This is legitimately depressing.
I guess I'll just go buy the manga volumes unless Vertical canceled them halfway through or something.
What were they thinking? Why isn't Kondansha suing them right this minute? Why would they even sign off on it? They get early screenings. ZEXCS isn't even a bad studio. I've seen doujin games with bigger budgets.
They did say they wanted the Anime to spur sales of the Manga. I guess this is what they meant by it.
Regarding this project, the producer told the director that they didn't have to worry about selling any DVD/BDs at all, and instead they should focus on making a work which will be remembered for decades. I feel they have succeeded.
Regarding this project, the producer told the director that they didn't have to worry about selling any DVD/BDs at all, and instead they should focus on making a work which will be remembered for decades. I feel they have succeeded.
Hahaha, holy shit.[Clark Gable];52793853 said:Every anime season has been bad for the past five years.
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Regarding this project, the producer told the director that they didn't have to worry about selling any DVD/BDs at all, and instead they should focus on making a work which will be remembered for decades. I feel they have succeeded.
Is this rotoscopy or are they just going for ugly realism?
DQX is already profitable and wouldn't even be an apt analogy if it wasn't.that some fucking business suicide - almost as worse at that Dragon Quest X MMO amirite?
Would be if DQX wasn't a fairly big seller. The Wii U version was a mistake (really it should have been a upgrade client for owners of the Wii version or something) but I can't imgaine that being much more than a Hi-Texture pack with some podunk coding for the tablet.that some fucking business suicide - almost as worse at that Dragon Quest X MMO amirite?
I imagine you smiling when writing that last sentence.
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Why did you willingly participate in this farce, Studio Pablo?
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Am I cute uguu?
I feel so bad for Studio Pablo right now.
They did the background art for Little Witch Academia, at least.
Okay, fine, here you all go. Crunchyroll is simulcasting Gargantia.
http://www.crunchyroll.com/anime-ne...tream-gargantia-on-the-verdurous-planet-anime
Okay, fine, here you all go. Crunchyroll is simulcasting Gargantia.
http://www.crunchyroll.com/anime-ne...tream-gargantia-on-the-verdurous-planet-anime
Regarding this project, the producer told the director that they didn't have to worry about selling any DVD/BDs at all, and instead they should focus on making a work which will be remembered for decades. I feel they have succeeded.
So, I looked through the credits of episode 1 for Aku no Hana to see how many people are responsible for this visual trainwreck. Here are the stats:
- There is no storyboarder or unit director for the episode, presumably because the direction is the live action base, so it's not needed.
- Instead there is a full live action cast of 38 people for the first episode, and a crew of at least 19 including 2 directors.
- There is one overall animation supervisor, 1 animation director, and 4 assisting animation directors, and 16 key animators. Pretty normal for anime, so they don't seem to be saving any manpower here either.
Overall it's clear that the director wasn't lying when he said what they are doing takes much more effort than usual, and probably costs more too. Viva la expérimentation!
Aku no Hana unsaving what Little Witch Academia had saved.
Fleur de Mal AKA Flowers of Evil AKA Aku no Hana 1
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Rotoscopy confirmed. This better be a late April Fool's joke and normal anime activities will resume next week. (I CAN'T ACCEPT THE TRUTH! HELP ME!)
We've known the anime is fully rotoscoped for months. It's not a secret.
We've known the anime is fully rotoscoped for months. It's not a secret.
I didn't know it. Sorry. Now you can understand my reaction.
So her last name appears to be "Mambabarang". Does that help with the spelling of her first name? I don't know! Not very French though.
Don't kill him before he adapts the second half of Mushishi!RIP Nagahama.
You shouldn't be sorry, the staff should be.![]()
I didn't hate Aku no Hana.
Sorry!
I mean, I don't think it's very good, mind you. It's a really boring first episode where virtually nothing happens, and shooting it in a live action, "realistic drama" fashion robs it of the melodramatic impact that it's presumably supposed to have when Nakamura utters the "shit eater" line. We get little sense of what the point of the whole thing is at this stage.
The rotoscoping is pretty much what I was expecting, I guess - maybe that's why I don't despise it as much as everyone else seems to. Of course with the drop in frame rate (because that's how anime rolls, I guess) and the lack of detail to the drawings it's not particularly attractive, and of course the manga has the benefit of everyone looking relatively pretty and completely unlike the actual facial structures of Japanese adolescents, but it's not totally hideous.
Also I really liked the animation of the actual flower of evil, so... there's that.
As I say, don't get me wrong, I don't think it's great. But as usual, "not very good" on the Internet seems to equal "A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY", and I don't think it deserves that level of hyperbole.
As much as I disliked the first episode I will say that I thought the scene between Nakamura and the Teacher and the final scene right as the music led into the credits were pretty well directed and for that reason I'm sticking with the show for a little longer at least. Those were the only scenes that I felt truly captured that sense of unsettling drama that the manga attempts and hopefully later episodes will have more of that.
Found this for Japanese speaking people. http://natalie.mu/comic/pp/akunohana Interview with the "staff".
kuromitsu said:And Google Translate is lying.
In short:
- At first Nagahama (the director) refused the offer to direct the adaptation, because he thought that simply turning this manga into a pretty, clean-looking anime would be pointless. He says that he believes that when the mangaka draws this story he's seeing something "else" which he expresses as a manga. So there would be no point in simply presenting it in animated form, at that rate you might as well just read the manga and be done with it.
- He thought if it was to be adapted at all, it should be done as a live drama. When he was offered the job the second time, he pitched the idea of using rotoscope. He was aware that the result would be different from the manga.
- Oshimi (the mangaka) says Nagahama is right about the way he creates the manga: the original story is something that exists in his head, and he draws what he sees in his mind. So basically the anime and the manga are two different versions of the story that exists in Oshimi's head. By the way, he was also aware that due to the rotoscope the anime would look different from his work, and he thought it was an interesting idea.
- Oshimi also says that he thinks Nagahama has a very deep insight into the story, and firmly believes that he's taking it in the right direction. He also very much approves of Nagahama's wish of the anime leaving the viewers with a scar.
- Oshimi was pretty much "in" on the whole thing, they tested the rotoscope method on him.
- The interviewer asks about the impact the visuals would have on viewers, and Nagahama says he's well aware that a lot of people will go "what the fuck" and "this is gross," "I hate this, I'm not watching this." But he's pretty much okay with that, too, because he thinks it's fine as long as it leaves an impact on people. Viewers may dismiss it right away, but some may check it out later and find it interesting, or they may come across the manga, recognize the title, and read that.
- Oshimi says that he once got a fan letter from a high school girl who wrote that when she read the manga in middle school she thought it was stupid, but she tried to read it again when she was older and she found it very good. Nagahama says that this is what he's going for, to leave an impact, even if it's negative. He's trying to create something that one can't just ignore or dismiss.
- Oshimi also says that the anime has many scenes that he wishes he would've drawn the way they are in the anime, for example a scene with Kasuga and Nakamura in the classroom.
- Also, he confesses he's writing the manga with the intention of murdering the readers with it (metaphorically, of course), thinks the anime is doing the same, and relishes the idea of the viewers getting slaughtered, jokingly of course. (lol #1)
They leave the following messages to the fans:
- Oshimi: He guarantees that those who feel very strongly about Aku no hana will enjoy the anime. However, chara-moe types, those who go "Nakamura-san, unf unf" will probably feel betrayed. (lol #2)
- Nagahama: Since it's so different from the usual anime, he can't say that everyone will love it. But those who watch the first episode and think "I want to see more" will not have their expectations betrayed.
If anything, this made me want to watch the show even more.I hope they're right and it's going to be interesting.
http://forums.animesuki.com/showpost.php?p=4622098&postcount=169
MS Paint is the future of anime.If only the movie looked like that!