Doctor Decimate
Member
my movie rankings would probably look like this:
Akira
Evangelion 2.22
Summer Wars
Evangelion 1.11
I really liked the family atmosphere of Summer Wars; if they made a movie dedicated entirely to that, I'd watch it. The characters were likable, the dialogue was great, and it was just a really charming thing to watch. The world-saving is where things get a little...fuzzy. While the animation and art design were stunning, it all felt rather drawn-out. It seemed like it should have ended around the King Kazma fight, and the decision to have the climax hinge on a card game and then on math problems instead of these fantastic action scenes just seems like a step down. The Power of Friendship/Family stuff at least made sense within context, but that doesn't really stop it from seeming a little hokey. Wabisuke being the inventor and some of the family members showing up with stuff like a supercomputer or some big-ass army vehicle were hard pills to swallow, too. I think my real problem, however, was that Natsuki disappeared for like half the movie until she popped back into existence for the climax, so the romance never felt authentic. None of this really stops the movie from being entertaining, and I'd probably watch it again, but it could definitely use some work.
Akira
Evangelion 2.22
Summer Wars
Evangelion 1.11
I really liked the family atmosphere of Summer Wars; if they made a movie dedicated entirely to that, I'd watch it. The characters were likable, the dialogue was great, and it was just a really charming thing to watch. The world-saving is where things get a little...fuzzy. While the animation and art design were stunning, it all felt rather drawn-out. It seemed like it should have ended around the King Kazma fight, and the decision to have the climax hinge on a card game and then on math problems instead of these fantastic action scenes just seems like a step down. The Power of Friendship/Family stuff at least made sense within context, but that doesn't really stop it from seeming a little hokey. Wabisuke being the inventor and some of the family members showing up with stuff like a supercomputer or some big-ass army vehicle were hard pills to swallow, too. I think my real problem, however, was that Natsuki disappeared for like half the movie until she popped back into existence for the climax, so the romance never felt authentic. None of this really stops the movie from being entertaining, and I'd probably watch it again, but it could definitely use some work.