Forum - View topicShelf Life - The Other 1/2
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Trypticon
Posts: 80 Location: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada |
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You should at least sample the first few episodes; you can always have a look on Funimation, there’s really nothing to lose on your part. According to what I have heard and read, Psycho-Pass seems as though it shares more in common with Sherlock Holmes with the actual story. The premise on the other hand in regards to their society and crime prevention, while being similar to Minority Report, also seems to share a lot of parallels to Equilibrium. I have the special, super-duper deluxe version on order; I should be getting it within the next few weeks here. I very much look forward to watching it. |
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EricJ2
Posts: 4016 |
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This being a Rumiko series, no matter how formal, angry or imposing a character tries to be....they've always got that one little foot of clay that's going to ruin it for them-- For Ranma, it's his curse (and Genma usually getting turned into a panda in the middle of dad-lecture); for Ryouga, it's his getting lost and turning to Jell-o around Akane; for Akane, it's her utter inability to do girly things like cook, and for Kunou (aka the Samurai Gaston), it's...the fact that he's a complete idiot. It's a staple in all three of the Rumiko comedies (like Mendou's claustrophobia in UY or Mitaka's fear of dogs in Maison)--four, if you want to count "Sit, boy!" in InuYasha--and it first refined the idea of embarrassment as a universal language in Japanese comedy. (For those who haven't been following that thread over on the Anime board.) Last edited by EricJ2 on Tue Apr 01, 2014 3:44 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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vanfanel
Posts: 1259 |
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This review comes at a neat time for me; just last night I got nostalgic and started looking up sites and newsgroups I used to follow in the mid-90's, back when anime was all still shiny and new. A surprising amount of that stuff is still floating around out there.
Ranma was huge back then. It spawned endless discussions, countless fanfics, and an infamous roleplaying usenet thread that regularly threatened to engulf rec.arts.anime.misc. The manga was still running, so nobody knew how it would end. The various character pairings had some pretty intense partisans, and...I don't know, there was a passion for it in fandom that could be pretty crazy and sometimes pretty annoying, but I kind of miss those times. BTW, though, people are saying it gets better around episode 12, and that may be true...but remind me: when does Happosai arrive and ruin it? |
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Animegomaniac
Posts: 4157 |
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So Ranma rose with the internet? That explains a lot. Ranma 1/2 remains the only Rumiko Takashi series where I've seen no episodes, trailers, bits or sorts which is odd since it was the first one I've heard off. Also, I've never fully watched a Rumiko Takashi series either because they are Rumiko Takashi series - she may be one of the wealthiest mangakas out there but isn't that based on never letting a series say "die" until the premise could be milked for all it's worth? I mean, creating engaging premises that are repeatedly ran into the ground with nowhere to go-almost instantly in some cases? Ranma 1/2 is shelfworthy; I keep seeing the first season of Inuyasha on sale for around ten dollars but ultimately the idea of any of her series on my shelf is tiring. I have a couple of Dragon Ball sets but I keep them hidden. Fan service laden perverted comedies with girls all over the covers? Fine but owning overly long shounen series is just embarrassing... |
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RHorsman
Posts: 151 Location: Loch Loman |
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I can't defend Pupa as a whole, but episode 6? Where it's the little sister eating him bite by bite for 4 disgusting unflinching minutes?
That's every imouto show distilled down to its screwed up essence. |
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vanfanel
Posts: 1259 |
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That's...not a half-bad way of putting it. Back when anime fans were so few and far between, the 'net was the only way to find like-minded people (aside from making converts yourself, anyway), and Ranma was really in the right place at the right time for that.
Have you tried "Maison Ikkoku"? It's long too, but that one knows where it's going and slowly but steadily gets there. (Like most of her series, it also improves a lot after its first season.) Which reminds me... If any Viz people are reading this, you are getting sleeeeeeepy...very sleeeeeepy...and when I snap my fingers, you will awaken...with an intense, burning desire to put MI out on Blu-Ray. SNAP!! |
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Utsuro no Hako
Posts: 1052 |
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They are, but that's not a bad thing. Psycho-Pass is Urobuchi's reply to Minority Report, and he takes the film to task for being overly simplistic in its treatment of the concept. Spielberg began with the assumption that the Pre-Crime system is bad, and everything in the movie is set up to reinforce that point. Psycho-Pass is Urobuchi saying, "Wait a second, it's not that simple -- you can't just dismiss all the good things the Pre-Crime system did just because it offends your notion of free will. Getting rid of the system is going to increase suffering in the world -- is that really all right? Sounds to me like only someone with a twisted mind would want that outcome." |
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consignia
Posts: 394 |
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I felt that Pupa was an admirable failure. It tried to do something different, which was create a viable horror anime production in 12 small bites. Sadly it failed quite hard, but it had it's moments. In general, I thought was quite a good satire of little sister shows, and it did have some wonderful weird bits. The last episode completely comes out of nowhere. But it really didn't establish much of a world, let alone a viable horror feeling. It was very incoherent and badly paced. I do like things that try though, and it certainly did that in my mind.
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EricJ2
Posts: 4016 |
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So, um....try watching it? You'll seem to have an easier time than with UY or Maison, these days. More to the point, it was one of the first and most accessible series that went mainstream, back in the days when US anime was either inscrutable failed art features like Streamline, cheap failed OAV's which were the only thing small startup companies could get their hands on, or strange short-run sci-fi series like Lain. When fans were praising Record of Lodoss Wars because it was one of the only things you could buy at Suncoast, things were bad back then. Once Viz hit the shelves--to cash in on the manga fans and say "Ranma talks!"--every company had to have one long-run comedy series. Software Sculptor's Slayers also became one of the first nutty audience-friendly comedies to hit the mainstream stores, and also became an instant thing in the US, while Pioneer offered the Tenchi Muyo OAV box, but you can usually tell which audiences started with that version first. Which, in Ranma's case, boils down to the basic issue that A), it's funny, and B), it's funny in ways that are universal enough to not need too much explaining. Even though AnimEigo already had Urusei Yatsura out on VHS, you usually showed Ranma to strangers first, since the funny slapstick and Ranma & Akane's battle-of-the-sexes were much easier for gaijin to understand than UY's wacky free-form cultural refs, although both had Rumiko's trademark for a crazy ensemble of slightly-off characters. Try it. It won't hurt you. Last edited by EricJ2 on Tue Apr 01, 2014 12:15 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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Touma
Posts: 2651 Location: Colorado, USA |
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That is one way of looking at it. A different way would be that she doesn't quit as long as the fans want more. It depends on whether you want to be negative or positive. However you feel about her Rumiko Takahashi is still very successful. And she is successful because a lot of people like her work and are willing to pay for it. And I admit that I am one of those people. |
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dtm42
Posts: 14084 Location: currently stalking my waifu |
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Might I interest you in Yami Shibai? I haven't seen it myself, but from what I've heard it is an effective horror show that has five-minute episodes. It aired last summer, so it's pretty recent. |
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consignia
Posts: 394 |
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I had heard of it, but didn't check it out at the time. I've just watched the first episode, and I think it's good. Love the art style, and they get quite a nice little horror vignette in it's short time. Thanks. |
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Maidenoftheredhand
Posts: 2634 |
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I've been debating about getting Ranma 1/2. I have most of the manga (It was the first manga I collected and at the time before I became an obsessive collector I thought I'd only buy the volumes with my favorite stories).
As for the anime I never thought it was quite as good as the manga. It does have a godly seiyuu cast though: Kappei Yamaguchi, Megumi Hayashibara, & Noriko Hidaka as the leads wow. And yes I love that opening song. |
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enurtsol
Posts: 14886 |
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[GRIT] - Global Ranma Insanity Thread
Ranma vs. Ryouga Shampoo vs. Ukyou Happousai vs. Cologne Herb vs. Pantyhose Taro etc.
It used to occupy most of the shelves in the "Japanimation" aisle (it's not called "anime" yet) of your local video stores when it was 2-eps per VHS volume, separate dub and sub volumes, thus multiple copies of many many volumes - before DBZ took over.
Hey! Dominion Tank Police! Devil Hunter Yohko! Patlabor! Project A-ko!
Lain didn't come out till the end of the decade, beyond Ranma's peak. Lodoss Wars is praised because it's good D&D, from where a lot of anime fans hailed.
Slayers was also the first to come out with 4-eps per VHS volume below $20, that helped its hit status. It's not too unusual back then for the hottest properties in Japan to be somewhat audience-friendly - they were aired on daytime hours and didn't rely on depraved fetishes as a hook.
Plus Urusei Yatsura was only subtitled, save for the first few eps that had a dub that's best forgotten. Though even Ranma started out slow. It wasn't till late S1 - early S2 that our anime-oblivious dorm hall happened to catch on it and started asking to watch the beginning episodes. |
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dtm42
Posts: 14084 Location: currently stalking my waifu |
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You're welcome - glad I could help. |
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