Chet Rippo
Member
We need some kind of Hall of Fame/Wall of Shame for posts that's for sure.
Well we already got one so far.
We need some kind of Hall of Fame/Wall of Shame for posts that's for sure.
I think this is the first time I've actually thought about Kanna's clothing style. I've always thought Midori's and Tamako's styles were obvious reflections on her character, but if I think back on it, hasn't Kanna always had a more urban style compared to the rest of the cast?
Well we already got one so far.
Midori dresses like a mom.
More to the point, you're married.
I wish there were more good hentai anime, instead of just ecchi. To Love-Ru Darkness received such a high level of polish and care, and yet I recently watched a hentai based off of an Asaki Takayuki manga and it was just garbage. I'm not saying I expect TLRD quality, but the types of shows that are released are simply horrible. Shiwasu No Okina has an OVA (now at 5 episodes) and it's decent enough to look at it, but it the animation is so stiff that it's actually closer to a picture book than an animation. They're also far less erotic than the source material (despite looking almost identical in some scenes), and have absolutely zero humor. Where's my modern-era Cream Lemon series? :/
I'm gonna hate-watch the next episode of Lolita Anime.
Harem Time is not what I would point towards as an example of a great transition from h-manga to animated form. The thing is extremely choppy even for a show whose premise consists on repeatedly putting a dude's dick inside many girl's bodies.lTo be fair, they are still transitioning to Korean animators over there so some quality issues are expected. But there has been some good stuff that has made the transition properly. Tosh's Harem Time and that highly experimental Shiwasu no Okina's Pisu Hame are good examples. This is just my belief but I believe that Asaki Takayuki's Choisuji adaptation is due to making them less loli as to circumvent that damnable loli law.
This is how the Oreimo Bluray set looks like
So I just bought the tank for Mix the other day and I have to say I enjoyed it quite a bit. It has all the Adachi-isms you would expect but this time the nostalgia meter is turned all the way up to MAX with the Touch references.
(They even show the Koushien championship plaque that Meisei won 26 years ago)
I hate the fact this is running in a monthly magazine though. Adachi is slow enough with the story developments as it is. This just exacerbates it. Oh well, I hope the story develops nicely and I look forward to the anime adaptation in 5 years.
EDIT:
FOUND IT!
http://cdn.natalie.mu/media/comic/1209/extra/news_large_touch_file_omote.jpg
It says National Baseball Championship
and then it has the roster. Number 1 is Uesugi Tatsuya. Oh god, the nostalgia porn.
Harem Time is not what I would point towards as an example of a great transition to animated form. The thing is extremely choppy as fuck.
To be fair, they are still transitioning to Korean animators over there so some quality issues are expected. But there has been some good stuff that has made the transition properly. Tosh's Harem Time and that highly experimental Shiwasu no Okina's Pisu Hame are good examples. This is just my belief but I believe that Asaki Takayuki's Choisuji adaptation is due to making them less loli as to circumvent that damnable loli law.
This is getting a bit uncomfortable so I'm just gonna stop here.
So we'll see the anime in 2025. lol
I suppose I can't blame him for doing the same thing over and over again, to the point where he's basically not even apologetic about it anymore. Why take a risk when you don't have to?
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AnimeGaf doesn't really watch anime. We sit around and complain about it but we don't do things so unnecessarily proletariat as watching.
Kanna is best girl. Midori dresses like a mom.
How did you.... I do watch it... I really do...
Mobile Suit Gundam Unicorn 1-5
Talk about freaking cliffhangers. I have about zero knowledge on gundams and this got me hooked. 2 remaining episodes can't come soon enough!
If he knows people will eat it up, it actually takes no balls whatsoever. lolWhat's even more awesome about this is that he shamelessly cribs from himself and HE ACKNOWLEDGES IT. That takes some massive balls.
If he knows people will eat it up, it actually takes no balls whatsoever. lol
Now, balls would be making a manga about hockey.
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So because of Toshokan Sensou and Production I.G., I decided to start watching A Letter to Momo and I noticed something. Both movies look... different from TV anime in terms of how the the characters move. Is that because there's more frames of animation or something? I haven't watched an anime movie in a while, so I'm not sure if that's just a Production I.G. thing or a movie vs TV thing or whatever. Hopefully an animation nerd can elucidate on this anyway.
So because of Toshokan Sensou and Production I.G., I decided to start watching A Letter to Momo and I noticed something. Both movies look... different from TV anime in terms of how the the characters move. Is that because there's more frames of animation or something? I haven't watched an anime movie in a while, so I'm not sure if that's just a Production I.G. thing or a movie vs TV thing or whatever. Hopefully an animation nerd can elucidate on this anyway.
more budget = more and better animators = more animationSo because of Toshokan Sensou and Production I.G., I decided to start watching A Letter to Momo and I noticed something. Both movies look... different from TV anime in terms of how the the characters move. Is that because there's more frames of animation or something? I haven't watched an anime movie in a while, so I'm not sure if that's just a Production I.G. thing or a movie vs TV thing or whatever. Hopefully an animation nerd can elucidate on this anyway.
If he knows people will eat it up, it actually takes no balls whatsoever. lol
Now, balls would be making a manga about hockey.![]()
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So because of Toshokan Sensou and Production I.G., I decided to start watching A Letter to Momo and I noticed something. Both movies look... different from TV anime in terms of how the the characters move. Is that because there's more frames of animation or something? I haven't watched an anime movie in a while, so I'm not sure if that's just a Production I.G. thing or a movie vs TV thing or whatever. Hopefully an animation nerd can elucidate on this anyway.
Is it like the difference between playing a game at 30fps and playing a game at 60fps?
Err, what Branduil said probably.
I don't know if there's ever been an anime done at 60 fps. They're pretty much all 24 fps and animated on twos or threes, which means between 12 and 8 unique cels each second... and that's in the full-motion scenes. Most anime have a significant number of still frames.
Animation done at a full 24 fps is extremely rare in anime.
I thought we were gonna stop with the porn talk.Another Lady Innocent was amazing.
I don't know if there's ever been an anime done at 60 fps. They're pretty much all 24 fps and animated on twos or threes, which means between 12 and 8 unique cels each second... and that's in the full-motion scenes. Most anime have a significant number of still frames.
Animation done at a full 24 fps is extremely rare in anime.
I thought we were gonna stop with the porn talk.
I don't know if there's ever been an anime done at 60 fps. They're pretty much all 24 fps and animated on twos or threes, which means between 12 and 8 unique cels each second... and that's in the full-motion scenes. Most anime have a significant number of still frames.
Animation done at a full 24 fps is extremely rare in anime.
Unless I'm talking out of my ass due to ignorance, in my gif making adventures I've seen a lot of sakuga scenes that are animated on ones when the rest of the episode is animated on twos or threes, but I can't think of a full episode of anything that uses a full 24/30 unique frames per second.
I can't comment on anime films because, admittedly, I've seen embarrassingly few, even of the classics.
Jeez, Toonamigaf is really proactive in extending their community beyond Gaf.
If only we had the motivation to do that.
You'd only encounter more peasants that way, etc.
So because of Toshokan Sensou and Production I.G., I decided to start watching A Letter to Momo and I noticed something. Both movies look... different from TV anime in terms of how the the characters move. Is that because there's more frames of animation or something? I haven't watched an anime movie in a while, so I'm not sure if that's just a Production I.G. thing or a movie vs TV thing or whatever. Hopefully an animation nerd can elucidate on this anyway.
I first read that as presents and was wondering why that would be bad.
I think I need some sleep...
I thought you claimed you couldn't see the differences in animation between different anime projects, you liar!
Clannad's Illusionary World scenes were done on ones! And a lot of people who watched it remarked on how weird the animation was because it seemed so fast, which in my experience is similar to the remarks of people who aren't used to 60fps games.
There are also scenes where different parts of the scene are animated at different times. For example, you can have two characters animated where one will move on every odd frame and the other will move on every even frame. That almost counts as 24fps, lol.
You're right though, I think. I don't know too much about animation, but that's what I thought too.
KyoAni is unsurprisingly fond of doing scenes that way since it shows off their production value. There are several scenes in The Disappearance of Haruhi Suzumiya shot on ones. Still, even KyoAni very rarely does shots on ones. It's just a poor cost-to-value ratio to do it all the time.
But that was a movie. Isn't that expected?
But that was a movie. Isn't that expected?
KyoAni is unsurprisingly fond of doing scenes that way since it shows off their production value. There are several scenes in The Disappearance of Haruhi Suzumiya shot on ones. Still, even KyoAni very rarely does shots on ones. It's just a poor cost-to-value ratio to do it all the time. And a lot of sakuga, like Mitsuo Iso's "full-limited" animation, focuses more on drawing a few frames really well than drawing smooth motion.
I didn't know that about Haruhi. I should try and watch the movie to appreciate it technically rather than zone out when I watch it. Haha, I'm sure there are a lot of nice things about it that I don't notice.
I like how anime utilizes limited animation. Did Iso work on Dennou Coil? I'm still planning on watching that someday.
He worked to death. To death.Did Iso work on Dennou Coil?
I didn't know that about Haruhi. I should try and watch the movie to appreciate it technically rather than zone out when I watch it. Haha, I'm sure there are a lot of nice things about it that I don't notice.
I like how anime utilizes limited animation. Did Iso work on Dennou Coil? I'm still planning on watching that someday. I remember that there's a name tied to it but I don't remember whose it is right now...
He'll be back for Eva 4.0's massive Evangelion orgy of death. Poetry, rhymes, etcetera.He directed it, wrote it, and attached his career to its' anchor.
RIP Iso's career![]()