Winter 2012 Anime Thread of Roundcats Up in This

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I figured now would be a good time to catch up on Bakemonogatari as well (so I can see if Nise is worth it), but I could also use a few other recommendations to fill out the week. I've been out of the loop for a while, and even when I was in the loop, I wasn't really in it, so I'm sure there's a lot I missed. I'm sure if I just limit it to 2009 onwards, I'll have more than enough good shows.

Here's what I'll vouch for within that time period.

2009:

Aoi Bungaku (Anthology series containing adaptations of classic Japanese literature; unique and varied with some fantastic segments)
K-ON! (Amazing production values, pleasant watch)
Spice and Wolf II (Continuation of the story about economics and wolf gods; excellent rapport between the two leads)
Trapeze (Fantastic examination of mental illness with a unique visual style)

2010:

Durarara!! (Not as good as Baccano, but still has an enjoyable cast of characters whose interactions are fun to watch)
Shiki (Slow but atmospheric start, wonky hair, interesting take on vampires)
Time of Eve (movie version is the one to watch; well-directed examination of the relationship between humans and androids in a world built on Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics)

2011: (I'll leave out shows you listed in the AotY thread)

Fireball Charming (CG shorts about the interaction between a robot duchess and her robot butler which are, well, charming)
Hanasaku Iroha (Some weak episodes, but worth watching for the satisfying way the character drama comes together in the middle and end)
Level E (Hilarious comedy with a memorable main character)
Wandering Son (Excellent direction and art, sensitive and mature character drama centered around gender identity issues and puberty)
Young Animators Training Projects (4 shorts all worth watching; Kizuna Ichigeki and Ojisan no Lamp are the best)

Currently airing:

Chihayafuru (Well-directed and moving show about a girl, a card game, and the romance that brought them together)
Gintama (Still the best anime comedy, 240 episodes later)
Natsume's Book of Friends Season 4 (Only the first episode has aired, but it lives up to the Natsume name so far. Watch the first two seasons if you haven't; the third isn't as well-regarded.)
 
Madoka - 5

The action scenes are actually not half bad, and the plot is starting to heat up. Aaand Madoka still hasn't become a Magi.

Also, I didn't notice til now, but the music is really good.
 
Madoka - 5

The action scenes are actually not half bad, and the plot is starting to heat up. Aaand Madoka still hasn't become a Magi.

Also, I didn't notice til now, but the music is really good.

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ok, I've just watched Denpa Onna episode 1. Why is the aunt 39 years old but looks like a teen? At least she isn't a loli like in Ro-Kyu-bu.
 
ok, I've just watched Denpa Onna episode 1. Why is the aunt 39 years old but looks like a teen? At least she isn't a loli like in Ro-Kyu-bu.

I think it's part of the gag. She's 40, dresses like a teen, acts like a kid. All the girls in the show are weird.
 
ok, I've just watched Denpa Onna episode 1. Why is the aunt 39 years old but looks like a teen? At least she isn't a loli like in Ro-Kyu-bu.

Modern anime women are Reyvatiel betas. They age to teenager years, and the stop aging 'til their 150ish, at which point they age rapidly and die.
 
Looks like Brave 10 is the next show in Crunchyroll's simulcast pipeline. Though it seems to be on a three-day delay, so it isn't a real "simulcast", I guess.

It is not available in any EU countries on Crunchroll so it is probably going to be one of the shows AoD has this season.
 
Madoka 6

Damned cabbit, shouldn't you explain these things before letting people become Magi's?! Actually, I get the feeling that he's kind of evil, as he tries his best to let these girls form contracts without saying too much. Another awesome episode.
 
Madoka 6

Damned cabbit, shouldn't you explain these things before letting people become Magi's?! Actually, I get the feeling that he's kind of evil, as he tries his best to let these girls form contracts without saying too much. Another awesome episode.

As I said before

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I figured now would be a good time to catch up on Bakemonogatari as well (so I can see if Nise is worth it), but I could also use a few other recommendations to fill out the week. I've been out of the loop for a while, and even when I was in the loop, I wasn't really in it, so I'm sure there's a lot I missed. I'm sure if I just limit it to 2009 onwards, I'll have more than enough good shows.
Wandering Son: this is probably one of the best shows of the past few years. I think it's a must watch but some people might be turned off from the subject matter.
 
Milky Holmes First season

Expected some cute little detective show, got a gag show filled with boobs, stupidity, loli lesbian stalkers, a guy who rips off his clothes and molests himself in front of children, and villian who
who wants Milky Holmes to succeed because she gets off on fighting them
. Since when do detectives need super powers that have nothing to do with detective work?

Still, I like the show and going to watch the second season.
 
Going about the show in a different way than most magical girl shows while still retaining the core aspects.

I'm sure someone else can explain it in a more detailed manner :S

Deconstructions are meant to challenge the underlying assumptions of a genre or trope. By grappling with the implications of those tropes/assumptions, the viewer hopefully learns something about the genre and its relation to actual reality.

Evangelion deconstructs mecha by making the destined child hero pilots actually act like immature children. The Urobuchi Gen-penned Saya no Uta (true proof of how fucked up he is) deconstructs eroge by questioning the relationship between the protagonist and his true love. Madoka deconstructs the magical girl genre by focusing on the contract between girl and magical being.

At least, that's my understanding, and I don't think TVTropes contradicts it.

Noirulus, you are watching shows fast.
 
Madoka 6

Damned cabbit, shouldn't you explain these things before letting people become Magi's?! Actually, I get the feeling that he's kind of evil, as he tries his best to let these girls form contracts without saying too much. Another awesome episode.

MdAmB.gif
 
Nah. That gif needed to be used pre-ep3.

It can also be used for the next set of episodes to come. Namely phase 2.

Madoka 6

Damned cabbit, shouldn't you explain these things before letting people become Magi's?! Actually, I get the feeling that he's kind of evil, as he tries his best to let these girls form contracts without saying too much. Another awesome episode.

See what I mean!?
 
Nah. That gif needed to be used pre-ep3.

I never understood the big deal about episode 3 for the following reasons
- The show was already dark with themes like suicide (some woman possessed by monster to jump out of some building).
- her death was already foreshadowed with black hair girl telling her don’t face monster alone you can’t beat it alone we have to team up or where screwed and her not listening.
- Blonde magic girl had very little screen time before her death, hard to care about a character you didn’t really even know and the characters have also just met.

But what I did find surprising was the way she died, she died there on the spot.

anyways I droped it after that episode it wasn't enough to keep me watching(too much shaft and ugly for me).

It was no Level E episode 3
surprise tone shift
 
First we need to identify the core aspects of a magical girl show. Is it the cute outfits? The magicks? The villains?

None of those things are the core aspects of a magical girl show. In Princess Knight, for instance, which is normally considered to be "magical girl", Princess Sapphire doesn't have any magical powers at all. Mysterious Akko-chan, as with many magical girls, is given the power to transform herself - but not into a crime-fighter, just whatever she wants.

When people say "deconstruction", they tend to mean "how would this play out in real life instead of happy happy la la fantasy land". For Madoka, Urobochi is looking at what might happen if little girls made agreements with cute mascots to fight monsters and it was all horribly depressing instead of relatively light hearted - not necessarily "real life" but given that most otaku think real life is depressing perhaps that's what they're going for by using the term.

Evangelion is seen as being a "deconstruction" of the mecha genre, but it's closer to putting a bunch of very unhappy/messed up people into the story. Darker And Edgier, as TV Tropes would have it - but not necessarily deconstructive.
 
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