Category: Reflection

Finally Gundam 00

Posted by - September 13, 08

Marina

Yes, I managed to finish this super-solid first season in light of the coming sequal. Why the hell didn’t I finish it until now? Not sure, but, I’m glad to be amped for next month.

Most of my Gundam 00 episodic impressions can be found at melative, but I will say this about Gundam 00: It surpasses Code Geass by a big margin. Which sort of redeems the Sunrise in my eyes, after R2… but doesn’t G00 predate R2 O.o

My real beef is that, Code Geass S1 was quite a good series, and ended decently, but G00 had a much better first season than Geass. Now, if Sunrise decided to take to R2 form with this second season of G00, I will be _______. Right!

Simply, here are some points G00 has over Geass, which Sunrise could totally FFFF:

  • Composure (G00 was well-oiled, Geass was shredded tranny)
  • Beauty (Space-Beautiful vs ugly persona, or die)
  • Resolve (G00 has a handle to grasp, Geass is excite bike on acid)
  • Identification (I can feel for members of Celestial Being, Geass everyone has un-human decision-making skills)
  • Meaning (Eradicate war vs the world as a chess board)
  • Justification (sound flow to Geass’s inverse variant of logic)
  • Romance (mine as well, even if it is faint… Setsuna and Marina have a deeper relationship than everyone in Geass except Lulu X Suzaku)

Har Har. Whether I exaggerate or not, I still believe Gundam 00 has more wholesome attributes than Geass, and by far a more invigorating watch, without the eyerolls and doggie bag.

The Colour of Time

Posted by - July 27, 08

I took Mike’s order suggestion and found myself immersed in The Girl Who Lept Through Time (時をかける少女) this evening. It was an excellent choice for the moment and well worth the time; I’m beyond content.

The mood and tone were similar to Dennou Coil, from my pov, but with better “accessibility.” The basis reminiscent of the Korea film, Il Mare, though I enjoyed this much more and felt a greater emotional presence. Anyway, isn’t time a funny thing?

Ryan A

[reflection]

Over Drive :: just quit now

Posted by - July 26, 08

I recently finished this 2007 Spring series [as reflected], and though I found it far from spectacular, it has a nice shine.

Yuki

Fukuzawa Yuki, is just that. She is a strange, intriguing character, to me at least, because she is quite typical, but at times she gives that feeling of development, or an urge for development. On top of that, Yuki’s random antagonistic moments are questionable as enjoyment, but were a fine source of complexity + added interest. What the hell was she always so spiced about anyway?

There wasn’t enough development for Yuki [or megane Asahi] in the series. Most of the focus was spent on the local road race, but I have a hunch that better depth lies in the manga. Consequently, I purchased the next 4-5 volumes of the manga (v6+). Japanese, but scanlation isn’t looking peachy at the moment.

Recommending this is useless, but if one were to attempt a viewing, I would recommend using the fast-forward control often during episodes 19-22. These 4 episodes were approx. 1 episode of material, stretched extremely thin via flashbacks and scenes from earlier episodes (overuse is bad). In short, the series would have been better around 22 episodes, or possibly 50 if the production quality was better, which would have given character development more time to solidify.

Ryan A

Well It’s a Start

Posted by - April 21, 08

yum

This is the first of my “weekly” posts, which are mostly about status; what was good last week and what am I looking forward to in the next 7 days.

Review

Looking back at my reflections for the week, I enjoyed. I think there is a good showing for Spring, despite appearing unattractive at first [and to many]. The shoujo feels naice, a little wobble in S.A, but the experience for newly premiered series (KKN, LibWars, 20 Faces) was intriguing?….

The Skinny

  • Library Wars in two strong episodes, great comedy, budding romance.
  • Kyouran Kazoku Nikki is ballistic, but I’m still skeptical in proceeding (as with 20 Faces).
  • xxxHOLiC Kei finished it’s first arc nicely, drenched in the tears of Zashiki Warashi, and an eyeball.
  • Nabari no Ou really begins to roll, with a cool, ashounen (like atypical) vibe and interesting characters. Killer e03!

Heroine Sampling

LW
VK
SA
NnO
KKN
xxx

Whoops, there’s a Yuuko sticking out ~~

Forecast

I need my shoujo! The slice-of-life flow of S.A is getting to me, and YUH, I *heart* vampires+goth, and can’t wait to see more fighting over books. I expect a decent showing this week, but it’s early Spring, and I’m on edge only for Nabari no Ou after killer ep03. Perhaps if I was watching Kurenai, which appears that it could go Black Lagoon at any moment while feeling like hearty slice-of-life and solid value, I would be urging for the next episode, but I’m being indecisive.

In any case, I feel good things coming (and no it doesn’t have the slightest relation to spankings).

Ryan A

Real Girls

Posted by - April 16, 08

Lars and Bianca

Yesterday, I spent the evening watching a movie with a couple family members. Lars and the Real Girl (imdb), reminded me [in premise] much of the debated escapist reality which general viewers, otaku, hikikomori, and NEET create in stimulation to mixing anime, manga, and life.

We have a presumed adult male who has a delusion about Bianca, a “Real Doll”. This entirely rang “Japan”, since we have all seen these love toys abundant on Mr. Choo’s and other sites. Unfortunately or not, the plot line soon sharply turns from any assumed building which had been taken place. Lars, though seemingly a hikikomori (but lacking the Japanese interest), is not, and his delusion about Bianca, is far from the notions one might get of another purchasing such a doll (pleasurezorz).

The film yields awkward, funny, and compelling moments, but it really makes these issues of escapist reality among anime fans seem quite feeble. It is an interesting watch that many could relate to, but not necessarily identify with, and I do recommend a viewing if one has the time and chance, as it is not entirely unrelated to the world of anime and manga.

Ryan A

In a related note, Ryan Gosling, the main actor, has appeared in also in The Notebook and Half Nelson. I recommend both, especial for HN’s slice-of-life appeal, and The Notebook’s heartwarming story.

true tears :: Enforce the Discipline

Posted by - March 29, 08

It will be soon, the last aired episode of true tears, I will experience it… and end this “crunch marathon“. Basically, I found the series wonderful, for a number of reasons, but not perfect personally (what is these days).

Nature and Animation

These are perhaps the most noticeable attributes of true tears. The nature of the series begins as simple, un-fantastic life; it is a normal story, and continues to be so. One implication of this is that it is not relying on anything other than reality to get the message across; normal slice-of-life. Not every series can accomplish such a story well, but in trade of solid, realistic storytelling, the story lacks some dynamics, though the characters make up for variation. Of course, if the experience holds interest+intrigue, the dynamics are secondary.

The nature may be semi-bland, but true tears came with excellent animation for a seasonal production. I was entirely astonished at the 720p, which seemed to bring shining sequences every episode (see here), as well as fashionable character design. From the ANN page, P.A. Works has had some experience with notable series (recently Darker than Black), so I would say this is a great solo result. (It would be wise to look forward to more of their stuff.)

Execution and Character Development

If I were to choose the brilliance of true tears, it would among these particulars. Regular story, regular characters, but the presentation, the ordering of details, the timing… bravo! Really, everything in it’s right place. These writers had a great vision, and the harem result doesn’t matter after that; there has be good reasoning behind whatever the final may hold.

With notable execution, it is inevitable that the series had good characterization (light, moderate depth, and good flow). I believe I most enjoyed Aiko/Ai, simply for her ‘S’ appeal the progressive picture she came to be. The other two girls were pleasant. I didn’t latch to either of them, but their developments were awesome. Noe was a kaweirdo, and progresses as a weirdo that is cute, while Hiromi started as this coldish girl and became a colourful, tear-shedding beauty [with a slightly intimidating defensive side]. It’s great.

I shouldn’t pass off Noe as such a weirdo, she is perhaps the most intriguing character of the circle. Her expressions, ideas, and statements open a window usually seen in KyotoKey projects, but she dances worldly meaning and symbolism around Shinichirou. Innocent, yet innately mature at times, she was a good focal point for the story (is she the final girl).

Necessary Reduction

I did enjoy the moments of moe and little bits of fluff, but the previous points are worthy of the experience. Though, my personal key flaw, was lack of connection, I did not feel strongly compelled for the overall result (heart connection).

How can it have such an amazing aura,
yet lack the essence of connection?

This may have to do with story dynamics (compare to H+C), but I just didn’t FEEL that definitive TUG (identification). I would imagine it’s not universal, because the story is so very real and understandable, and beautiful, that it should be widely identifiable. I believe the last series which game me a similar feeling was, mmm, Irohanihoheto. And that’s about my only minor gripe.

From here I go…

At this point, I’d like to elaborate on what is learned from this series; from my point of view, it is an enforcement of a discipline. One of the true tears drivers is the notion of dishonesty. It sounds bad, but most of the characters aren’t honest with themselves, by way of action and in emerging circumstances. They aren’t lying to themselves, they know their respective truths and accept, but they have not acted upon the path from the start or announced their feelings; lying is the driver, courage is the solution, but then no story, and no true tears.

My own idea about paths is simple, “weigh properly, the bits of doubt; honor the unwanted path; step forward or do not step at all.” Ai is the clearest example, as she not only stalled her wanted path (Shinichirou), but took a path of doubt which she did not want (Miyokichi). Looking at Hiromi, this is also the case, but misinformation was her stall point, though I think she was reaching her limit of suppression; a love so great, it would explode.

Remarkably, I find the truest character to be Noe, but again, the end girl? It’s possible, acceptable, but we’ll just have to wait and see.

Ryan A

For reference: my definition of “crunch marathon”, is probably better said as a lead-up marathon, where it is timed so that the final episode is released and view shortly after all previous episodes. Yea, it’s made-up.

Proposal Daisakusen

Posted by - February 21, 08

KenZou

When I stumbled upon this drama I was looking for something light and fun, with a good mixture of emotions. Thankfully, the series provided more than I had hoped for. The showing by main characters was very good, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see an anime adaptation; it could work.

The basic premise is that Iwase Ken, well forget it, actually it is explained in the first 5 minutes, and deals with re-living regrets. Due to magical fairy circumstances, Ken gets that chance, and must win back his childhood friend. Sounds so generic, and it truly is, but usually if something is going to rely on smoke and mirrors, it won’t go far with me. Luckily, the premise was not the driving point [nor the finishing point], instead there is an interesting way about storytelling, through moments of Ken’s memory.

So I finished this drama the other night, which took a matter of a few days woven between eat, sleep, and school. It was most definitely worth it, and the writing turned out to be very good; coincidental but appealing. I didn’t cry, but some may, more importantly was the overwhelming feeling of heartbreak and failure; I don’t get those feelings everyday, and even though they are considered “negative”, I gladly welcome them.

Interesting, fulfilling, and highly enjoyable.
More info @d-addicts

Ryan A