KDash31987
Member
BY THE POWER OF GRAYSKULL!
WE HAVE THE POWER!

WE HAVE THE POWER!

Now, if only Luna and Artemis could turn into large battle cats...
I wouldn't put as much stock in that given that they've clearly pulled out all the stops for HapCha this time. It's shaping up to be the best Precure series yet, and they clearly don't want the show to lose out to Sailor Moon as an also-ran.Edit: On another note, given that HappinessCharge PreCure! will (presumably) still be airing by the time the new Sailor Moon series starts, they must be targeting a different audience.
BY THE POWER OF GRAYSKULL!
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WE HAVE THE POWER!
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Now, if only Luna and Artemis could turn into large battle cats...
Why can't they target the same audience? Toei also does Super Sentai and Kamen Rider, those shows share the exact same target audience and run back to back, so why wouldn't they do two magical girl shows?Edit: On another note, given that HappinessCharge PreCure! will (presumably) still be airing by the time the new Sailor Moon series starts, they must be targeting a different audience.
I did not know that, though I was under the impression that Kamen Rider targets a somewhat older audience. The new Sailor Moon could do the same and not target an entirely different audience.Why can't they target the same audience? Toei also does Super Sentai and Kamen Rider, those shows share the exact same target audience and run back to back, so why wouldn't they do two magical girl shows?
Oh yeah I love that PGSM special too; Mio is too funny.
These subs make me want to commit murder.
(It's 'Apply')
These subs make me want to commit murder.
(It's 'Apply')
These subs make me want to commit murder.
(It's 'Apply')
サイレンス・グレイブ・サプライズ
Yeah, it's cool. I don't have any Mio gifs yet, but here's another I did:
It's really the same target audience, basically five year olds. That's why the summer movies are double features, the same kids watch both.I did not know that, though I was under the impression that Kamen Rider targets a somewhat older audience.
Sailor Moon has a built in adult audience and especially internationally Toei won't reach many kids (how many use streaming services to watch a japanese show subbed?) so I'm pretty sure the older fans are important to Toei, I was just saying that they don't have to target an older audience just because they already have a similar show for young girls.The new Sailor Moon could do the same and not target an entirely different audience.
Do you know if Viz Blu-Rays are region free? I'd like to get Ranma. Thankfully most Blu-Rays are not region coded but there are always some that are.On a flip death note: A friend of mine got the Ranma 1/2 Blu-Ray and apparently it looks great so far! I'll probably get it in a week.
The thing is, I like the story of the manga (although I'm not a fan of the lack of characterization) but I also like the episodic structure of the anime (although most arcs went on too long), I want the new anime to be both if that's possible.You can have youma without having a specific episode formula.
Do you know if Viz Blu-Rays are region free? I'd like to get Ranma. Thankfully most Blu-Rays are not region coded but there are always some that are.
Blu-ray Discs
Region A/1: North America, Central America, South America, Japan, North Korea, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Southeast Asia
Region B/2: Europe, Greenland, French territories, Middle East, Africa, Australia and New Zealand
Region C/3: India, Nepal, Mainland China, Russia, Central and South Asia
Amazon seems to imply Region A/1-only.
amazon is often wrong about that, sometimes even the backcovers are wrong, they state a specific region but the discs themselves are region free, that's why I'm asking.Amazon seems to imply Region A/1-only.
If you liked Ranma, you might like Urusei Yatsura even more!
And to be fair, it's really not that great until after 20 something episodes when the ED changes and it switches to regular half-hour episodes. It's worth it, though. Afterward the writing dramatically improves and the art gradually improves over the course of the show.I started watching it a few years ago, but didn't watch much because everything I found was horrible in quality.
Darrrliiinngggggg~
I wish the DVDs weren't out of print.
While we are on the subject: What if Rumiko Takahashi wrote Sailor Moon?
Well, there'd certainly be a lot more nudity. And romantic comedy hijinks.
It makes me a little sadder that it's not Apply, since it actually makes sense.
About Ranma, I think I'll just order the BD set and find out if it's region locked myself, if it is I'll just get a cheap region A player.
Still waiting for new information about the new anime, I hope they release pictures of other characters soon.
If you've seen anything Tenchi before you owe it to yourself at this point to watch Magical Girl Pretty Sammy.I just finished Ojamajo Doremi, so I may start a Sailor Moon rewatch soon in preparation for the new series (hard to believe it's almost been 2 and a half years since I started watching the first time). Also may watch that Urusei Yatsura show, and Maison Ikkoku since Hitokage says it's really good.
If you've seen anything Tenchi before you owe it to yourself at this point to watch Magical Girl Pretty Sammy.
Hmm... Tenchi OVA 1-13 then.If by Tenchi you mean Tenchi Muyo, I haven't seen anything Tenchi.
Maybe I'll watch that too.
madp said:While I'm in a mood for pimping stuff I'm watching, I'd just like to discuss Magical Girl Pretty Sammy for a few paragraphs. Wait, wait, don't run yet! I promise that there's actual merit to this endorsement.
Thanks to some helpful prodding from Hito I recently began going through the Tenchi Muyo franchise because it's essentially the bridge between Urusei Yatsura and the harem genre that Tenchi Muyo spawned through its adaptation of the Ataru-Shinobu-Lum love triangle that defined early UY. At the very least, the first and second Tenchi Muyo: Ryo-Ohki OVA series are pretty solid works that skillfully blend and balance science-fiction, comedy, drama, and romance to create a product that, for its time, was actually pretty novel. It's clear why TM: Ryo-Ohki was so instrumental in shaping the tastes of both Japanese and early American anime fans.
Anyway, probably to ride the wave of Sailor Moon's enormous popularity among otaku, Pioneer released a magical girl parody spinoff OVA Magical Girl Pretty Sammy in 1995. It was apparently popular enough that an entire 26-episode series based on the concept was greenlit and debuted the next year. It essentially repurposed a few characters from the Ryo-Ohki OVAs as mildly-different versions of themselves in an alternate reality where Sasami, who in the OVAs is the little sister of core triangle member Aeka and largely relegated to the outer fringes of both the serious narrative and the harem stuff, becomes protagonist and is dropped into a typical magical girl scenario. Sounds like a sleazy, cynical cash-in, but let me try to explain why it's actually really good.
Most importantly, it's not the "bad" kind of magical girl parody. It's not lascivious in its presentation--several magical girl parodies are just lolicon garbage clothed in a scattering of genre tropes or otherwise think that the only way to subvert magical girl tropes is to defile what is normally innocent. I hesitate even to call Pretty Sammy a parody because there's an association of mockery there, and while it is certainly a satirical take on the genre, it also manages to be genuine at the same time. It plays with the expectations of those who are familiar with the genre while still operating in the typical genre framework, and in terms of comedy, it's very much an antics show in the legacy of Sailor Moon. I don't make the comparison lightly--Sammy is genuinely fun in the same "stick to the formula but mess around as much as you possibly can within the formula" way that SM is.
The big difference from Usagi is that Sasami is perpetually exasperated, fully aware of just how ridiculous her circumstances are and yet powerless to resist fulfilling her duty. This is only half of the dynamic that shapes the comedy, though--the other part of the equation is the incredibly entertaining rivalry between Sasami and her perfect foil, the evil magical girl Pixy Misa, who appears every episode to usher in the Monster of the Week fight. Pixy Misa is undoubtedly the single best thing about the show--brash, egotistical, loud, uninhibited, and gleefully antagonistic, she absolutely overflows with charisma, thanks in part to a singularly unique and spirited performance from tragically-underused Kasahara Rumi (who recently resurfaced out of nowhere as Ain in One Piece: Film Z of all things.) Pixy Misa's banter with Sasami is always hugely entertaining and full of subversive commentary on magical girl tropes, all amplified by the central conceit thatSasami and Misao (Pixy Misa's civilian identity) are best friends in real life, yet unknown to each other are enemies in battle.
Pixy Misa also receives the lion's share of the quality characterization, given thatPretty Sammy actually does devote a decent amount of time to more serious dramatic fare, which is well-integrated, personal, and always feels earned (another Sailor Moon commonality!)Misao and Misa are polar opposites in personality. In each episode, Misao is hypnotized and forced to transform by the real antagonists. The transformation has the effect of embodying Misao's true self when uninhibited by her painful shyness and rigid, isolated upper-class upbringing, both of which are explored over the course of the series and contribute to how her relationship with the much more extroverted Sasami evolves. Probability of Misao having to come to grips with her "true self" at some point in the series? Take a guess.
It's also worth mentioning that there's a decent-sized supporting cast that's also really well-utilized, so as great as Misa is, it's not totally her show. There are Sasami's parents (but especially her father, who is an unhinged super-badass Gary Stu performed amazingly by Kazuki Yao), Sasami's classmates including the Helga Pataki-esque Konoha and discipline-obsessed Eimi, bumbling, covetous, short-fused antagonist Rumia and her beleaguered, skeptical, reluctantly-complicit little brother Rumiya, Tsunami (who thrusts Sasami's mission upon her and skewers the "benevolent other-dimensional monarch" character a decade before Precure had a chance to run it into the ground), and idiot-savant Mihoshi, the dissatisfied and serious Kiyone, and eccentric mad scientist Washu, who all basically reprise their roles from Tenchi Muyo.
I hate that I really can't go more into the specifics of the humor with examples of what the "good" stuff is, but dissecting jokes is a tedious exercise that only serves to permanently ruin what it's explaining in the process. Basically, I highly recommend the series to anyone who likes the genre, but especially anyone out there like me who has had difficulty filling the Sailor Moon-shaped hole in their heart after finishing it. It's easily the most SM-like magical girl series I've seen, in all the best ways. You do lose something if you're not familiar with the Tenchiverse given that the part of what makes the premise fun is seeing how Tenchi lore surrounding the Juraihelm succession is twisted into a magical girl premise, and, furthermore, several characters make minor appearances as totally unrelated characters in the Pretty Sammy alternate universe, but it's still fine as a standalone work. Watch it!
oh I guess it was also called Magical Project S in America or something.
I've seen it years ago, I liked it, at the start you think it's a typical giant robo anime, then it becomes something completely different, the final two episodes are a mindfuck, it took me some time to understand what was going on. After the series there's a movie called "End of Evangelion", the series end takes place in the main characters head, the movie shows what's going on in the real world, I think they compliment each other, don't listen to people telling you to skip episodes 25 and 26.Since we are going off anime recommendation has anyone seen Evangelion? I always wanted to get into it but everytime I try to look into ther's like a bunch of different versions and it just flies over my head.