the mature artstyle, reminiscent of 90s anime. I looks to be a 12 ep series which is half way through atm.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by PC Engine Fan X! »

That's cool to learn of the Blade anime series. There's another anime spinoff series based off of the Ultraviolet sci-fi live-action film that's playing on Sony's Crackle.com site right now. I'll have to check it out and see how it turns out. This particular Ultraviolet anime series still hasn't gotten a proper DVD or Blu-Ray release stateside but it'd be nice if it was.

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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by xbl0x180 »

PC Engine Fan X! wrote:
xbl0x180 wrote:Kite is also pretty good in an "NC-17 La Femme Nikita" kind of way. It's not really hentai pornography because there's more focus on story than sex - and they actually went ahead and made a sequel for it. Besides, Umetsu Yasuomi isn't just some random guy with a penchant for making pervy anime. This director is responsible for the "Presence" segment in Robot Carnival. At the time I saw that in the cinema, my mind was blown. Kite is definitely a lower budget production, so there's still choppy animation to contend with.

Steering away from hentai, I'd much rather recommend you see Robot Carnival first and see if Umetsu's style is to your liking.
Umetsu Yasuomi also did the character designs for the second Megazone 23 OVA (quite a different approach from the character designs of Mikimoto featured in the first MZ-23 OVA indeed). I liked the cool Silverhawks themed pinball machine that one character plays inside the bar scene. Bought the bundled 3 DVD disc set of all three MZ-23 OVAs when it was still available to get at retail. It'd sure be nice if MZ-23 was properly released on Blu-Ray format. There was even a PS3 MZ-23 import game released (but it wasn't an action game per se but more of an interactive visual comic).

There was the bonus "present" of an all-new original MZ-23 anime ending (that was done for the new Robotech anime film that Cannon Pictures film studio wanted to distribute nationwide but they went bankrupt, so it was never properly released) that was included with the second MZ-23 OVA on VHS format.

Yeah, the sequel of "Kite: Liberator" really didn't match on par with the super tight pacing set in the first Kite OVA -- I was hoping that the sequel would be top notch but it does have those cool switchable on-the-fly handguns, nevertheless. Also a special cameo appearance by what looks like Saya -- another insider tribute/nod to the original Kite OVA in this sequel.

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Great catch. It's funny, but whenever anyone - including myself - mentions Megazone 23, it's with Mikimoto's designs in mind. I had no idea Umetsu worked on one of its sequels. I haven't read much on these two other volumes (except for the third really being a let-down). I've seen the first one and that was aaaaaaages ago, back in the early 90s, as a fansub. Eventually, I will track down all three 8)
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by drauch »

Really? I always thought the Miyazaki Disney release dubs were terrible. I guess they aren't the worst, but to me it just seems the voices they choose never match the characters.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

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I just did a 2-day anime marathon and watched all 26 episodes of Neon Genesis Evangelion + End of Evangelion (for the first time.)

Not sure if my brain is meant to feel this fried. :|

Before I introduce my take on it, I'm curious about some of the other points that were touched on in relation to this series. I've heard several people mention that it is effectively responsible for the decline in anime thereafter.
If someone could elaborate a little more on this I'd be interested to hear about it.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by iconoclast »

Now you need to watch Rebuild of Evangelion 1.11 (good, but it's mostly a retelling) and Rebuild 2.22 (almost as good as End of Eva).
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by Skykid »

iconoclast wrote:Now you need to watch Rebuild of Evangelion 1.11 (good, but it's mostly a retelling) and Rebuild 2.22 (almost as good as End of Eva).
Evangelion HD Remix?

Not sure I can be bothered.

I'd like to hear some commentary regarding the questions above though:
Skykid wrote: Before I introduce my take on it, I'm curious about some of the other points that were touched on in relation to this series. I've heard several people mention that it is effectively responsible for the decline in anime thereafter.
If someone could elaborate a little more on this I'd be interested to hear about it.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by TrevHead (TVR) »

Not sure if my brain is meant to feel this fried.
Considering how abstract the ending was, im sure been puddled is a common response

I watched the 1st remake movie and found it to be quite good, it was that which spurred me on to watching the TV series. Has all the movie remakes been made? If so I might watch them myself, as hopefully they it will have a better ending than the bizarre original
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by hzt »

Skykid wrote:Evangelion HD Remix?

Not sure I can be bothered.
Rebuild is way more than a retelling or and HD remix, and even if it was exactly the same but with better animation it would be worth watching because the animation is just so good. (N.B. I am a massive Evangelion fanboy. The animation really is brilliant though.)

As for your question Evangelion had a huge influence on the way that anime is made now, with merchandising and spinoffs and all that shit really being more important (in terms of making money) than the actual anime, and that is a big part of why anime has got worse. I'm no good at explaining it in depth but IMO it is far more to do with the this than to do with any influence it had on the actual content of anime. In terms of content though it was mostly Evangelion that sparked off Sekai-kei (google it) and a lot of people think that is shit and a pretty negative thing. I think it is interesting to see how a lot of the changes in Rebuild make it (sometimes subtly) really "anti Sekai-kei" and I assume it's deliberate.

You want to drag JDE in here, he'll probably write you an enlightening essay about all things Evangelion. Or post one he's already written.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by PC Engine Fan X! »

Some of the redone scenes and all-new scenes are breathtaking when viewing the Evangelion HD remakes...absolutely gorgeous to watch in 1080p format.

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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

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Skykid wrote:Before I introduce my take on it, I'm curious about some of the other points that were touched on in relation to this series. I've heard several people mention that it is effectively responsible for the decline in anime thereafter.
If someone could elaborate a little more on this I'd be interested to hear about it.
Here are my issues with Evangelion:

1. Making the characters emo twerps who can't get along with each other, ever.
2. When in doubt, just add in an "I'm about to snap and go crazy, I can't take the pressure" scream.
3. Bringing in all sorts of religious garbage into shows. So I guess just having alien invaders wanting to conquer and exploit Earth just can't be interesting anymore, so they shovel this crap into anime shows and games like Xenogears? The Sakura Taisen games did this a bit by making the enemy Satan, but it was tongue-in-cheek and intentionally cheesy. At least making Satan the antagonist makes sense, not God and angels.
4. Tack on a "WTF? ending" and pass it off as brilliant storytelling. Shinji strangling Asuka and saying, "I think I'm gonna be sick." Dude, you aren't Stanley Kubrick, so don't even try to outdo 2001: A Space Odyssey.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by PC Engine Fan X! »

It'd be interesting to see how the third and final Evangelion HD remix anime film turns out. Although four of them were planned, it seems like that it has been trimmed down to just three movies instead. Am curious to see it will all end though -- will it be on par or better than the events that take place in the two-parter of End of Evangelion film release?

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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

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In terms of content though it was mostly Evangelion that sparked off Sekai-kei (google it) and a lot of people think that is shit and a pretty negative thing.
If they think living on the brink of apocalypse is a bad thing, then they haven't seen A Boy and His Dog. Personally, I find it to be one of the most fascinating blueprint for ideas in film and literature. (If I am understanding the definition correctly...)

As for Skykid, I can't honestly tell you if or how Eva has started a decadence in anime. But I know that, despite having an engrossing plot that takes a major twist halfway through the show (as well as a great art style), the end of the series is full of pseudo-philosophical nonsense that is bad enough to make one hate the show, even if they enjoyed the beginning.

I will always love End of Eva for it's grand scale battles and bittersweet tragedy. But as I've said earlier in this thread, it remains unexplained why NERV and SEELE wanted to destroy the angels when they wanted to initiate third impact all along (they had Adam and Lilith since, like, the fifth episode for Christ's sake...).

I haven't seen 2.22 (when I could be watching masterpieces like Death Note and Berserk, why even bother going back?), but don't bother with 1.1 Rebuild. It's pointless aside from the increased quality of art direction from the original.
Tack on a "WTF? ending" and pass it off as brilliant storytelling. Shinji strangling Asuka and saying, "I think I'm gonna be sick." Dude, you aren't Stanley Kubrick, so don't even try to outdo 2001: A Space Odyssey.
^^This. That was one of the greatest flaws of the film.

SPOILER!!!!!!!!!!!!!





Though Asuka's last stand before her death was done incredibly well. Absolutely terrifying and riveting, it was.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by greg »

Siren2011 wrote:Though Asuka's last stand before her death was done incredibly well. Absolutely terrifying and riveting, it was.
Yeah, that part was pretty cool. It would've been cooler if Shinji had managed to smooch with her at least once towards the end to make her a "redeemed hot piece of ass getting killed" than a "stuck up bitch getting killed."
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by Siren2011 »

Yeah, that part was pretty cool. It would've been cooler if Shinji had managed to smooch with her at least once towards the end to make her a "redeemed hot piece of ass getting killed" than a "stuck up bitch getting killed.
This quote made me laugh so hard I was in tears. 1+
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by iconoclast »

TrevHead (TVR) wrote:
Not sure if my brain is meant to feel this fried.
Considering how abstract the ending was, im sure been puddled is a common response

I watched the 1st remake movie and found it to be quite good, it was that which spurred me on to watching the TV series. Has all the movie remakes been made? If so I might watch them myself, as hopefully they it will have a better ending than the bizarre original
Rebuild 3.0 is still MIA, unfortunately. But be sure to watch 2.22, it blows the first one out of the water.

FYI, everything past Rebuild 1.0 is brand new. 1.0 was just a slightly altered retelling of the opening scenario of the television series, Rebuilds 2.0 and beyond are an entirely new story.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by Skykid »

hzt wrote:
Skykid wrote:Evangelion HD Remix?

Not sure I can be bothered.
Rebuild is way more than a retelling or and HD remix, and even if it was exactly the same but with better animation it would be worth watching because the animation is just so good. (N.B. I am a massive Evangelion fanboy. The animation really is brilliant though.)

As for your question Evangelion had a huge influence on the way that anime is made now, with merchandising and spinoffs and all that shit really being more important (in terms of making money) than the actual anime, and that is a big part of why anime has got worse. I'm no good at explaining it in depth but IMO it is far more to do with the this than to do with any influence it had on the actual content of anime. In terms of content though it was mostly Evangelion that sparked off Sekai-kei (google it) and a lot of people think that is shit and a pretty negative thing. I think it is interesting to see how a lot of the changes in Rebuild make it (sometimes subtly) really "anti Sekai-kei" and I assume it's deliberate.

You want to drag JDE in here, he'll probably write you an enlightening essay about all things Evangelion. Or post one he's already written.
Hmm I was under the impression that, based on something I think Randorama noted a while back, some of the key themes in Evangelion - particularly that of the helpless socially inept otaku - resonated so strongly with real-world (similarly socially inept) individuals that it germinated the continuing trend in anime thereafter, giving rise to the fads of today.

Apologies if this is completely off the mark, perhaps I read into the comments too much.
4. Tack on a "WTF? ending" and pass it off as brilliant storytelling. Shinji strangling Asuka and saying, "I think I'm gonna be sick." Dude, you aren't Stanley Kubrick, so don't even try to outdo 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Yo, if you were here right now I'd kiss you.

How I found the Evangelion experience, here goes:

It was a good show.
It struggled initially with budget, and some of the early episodes took a while to find a rhythm. That said, I was impressed by the way that there was an apocalyptic sensation present from the start. Even though it begins by treading staple anime territory, the environment and the emptiness of the city gave the show a difficult to pinpoint yet thoroughly effective bleakness.
To its credit, when the animation was good it was great, and even though the actual plotline (rather than exploration of human foibles) didn't find a way to emerge before the final 7 episodes, the character handling was fairly robust (if repetitive.)

Shinji is a whining fuck. I'm not sure if he was a central protagonist I really liked. He wasn't like Kaneda or Tenchi or Yu Yu Hakusho - he was pathetic. This of course was intentional: he was a motherless (and fatherless really) 14 year old kid who was painfully insecure. He was the embodiment of social retards everywhere who blame their parents for not loving them enough, who hate themselves for being useless at everything. That theme and the oedipal references were a bit trying after a while, although never to the point where it made you want to stop watching.
Above Shinji the ensemble cast was pretty robust, carrying him like the delicate leaf that he was. I enjoyed the development of certain characters, particularly Misato and Ritsuko. But where Rei was intriguing, Asuka's insanity became annoying and overdone. It was a bit like sitting in a nursery creche and watching kids blow off steam.

Of course I balked at episodes 25 and 26. I really like the four directors cut episodes prior because they opened up the backstory to such a great degree, but then the fact all questions went completely unanswered was one of the greatest faux pas in visual entertainment history. That Anno and staff tried to defend the 'artistic integrity' of what was a massive budget botch job was insane - there was just no ending. It was tragic and I felt for them, but don't try to lie your way out of it by telling everyone it was an existentialist philosophical 'possible' conclusion. That doesn't close all the doors you opened.

Neatly moving on:

Episodes 18 - 24 were what I would consider to be the best in terms of establishing Evangelion as a credible science fiction show, and I would say that the (admittedly complex) pseudo-religious, pseudo-scientific fiction was exemplified best here. The apocalyptic build up was looming and suddenly the fate of the characters was more of an issue for the viewer.

However, when End of Evangelion finished, I honestly wasn't sure if he's managed to salvage much at all. For me, Anno sold out with EOE almost as much as he did the first time around. Frankly, why is it that the Japanese always seem to ruin what start out as perfectly decent works of fiction with a desire to produce something absurdly profound?

Profundity isn't gained by producing something so contrived and rambling that you bamboozle the audience into a state of submission, yet sometimes I don't think the Japanese mentality is capable of executing a clear and reasoned philosophical plotline that any viewer can feel content that they've understood. It's not a flaw of their thinking, but a lost in translation issue that rears its head over and over.

End of Evangelion addressed some of the questions in the plot, but fucked itself royally by throwing up many more. Seele and Gendo's relationship was never explained. Why Gendo was treacherous makes no sense, and if both were working to bring on the Third Impact, why did Seele feel the need to destroy Nerv and execute the Eva pilots?

Likewise, Seele were clearly Nerv's retainers. They were never not in control, and if the Third Impact was always on the agenda, why encourage Gendo and Nerv to create Eva's to battle the Angels in the first place, and why not initiate the Third Impact when the opportunity was first made available (Lilith and Rei were around from day one, so what's the problem?)
The conflict made little sense, and therefore so did Gendo's objectives and Nerv's purpose.

The apocalypse, where little artificial clone girls somehow awaken sleeping gods and become bigger gods and, by the wishes of one insecure snivelling little bastard, reduce all human beings to a primordial soup state so that he no longer has to live in a world with pain and worry, is not without some value: unfortunately because the audience needs to research "wot the fuck I just watched" to have any comprehension of it is the kind of grandiose failure only the Japanese can orchestrate so perfectly.

The truth is, upon reading up on Anno and how he wants people to analyse and interpret Evangelion "for themselves", my fears were realised: There's just nothing to it. It's hollow. It's not 2001: A Space Odyssey, it doesn't have any true philosophical structure or point, it's just a haze of jargon, a mish-mash of influences, like a gaudy totem-pole covered with post-it notes and pages of the bible.

If Anno doesn't know what the fuck it all means, then it means nothing. It's engineered with the idea that, if it's large enough in scale and vision, all the stoners and no-brained twerps will step into the daylight thinking they just had some kind of an epiphany.

YOU DIDN'T HAVE AN EPIPHANY.

Some mental Japanese director decided to use symbolism, iconography and aspects of religious texts to try and give his work a higher value. The truth is, it doesn't have any higher value: it's a show about robots beating the shit out of each other, some conflicted children, and an end of the world scenario to tie in in a bow.

In summary: Just go along for the ride and enjoy the good stuff. Don't bother to analyse it, for god's sake (no pun intended), because that's exactly what they want you to do.

Done.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by PC Engine Fan X! »

I recall that Anno wanted EoE to end like it did and still leave a bunch of questions unanswered intentionally. How did this mysterious Seele group come about (in terms of being organized) before the "The First Impact" event that takes place in the series/films? I suppose a prequel to Evangelion would be needed to further tell the earlier adventures of what took place.

Under those 12,000 plates of fortified armor, it seems that the Evas share the same DNA as their human counterparts as shown in some scenes with NERV's underground based labs.

In the Evangelion HD Remixes, the upgraded Angels have such incredible supernatural destructive powers that any possible solution to counterattack them seems futile. Yet, it's interesting to see how such problems can be addressed and whatever it takes to solve them either through sheer force or ingenious military tactics/weaponry on a grand scale Gainax styled. Quite epic indeed.

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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

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Skykid wrote:However, when End of Evangelion finished, I honestly wasn't sure if he's managed to salvage much at all. For me, Anno sold out with EOE almost as much as he did the first time around. Frankly, why is it that the Japanese always seem to ruin what start out as perfectly decent works of fiction with a desire to produce something absurdly profound?

Profundity isn't gained by producing something so contrived and rambling that you bamboozle the audience into a state of submission, yet sometimes I don't think the Japanese mentality is capable of executing a clear and reasoned philosophical plotline that any viewer can feel content that they've understood. It's not a flaw of their thinking, but a lost in translation issue that rears its head over and over.

The truth is, upon reading up on Anno and how he wants people to analyse and interpret Evangelion "for themselves", my fears were realised: There's just nothing to it. It's hollow. It's not 2001: A Space Odyssey, it doesn't have any true philosophical structure or point, it's just a haze of jargon, a mish-mash of influences, like a gaudy totem-pole covered with post-it notes and pages of the bible.
Wow. These three paragraphs in particular show great insight. Arthur C. Clarke's 2001 made sense to me, and I have not yet even read the book. The Monolith sends David Bowman back in time to witness the big bang, the creation of the stars and the planets, and the earth. Life begins and ends with the Monolith. It wasn't hyperspace, it was time travel. But that movie must have stumped so many people that they think that just befuddling people means you're being artistic. This sort of wannabe pseudo-intellectualism is ridiculous, but Anno thought it was his ticket.

To be fair, from what I understand, the last two episodes of the TV series weren't originally his idea. The network told him what they didn't want the show to do, so he made it into a movie instead. So maybe to have it make sense, watch the TV show up until the final two episodes, watch the movie, then decide whether or not to finish it with those final two episodes. I think there was a manga called Evangelion: End of Days that is set in that parallel universe where the three kids are going to high school together and wacky hijinks ensue. That may be an interesting read.

OK, so I don't hate Evangelion that much. I love the character designs, the mecha designs, the creative enemy designs, the music is fantastic (great opening theme that harkens back to classic anime theme songs, the "Fly Me to the Moon" cover during the end credits, plus the great background music), and it has a great premise.

For those who like the aesthetics to Evangelion but don't care for the show itself (like me), please give Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water a shot. Unlike Evangelion, it starts out great and becomes fantastic. It goes from Jules Verne-inspired steampunk and evolves slowly into a full-blown SF epic. Towards the end, you can see a lot of designs and concepts that were later used in Evangelion. Jean is actually a likeable protagonist. One episode, he unleashes a Shinji-esque scream though!

Check out Electra's uniform at the end of the series. Very Evangelion-ish!

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here's the link to the image, in case it gets blocked: http://www.thesecretofbluewater.com/nad ... -tuta1.jpg

The Nadia movie, though, was a real disappointment. It was a sequel to the show, and it was dumb.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

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greg wrote:Arthur C. Clarke's 2001 made sense to me, and I have not yet even read the book. The Monolith sends David Bowman back in time to witness the big bang, the creation of the stars and the planets, and the earth. Life begins and ends with the Monolith. It wasn't hyperspace, it was time travel. But that movie must have stumped so many people that they think that just befuddling people means you're being artistic.
I've read the book, and that's not what happens. But I believe the movie was made for you to interpret in your own way. The book however is very clear about what is happening.

Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water looks interesting (a Miyazaki concept!). Just reading about it led me to Future Boy Conan which I'm also going to check out, Thanks.
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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by PC Engine Fan X! »

Ah yes, I used to watch the Spanish dubbed "Future Boy Conan" anime series on Channel 19 KNSO back in the mid-1980s before it got bought out by the larger Univision conglomerate.

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Re: Recommended Anime/Manga?

Post by StarCreator »

greg wrote:For those who like the aesthetics to Evangelion but don't care for the show itself (like me), please give Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water a shot. Unlike Evangelion, it starts out great and becomes fantastic. It goes from Jules Verne-inspired steampunk and evolves slowly into a full-blown SF epic. Towards the end, you can see a lot of designs and concepts that were later used in Evangelion. Jean is actually a likeable protagonist. One episode, he unleashes a Shinji-esque scream though!
I'm inclined to agree with you, but I just couldn't get past the island arc.
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