"I've started watching Attack on Titan again. Watching a giant bite the head off somebody, then pull them apart and eat them is so much less disturbing than watching that poor girl in Watamote humiliate herself. "
Full disclosure: Actual monsters in Attack on Titan are considerably less cute than this .gif implies.
In other news: We can now re-size .gifs in Minx. Wo0t!
This polysyllabically titled show airs on Crunchyroll a week late, so despite my judicious attempt at avoiding spoilers I'd heard considerable chatter about this episode being just wretched and 'worse than the last one'.
Given that the last episode was about our poorly socialized protagonist getting tunnel vision and missing the point of her hobby, I fully expected this episode to be a bit of a downer with Yura's Ahab complex causing issues.
Boy howdy.
One of the overriding themes of this show is sportsmanship. This episode also focuses on the importance of not becoming what one despises and how easy it is to fall into that trap, especially if one feels strongly that one's cause is noble.
The other major point of the show is that the raison d'etre' of a hobby is to enjoy oneself. This is not to say
that winning is not important, but the enjoyment is the goal. If lives are not at stake and what you are doing is unpleasant and wearying without an enjoyable payoff...then one needs to stop doing it or start collecting a paycheck for it.
As expected, Yura drives her team hard to the point of misery, at one point disregarding a fairly severe leg injury incurred by Kirishima. The kicker is that at the last minute Yura fires the winning shot....a split second after being hit.
By the rules this means Yuras winning shot was illegal but it's undetected by anyone except her opponent, the malevolent Haruna.....who smiles knowingly, informs Yura that she now respects her because she'll do anything to win and walks away.
The episode ends a tad ambiguously. Yura has the opportunity to make this right, but she's feeling a profound obligation to her teammates who she ran into the ground to get this victory....what does she do? Well we'll know for sure next week.
Of course most people reading this know that there is only one correct answer, but Yura doesn't. Her backstory is that she's never had friends. She hasn't learned about sportsmanship and she's carrying the shock of the earlier lesson about fighting to the end...for which she is seriously overcompensating.
I expect that the NEXT episode will be the nadir (emotionally...dramatically it might be quite compelling)
This is the antithesis of a shonen manga. Japanese society puts a VERY high value on giving your all and going all out whatever the cost. Shonen manga and sports manga tend to do the same with the former focusing on crushing the villain utterly.
This show, is about remembering to step back, breathe, and keep things in perspective...and how easy it is to fail to do that.
Yura is not an idiot, she's young and ignorant. She's learning, like we all do, as she goes and she's making mistakes. There is actual character development here. I'm still liking this show quite a bit though I think I may actually be the only one now.
So...for those of you who've been watching...any bets on whether or not she just flat out shaves her head this time?
Not Quite a Combo Breaker but.... It's Time for PAINTBALL!
Well after dwelling on dark matters for a bit I was damned happy to see Tuesday roll around because that means StellaWALLOFTEXTc3 is finally up on Crunchyroll.
In this episode we learn that the KGB club is even more co-ed than we thought.
This despite the fact that one of their members today has chosen to be strapping and not trapping.
One of the points that this episode touches on is the importance of having something to fall back on in the event of unlikely contingencies.
"We are SO going to kick Oorai's ass this year!"
"And those witches too!"
Oh...there was one other thing...
Oh my...
The series takes a surprisingly dark turn in the first 45 seconds.
Someone, quite likely a competitor, is playing for keeps. They're using an illegally overpressurised air-gun and start sniping at the girls.
Now Sonora is in the hospital with a concussion and Yura blames herself.
Although the other teamates decide to sit out the much anticipated 24 hour tournament, Yura somewhat rashly decides to sign them up, to honor Sonora with a win.
And the wallflower takes control...
As an aside, I think this is the first episode where Yura hasn't had a vision.
This show continues to completely surprise me.
In addition to a rather unexpected direction, this episode does develop on a couple of things we've seen previously.....
*Yura really is beginning to miss the plot...The point of paintball is to have fun, it is a leisure activity.
*Something BIG went down between Sonora and Haruna in the U.S.A. It's not at all clear WHAT but it seems to be developing into a major plot thread.
The series emphasis on sportsmanship is still very much in evidence. This particular episode touches slightly on the do's and don'ts of leadership as well.
I am really impressed. I have no idea where it is going but I'm increasingly confident I'm going to enjoy finding out.
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Yes regards Yura forgetting the point. That seems to be one of the themes to the show. In this case she also has the added guilt of doing it for a friend.
As for the other thing, most likely she slipped into paintball mode and forgot to take cars into account...ie: she forgot rule#2 'situational awareness'.
Todays lesson kids: General orders 1 and 2 are NOT suggestions.
This episode was not as...I don't know...engaging?... as some of the others but set up a LOT of stuff and it remained very interesting; to me anyway.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Tue Aug 20 21:00:37 2013 (F7DdT)
RWBY is Now on Crunchyroll
There's not much to add except that having watched it again, Crunchyroll can handle the load in the exact same way that that RoosterTeeth's server's can't. (I tried to show it to a friend last night and it was all out of synch). It stays in sych at high rez too.
...but she would. She's in it. By the way, what DOES she see in that guy?
The latest installment of RWBY is only four minutes long. Well acted and nicely paced with even better music than previous episodes it...well it ends after four minutes which SUCKS cause I've gotta wait a whole WEEK to see what happens!
It's a cute show, plus it's always nice to see people who genuinely enjoy their work.
It Strikes Me
...that while this banner does make for admirable honesty on their part, such a high visibility release of this information is potentially counterproductive from a marketing standpoint.
Posted by: Mauser at Thu Aug 15 05:29:10 2013 (TJ7ih)
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Shut-ins with psychiatric issues, either agoraphobia, social anxiety, schizophrenia, or some charming blend thereof. Probably also borderline personality disorder in a lot of cases. Hikikomori is a well-publicized aspect of Japan's ongoing social collapse, in public perception if not necessarily in fact, a large fragment of Japanese youth are going full-ama-no-Iwato, hiding in their family homes.
I haven't heard much about hikikomori recently, dunno if that means that the social panic about it has passed, or that people just got bored by reading about them. I guess they've passed on to worrying about foreign affairs and the new nationalism?
Posted by: Mitch H. at Thu Aug 15 08:36:16 2013 (jwKxK)
The stereotype now also includes them spending pretty much every waking minute online.
Himawari in Vividred Connection is initially presented as a fairly typical hikkikomori. (except that fact that she's a girl, and the stereotype is a young man.)
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By the way, we should be grateful collectively to Japan's Hikkikomori, because a lot of the raws which get posted and eventually subbed for us come from them.
What I Learned this Evening on Crunchyroll
It's the school festival episode of Stella[REDACTED]Club C Cubed and I learned all sorts of stuff today.
The survival club is out of money. They're going to be hard pressed to pay the entry fee to get into a much anticipated '24 hour tournament'. They decide to go for broke and try to raise enough money at the festival.
I learned a new Japanese word.
In Japan a commercial shooting stall with electric target retriever is called a "massine'.
It may SOUND like they're saying 'machine' but it's a brand new and distinct word meaning 'shooting stall with electric target retriever'. I know this because the subtitle-ers spell it that way. Every. Single. Time.
See? They learned something too.
I have serious doubts that 'learning' that has made me any wiser but I learned some other things as well. For those that have seen the episode, here's what I learned... more...
In my defense I am distracted by my pondering of what Extreme Opera is. After seeing Dasichi's skillset, I keep having visions of them running through the forest weilding paintball guns with Daisichi portaying Brunhilde while Sigfried, portrayed by Aiara, shouts "Kill da Waaaabit!.
I am unable to unsee or unhear that.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Tue Aug 13 14:18:37 2013 (F7DdT)
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Maybe you can use the word "massine" in your next Japanese class to impress your instructor with your large vocabulary...
Posted by: Siergen at Tue Aug 13 17:05:30 2013 (Ao4Kw)
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Somewhere on Youtube I saw a clip of what I guess is supposed to be a Japanese game show that involved spraying water on some women who were dressed--if you can call it that--only in toilet paper wrapped around their torsoes, so to be fair to Gainax, it's not as if they're making that up out of whole paper.
Posted by: RickC at Tue Aug 13 18:10:13 2013 (WQ6Vb)
I have a friend who does art. He used to be a professional animator and he's done a bit of small press work in comics. He's been doing art in various capacities for 30 odd years and has a wide range of interests.
I mean anything involving MMD or Poser will get under his skin and if applied for more than a few minutes will send him into a white hot rage rage. It's rather bizarre, its like his IQ drops 35 points and until the offending media is removed all he can say is "Duuhh..I hate dat stufff..." Now this is not a rational response and would seem to be a matter of personal preference and pig-headedness but he recently made an interesting argument when I pointed out that he'd seemed to like The Incredibles.
Well he does like Pixar films...mostly. His argument is that the MMD videos and such aren't actually art because unlike the big studio productions they're just using someone else's creativity. The person doing an MMD video on YouTube in his eyes isn't doing much more than posting a paint by numbers painting and calling it his. The programer has done all the art.
Now, as it happens, I'm tinkering with MMD right now, but I'm not making much progress because, I'm not artistically inclined and doing that on a Mac is clunky. With MMD one is manipulating these wire frame models and even at the most basic level choosing ones choreography. However the facial expressions in particular ARE all built into the program and were put there by the programers as are (I'm told) some basic movements). It's my understanding though, that MMD can be used to produce things like this....
I'm unsure of the provenance of these .gifs (which I nicked from 4-Chan) except that they seem to be from some Touhou fanfic. I understand that one can download Touhou "skins" for MMD wireframes now (fans made those available some years ago) However, even if the creators of this did use off the shelf " paper dolls" for their character designs there is the matter of the choreography and the subtitles which imply writing a script. Of course this is Touhou so it's fanfic anyway. However the potential seems to be there and is certainly present in the professional versions of Poser to apply ones own skins to the products frames. Such additions would require artistic ability (and being 3d would be akin to rendering a sculpture), but the objection of my friend is that those using this medium are using someone else's art.
My feeling is that this is akin to using Legos or perhaps a paintbrush. I'm of the opinion that even MMD can teach aspiring animators about computer animation, choreography and editing, which in the computer age are quite different skills from what they used to be. However, I don't do art, my figure drawing makes Randall Munro* look like Da Vinci so this is most definitely a layman's perspective. I'm really not sure how much ones brush needs to stray outside the numbers before ones effort becomes art.
I'm pretty sure that this piece done with Poser qualifies though
...but at what point on the spectrum between that piece of magic and simply having Lady Hatsune make a leek face it stops being analogous to stickers on ones Trapper Keeper...well I'm not qualified to answer that.
The person doing an MMD video on YouTube in his eyes isn't doing much more than posting a paint by numbers painting and calling it his. The programer has done all the art.
The same way Fender and Gibson did all the art and Mark Knopfler just played notes that were already there.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Fri Aug 9 06:51:17 2013 (PiXy!)
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If you produce fine, handcrafted, heirloom-quality furniture, you probably have a low opinion of Ikea. But for a lot of people, Ikea is the difference between nothing and making do with milk cartons.
Or, if we're going to talk about paintbrushes... I use a Kolinsky sable brush from W&N, because it's a really good brush (quite a bit better than the painter, if I'm going to be honest), and the few extra bucks it costs isn't going to break my bank. It's nice having a brush that can hold a point that well. There are also artificial fiber paintbrushes made for the three-for-a-dollar crowd. There are people who get fantastic results with the former, to be sure - but there are also people who can take the three-for-a-dollar paintbrushes and do amazing things with them, because the tool isn't the talent, and it isn't the vision.
Sure, if you're a professional-level animator, you're not going to like tools that let people bodge together their own animation. Professional sound guys scoffed at software that let you do your own mixes on a home PC... and it turned out that a lot of people were pretty good at mixing without being a "professional" sound guy. Heck, for that matter, I'm sure that plenty of vocalists aren't too fond of Vocaloid.
Posted by: Avatar_exADV at Fri Aug 9 21:39:20 2013 (pWQz4)
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At around 1:55 in the video, she appears to be firing the gun by cycling the charging lever on the bolt. Reminds me of a gunslinger firing a revolver by fanning the hammer, although I've never heard of a rifle fired via the bolt lever.
Posted by: RickC at Fri Aug 9 22:28:04 2013 (WQ6Vb)
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@Avatar comment#2:
I think Vocaloid is a better argument for my friends point of view than MMD. The tone, pitch, and everything else is actually done by someone (or something) else. That being said, editing and songwriting are each definitely arts in their own right.
One thing that (I think) set my friend off is the ease of tracing with the computer. He was in awe of how much better some people were on the computer than on paper. I suspect that this generally has two causes.
1: the person is just much more comfortable in the computer medium (I'd wager that this is very common today given the amount of time people spend on it).
2: They're doing vectors.
This latter has turned out to be the case quite often in his recent experience.
As for MMD, given the sheer ammount of stuff pre-programmed into even the most basic version, I think my friends argument is not without some merit at the most basic levels of competency. I tend to think that his argument breaks down rapidly once one moves out of the orientation phase.
Of course some of this is just crumudgeonism on his part. but given the complexities of the tech, asking at what point a work becomes art and particularly ones own art strikes me as not entirely unreasonable. However, while I'm inclined toward your and Pixy's point of view on this, not being an artist at all makes me wonder. I mean look at the amount of clip art, embedded videos and such I use here.....though of course no one would call the blog "art".
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Sat Aug 10 00:17:21 2013 (F7DdT)
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@ Rick C comment#3:
I'm unfamiliar with bolt actions in practice, however one can do something similar with a pump action weapon if one cycles it very hard and holds down the trigger. Note too that it has been mentioned in the series that she built the weapon herself so chambering a round and closing the bolt might automatically fire it.
Also:
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Sat Aug 10 00:25:40 2013 (F7DdT)
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I've been curious about playing with MMD, but at the time, it seems like people had to patch it to get english or something. Of course, at one point I was going to dabble with Daz 3d (don't bother). And I used to futz around with POV-Ray, but nothing ever came close to some of the amazing images out there.
I just don't really have the commitment to achieve skill with these things, which kind of shoots down the idea that skill isn't required. (Although DAZ probably does, since it's basically a paper-doll system where more talented artists sell content for you to add to the program. It can't really create its own.)
Posted by: Mauser at Sat Aug 10 04:04:20 2013 (TJ7ih)
A Gripe
As I post this, it's a bit more than an hour before episode 5 of Stella-Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch airs on Crunchyroll. I note this is almost a WEEK after most all the cool kids have seen it.
I've been judiciously avoiding spoilers, but here's not much point in blogging this one.
UPDATE: OK. For those of you who've already seen this.....
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I think the real issue is with Yura's motivations.
The rest of the team is out there to have fun. They enjoy the camaraderie and the challenge and have more or less come to terms with being, well, weirdos.
Yura hasn't. She's got some character movement, not very difficult since the start was at "scared rabbit in headlights", but what's motivating her isn't so much joy, it's fear. She likes being able to socialize with the others, something she's just not used to, but by contrast she's worried that they're going to reject her for screwing up.
(Incidentally, this is partly Sono's fault, for chewing her out over an etiquette breach when she hadn't bothered to explain the etiquette involved... especially when the other side had itself broken the etiquette by going for the humiliation-victory rather than playing the game. You don't get mad at rookies for doing rookie stuff! But Sono's own issues got in the way there...)
In the meantime, that's got Yura fixated on victory, in a way that the rest of them aren't; everyone else is out to have fun and looking to win as part of that fun, but Yura's out to win because losing would be terrible. It's not a healthy attitude for a sport, and the results could be... well, presumably Sonora's rival didn't get like that by eating too much cake in the light music club.
Yura could use, frankly speaking, getting the stuffing knocked out of her; she'd hate it, but realizing that the aftermath isn't getting turned out of the club would help her attitude a lot. Of course, all that is assuming that ep 4 was a weird aside and that the tone of the series remains normal-ish; if Yura's stepping onto actual battlefields, then taking a somewhat grimmer view of winning and losing may well be a survival trait...
Posted by: Avatar_exADV at Tue Aug 6 22:08:25 2013 (pWQz4)
While still not up to the level of its premiere, episode 3 of RWBY has recovered quite a bit from # 2, though slapstick visual 'cheats' don't work as well in this medium.
This is definitely a cliche' buffet and it has some technical issues, but it's amusing me. This episode was all dialog and the voice work held its own and remained pretty engaging.
Steven Den Beste
His blog brings all the boys to his yard.
Of course having put it in those terms...I'd best get off his lawn before he comes at me with a Chen-saw.
Three Minutes of Combat IN TECHNICOLOR
Though we've mentioned before that it's being released as a series of
movies, it bears repeating that Yamato 2199 being broadcast right now on TV in
Japan. Despite the fact that it almost never shows up in season previews, this is, IMHO the best action show on right now. In fact, despite the rather anachronistic design of its titular spacecraft, Yamato 2199 is one of the better scifi shows of the last decade.
For those of you who watched Starblazers those many years ago, here is a brief promo clip of the battle at the rainbow nebula. For those poor deprived souls that didn't, this isn't terribly spoilerish, it's one of several battles our heroes fight, this one taking place in a remarkably dense, multicolored nebula.
Yamato 2199, is being aggressively marketed internationally. The English language dub is called Starblazers 2199, and will have at least some name changes (the ship is named Argo on the English version). Bang Zoom is doing the dub which is heartening. They've done some excellent work in the past. Johnny Yong Bosch is reportedly playing Kodai/Wildstar.
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As in the original, the Yamato seems to take way more punishment than any possible ship of its dimensions and distance from support and repair docks could possibly absorb and keep going. Forget the infamously regenerating third bridge, they seem to lose at least one of their 18-inch turrets every other fight...
Posted by: Mitch H. at Mon Jul 29 13:09:59 2013 (jwKxK)
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In this series they have at least paid lip service to the difficulties of field repair. The ship having various things not working is an occasional plot point, particularly after
their super impressive 3-d printer they use for repairs....gets blasted to bits and needs repairs.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Mon Jul 29 13:27:56 2013 (F7DdT)
Life Altering HairstylesStella WAHSDC3 has been pleasant enough thus far. The other club members are all likeably eccentric. The problem has been main character who is SO damned insecure and introverted that by episode 3 it begins to grate. Yura has problems. She is terribly introverted, indecisive and afraid of her own shadow.
However, in this episode (#3) these issues stop just being a character trait and become a plot point.
They're at a paintball tournament. Unlike Girls Und Panzer boys are allowed to participate in the league and indeed make up the majority of players at the tournament. Our girls school heroines win for several tournaments but don't wipe the floor with the competition. The competition is VERY good at what they do. All is well until they encounter the team from Sisters of Bitchieness Girls School of Implacable Small Unit Tactics For Sadistic Combat Monsters Whose Uniforms Are Black....or something. This fight is personal, there is some history there and our heroines get routed...well....The team aside from Yura gets taken out...Yura's response to this is not to go down fighting....not to try to make a dash for the flag...not even to run and at least make it hard for them....she jusy says "Eh what the hell"...and gives up. This Of course is a FORFEIT.
...and I'm like "You selfish little &^%"
It got worse...the team came over and comforted her and told her it was no big deal.
OK at that point I just about logged off but at that point Kashima, the president stepped in and tore her a new one. She pointed out quite rightly that Yuna had let them all down, damaged their reputation and essentially insulted them.
It was almost like there were certain minimal standards of behavior expected of people.
Given that she's going to an exclusive girls school that looks like a pink Versailles about the size of central park...I gather that Yuna has probably been pretty sheltered life and hasn't been socialized to grok such concepts as loyalty and honor except as abstractions.
Well...she does seem to understand that she has screwed up mightily.
She understands it SO well that at the end of the episode, she's cut her hair very short.
This is a big thing to the Japanese. Cutting the hair dramatically signifies a major life change. This indicates that she GETS it.
It appears that our heroine has come to grips with her problem and is growing as a character.
And I find that cool.
As an aside, the actress doing Kirishima is knocking ot out of the park as far as conveying the oddness of the character most effectively.
UPDATE: Teh Banshee has a fine analysis of Yura's conundrum in the comments.
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Yura is caught between two different standards of behavior. One is that the nail shouldn't stick up, and that if it does, it should hammer itself down. Sticking out is a burden to other people, and your rights are whatever the group chooses to throw your way. And the group is whoever is around at the moment, not just your friends and family who care about you. Yura has been thoroughly indoctrinated into this, by always being the lowest status person around (possibly only in her own mind). But this standard is why Japanese bullies apparently aren't kidding when they call on people to surrender to save them trouble, and why Japanese police feel insulted if an innocent person who has been arrested should publicly proclaim his innocence. So of course Yura thinks she is obliged to surrender, or suffer both social and physical consequences for being a nuisance to the other team and to her own. Because apparently, that's what's always happened when she stuck out.
But in her fantasies, she is a person with worth and status, a person who can persevere and fight. In part of her mind, she thinks of paintball as a way to become that person. She just has no idea of how to go about it, or not enough courage to follow her ideas.
And by cutting her hair, she declares that she is going to really do it.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at Wed Jul 24 16:22:30 2013 (cvXSV)
So, You May Ask, "Where's the Post?"
Right here. It's a disquisition on the pros, cons and history of pneumatic postal systems scaled up to eleventy.
Now you, gentle reader, may wish to suggest that there is no such post here. To that I'm afraid my response must be...
Don't. You. Think. I KNOW THAT!?
THERE WAS!!1!! BUT NOT'NY MORE!!
I was almost...almost done...but I pasted a url in the text so I highlighted it and hit backspace.
It's what your supposed to do right? Blogging...b..basic word processing...imple isn't it?...and and then the screen jumped to the previous page.
A..and it was gone..all those words. ALL OF THEM!
They say that there's no devil...but there is...it came and ate my post RIGHT OUT OF HELL!!
Anyway, in lieu of any actual content, here's a nice documentary on the making of Star Trek's The Doomsday Machine that I pilfered from Ace's sidebar.
RWBY Episode 1
Over the course of the last several months, four computer animated shorts have been released, each focusing on an "eponymous" character from an upcoming animation series called RWBY.
The first two were superb and used color and music to great stylistic effect. The second was less stylish but had a good deal of action and a voice actress whose purr was husky enough to pull a dogsled. The third had a heroine who was not particularly likeable and its pacing was uneven, but it was technically impressive (rather too much so...it had a tendency to break You Tube) with very well imagined action sequences and a fine score. These trailers have generated much anticipation for the series...and now that series is here...
In contrast to the first two trailers, which had a very ephemeral, almost European atmosphere, the first episode has a more or less conventional Japanese Shonen comic feel to it.
It seems that "Red" from the first trailer is going to be our lead.
Ruby Rose is a student at a college that specializes in training monster hunters. She's a typical shonen heroine, idealistic, enthusiastic to the point of being a goofball, and a very adept at the utilization of her .50 caliber, bolt action, magazine fed, fully articulated, rocket assisted, collapsable scythe. Her immediate goal is to graduate college and do her graduate work at Beacon University, which is required to become a huntress. Huntsmen and Huntresses are the elite monster hunters of this rather anachronistic world.
How anachronistic is it you may ask? Well, for one thing, they presumably have monsters. Additionally, they have magic (which is facilitated by a McGuffin called "dust"), machine guns, cities that look like a cross between 1930's Chicago and Vienna, airships, a broken moon, advanced tablet computer devices and villains who wear derby hats....
Meet Roman Torchwick. He is a well known criminal who has decided to rob a dust, dry-goods, jewelry, magazine and music store. Unfortunately for him, Ruby happens to be loitering in the magazine section. While Torchwick relieves the owner of his dust, an ill conceived bit of initiative by one of Mr. Torchwicks henchmen makes Ms. Rose aware of their shenanigans and fisticuffs ensue. Things proceed to escalate rather quickly after that, to swordplay to gunfire and eventually all sorts of magical 'splodies.
Mr. Torchwick has formidable resources at his disposal and (despite the intervention of a professional huntress on our heroines behalf) he makes good his escape.
Afterwards, she is questioned by the huntress, handed off to the huntres's supervisor and we learn that Ruby Rose is not just a formidable fighter, she collects huntress/ hunter autographs, is hyperactive to the point of being something of a spaz and she can eat a pile of of chocolate chip cookies as big as her head.
"...and not a single cookie lived to tell the tale."
Upon establishing these important facts she is scolded, given a unique opportunity, which she decides to take. This results in Ruby reuniting with her obnoxiously loud older sister as the episode ends...
Oh dear God...Did that woman just say her name was...Gladys Goodwitch?" "Yeah sis...I'm afraid she did."
As an aside, there is some indication from the closing credits that
this will not be quite the female sentai team people were expecting.
There is a fairly large mixed gender cast and the fellow we currently
know only as "Vomit Boy" features prominently.
Well, I liked it.
It's not the least bit original at this point, but it's visually interesting, seems to have a decent story and Ruby Rose is a thoroughly likeable character. The voice acting is above average. The pacing of this episode was excellent. I was surprised to find it was only 12 minute long. They provided enough exposition and character development for a full thirty minute pilot in that time. The music, as can be expected from the trailers is superb. Someone named Jeff Williams delivers a fine BGM that complements the fight scenes choreography nicely. The new theme song is quite catchy too.
The computer art is odd and occasionally distracting, but it can be
surprisingly expressive. It certainly lends itself to fluid motion.
The 12 minute webisodes air every Thursday at 7pm (5pm for those who subscribe).
This show is pretty neat...but it is the harbinger of something neater still more...
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Thanks for tracking it down. And for doing more with it than I had a chance to (grrr, designated weekend overtime...)
BTW, have you seen my thunder, I seem to have misplaced it somewhere. :-)
Posted by: Mauser at Sun Jul 21 05:23:10 2013 (cZPoz)
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You mentioned that they had "initial financing by Kickstarter". Do you have a link to the KS page for their offering? Even though the funding is now closed, I was interested in how they pitched it, but I cannot find anything on KS under RWBY or Roosterteeth...
Posted by: Siergen at Sun Jul 21 14:25:50 2013 (Ao4Kw)
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I can't either and was never aware of it, but their web page mentioned that it airs at 5pm for Kickstarter people...7pm for everyone else.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Sun Jul 21 14:43:15 2013 (F7DdT)
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No I'm wrong and will line through the offending text. Their sponsors are their subscribers. They have a deal like Crunchyroll that allows you to bypass ads and see the videos early.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Sun Jul 21 14:45:24 2013 (F7DdT)
Yeah... almost had a spit take at "Gladys Goodwitch." Lord knows I'm not one to throw stones when it comes to character names ("why do they all start with 'A'?") but seriously.
And between the bowler hat and cane, I fully expected Torchwick (which would make for a punny penis joke later in the series...) to be speaking Nadsat.
Voices. I agree almost completely: all four are very interesting and each has a compelling style. Not sure who's I like most; perhaps after a rewatch.
BM, thank you very much for bringing this to my attention! Top marks, sir!
Posted by: Tiberius at Sun Jul 21 15:20:16 2013 (97M8h)
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