Of which this is a rather non-representative excerpt.
I'm hard pressed to think of any show I have felt so guilty about enjoying.
The fact that I'm enjoying it a great deal only adds to my nagging guilt.
However, I'm able to somewhat assuage my conscience as I am now pretty sure that this show is not actually pr0n. I base this assessment on the fact that I don't think the audience is supposed to stand up and cheer while watching pr0n.
Posted by: Mauser at Mon Mar 24 04:30:49 2014 (TJ7ih)
2
Eh, Whedon would probably hate it with the fire of a thousand suns, Wesleyan doctrinaire second-wave "feminist" that he is. The cheesecake is kind of up-front. But I wouldn't call it porn - it's no dodgier than anything in Utena, for instance, which is pretty much the gold standard for feminist anime texts.
I tend to think of Kill la Kill as heavily Go Nagai-influenced - the Trigger people worked on Re: Cutie Honey and you'd have to be blind not to see the Nagai influence on Gurren Lagann, although it's no-where near as crazed over-the-top Nagai-batshit as Kill la Kill has been. More third-wave feminist than you'd expect from Japanese creators, almost Be Papas in sensibility, but as far as I can tell, there's no direct staff overlap. Enokido's been all over the industry in the twenty years since Utena, including a stint with the Trigger creative people on Diebuster, though, so who knows?
Posted by: Mitch H. at Mon Mar 24 10:50:38 2014 (jwKxK)
Log Horizon has been fairly surprising all along and its ending was more so. It is not at all the sort of climax one would expect from a fantasy adventure show that has been steadily escalating, being instead something of a denouement to the epic tale that was the first 22 episodes.
This series of character vignettes is the final installment of the three episode cour that began with the cake episode (which can now be seen in a completely different light).The various guilds are having a festival to celebrate their victory as well as the treaties of friendship with the Free Cities of Estal. However, what seemed like little background annoyances the characters navigated in the cake episode turn out to be part of an escalating pattern of disruptions, with a real risk of blowing up everything they've worked for.
Instead of a climactic hack and slash battle, the situation is resolved
by Shiroe, Crusty and Minori using their skills and wits and diffusing the
situation without major incident.
There's also a brief conversation with the first real villain we've seen since they escaped that Demikas bastard in Suskino, and she is a piece of work. Exhibiting a venal but extremely dangerous sort of evil, it seems that she is what is behind the weirdness in MInami and the disruptions of the festival. It looks like she will be a major antagonist moving forward.
(UPDATE: OH! She was the "bard" telling the alarmingly accurate story to the children in the castle in Estal.)
There are quite a few major revelations not the least of which is that there will definitely be a season two in the fall.
This has been a very good series and I highly recommend it. As an added bonus, it has remained quite kid friendly and as I said in an earlier post, if I had kids this is the sort of show I'd be wanting them to watch.
It's a show about a bunch of decent people who display great courage, ethics, hope and even a decent sense of civics. It portrays a world where
intelligence is admirable, ones principles are important and experience
(and study habits) really do matter.
It's also been fun.
The fall season is going to have at least one show to look forward to. more...
1
Bah. Those aren't even Space Marine sized, let alone Vlad Tzepesci sized.
It is a pretty great show, though. Had a lot in common with Maoyuu - stories of enormously powerful people trying to change the world through progress, who could just say "screw negotiation, I'm killing everyone else here" but for whom resorting to that is a losing solution. That said, much higher production values and a good set of characters.
Was expecting a more MMO-oriented solution to the merchant thing, though. "Five hundred tons, huh? Hm... how many magic bags we got here? Eighty? Ninety? That'll manage..." ;p
Also, Akatsuki moe.
Posted by: Avatar_exADV at Sun Mar 23 15:03:42 2014 (IopVv)
2
The reason why it's kid friendly is the location it's being broadcast, NHK. The adaptation streamlines some of the less tidy bits from the light novel. Defeated monsters don't just drop coins and loot, you have to literally skin and harvest the parts. The fight description is also a wee bit more graphic, for example, Shiroe actually decapitating Demikas to get the point across in that fight for the rest of the bad guys there.
What I'm most surprised at is how fast the adaptation come into place. The author of the light novel was having lunch with his agent when the agent mentioned that NHK was interested in adapting the novels into a Friday afternoon show. He approved and though that the novel was a wee bit odd choice for NHK (to be sure, this show does teaches you the working of Capitalism and Governance rather well, so they do have the education bit down). 8 months later, the first episode aired.
Posted by: BigFire at Fri May 2 08:47:11 2014 (9QOKK)
..however, the first one can be yours for $34.95 whereas the second can't actually be purchased as such and certainly requires considerable social skills, a sense of humor, good looks, similar interests, compatible belief systems, patience, integrity, discipline and a great deal of personal responsibility.
The choice is obvious...in part because we have no idea who the awesome cosplayer is and wouldn't ruin her life by posting contact info if we did.
Well Then...
I guess this show does have potential.
They had me with Otakulypse Girl..the Antikythera mechanism was just glorious overkill.
I've heard good things about Love Chunibyo and Other Delusions for some time. It's streaming on Crunchyroll now and looks to be both cute and demented.
1
First season was very enjoyable. Second... I've watched about every other episode; I almost wonder if they're tag-teaming writers? I think you'll like it, though.
Posted by: Clayton Barnett at Sat Mar 15 10:52:18 2014 (b4Q61)
2
I agree, the first season was a nice bit of fun. The only problem is it resolved the issue for the most part and they had to resurrect a fair amount of the problem for the second season to work. Certainly not unheard of in these series.
The other thing is the second season is somewhat more episodic and has less of an over all plot. Another character is added who is going through a bit of the same problem the main female character went through the first season.
All in all it is a pleasant show with some fun "battles" fought in fantasyville. The sleep episode is a particular joy.
Definitely watch the first season before the second.
Posted by: topmaker at Sat Mar 15 18:09:58 2014 (2yZsg)
A Question for My Readers
The erudite humor, subtle social commentary and deep philosophizing of Space Dandy are expertly weaved via its multi-layered storytelling into a tapestry brilliantly designed to stimulate the intellect of the most sophisticated viewers while still conveying (with somewhat less success) entertainment on the squalid, unimaginative and vulgar level of storytelling accessible to the gauche masses.
Regrettably, as you may have gleaned from my previous post, my artistic appreciation is such that I'm really only comprehending the last part.
Hence my question.
Is there anyone here who gets the first part?
2
Sorry, I haven't watched any of it past the first 15 minutes because I don't do unfunny comedies.
Posted by: Wonderduck at Tue Mar 11 20:39:38 2014 (VhbIQ)
3
I didn't like the first 3 episodes, but I heard it gets better after the animation hole around ep.7.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Tue Mar 11 21:34:38 2014 (RqRa5)
4
I thought the first episode had a "feeble glint of promise", and with the ED song promising to throw out any hint of continuity, they could do a plausible reset each episode. After that, the only one I honestly liked was 5; I have 8, but felt no urge to watch it after 7.
-j
Posted by: J Greely at Wed Mar 12 01:15:19 2014 (+cEg2)
5
There are far less boobies than originally promised. I think it fails on level 2 as well.
Posted by: Mauser at Wed Mar 12 15:19:03 2014 (TJ7ih)
Saturday Morning Cakefight
Saturday mornings...
In my youth this meant sitting down with grotesquely unhealthy cereal and watching Saturday morning cartoons, which was the programming block for kids back in the days when there were only 3 TV networks. These were almost always billed as exciting adventure shows. However, due to a malevolent confluence of progressive hysteria, lawyers and network departments of standards and practices, theses shows were almost uniformly a profound disappointment. While kids everywhere else in the world got to watch various iterations of Grendaizer, we poor American children were being tormented by The Funky Phantom, Devlin and Jabberjaw.
This morning, I decided to have revenge upon the programing directors who ruined my childhood. I got up, pulled a Go-Cup of Fruit Loops out of the hurricane box, sat down in front of the computer and went to Crunchyroll which airs new episodes of Log Horizon at 07:30 on Saturdays. I just thought it would be amusing to go through those motions of yesteryear but actually see something really good.
Just like they had with Clue Club, the gum-numbing dregs of the Fruit Loops served to exquisitely accentuate the disappointment.
Heretofore, every single episode, of Log Horizon has not only been good, its been better than the last. This episode continues the shows habit of surprising its audience by abruptly reversing that self improvement trend.
No...no actually, this was pretty much the exact opposite of that.
In fairness, part of the problem here is that previous episodes have set a rather high bar.
In the last episode, the plot had taken yet another intriguing turn. With only four episodes to go, many of us were looking forward to find out just what had gone down in Minami....
....so naturally, we got middle school soap opera and cake.
Yes boys if you get to level 90 in W.O.W. you too can have an adoring underage harem.
It seems that Minori is deeply in love with Shiroe.
Just a reminder, she's 13.
This puts her in direct competition with Akatsuki...which only serves to remind us that Akatsuki really doesn't look 25...which may be part of the reason that Shiroe has been so oblivious to her pining.
That and he's been dismissing her somewhat off-putting 'loyal minion' antics as just roleplaying in the game setting.
In any event there is a fierce cake feeding duel...
...and the public service educational message of today's Saturday morning cartoon, is that cakes...like Fruit Loops...are bad for you.
It was made plain after much high calorie drama and numerous misunderstandings that Minori is not in the running for her mentor's afections. That wacky hijinks are required to inform a 13 year old that a 24 year old is not actually her soul-mate probably says something dreadful about the times we live in.
Of course she seems to still be carrying a torch....
Shiroe also seems to be avoiding any signs of exhibiting even the tentative beginnings of a hint of a clue regards Akatsuki's feelings...and this after she gats the courage to be quite obvious about it....so nothing is actually moved forward by this episode.
Now, I'm not really likening this episode to...the execrable squalor that was The Funky Phantom...
"Good God I should hope not!"
This story wasn't actually bad, mind you. It was even kind of cute.
However, it was just a complete non-sequitur of an episode that seemed to belong in some other show.
There are only three episodes left, so I'm wondering (now with some trepidation) about how they're going to wrap this generally excellent series up.
I'll be watching next weeks installment with a lot of interest.
...but without the Fruit Loops.
Some people noted that the whole cake story seems to be an apology for not doing more with Akatsuki during the light novels. But apparently there's also a faction who thinks it's wildly funny. Um. Anyway, they left out the stupidest part, which is a restaurant staff thinking that Shiroe is a pedophile and doing nothing about it except leaving offensive messages in the decoration of the cakes. (What??)
Having people think Shiroe is a suspicious character can be done better, and I don't know why it wasn't. I guess because the writer likes Shiroe and can't bring himself to write plausibly suspicious gamers.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at Tue Mar 4 15:01:59 2014 (nh8FR)
3
Hmm.
It was a cute enough episode
One of the things that I'd LIKED about the show is the perfectly reasonable suspicion of Shiroe.
I was thinking after the episode before this that his somewhat heavyhanded machinations were starting to backfire, because people don't react well to being manipulated. I'm guessing now that that is not the case.
Shiroe has a totalitarian streak that's not really in keeping with the organization, let alone the attitudes of the round table. Exploring that would have been nice. One of the things that I've liked about the show is that after the first
few episodes it has focused more on the other characters like Minori's
team and that business with Lanessia and Crusty...which is awesome. I know nothing of the LNs but the show is doing a good job of conveying the idea that the Princess is rather more savvy than she lets on.
The smile when she "fainted" after basically saving the world is priceless...
The ensemble cast is actually working much better than these things usually do, in part because the cast is pretty intelligent.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Tue Mar 4 18:59:23 2014 (DnAJl)
A Four Ring Circus of WIN Log Horizon has been discussed here before.
Since then it has continued to surpass expectations despite its unspectacular animation and dubious concept. The show has all the tropes one would expect from a fantasy adventure series, plus a great many in-jokes and references to online RPGs, however it uses them in very clever ways and is surprisingly intelligent.
21 episides in they still have 5 episodes to wreck it, but I'm going out on a limb recomending this one strongly. I started to do a regular review but this is a show spoilers will completely spoil, so here is a deliberately vague overview of what sorts of characters are involved in the three to four distinct but interlocking plots that stem from a mishap with a Massively Muliplayer Online Virtual Reality Role Playing Game that traps thousands of players in the game with no way to log out.
In Ring One:
We have our designated hero. He's overall a decent guy and goes to great lengths to do the right thing. He's not a frontline action hero however, and he tends to gets by on smarts, using game theory as well as working feverishly to develop political/interpersonal skills he'd never really had to (nor wanted to) pursue until just recently.
His lack of patience for such things causes him to resort to downright Machiavellian, even totalitarian methods to achieve his fairly noble ends....methods which seem to be coming back to haunt him.
We have a thoroughly conventional would-be love interest/side-kick. Well, not quite: She's so utterly smitten and so thoroughly into the "serving her noble master" roleplay that she's a little creepy and stalky. However she's really good at her job (which involves kicking ass, and cutting throats). She's also quite smart and her perceptiveness and different perspective on things is actually crucial to everyone's survival.
Also: It's always nice to find a DFC' in anime who is non-neurotic, utterly awesome and at ease with themselves.
There is one annoying, token lunkhead: He may have Tourettes as he frequently makes sexist comments despite the fact that they immediately result in great pain and temporary physical disability (see above).
We have an older gentleman who is intellectually curious enough to, on a lark, try something completely new (and apparently pointless) just to see what will happen. In the process, he changes the world.
In a complete break with convention, the old guy is not a perv and in fact prides himself in being a gentleman...in the very best sense of the word. He's an all round cool cat, whose urbane, almost aristocratic mannerisms belie an exemplary ethical compass plus great moral and physical courage.
In Ring Two:
We've got five teenagers who find a mixture of idealism, inexperience and bravado has subsequently landed them in a dire situation, far from help with the fate of thousands on their shoulders. Remarkably, all four young adults are striving to actually be adults...how's that for novel? Of course, as they're young, they're learning and everything they punch at is well above their weight. This is an action flick so everything can punch back....hard
The group includes a crackerjack young lady who, due to her levelheadedness and self discipline becomes their leader via acclaim. She's learning as she goes about the ins and outs of command and leadership, and doing everything she can to improve herself so that she can better keep her outmatched little party alive.
Her brother is a good man and physically brave, but, he's terribly inexperienced and it often seems that he has more balls than sense. He is however, indomitable in his determination and can think on his feet.
There is also a girl who has been through a special hell recently and is still somewhat traumatized from the experience. She's striving to confront her demons, improve herself and save her friends...all the while coming to terms with the sheer gravity of what she's lost.
An idealistic but grounded young woman who has sufficient grasp of her own limitations that she can use her limited talents to surprising effect. Her modesty belies her remarkable effectiveness in combat which acts as a nice foil to her polar opposite in the group...
...A dapper young man of 19 years who seems to be trying to somehow weaponize the Dunning-Kruger Effect. His boastfulness seems to be in direct proportion to his failings, of which there are many...physical courage, it should be noted, is not amongst them.
In Ring Three:
"Flyover Country" is actually much more important to the well being of us all than many who live in certain hip cities want to acknowledge.
I swear this is on topic.
The greatest test of ones character is when one finds that doing what is right requires one to make a sacrifice or take a great risk while simply walking away carries no negative judgement or cost.
Also in this ring: You magnificent bastard! You found a keeper!
In Ring Four:
There are also bout 20 different quirky supporting characters involved in a slice of life show about small businesses and local politics...oh and steam engineering and a war. Most of them are interesting enough and sufficiently fleshed out that the fanfic practically writes itself*.
**************************
Log Horizon has been very entertaining so far and frankly if I had kids this is the sort of show I'd be wanting them to watch. It's a show about courage, ethics, hope and even civics, where intelligence and thinking things through is important, experience matters because life lessons are hard earned and most of the protagonists are pretty decent people. It's also a surprisingly lacking in the gratuitous fan service department..one epic miniskirt notwithstanding.
Be advised though that the OP is an obnoxious, weaponized earworm.
Those who've been watching it, have at it in the comments. I'm curious what other people think.
Update: A few theories on what is actually going on
It's possible that the 'Adventurers' are not actually the players, but copies of players minds that were made when the update went live. The players may may actually be dead due to having their brains fried in the process. I base this on the fact that no-one has keeled over dead yet from their IRL selves starving. Of course we don't know WHAT is going on in the real world, and the few flashbacks to their gaming setups don't show any VR headsets or really any kit that would look out of place today, so it may be that the actual mechanics of the mishap are never going to be a plot point.
Akatzuki's changing her Avatar does beg the obvious question...how many of these comely wenchess are actually creepy old dudes? 80% or more? My money's on Henrietta being one.
The implications of the contract with Rudy are deeply problematic.
Spoiler tags here are as follows: [-S-P-O-I-L-E-R-] [/S-P-O-I-L-E-R-]
...but lower case and without any of the dashes
* As opposed to that other show where Tite Kubo got bogged down writing his own fanfic.
I kinda like the theory where some of the People of the Land are possessing the gamers' original bodies. Or the Knights and PotL with high classes. Or wizards. Or gods. Or goblins. Goblins and demihumans would be messy but cool.
Of course, now that we have an idea where the Knights went, this isn't quite as viable a theory.
I suppose that we could go with the adventurers' original bodies becoming golems, and sort of going about their business without much thought. (Cue satirical indictment of routine modern life.)
I also like the idea that this really is a matter of high-tech magic (or magic-like tech, or divine magic), and that the magic just got powerful enough to actually transport people's minds and spirits, and maybe their bodies too. In that case, I expect that the adventurers' original bodies are stockpiled somewhere, being magically sustained.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at Wed Feb 26 14:41:40 2014 (nh8FR)
2
Umm..Wait...
We KNOW were the Knights went? What episode was that in?
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Wed Feb 26 20:41:55 2014 (DnAJl)
3
"People who read spoilers about the manga know what's up with the Knights".
-j
Posted by: J Greely at Thu Feb 27 01:45:04 2014 (+cEg2)
It was a throwaway line in the most recent episode, unless I'm dreaming. Of course, I was watching pretty early in the morning on Saturday, so it's possible that I was! (Also, it's possible that their info was wrong.)
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at Fri Feb 28 14:29:29 2014 (nh8FR)
Director Carl Rinch gives the classic tale of Bushido a supernatural twist. The film boasts an all star cast of Japanese A-listers including Hiroyuki Sanada, Ko Shibasaki, Tadanobu Asano, Min Tanaka and Jin Akashini. They are joined by Keneau Reeves portraying a magical honkey who teaches our heroes an important lesson in respect and tolerance.
Despite that...last bit, this is not a bad film. It is rather strange though.
A brief narration gives a decent overview of the political situation in 18th century Japan and the fact that this film is based on a historical event...shortly before introducing the audience to some really impressive supernatural weirdness. This is a Japan where the Tengu and other Yokai are real and can be quite dangerous. Thanks in part to the supernatural element, Reeves's character is not entirely egregious and his incongruous presence actually serves to establish the decency of the Lord Asano character ( Min Tanaka). In spite of a somewhat dubious romantic subplot between him and Ko Shibasaki, Reeves is, at best a deutoragonist and, in fact Hirouki Sanada as Oishi emerges in his historical role as the lead. This is actually a fairly straightforward retelling of the story....Well....aside from a much grander scale, the occasional supernatural horror, and Pirates of the Caribbean homages. This is all done with an astonishing amount of what appears to be...sincerity.
47 Ronin is a pretty odd film, but if one HAD to somehow work Keneau Reeves into this story, this is about as respectful to the source material as one could hope for. If one wanted to remake this film without the supernatural elements...well, there's no point in that because Hiroshi Inegaki nailed it in 1962. As it is, this is a pretty good popcorn flick that, surprisingly, does not cop out on the point of the story. It's even clever at times with a few moments of 'fridge brilliance'
In a flashback at the beginning of the film Reeve's character (as a child) escaped from a group of Tengu who had raised him (he was abandoned in the forest due to his being of mixed race) At one point he confesses this to Oishi...stating that he left because while the group that raised were always kind to him, they had a nihilistic philosophy and considered human life only a path to suffering and death..a path they aim to end. A bit later , when Reeves is functioning as the heroes expert on things supernatural. we encounter the monstrous & secretive tribe of Yokai who raised him...They're supernatural ....Buddhist monks...The implication seems to be that Reeve's character had simply missed an important point regards the 4 noble truths.
*************
Given that, aside from the aforementioned group, the Tengu and their human associates as seen are pretty dangerous and malevolent, there is a perfectly rational reason why Oishi does not initially trust Reeves character. This sets in motion the tragedy of the first part of the film, which transpires because Oishi initially does not heed Reeves warning.
I admit I went into this with low expectations, but, while no great work of art, it is a surprisingly solid film.
1
And since, in the 18th and 19th century, long-beaked tengu were strongly associated with big-nosed American and European guys as well as with teaching swordsmanship and other skills and knowledge....
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at Sat Feb 15 18:38:45 2014 (cvXSV)
Oh Good. They Weren't Just Trolling Us With That Ending.RWBY will resume in July.
There will be a premire at RTX (July 4-6) and it will be released online shortly after that.
Volume 2 will reportedly be 12 episodes of around 12 minutes which is a good thing as the wildly varying 4-15 minute length last season was non-conducive to pacing. Though resuming after an 8 month hiatus, this second volume is apparently considered to be the second half of season one.
For all this show's quirks, I find myself looking forward to this. They're doing some interesting things with the nigh nonexistent budget I am genuinely curious where it will go from here.
From episode 7 of Log Horizon, which, in addition to the definition, provides a more in depth examination of the of financial, logistical and personnel requirements for the successful execution of such an endeavor and touches on the vital importance of being able to identify and get in on the ground floor of promising business opportunities. The potential pitfalls of trade secret infringement are touched upon as well, but are not yet being examined to any great degree.
2
I don't even try to keep up with Touhou anymore. Every game that Zun makes adds a whole new cast of characters, and it's gotten to the point that keeping up with the AKB variant casts would be easier.
Posted by: Avatar_exADV at Tue Jan 21 03:23:08 2014 (IopVv)
Super Robot Girls-ZMazinger-Z, Great Mazinger, and UFO Robot Grendaizer are no longer particularly well known in the USA but the trilogy was the groundbreaking triumvirate of the super-robot genre. The three series were hugely influential. Grendaizer, in particular, the last and best of the series, was, under the name Golderack, a phenomenal hit in Europe and Canada.
Now 42 years later, they've remade all 3!
As the world has gone mad and nothing is sacred, they've remade the trilogy as a magical girl show.
Meet our Villains, Antagonists, audience identification characters. These young ladies work for the temp agency from hell....
....which is kind of a sketchy outfit and is involved in some dubious activities...
...like supervillany.
But the girls got all kinds of cybernetic implants out of the deal and they do seem to enjoy their work...
...until they don't.
Morale at their firm is an ongoing struggle.
You see...these are the designated "heroes"
"...and mercy is a dish we don't serve."
As one might guess from their badass longcoats of delinquency, they are unconcerned with proportionality (or collateral damage for that matter) and quite massively outmatch the villains. Based on three of the most beloved Super Robots of all time the heroes...are....
...ummm...
...well...
They are present.
The villains are kind of amusing though.
One format note: I was under the impression that the episode length was
10 minutes, but it seems to be around 26 minutes with three distinct
sketches in each episode.
This show is all over the place. Quite a few of the gags are references to the old shows so I'm not sure how much of the humor actually gets through to those who are unfamiliar with them. Do note that although it looks for a time like it might be kid friendly, it suddenly and jarringly isn't. The "beach" sketch went a tad
overboard with the fan service (and we here at Brickmuppet Blog are usually quite appreciative of such things).
Overall however, despite a great deal of structural stupidity, I found it to be a cute, funny show.
OP aside, the music is pretty good, with the BGM being based on the stirring BGMs of the source materials and the show has a manic enthusiasm that is engaging. Additionally, it seems they didn't skimp on the voice actors, having gotten a whole bunch of top tier talent to do bit parts.If the credits are any indication we'll be seeing Mecha Musume parodies of several of the unrelated Toei Super Robots, which I find myself looking forward to.
Super Robot Girls-Z is drunkenly riding a unicycle of exuberance across a tightrope of nostalgia while juggling vulgarity and hilarity over a roaring cataract of idiocy. It may not succeed, but even if it doesn't it will probably be amusing to watch until it falls.
Kill La Kill Continues to Surprise
....in part by the very act of continuing. I hadn't read up on the show and expected episode 13 to be a battle royale wrapping everything up.
However, #13 is not the last episode. Instead there was plot development, introspection and almost no softcore pr0n mixed in with the usual manic energy. With one exception, they are all pretty surprising....
1
Oh, I didn't realize it was still going. she found out who did her Dad, and it was actually kinda anti-climactic. But on the other hand, the whole Nudists sub-plot isn't over.
Posted by: Mauser at Fri Jan 10 06:33:08 2014 (TJ7ih)
While I was initially impressed with its characterizations and how well this show handled its ridiculous fanboy affirmation premise, after the unmitigated disaster that was episode 5, I had thrown in the towel. However, a couple of weeks later, I did watch the next episode and it was substantially better, much more in keeping with the tone of the earlier episodes. In it, our hero, who follows sports manga but not actual sports decided that the best way to defuse the growing racial and ethnic tensions between the elves and the dwarves in his class was to have them have a soccer tournament against each other...It goes about as well as one would expect.
After that, the show continued its uneven shuffle towards the end, never quite gelling but every episode had at least some intriguing or at least amusing tangents.
For a show that is supposed to revolve around evangelizing fandom, it can be pretty straightforward in its exploration of that cultures pathologies and dysfunctions.
This, of course, is the gambit of a faction in the Japanese government.. Introduce Akiba culture to rot Eldant's society from within, thereby increasing internal strife, destroying their societies traditional values and sowing discord, which will allow exploitation of the regions rich mineral resources. Generating a literate cadre of consumers for Japanese visual culture is icing on the cake...but lucrative icing indeed. They'll be paying for their manga in Eldant currency....gold and silver coins. Shinichi was chosen not for his knowledge of trivia, but because he can be disposed of without notice.
The show takes a rather different tack in the last two episodes and while it had been telegraphed for quite a while it still feels rather jarring. The ending only partially resolves the various plot threads but I found it more satisfying than it normally would be due to the fact that there was some genuine character development in a couple of characters over the course of the series.
Wildly uneven, Outbreak Company is never great, and the occasional idiocy of the protagonists can be infuriating, but it is often cute, funny and even interesting. It seems to be set up for a second season, and in the unlikely event that transpires, I'll probably at least give it a try.
This "Space Dandy" Thing Looks Like it Could be Offensive
Gloriously so.
More importantly it seems to have considerable potential to be fun...and possibly even good.
The ad is RETRO-RIFFIC...
...beyond that, here is not much to go on, other than reports that the show concerns a bounty hunter in the far future. However, Soul Eater, Full Metal Alchemist, Cowboy Beebop and Samurai Champloo...is a pretty impressive pedigree.
It certainly looks to be one to watch. It's premiering on Toonami this Saturday, January 4th
1
The promo has the exact opposite affect on me. The fact that I enjoyed most of the previous shows mentioned is the only reason I am even going to give this a shot. If all I had to go on was the promo you embedded, I would actually make an effort to avoid accidentally tuning in...
Posted by: Siergen at Mon Dec 30 20:41:13 2013 (c2+vA)
2
If this is going to have a simultaneous dub release, I wonder if anyone is going to bother fansubbing it.
Posted by: Mauser at Mon Dec 30 23:24:52 2013 (TJ7ih)
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Tue Dec 31 01:44:06 2013 (DnAJl)
4
I'll give it a shot, even if only because it's a change from most of what's made these days. God knows I have little interest in the ninth reboot of Pretty Cure.
I'm mostly worried that it will merely be good, fall short of people's high expectations, and get trashed in the reviews, and we'll have another five years of the same old blah.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Tue Dec 31 01:49:27 2013 (PiXy!)
The names he mentions before drinking the regeneration juice - Charley, C'Rizz, Lucy, Tamsin, Molly - are his companions from the Big Finish / BBC Radio audio plays. So it seems those are now tacitly considered canon.
They've done about 300 full-cast plays with Doctors 4 through 8, and if they're canon it makes for some very interesting history.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Sun Nov 24 03:37:54 2013 (PiXy!)
3
Well, given that a lot of the Big Finish people are buddies with a lot of the novel people, and given that a good chunk of the novel people are now running the store (Moffat, Cornell, etc.), it would be logical to make the novels and audio plays canon.
The problem is that frankly, I think a lot of the audio plays and novels have been really pretentious, as well as not keeping the Doctor in character. The first time one of the novels had the Doctor purposefully leaving somebody to die (while making a self-righteous speech about it!), I decided that there was no way you could possibly count the novels as canon. Same thing with the audio plays. And I shouldn't have been surprised, because a good number of the new novel writers and audio writers were people whose fanfic I hadn't liked either.
And so even though I've enjoyed certain of the novels and audio plays, I've found very few of them that actually fit comfortably into the show canon of the past. They do fit into the new Who, but that's because the new Who _is_ the books and audio plays writ large. (What price the Land of Fiction now?)
OTOH, I totally agree with Moffat retconning all that war crime crap out of existence. I have never understood this thirst to make the Doctor go around killing off half the universe in his spare time, and it is a highly appropriate use of story power to get rid of what never should have been written. (And yes, Moffat killed off Sarah Jane in his own novel for the sake of a touching death scene which he knew would be made to unhappen in the next few books, and all because Sarah was his favorite. Fannish love is a weird thing....)
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at Sun Nov 24 16:55:18 2013 (cvXSV)
4
Much to my annoyance, the first torrent I downloaded was mislabelled, containing the Side by side 3D version. Totally useless waste of 2 gigs of download and 12 hours. Yeah, Clearwire seems to have really perfected its Torrent-stomping algorithm. My graph is dead-flat under 50K. Bastards. Now I have to do it all over again.
Posted by: Mauser at Sun Nov 24 18:23:31 2013 (TJ7ih)
5
Yep. For a couple of seconds I wondered if we were seeing through the eyes of an alien with double vision, then I realised I'd got the wrong file.
Fortunately my ISP is pretty good and it only took 45 minutes to get a good copy.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Mon Nov 25 18:18:20 2013 (PiXy!)
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