You can dial back otaku-pandering in anime and without pandering to Western tastes. Creating anime with a global audience in mind doesn't necessitate abandoning the distinctly Japanese elements that make anime appealing in the first place.
You take juvenile as an insult, i don't.
I think enjoying juvenile things for an adult is ok (as long as that's not the only thing he/she enjoys).
Hell, otherwise i wouldn't be on a videogame board.
I haven't watched the show, so maybe i'm missing some major context, but a boob grab being juvenile, having as a rebuttal some cheesy anime DBZ style over the top action, it is puzzling to me.
From the description this sounds like an action or drama anime. So I'm confused as to why your using an animated sitcom scenerio as an example of Western tropes, especially with your other example of a shounen anime trope.You should probably edit that one. Perhaps you would be better served using something like Young justice.I mean sure but on the flip side I'd much rather take a show that indulges in "calling out your attack names" tropes over one staring "a nuclear family with 2-3 kids, a fat/idiotic husband and an impossibly hot housewife who probably could be doing much better in life doing literally anything else or married to anything else". It's all a matter of which tropes and the quality of the writing.
And the superior sequel series, The Legend of KorraThis already exists. Its called Avatar: The Last Airbender.
It was one of the more recent Netflix "Original" anime.
People are getting confused by the fact that Netflix labels it as a "Netflix Original Series", when in fact they just had exclusive rights to the English dub.
Not Japan is weirding me out a little.
Wasn't Heroman that?
There were plenty of those in the 80s, when Jean Chalopin (of Inspector Gadget fame) worked with Japanese studios. See Ulysses 31 or Cities of Gold, for the best examples.
The seven deadly sins was pure garbage, so lets see if this one will be an improvement.
Based on Production IG's past work, I don't think that's going to be a problem.The concept sounds interesting, I hope this isn't some loli shit.
Netflix is just paying for it, I'd say the studio and creator are more indicative of quality than it being Netflix funded.Yeah, have to agree. I have a decent "wait and lets see if it gets better" mentality but I couldn't even make this one past the first episode. Lets hope that Netflix is a bit choosier about this one and not letting it develop into an anime trope fest.
...how have I never heard of this. Holy shit, you just sent me on a Google train that leads down a deep and long rabbit hole. The more I'm looking at this the more I think i'm finding shows I actually used to watch and never realized they were made like that.
Huh. Neat, thanks!
Netflix is just paying for it, I'd say the studio and creator are more indicative of quality than it being Netflix funded.
A lot of Western animated TV shows have had animation outsourced to Japan, Korea, or other Asian countries. In the 1980s and 90s TMS Entertainment and their subsidiary Telecom Animation Film worked on a lot of well-known Western cartoons, such as Animaniacs, Batman TAS, Chip n Dale Rescue Rangers, Ducktales, The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh, and Tiny Toon Adventures.
Yeah, I kinda knew that. The sort of thing I'm interested in like how I was talking about before is less of a "we sent our shit to Korea to animate it on the cheap" and more "let's make an anime, but Dan McAmerican is writing it"
...I know it sounds like a silly delineating point but I think the general tone of each is pretty distinct in how each would turn out. For instance, the above mentioned Heroman vs. Chip and Dale.
I'd just like anime creators to make the sort of things they feel passionate about making, which may not always end up with high-quality works but is a better approach than ordering them to make something based on what producers feel will appeal to a certain audience. I'm certainly not opposed to co-productions between Japanese animators and European/American/other Asian animators - interaction between artists of different cultures is a good thing. I'm very interested in the upcoming French/Japanese animated film The Red Turtle. But that's something different from Netflix funding this Perfect Bones series or Funimation getting on the production committee for Dimension W - I see no evidence that that business model is likely to produce high-quality works.
What? But why?Production I.G acquired the rights to FLCL from Gainax last year and said they intended to use those rights for a remake.
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=1104980&highlight=flcl
Production I.G acquired the rights to FLCL from Gainax last year and said they intended to use those rights for a remake.
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=1104980&highlight=flcl
But why? This is as necessary as all the fucking 80s reboots and sequels Hollywood is doing. Even worse, actually, since FLCL holds up well in the visual department, doesn't looks outdated or anything.Production I.G acquired the rights to FLCL from Gainax last year and said they intended to use those rights for a remake.
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=1104980&highlight=flcl
Bruh. No. SDS wasn't even on my radar before the original series, now I'm hitting mangastream daily to read the new chapters. They should let the Commandments arc finish before doing the next season, though.The seven deadly sins was pure garbage,
Bruh. No. SDS wasn't even on my radar before the original series, now I'm hitting mangastream daily to read the new chapters. They should let the Commandments arc finish before doing the next season, though.