Hideaki Anno predicts decline of anime in 5 to 20 years

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Beware the source is Kotaku, anyway the negative attitude about the anime industry is nothing new, but it's intesresting to see how big name directors think about it.

Hideaki Anno, creator Neon Genesis Evangelion, thinks that the Japanese animation industry’s days are numbered.

In an interview with Russian news agency RIA Novosti (via EvaGeeks), Anno said the anime industry as we now know it will end in the next five to twenty years. Decline and “death” are unavoidable. Anno calls this only “a matter of time.” Yikes!

“Japanese animation is in decline,” Anno told RIA. “It’s already peaked.” Next, Anno believes, is the inevitable death. “After it does collapse, there will probably be a new resurgence.” The question, Anno wonders, is whether people will wait for this rebirth.

This death isn’t the end of anime per se. Japan will continue to have animation. “I don’t think animation will vanish,” Anno continued, “but perhaps, there might not be the conditions that have existed up until now that have led to the creation of interesting films.”

Anno thinks this collapse will mark the end of Japan’s dominance. Other countries in Asia, he points out, are getting richer and will produce more and more animation for their own audiences. On the contrary, Anno thinks there will be less money in Japan, which will also aid in anime’s decline and death. He also points out that there are fewer animators in Japan, which will also negatively impact anime. No doubt, ditto for a smaller population.

Of course, animation will continue abroad—and it, perhaps, that animation will be influenced heavily by anime. Who knows.

“Japan will just no longer be the center of world animation,” Anno added. “Maybe in five years, Taiwan will be such a center.” Anno described a recent trip to Taiwan, and the animators there, he said, had such passion and energy. In Japan, Anno says animation is “moving by inertia.”
http://kotaku.com/evangelion-creator-predicts-the-death-of-anime-1706738732
 
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smurfx

get some go again
aren't most animators paid nearly nothing and they also work very long hours? it's likely going to die out because nobody wants to do it. is korea still the go to place to outsource animation? plus with not as many kids being born in japan then who will watch the animes?
 
aren't most animators paid nearly nothing and they also work very long hours? it's likely going to die out because nobody wants to do it. is korea still the go to place to outsource animation? plus with not as many kids being born in japan then who will watch the animes?

This is like 4 GAF threads on Japan in one sentence
 

Pixeluh

Member
Not surprising to me. The last time I tried to watch an anime series was in 2011. Nothing these days interests me, or I feel like it's not enjoyable. Moe blob/loli/school-life shit every season is so boring.
 
Appealing to a more and more niche audience, reducing animation quality, poorly paid animators...yeah I could see a crash happening. It'll bounce back I'm sure but...yeah.

Though you can argue it's completely unfair, modern anime has gained a reputation of not being "cool" anymore ("moe" type stuff being a big reason) that is hurting it in the west, from my experience/what I can tell. That doesn't help either. There's obviously more than that out there but that's what a lot of people see "modern anime" as now, and that's going to hurt/is hurting the medium as a whole.
 

Raxus

Member
Not surprising to me. The last time I tried to watch an anime series was in 2011. Nothing these days interests me, or I feel like it's not enjoyable. Moe blob/loli/school-life shit every season is so boring.

You must not be looking very hard.
 

javac

Member
He's right, there's an old quote from Anno in regards to his work on Eva which I think ponders the exact same ideas, the notion that sometimes a reset button need to be pressed, like flushing a toilet, we need to get rid of that old shit, things need to start afresh, with new ideas to rekindle the imagination of people.

Anno: It's a problem of the quality of the Japanese people themselves. To express it in the style of Shiba Ryotaro, the voltage of Japan is decreasing. It's not just anime; novels, films, manga, no matter the kind of culture, they are all surely declining, I believe. It's not simply a matter of the old times being good. We[, my generation,] and those after are already a "copy culture," so there's nothing else we can do. As copy piles upon copy, they quickly become distorted and diluted. [...] In this situation, things can hardly be improved. It's difficult, I think. From here, Japan will probably rapidly reach an impasse. Perhaps years from now, or perhaps longer, someone will figure out something, and perhaps things will just keep declining. In Japan as a country, culture has already become "blocked." Korea, China, and South Asia have been able to produce exemplary works, and the day may arrive when they do away with Japanese things. I believe the intention to break down this "blockage" is essential.
 

Madao

Member
it can't die until Gintama and Jojo are finished.

after that i don't give a shit. i can switch to manga for One Piece.
 

Dr.Acula

Banned
“Japanese animation is in decline,” Anno told RIA. “It’s already peaked.” Next, Anno believes, is the inevitable death. “After it does collapse, there will probably be a new resurgence.” The question, Anno wonders, is whether people will wait for this rebirth.

Garage anime/Otaku spaceships confirmed.
 

Toxi

Banned
I'm wondering if some of the factors that caused the Japanese game industry outside of mobile to dwindle also apply here.
 

orioto

Good Art™
Well the peak WAS evangelion to me anyway.. It's been declining since..
i'd realy love that new techs allow more creativity with limited budget, like the Giulty Gear Xrd tech for exemple. It could change everything.
 

Qblivion

Member
“Japanese animation is in decline,” Anno told RIA. “It's already peaked.” Next, Anno believes, is the inevitable death. “After it does collapse, there will probably be a new resurgence.”

so eva rebuild is just a metaphor for the anime industry and we wont get the final film until this "resurgence"?
 
I donno about dying completely. Seems hyperbolic.

But maybe it needs to reinvent itself and comes up with materials that would appeal to wider audience not just teens or creepsters.
 
And not a single tear was shed. 95% of post 2000s animes look like they recycled the same animations,
scenes, styles and faces over and over again. I honestly thing you can just recut any modern anime with the same exact poses from earlier material.
 
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