Winter 2012 Anime Thread of Roundcats Up in This

Status
Not open for further replies.
Glad I'm not the only one who felt compelled to make a direct comparison, though I used shots from the same episode.

Konoe_massive_growth.jpg

Rumor from 2ch has it that she's going to be nude in vol. 6 during one particular scene.
 
Digimon Xros Wars: The Young Hunters Who Leapt Through Time 3:
Okay, I admit it. I'm not the biggest fan of Tagiru, but his reaction to finding out Pinocchimon was lying genuinely made me laugh out loud. That was a very well executed scene. Overall, this was a pretty enjoyable episode with some very fitting usage of music from the first Xros Wars on a couple of occasions, but I'm still not a fan of Xros Wars nice Pinocchimon.
 
Melody of Oblivion 6
This is the highlight of this episode.
ZSgct.gif

It's a reminder that the show could have been interesting if they executed the more ethereal qualities properly. Instead the most memorable part is shooting a toy mouse.

You're a quarter of the way there!
 
I kind of want to buy Madoka, but $40 minimum for only four episodes is fucking ridiculous. At least it has a dub, though. Aniplex has their head up their ass about as far as Bandai Visual. On one hand, it shows they care fuck all about piracy and on the the other it shows they want to fuck over those who do want to legitimately buy/own the product.

I absolutely want to buy Madoka but it's not happening with that pricing. Paranoia over reverse importation and Japanese companies trying to steer foreign markets toward their own insane pricing models are only going to continue to hinder the NA anime industry. I have no problem with anyone supporting Aniplex, I just can't get over how backwards they are.

Last episode. They don't censor north american releases, right?

My Vampire Bund BDs are uncensored, and I doubt that whatever is in BGHK is quite as taboo as that.
 
Not that I put any stock in the ANN editorial staff, but they're over the moon about it for some reason.
Yeah, they went on and on about it on their podcast. Yech.

You're right about TNG not being immune to entire episodes of that sort of thing, though I haven't watched much since my teenage years so my memory is beginning to dull on the specifics. I think that Mouretsu is still far more about its characters than its technology; the writers obviously think that this interminable blow-by-blow of the
electronic attack on the Odessa II
is far more gripping than it actually is, but I know that this plotline is also attempting to serve the dual purpose of developing Marika's leadership skills. Ultimately it's a really roundabout way of achieving some basic characterization that serves the convenient dual purpose of filling time.
Well, I feel like the only thing different about the show is that it's a female lead in a very typically male character archetype. With some rejiggering, it's not all that different from JJ's Star Trek, with a child living in the shadow of a father being recruited to essentially run a starship. Just flipping the gender is interesting enough, but so far I don't think they've done anything interesting with that concept. Maybe next week's episode will change that, once the "intro" arc is out of the way.

re: Hanekawa, I knew that the
hair
was going bye-bye but I had no idea about the
glasses
. It's amazing how much less distinctive she is; if she wasn't in her school clothing she could have passed for a random friend of Karen's. If you've seen the bonus episodes of Tsubasa Cat, I don't know what to say about her "disinterest".
She obviously loved Araragi at that time, but the end of that arc resulted in her agreeing to cease pursuing him rather than her actual feelings for him dying out, I think.
In this episode of Nise, there's a wistfulness about her body language in Koyomi's room. Of course, that's heavily open to interpretation, but it's easy to imagine her
feeling sadness at the fact that she'll only ever be there as a friend, nothing more.
It's been a while, but I take it that she understands that he's with Senjougahara and accepted that fact a while ago. Of course, there's some indication that the two have had a history that allows them to co-exist in-spite of the triangle, which is why she's able to speak to Senjou on equal terms. Whether she's wistful though? I'm not sure myself.
 
Nise 4

Smh. Never before in my life have I seen a scene be so badass, while being so incredibly awkward. I can't say whether that speaks ill of my palate, or the scene's raw ability to fuck with you. Both maybe. Keep it simple. The Juxtaposing of intimacy and irritability just made for one effective window...Awkward due to aesthetics, but effective still.

Hanakawa actually got an upgrade with the hair cut, go figure. The sisters are still boring vehicles for Araragi's development. And I want Kizu now.
co-op bathing as a metaphor for intimacy just works,
but not like that Shaft.
 
Well, I feel like the only thing different about the show is that it's a female lead in a very typically male character archetype. With some rejiggering, it's not all that different from JJ's Star Trek, with a child living in the shadow of a father being recruited to essentially run a starship. Just flipping the gender is interesting enough, but so far I don't think they've done anything interesting with that concept. Maybe next week's episode will change that, once the "intro" arc is out of the way.


It's been a while, but I take it that she understands that he's with Senjougahara and accepted that fact a while ago. Of course, there's some indication that the two have had a history that allows them to co-exist in-spite of the triangle, which is why she's able to speak to Senjou on equal terms. Whether she's wistful though? I'm not sure myself.

The gender-flip of the role would probably be more meaningful if she were tasked with leading a more traditional pirate crew, but going by the credits it looks like several of her classmates are going to join with her so her crew is going to be both disproportionately female and already obedient to her. Ultimately, I think her young age is going to cause others to question her fitness to lead more than her gender, though the parallels to Abrams' Trek are definitely there and it's undoubtedly uncommon to have a female in this character archetype. I'm almost glad now that the "Miniskirt" in the title was scrapped because it would have immediately and pointlessly sexualized Marika.

I think you have an excellent grasp on the Senjou-Hanekawa-Araragi triangle and I'm probably overanalyzing. There's nothing to indicate that Hanekawa's feelings for Araragi are anything other than settled, though I'll watch Nise 04 again tomorrow just to see whether or not my observations on her behavior were completely imagined or not. If nothing else, Bake/Nise are generally quite deliberate in their imagery, though probably not so much that every single moment is trying to convey something.
 
ipreordered tha Madoka discs but I wont but Fate/zero.

But you'll be missing out on apparently 40 minutes of extra content, along with the soundtrack, a Drama CD, interviews, and other fluff that somehow amounts to more than a dollar a minute.

Think of it as an investment for Aniplex... I mean, the Japanese anime industry!
 
They are three minute shorts. You only have yourself to blame for not picking it up.

Is it like if Chi was a balloon?

5xxYG.jpg


HNNNNG


But you'll be missing out on apparently 40 minutes of extra content, along with the soundtrack, a Drama CD, interviews, and other fluff that somehow amounts to more than a dollar a minute.

Think of it as an investment for Aniplex... I mean, the Japanese anime industry!

I can't buy EVERYTHING. Only most things.
 
Yozakura Quartet - Hoshi no Umi 3

Amazing. Really loved the way the fight was directed and the way, even with an episode in which 90% of the time the characters were fighting, the moment it was time to tap on your "feels good" emotions, they hit it pretty well.
My only complaint would be that a couple scenes felt a little off, but it's pretty minor and with the fact that there is so much in motion it's even more marginal.
 
Ayakashi - Japanese Classic Horror 1:
Well, since people said I should watch one of the arcs in this show before continuing with Mononoke, I figured I might as well watch the whole show. The first episode was a pretty good setup, and I feel like the characters are well established, and there's a lot of good drama between them. I'm interested to see what happens next after the way the episode ended.
 
HxHr 16

Looks like they'll finally be getting off Zevil Island next episode. It's gonna be interesting to see how they handle this shit that goes down in the final phase.

Ayakashi - Japanese Classic Horror 1:
Well, since people said I should watch one of the arcs in this show before continuing with Mononoke, I figured I might as well watch the whole show. The first episode was a pretty good setup, and I feel like the characters are well established, and there's a lot of good drama between them. I'm interested to see what happens next after the way the episode ended.
Skip the second arc as it's pretty bad.
 
Ayakashi - Japanese Classic Horror 1:
Well, since people said I should watch one of the arcs in this show before continuing with Mononoke, I figured I might as well watch the whole show. The first episode was a pretty good setup, and I feel like the characters are well established, and there's a lot of good drama between them. I'm interested to see what happens next after the way the episode ended.

Ayakashi would be fairly entertaining in its own right even if it had never had the god-tier Bakeneko episodes that get most people to watch it in the first place. These serious adaptations tend to be free of unwanted anime tropes and retain a more literary feel, though this goes out the window with Bakeneko in the absolute greatest way possible. I'm also partial to historical folk tales involving youkai and other supernatural elements anyway, so your enjoyment might depend on how interesting you find the subject matter.

You might want to try the noitaminA adaptation of Genji Monogatari if you end up liking this.
 
I watched Mononoke without watching Ayakashi and I didn't feel lost at all. What exactly did I miss by not watching Ayakashi?

The last arc of Ayakashi is the first appearance of the Medicine Seller and is animated in Mononoke's style. Mononoke was spun off from this arc, but if memory serves the Bakeneko story in Ayakashi is standalone and doesn't have any direct connection to the
Bakeneko
story in the final episodes of Mononoke. It's basically just three bonus episodes of Mononoke if you watched that first.
 
I watched Mononoke without watching Ayakashi and I didn't feel lost at all. What exactly did I miss by not watching Ayakashi?

The third arc of Ayakashi (episodes 9-11) is actually the beginning of Mononoke - the later series was created due to the positive reception of the earlier story. It introduces the Medicine Seller as well as a character who reappears in the second arc of Mononoke, and executes its central concept better than any of the arcs in Mononoke proper except the Nue arc. The final climax has to be seen to be believed.
 
The last arc of Ayakashi is the first appearance of the Medicine Seller and is animated in Mononoke's style. Mononoke was spun off from this arc, but if memory serves the Bakeneko story in Ayakashi is standalone and doesn't have any direct connection to the
Bakeneko
story in the final episodes of Mononoke. It's basically just three bonus episodes of Mononoke if you watched that first.

The third arc of Ayakashi (episodes 9-11) is actually the beginning of Mononoke - the later series was created due to the positive reception of the earlier story. It introduces the Medicine Seller as well as a character who reappears in the second arc of Mononoke, and executes its central concept better than any of the arcs in Mononoke proper except the Nue arc. The final climax has to be seen to be believed.

Ok time to watch the last arc of Ayakashi.
I kinda assumed that since it's called Bakeneko then it was the same as the last arc in Mononoke. But I guess they are different.
 
The gender-flip of the role would probably be more meaningful if she were tasked with leading a more traditional pirate crew, but going by the credits it looks like several of her classmates are going to join with her so her crew is going to be both disproportionately female and already obedient to her. Ultimately, I think her young age is going to cause others to question her fitness to lead more than her gender, though the parallels to Abrams' Trek are definitely there and it's undoubtedly uncommon to have a female in this character archetype. I'm almost glad now that the "Miniskirt" in the title was scrapped because it would have immediately and pointlessly sexualized Marika.
We shouldn't kid ourselves either - this show is made for guys as much as Symphogear and Rinne no Lagrange - so I expect body pillow merchandise to appear sooner rather than later.

The way that they've basically made her the "father's daughter" makes me believe that she'll just have some innate skill that makes her awesome as a captain. Of course, they've gone to great pains to show that she's always been interested in piloting and whatnot, but I'm assuming the classic shounen tale of inherited excellence to apply here when it comes to how people interact with her. The fact that her father's crew is willing to go through all these measures just to keep an eye on her is rather telling.

I'd like to imagine the greater aim of the show will be her trying to figure out how to exist in her father's shadow. There's the classic tale of de-mythologizing the father figure, but I don't think this show will be all that grimdark.


I think you have an excellent grasp on the Senjou-Hanekawa-Araragi triangle and I'm probably overanalyzing. There's nothing to indicate that Hanekawa's feelings for Araragi are anything other than settled, though I'll watch Nise 04 again tomorrow just to see whether or not my observations on her behavior were completely imagined or not. If nothing else, Bake/Nise are generally quite deliberate in their imagery, though probably not so much that every single moment is trying to convey something.
Hah, I don't remember much about Bake, so I'm just going from fading memories and assumptions. I do remember a scene at some point where Hanekawa talks to Araragi about how it would appear to Senjou if he spent all his time around other women though, so it just seemed to me as if she was teasingly resolved to the current situation.

And hey, I suppose you can't really ignore the fact that she was sprawled out on his bed. Although I wonder how on the nose it was since his sister pointed out that trope before they went into his room.
 
Hah, I don't remember much about Bake, so I'm just going from fading memories and assumptions. I do remember a scene at some point where Hanekawa talks to Araragi about how it would appear to Senjou if he spent all his time around other women though, so it just seemed to me as if she was teasingly resolved to the current situation.

And hey, I suppose you can't really ignore the fact that she was sprawled out on his bed. Although I wonder how on the nose it was since his sister pointed out that trope before they went into his room.

Wasn't that while she had the cat with her though? Facade, I think. Sides, it's a harem. Feelings never dissipate.
 
Legend of Galactic Heroes 1:
So, it begins. There's a lot to take in here, including a lot of characters with long names and a number of different factions. I'm sure I'll get a handle on everything soon, though. The central characters in the first episode are all set up pretty well, and I think there was some good drama between them and some nice glimpses into what society is like for these people. I'm intrigued to see where this goes.

Ayakashi would be fairly entertaining in its own right even if it had never had the god-tier Bakeneko episodes that get most people to watch it in the first place. These serious adaptations tend to be free of unwanted anime tropes and retain a more literary feel, though this goes out the window with Bakeneko in the absolute greatest way possible. I'm also partial to historical folk tales involving youkai and other supernatural elements anyway, so your enjoyment might depend on how interesting you find the subject matter.

You might want to try the noitaminA adaptation of Genji Monogatari if you end up liking this.

Yeah, I have to say that I really appreciated that feel in the first episode. It feels like a serious adaptation of a literary work in how the characters are thinking and acting, and the narrator really manages to sell that well. It's pretty engaging subject matter for me personally, too.

I'll definitely keep my eye out on the Genji adaptation. I like what I've read of the original novel, so it holds some special interest for me.

Gundam Age any good?

If by good you mean bad, then sure.
 
I watched Mononoke without watching Ayakashi and I didn't feel lost at all. What exactly did I miss by not watching Ayakashi?

Besides it being one of the best, if not the best, medicine seller story, it introduces most of the concepts and tools(the scales, alternate form, etc) that the medicine seller uses. Much of this is left unexplained until further into Mononoke, which i think would be a bit problematic in the first arc of the show considering they dont really tell you what his tools do and they only show a brief snippet of his transformation. I would imagine the first arc of Mononoke is a bit confusing for those who didn't watch the Ayakashi one. Also one of the characters from the Ayakashi arc reappears in Mononoke.
 
So is there any explanation as to why more of the Durarara light novels haven't been adapted yet? I'm tired of seeing fanart of
Izaya's sisters
and not knowing anything about them.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom