• Hey Guest. Check out your NeoGAF Wrapped 2025 results here!

Summer 2011 Anime Thread II of IKUHARA'S RETURN, Penguins, and Idols

Status
Not open for further replies.
ninj4junpei said:
2cwk57a.jpg


Whatever, I just suck at writing. Kids, don't fail out of college or you'll end up like me. I'm too incompetent for this thread.
Now you're gettin it!
 
ninj4junpei said:
IMG]http://i56.tinypic.com/2cwk57a.jpg[/IMG]

Whatever, I just suck at writing. Kids, don't fail out of college or you'll end up like me. I'm too incompetent for this thread.
That .gif no longer means what it used to mean :(
 
darkside31337 said:
My own thoughts on TGWLTT, absolutely amazing in terms of animation, story, direction and every other technical aspect of a movie. Thought it was really boring as a total package. One of those movies where the whole is actually less than the sum of the parts, at least for me personally.
Wait, I missed this. How does that work?
 
I think it's more like one person had one opinion one movie that wasn't shared by some other people.

Considering how many people here seem to have an appreciation for Hosoda's The Girl Who Leapt Through Time perhaps you should check out his earlier film, Baron Omatsuri and the Secret Island a.k.a One Piece Movie 6.

You don't need to have any familiarity with the One Piece franchise to watch the movie, just in-case you're wondering. In terms of quality, it might even be better than TGWLTT but it's hard to say as they're two very different movies.
 
Jexhius said:
I think it's more like one person had one opinion one movie that wasn't shared by some other people.

Considering how many people here seem to have an appreciation for Hosoda's The Girl Who Leapt Through Time perhaps you should check out his earlier film, Baron Omatsuri and the Secret Island a.k.a One Piece Movie 6.

You don't need to have any familiarity with the One Piece franchise to watch the movie, just in-case you're wondering. In terms of quality, it might even be better than TGWLTT but it's hard to say as they're two very different movies.

That actually happens to be my favourite One Piece movie.
 
ninj4junpei said:
I was under the impression that he is from very far in the future, so why would he wait for her?

Because it's romantic.

Another thing I didn't get was what was up with her aunt?
She was totally unfazed by her niece time traveling. Also, she looks way more like Makoto than her own mother.

She's the protagonist of the original novel.
 
cosmicblizzard said:
Don't have a ton of experience with Super Robot, so forgive me if I get a little excited over displays of hot blooded badassery.

Welcome to the anime master race :D

about to start penguindrum since you guys seem to love it so, gonna start tiger & bunny too, braced for more product placement than Michael Bay and Will Smith combined
 
Jexhius said:
Wait, I missed this. How does that work?

I'm not sure what you're asking. If I took every component of the movie, the animation, the story, the sound, the characters each as individual components I'd love this movie to death. It's a really well made film but I just didn't find it very enjoyable.

To elaborate a little more the movie is essentially the anime take of Groundhog Day. But as a comedy it's not in the same ballpark and the romance is bleh. The
Time Travelling
is a bit of a mess, it's obvious they don't want to go too in-depth for the sake of inconsistencies in the story (that still exist) and for the brevity that is film itself. Personally in the end it's comedy isn't very comedic and it's romance is a bit nauseating .

I can see why people think highly of it, it doesn't bug me in the slightest that people love the film. Maybe I'll rewatch the film now that it's been a few years since I last saw it. Perhaps I'll think more of it with another go around.
 
/XX/ said:
The funny thing is that... what impacted me the most of this film was how Makoto, Kōsuke and Chiaki's relationship wouldn't be the same after that. I liked that innocent and very friendly 'statuo quo' between the three, so a step further, even if natural and logical for every human being, seemed like a necessary (but sad) abandonment of those greatly unique and most enjoyable times lived (as Chiaki itself states) in change of an uncertain, but exciting, future we embrace as we grow. I know that, as it is set-up, they will probably meet again and keep living their lives as normal, but the melancholy derived from those good moments is something I think everyone can relate to.

As I see it, the movie plays with the audience based on the above noted, because the sudden (but hinted) notion of Chiaki confessing his feelings to Makoto, and her reluctance to acknowledge this represents a destruction of the comfort zone, the reluctance to change and keep going, wanting everything to stay the same (as Aunt Kazuko thoroughly notes). Even if not developed enough as a couple's relationship, that goodbye scene with the two has (in my opinion) the impact necessary to make it poignant because it means more than love in general; the acceptance of a volatile present (remember, "Time waits for no one"), the realization of the fragile and precious thing that is friendship, and the necessity of leaving behind the past to reach the future.
Nothing else to add except "well-said."

Okay, not exactly.
One of my favorite scenes is where Makoto tries to stop Chiaki from confessing over and over again. It's a brilliantly funny scene, and at the same time it illustrates Makoto's immaturity, and how she literally wants time to stand still.
This wouldn't be possible without the time travel plot device, but what really makes the story work is we can relate to her, even though we've never traveled through time or anything like that. It's one of the most uniquely told coming-of-age stories in how it depicts the normal reluctance to fully grow up and the desire to stay in an idealistic, adolescent world forever.
 
The girl who leapt through time:

Well, that was okay. I expected more after all the hype for this movie. I didn´t like how they took such an epic, grand-scale topic (time travel) and then went for such a small, limited story, which didn´t really go anywhere. I wouldn´t actually call it a story, rather a ... moral. Basically, the whole plot means to say "Don´t waste your time, take chances NOW". In these regards, it feels almost like an educational movie.

Btw. I *hate* exaggerated running. Sigh. I hate it when it happens in Ghibli movies and I hated it here. It makes no sense, isn´t necessary for any of the scenes, it just makes the character look even weirder. Seriously, be it running or riding the bicycle, Makoto could never do it like a normal human being. Made me angry. Even moreso because it looks as if she doesn´t weigh a single thing. Oh well.

Okay anime, but not a masterpiece or must-see by any means. Now, what to watch next?
 
One Piece - Baron Festival and the Secret Island

Sometimes a recommendation can seem unbelievable. A currently well known director once directed the sixth in a line of spin-off movies for an extremely popular mass market shounen fighting anime series known to have relatively low production values because it continues to run after hundreds of episodes. This movie is said to have been of such quality that it puts even his most recent original work to shame. Could it be? Is it an exaggeration? Maybe something born out of lowered expectations? No, it is exactly what was promised - not only one of the best animated movies based on a licensed property I have seen, but possibly the most mature direction to have come out of a Japanese animation film in the last decade.

This is one film where I feel that talking about the whys and the hows of the film would not do it justice, nor would it be fair to discuss characterizations, plot, or even setting. Not knowing anything about the movie beforehand if possible, is the ideal way to enjoy this. Not because of expectations, but simply because it would be doing yourself justice to experience the movie as it was intended. What I can do instead to convince those who are considering watching it, but do not know if it would be really worth their time, is to discuss how the movie made me feel, and where I felt the movie succeeded beyond the average movie made.

The film does not feel like a story told merely through narrative action. Instead of a piece that is communicated to the audience via script and information provided from dialogue and visuals, the tale here is one which attempts to connect with the audience on a completely emotional level using the invoking of feelings and tonal shifts. Every single scene in the movie, and every part of every scene from the visuals, to the camera angles, to the music, the sound effects, the movement of the characters, and the individual length of a scene, are specifically to invoke specific feelings from the viewer to carry across the same feelings a character might be feeling, or how the overall tone of the movie is moving from one stage to another.

The storytelling and build up in the movie reminds me of a concert, a musical, and even much older western cartoons, where what is expressed in the work feels like the work itself, rather than just an element of what is being presented. It is something so natural, so simple, so elemental, and yet so hard to pull off that almost no one ever tries. It can fail so easily if mismanaged, but when successful it is magical.

This movie is magical. It is beautiful. It is art. Rarely have I seen something which makes me completely satisfied, but this is one of those films. It is a complete showpiece of the talent of the director, and the talent of all the staff he has assembled, who clearly believed in his vision. For it to have been just a spin-off movie for a long running popular shounen series just makes it that much more bold.
 
Sennorin said:
The girl who leapt through time:

Well, that was okay. I expected more after all the hype for this movie. I didn´t like how they took such an epic, grand-scale topic (time travel) and then went for such a small, limited story, which didn´t really go anywhere.
But... that's exactly what makes it so good, especially compared to a lot of time-travel stories. Also, you asked for school slice-of-life stuff, but now you say you want something epic, I don't...
F1WoS.gif
 
Branduil said:
But... that's exactly what makes it so good, especially compared to a lot of time-travel stories.
That's pretty much the whole of it.

Although I may have felt the same way the first time I saw it. I was wrong though.
 
I haven't. Never had much interest in One Piece.
HoweveR I may make an exception for that movie, like I made an exception with Lupin watching Castle of Cagliostro (and thoroughly loving that)
 
Denpa Onna to Seishun Otoko 07:

Ugh, at this point I´m forcing myself to go on with this show. Also, I *hate* the opening song and animation. Seriously, it´s absolutely rage-inducing.

Man, the girls in this show are the most unrealistic characters like ever. Also, every person tries to make some pseudo-philosophical lines that just fail to be that and sound beyond stupid. "I think anything flying straight up is shooting for space". wat

Also lol, do I sense an upcoming time travel-aspect here? :D
 
Isn't the whole point of AnimeGAF to find well-received Anime and somehow shit on them anyway? Did you guys think stuff that you liked was off limits?

TGWLTT is an awesome movie though and y'all haters are crazy.
 
Dynedom said:
Isn't the whole point of AnimeGAF to find well-received Anime and somehow shit on them anyway? Did you guys think stuff that you liked was off limits?

TGWLTT is an awesome movie though and y'all haters are crazy.


Irresponsible Captain Tylor is one of the absolute worst
funniest
anime I've ever seen. Seriously.

Am I doing it right?
 
Sennorin said:
Denpa Onna to Seishun Otoko 07:

Ugh, at this point I´m forcing myself to go on with this show. Also, I *hate* the opening song and animation. Seriously, it´s absolutely rage-inducing.
WHAT? You are a horrible monster. A wretched thing.
 
duckroll said:
This movie is magical. It is beautiful. It is art. Rarely have I seen something which makes me completely satisfied, but this is one of those films. It is a complete showpiece of the talent of the director, and the talent of all the staff he has assembled, who clearly believed in his vision. For it to have been just a spin-off movie for a long running popular shounen series just makes it that much more bold.
Following this, it can't be stressed enough how, sometimes, specific key people create such a seemingly inviting opportunity to work in for other animators (through connections mainly, as duckroll mentioned earlier). They normally know each other, share information and have mutual respect for their works, so it is not only the money that attracts these people to a project like this, but also the value they perceive in the other staff involved or the work itself. The camaraderie and pure fun they sometimes show is inspiring, and demonstrate the 'work of love' this kind of special assembles give to us... Chikashi Kubota, Sushio & the all-star friends cast (too many to name) of this film is what one would call an example of that.
 
duckroll said:
One Piece - Baron Festival and the Secret Island

Sometimes a recommendation can seem unbelievable. A currently well known director once directed the sixth in a line of spin-off movies for an extremely popular mass market shounen fighting anime series known to have relatively low production values because it continues to run after hundreds of episodes. This movie is said to have been of such quality that it puts even his most recent original work to shame. Could it be? Is it an exaggeration? Maybe something born out of lowered expectations? No, it is exactly what was promised - not only one of the best animated movies based on a licensed property I have seen, but possibly the most mature direction to have come out of a Japanese animation film in the last decade.

This is one film where I feel that talking about the whys and the hows of the film would not do it justice, nor would it be fair to discuss characterizations, plot, or even setting. Not knowing anything about the movie beforehand if possible, is the ideal way to enjoy this. Not because of expectations, but simply because it would be doing yourself justice to experience the movie as it was intended. What I can do instead to convince those who are considering watching it, but do not know if it would be really worth their time, is to discuss how the movie made me feel, and where I felt the movie succeeded beyond the average movie made.

The film does not feel like a story told merely through narrative action. Instead of a piece that is communicated to the audience via script and information provided from dialogue and visuals, the tale here is one which attempts to connect with the audience on a completely emotional level using the invoking of feelings and tonal shifts. Every single scene in the movie, and every part of every scene from the visuals, to the camera angles, to the music, the sound effects, the movement of the characters, and the individual length of a scene, are specifically to invoke specific feelings from the viewer to carry across the same feelings a character might be feeling, or how the overall tone of the movie is moving from one stage to another.

The storytelling and build up in the movie reminds me of a concert, a musical, and even much older western cartoons, where what is expressed in the work feels like the work itself, rather than just an element of what is being presented. It is something so natural, so simple, so elemental, and yet so hard to pull off that almost no one ever tries. It can fail so easily if mismanaged, but when successful it is magical.

This movie is magical. It is beautiful. It is art. Rarely have I seen something which makes me completely satisfied, but this is one of those films. It is a complete showpiece of the talent of the director, and the talent of all the staff he has assembled, who clearly believed in his vision. For it to have been just a spin-off movie for a long running popular shounen series just makes it that much more bold.

Yeah, it isn't bad.
 
Jexhius said:
Which raises the obvious question: has Branduil even seen One Piece Movie 6?
Unfortunately not. I'll probably rectify that fairly soon. There's only so much Brain Powerd a man can take.
 
Sennorin said:
Denpa Onna to Seishun Otoko 07:

Ugh, at this point I´m forcing myself to go on with this show. Also, I *hate* the opening song and animation. Seriously, it´s absolutely rage-inducing.
G8hAr.gif


:,(
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom