Maybe Kaiji should try his luck at the Powerball.
You are weak. You would never survive the Pachinko, let alone the Akagi gauntlet.
Would still probably be 5 episodes.
Just checked how long that pachinko thing is and it's a bit too much.
The Akagi gauntlet never ends, it's not physically possible to survive it. The Washizu game took what, 30 years?
Isn't he still playing that old man?
I already asked for recommendations a few days ago but I want a few more. If I like kuroko, haikyuu, and diamond no ace what should I watch next?
That's a consistent problem with the show in that it states certain facts or aspects without showing why that to be the case. For example, they mention Gaju's silhoutte is better than his competitors but no insight into how people determine that. The show is seemingly assuming that the people watching are already familiar with dancing. I feel like I haven't learned jackshit about dancing in contrast to when I started the show. Compare that with Yuri on Ice, another show about isolated performances in a competition, where they explain how a person gets deductions or makes up for those deductions in other ways. It just assumes that if you throw some sakuga on it then you know the dancers are real good compared to the CGI models in the background. Compounding that is the lack of animation during the dancing as we don't see enough of the dancing in totality to get a handle on improvements or skill gaps. Instead they'll just do a closeup on someone's face to show how serious they are as if that's some sort of substitute. That's not all though.
How?
There's Mako losing her inserted breast pads and they go flying across the dance floor, after which dancers all slip on them. I don't understand, is this supposed to be funny? This has nothing to do with sexuality or sensuality and just comes across as really cringey nonsense. The way women are treated in this show is pretty lousy as a whole. It's similar to the way Kiyouko is treated in Haikyuu except even more of a focus so it makes it worse. Shizuku is an intriguing character but everybody treats her as a trophy. Maybe it has to do with the nature of dancing itself, as the females might only serve to be good enough to not hinder the males, but it feels a bit degrading to her character.
The direction seems really shoddy in a number of places such as this scene which is a very serious moment in the show when Mako stands up to her piece of shit older brother and slaps him. However you couldn't tell if you look at this screenshot. Why is this being treated in a comedic fashion? Why? There's nothing funny about this. There's a number of occasions where the direction just seems completely at contrast with the emotions in the scene.
I could go on about the lack of characterization that pretty much everybody other than Shizuku has. Gaju is so over the top as a villain that I have no clue why Tatara would want Mako to go back an emotionally abusive brother like this. The character work that Tatara has after seven episodes is the divorced parents angle. The show instead focuses largely on the dancing aspect, but fails to make it compelling to watch other than for the sakuga moments. Also before someone says that it was only this episode that was bad, all of these problems are longstanding issues since the first episode.
Award 2a: HG's license to make derivative works expires 14MAR2021. All rights and sublicenses revert to the company that bought the company that bought Tatsunoko at that time.
All of HGs rights end on March 14, 2021. All of them
Only a few more years left on the prison sentence!
Ballroom is kinda bad. I'll write up my general feelings in a minute.
Why bother writing about anime. It's all kinda bad.
In This Corner of the World was very good. I'm glad I went to see it in theaters instead of waiting for the Blu-ray, since I don't think the more powerful scenes would have had as much of an impact otherwise.
It helped that the audience actually stayed quiet through most of the movie as well.
You've got 251 posts in this thread, that's a lot of whining about anime imo.
Stardust Crusaders 27
The Oingo Boingo brothers are perhaps the most Jojo has ever felt like a Saturday morning cartoon. Oingo gets trolled as much as villains in an old Looney Toons cartoon. I suppose this is appropriate considering their powers hinge on a weird comic book thatpredicts the future.misleadingly
It's okay to admit defeat, we all know you love anime.Fixed.
Ah, this was the one that was crowdfunded? I agree with your sentiment, though since I don't know where the funding comes from for other non-late-night adaptation anime movies (for example, the Fireworks movie that I think just hit theaters), I can't really enter the debate on the issue too much...It's a very good film and I'm glad it got made. I still think it is shameful for the medium that it needed crowdfunding to get off the ground (and to get the director tickets to overseas premieres) when this is the sort of stuff that would be independently funded for live action films because there's strong support for art films out there. >_<
Yeah, a theoretical live action version of this movie would basically be full of stars and probably have a huge budget.It's a very good film and I'm glad it got made. I still think it is shameful for the medium that it needed crowdfunding to get off the ground (and to get the director tickets to overseas premieres) when this is the sort of stuff that would be independently funded for live action films because there's strong support for art films out there. >_<
I wanted to just get some thoughts out about In This Corner of the World before I forget:
On the whole, the film feels like a toned down version of Mai Mai Miracle, using similar themes and techniques (memory, imagination, magic-realism) in a more grounded story. This led to some very effective scenes, particularly.the death of Hirumi and the first bombing we see
The film, for better or for worse, is as apolitical as The Wind Rises, where the war is just a backdrop for the story. This is where it's tough for me to separate my own subjectivity from my viewing experience, particularly as a someone who is Chinese whose parents both lived under Japanese occupation. This is before we even get into the fact that Japanese nationalists deny that the Japanese committed any war crimes and Japanese politicians make annual pilgrimages to a shrine dedicated to war criminals.
(Of course, I'm also the asshole who plays Kancolle, a game that turns Japanese warships into waifus, so yes I know I have a complicated relationship with my weeabooness )
In that light, on the one hand I think the film is very effective at conveying the emotion of being a woman living under the spectre of the Japanese war. On the other hand, it's like trying to watch a movie about German civilians suffering when you know that a few stations down the railroad tracks, the Holocaust was happening. I don't think there's an easy way to address that dichotomy, and maybe I'm one of the few people who would even have a problem with that when watching the movie.
So apolitically, the tragedy of the Japanese homefront is effectively conveyed just through the mono no aware aspect of life in 44-45. We see this through rationing, the existence of the red light district, the types of ships that are in Kure. Of course, there's the literal ticking clock of the calendar, counting down to the fateful day the world would be changed for the rest of our lives.
And of course, Suzu as an artist reflects this feeling as well, as the film switches from the "realism" of the traditional anime world to the world of her drawings - both textually through the actual drawings she makes, but also metatextually by changing the art style.
I think it's telling that the very final image that the film leaves with you at the end of the credits is a picture of a right hand waving at you. It's a very powerful final image that makes sense if you've seen the movie and is reflective of the entire final act of the film. Seeing that was basically the part that broke me, because in that moment I could sympathize with what it must have been like to be forced to pick up after the bombs were dropped.
I feel like this film is going to be a low key release compared to Your Name. The fact that it's only going to be available here for a week, in sporadic screening times, is an indication that they don't think there's any market for it and I don't really blame them. It's not meant to be a crowd pleaser, and I suppose it's a small miracle that it's getting screened at all.
Considering I am of Korean descent, and my grandparents were alive under Japanese occupation, I am probably going to feel similarly to its apoliticalness.
It's a shame In This Corner of the World had to get crowdfunded, was speaking to a friend who is pretty down in anime in general and linked him to the film and he was immediately interested in checking it out, there's definitely a market for these type of animated films.
There's a moment that someone might explain to be specifically regarding this post:Considering I am of Korean descent, and my grandparents were alive under Japanese occupation, I am probably going to feel similarly to its apoliticalness.
There is a bit whereI think it's important to note that while the film and story is tonally apolitical, the narrative has many political beats. That is to say, there is no judgement or intended bias in how things are presented, but you get a very strong image of what it was like for people living in that time in that place. It made the film so much more powerful to me. I fucking hate imperial Japan, and my grandparents lived through the Japanese occupation here in Singapore too. What really hit me in the film is how unafraid it is to present things as they are even though it in fact makes the typical Japanese civilian look WORSE in context. Yet anyone with empathy and understanding of the difficulty of mobility away from where you are born at that time will see that nationalism and lack of understanding of the larger matters of the world is not entirely their fault.
It was commercially successful when it released in Japan, propelled by strong word-of-mouth, so I'm hopeful that that will make it easier for similar films to find funding in the future.
There is a bit whereThat's probably the closest it gets to showing the characters responding to the war in a political manner.Suzu feels a bit of recrimination or betrayal when she learns of the surrender, because there is the sense that they sacrificed for nothing.
I'm so sorry I couldn't help myself.
Nah, it's there throughout the entire film.
Her family and friends work for or with the military in one way or another. They are proud to be serving the country and being part of the war effort. The town she moves to is one of the biggest shipbuilding factories in Japan at the time, responsible for much of the naval fleet, and they see that as a great thing. Her own sister works with soldiers and finds their occupation attractive - something many young women probably thought back then. Her father in law is with the military, so is her husband. Her childhood friend is a soldier. Everything about that period in her life is contextualized through Japan and Hiroshima being a hotbed of nationalism and war pride, even among regular civilians, because no one knows better. To them their own country doing something means they should be part of it. And that can't be wrong. Can it? Without internet or television, with only word of mouth and your own two eyes, in quiet villages and towns the entire world is just what is around you. That's what it was like.... in that corner of the world.
I'm so sorry I couldn't help myself.
That's the weird thing, I'm not even sure if it's fair to bring this baggage to the film.For what it's worth, I have zero Asian heritage but I was also thinking about some of those same political/apolitical themes of the movie that you're all talking about... I'm just nowhere near eloquent enough to be able to really join the discussion on them.
New image for the second season of March Comes in like a Lion.
I should probably catch up...
How did that show go from the most hated to the most loved in only a few episodes.
Seriously I remember so many people shitting on it before it suddenly became the best thing ever somehow.
How did that show go from the most hated to the most loved in only a few episodes.
Seriously I remember so many people shitting on it before it suddenly became the best thing ever somehow.
How did that show go from the most hated to the most loved in only a few episodes.
Seriously I remember so many people shitting on it before it suddenly became the best thing ever somehow.
How did that show go from the most hated to the most loved in only a few episodes.
Seriously I remember so many people shitting on it before it suddenly became the best thing ever somehow.
I think that's the thing that makes it like The Wind Rises for me.
Like you could place this movie alongside Their Finest, a movie that came out recently and was set during the London bombings, and both are interesting portraits of a life lived under constant threat of death from above and the sacrifices that must be made. Except when we think of London's bombings, we think of Churchill giving his "never surrender" speech and Be Calm and Carry On and all that, because the British were the "good guys". But the film never mentions any of this (outside of being about Dunkirk) because it's just assumed to be part of the historical context.