I feel pretty lethargic. Not good, I say, but not bad. Really, there isn’t much happening when I check out what’s downloading; I’m sort of oblivious. Here’s what I am keeping track of…
- Bamboo Blade
- Kimikiss
- Shana II
- Shugo Chara!
- Gundam 00
Anything and everything else I’ve barely touched, just not in the mood. This ranges from Ghost Hound to Moyashimon!, but I want to be there. I just haven’t found a good moment for myself to say… Ryan! Enjoy this.
J-media is nice, because I still enjoy it, even though I’m twirling my anime habits around in thin air. Particularly, I’ve found small time for dramas. I’m not converted or such, but there is something about a 40-50 minute X 10-12 episode series when compared with a double-season (~25 episodes) anime, and I’d have to say it is the level of fulfillment.
Lately, the j-dramas I’ve experienced felt meaty. The equivalent amount of time in anime… wait, I’ll just use a metaphor:
If anime were Carmel-san’s BacoTomago thing, it would be 2 eggs and 2 strips of bacon, whereas a drama would be 3 eggs and 2 strips of bacon…. very small difference… it isn’t as definite as saying, bacon and eggs VS the fruit smoothie.
Anyone that eats eggs regularly for breakfast knows, 2 eggs vs 3 eggs is quite a difference; this has something to do with math.
Two eggs can theoretically satisfy two mouths, 3 eggs does the job surely. Thus one mouth should be able to enjoy 1.5 eggs, but because eggs come in shells, let’s go for 2 (rounding is fun). Now, increasing the amount to 3 eggs, when a belly is satisfied with 1.5 eggs… that’s double, 200%, therefore quite a difference.
Eggs are fun…episode to episode, dramas have fulfillment, but overall I still feel anime is better rounded in the end.
Enough about the why. In January, I went through GTO, First Kiss, and Nobuta wo Produce, while starting Kimi wa Petto, Yamada Tarou Monogatari (via TokiDoki), and this evening Proposal Daisakusen.
Of the bunch, Nobuta wo Produce is quite notable. It was fun, with interesting characters. GTO was fun, though a bit older. First Kiss had some relapse and psycho-analysis requirements, but addicting through the first half. Of the three I started, I will probably only finish Proposal Daisakusen; from 2007. The others were good, just I wasn’t feeling them; Yamada Tarou is enjoyable, but the chemistry was so-so, and Kimi wa Petto, I like the manga.
Hmm, well, I feel like I didn’t accomplish much this post, but dramas are a good way to keep the j-flow, since I’m not maxing out my anime entertainment. I may not write about it here, but one drama I am looking forward to watching is Galileo; science-mystery. One drama I probably won’t venture into, but I love the source is Honey and Clover; Garten is blogging that one.
So, yea. party on!
Ryan A
edit: I accidentally published this private, which is strange… so since I was logged in, I couldn’t tell. D:
u shud become a maths teacher. or tutor me in maths at least
i like dramas, but the only one ive seen that i thought had actual substance was 1 litre of tears. if u havent seen that, you probably should. most of the other ones i watch are dry comedies and stuff like that
lol, ; secret: I would like to be a teacher, but I’m not allowed to take the education courses :(.
I have heard of 1 litre of tears, but haven’t taken time to watch it. Yea, generally, I think dramas find it difficult to synthesize emotional depth, run on the power of rabid fan-girls, etc.
GTO struck me with some solid emotion, particularly between Miyabi and Tomoko. Other than that, it’s interaction, comedy or concept that strikes me.
It’s just hard to find stuff that doesn’t seem cheesy and has solid chemistry; slim pickings. There are a handful, which isn’t zero.
Hey.
Actually, I’ve felt that way, but with movies. After seeing Lust, Caution and also Michael Clayton, I’m invited to delve and explore more of them.
Ooo, most of the JP movies I’ve seen were older Kurosawa films. Though, Ima ai ni Yukimasu was probably the most recent I explored.