Forum - View topicAnswerman - Why Don't More Publishers Take A Chance On Older Titles?
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Kazemon15
Posts: 400 |
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So you can confirm it's the actual DVD SD episodes and not the badly encoded BD episodes? Im praying that is the case. I ordered the BDs when they came out in Japan. I also own the Japanese DVDs. The BDs are a complete mess. The quality is just bad and lots of details are lost because they messed it up and made the entire series darker than what it is. And in the case with Discotek taking a smaller risk than bigger companies, I can see that. To be honest, I always thought Sentai Filmworks would get the series, seeing as they did alot of sub-only releases a while back. But nowadays, seems Discotek is taking more chances than Sentai, which I am happy for. I already pre-ordered my release. Cannot wait for September. |
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Primus
Posts: 2802 Location: Toronto |
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The longer it takes for Crunchyroll to make a statement makes me think the less likely it is to be continued. The first two seasons might still have Sentai issues, but the second movie and the newer episodes don't. |
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Nonaka Machine Gun B
Posts: 825 |
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I guess to be fair to Reborn!, none of the R1 companies bothered with it when it was new. It should have been dubbed and slapped on Toonami ten years ago. Of course dubbing it wouldn't make a lot of sense today, in 2018. It's a case where we kind of just Monday-morning quarterback how it bungled; we'll never really know what could've been.
This kind of moves away from the question, but I was always kind of puzzled Discotek didn't try to dub Yowamushi Pedal. I know it's technically a sports show, but next to the modern Lupin III, I think it's their newest property (2014+). Time keeps cycling along on that, tick tick tick! And, there's probably going to be more of it animated down the road; it just wrapped up a 2018 series |
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OjaruFan2
Posts: 668 |
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This explains why FUNimation and Viz Media stay away from long-running kids and family anime, such as Ojarumaru, Nintama Rantaro, Kochikame, and Anpanman; they’re too long and too old to sell over 10,000 units, and would be very, very expensive to dub. Not to mention that the attempts of dubbing and releasing similar shows (Shin-chan, Sgt. Frog, Hamtaro, etc) led to more bombs than it did hits.
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CatSword
Posts: 1489 |
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The cover art shows it as "standard definition" and "SD on BD". |
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Spawn29
Posts: 554 |
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I'm surprise to see how Reborn is now consider to be a obscure title given how super popular it was in 2007-2008. I think if a title is too obscure, no one would bother with it. I would love if it Call Me Tonight got a US release on DVD, but I doubt someone like Discotek even touch it. I discover that anime thanks to the Buried Treasure series on this site.
Even something like Kaiji with a decent fanbase would probably never get pick up by Discotek or even Sentai Filmworks because it would be too niche. I would even pay money for a home release of Hell Target because it never got released in the US back in the days
I personally don't want Funimation to pick up old titles and just leave them to Discotek, Sentai/Madein Japan and Rightstuff. It gives out more variety and competition in the market. If you look at movies for example, you have many companies that stick with old obscure and cult movies while mainstream studios stick with movies that everyone knows about or has seen. Funimation in the anime industry is like the Warner Bros, Paramount, Fox, etc where they release stuff that appeals to casual and general anime fans while sometimes releasing old stuff. While Discotek is like Arrow, Scream Factory, Verstron, Kino, etc where they pick up cult titles. To me, Funimation releasing titles like Zillion, Momotaro's Divine Sea Warriors and Record of Lodoss War if someone like Paramount decides to release Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS or Wizard of Gore. With Speed Racer and Akira, it made sense for Funimation to pick those titles because they are so well known. People who don't watch anime or don't even know what anime is, knows about Speed Racer. You could say Speed Racer, Kimba the White Lion and Astro Boy are the anime that the Baby Boomers grew up with (Both my mom and dad have memories watching Speed Racer, 8 Man and Kimba as kids in the 60's). |
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MoonPhase1
Posts: 497 |
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Toonami was in no position to getting another 200+ episode series 10 years ago especially being in a weekly format. 2012 is a maybe on it, but even then it was still a experiment to see if people would even still watch Toonami. Sure people let them know that they wanted it back after that April Fools Prank, but saying and watching are 2 different things. Thankfully people do watch it and continue to do so. Reborn just had lousy timing to be on Toonami. Though Viz could have put it on Neon Alley. |
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Kazemon15
Posts: 400 |
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Yeah, I know, I'm just being skeptical. Those BD eps were seriously bad. I just want the best for this release. |
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dark13
Posts: 562 |
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loveliver
Posts: 169 |
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Well, you must've talked about the first half, that was digitally animated in SD. I don't really know how the second half looked on the Japanese Blu-rays, you know the episodes in ACTUAL HD. |
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Lord Geo
Posts: 2645 Location: North Brunswick, New Jersey |
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I get the comparison, but it's still a bit flawed. Companies like Warner Bros. Paramount, & Fox produce their own content, while Arrow, Scream/Shout Factory, Kino, etc. rely mostly on licensing the works of others, similar to how the anime industry over here works. Not just that, but those mainstream Hollywood companies do also release vintage titles all the time, but that's because these companies have been around for decades (if not more than century, even), and have massive catalogs to make new releases from... As long as the materials are there. Companies like FUNimation & Viz may be the WB or Fox of the anime industry over here, but they still have to operate like Arrow, Verstron, & the like; they're stuck in a weird, simultaneous existence.
I'm hoping that you were exaggerating here, because stuff like Zillion, Momotaro, or Lodoss are nothing like the exploitation films you're comparing them to. If anything, I'd argue that the anime industry here is missing a proper equivalent to the likes of Synapse Films, Blue Underground, or Unearthed Films. Discotek effectively has to try to be both like those cult-focused companies, while also wanting to be an equivalent to Criterion, so I'd be more than happy to see some of that weight lifted off of Discotek. To return to the original point, though, those Hollywood companies have experimented with licensing other movies for American release every now & then. I have Universal's DVD release of the live-action Dororo movie, for example, which was a sub-only experimental release from 2007. That's no different than FUNimation putting out Zillion, or Viz license rescuing Moribito (I feel like people forgot this happened...), quite honestly. |
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DRosencraft
Posts: 671 |
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It's funny that Reborn is mentioned for a couple reasons. First, I watched it originally a few years ago (I want to say it was on Crunchy, but I can't be sure). It was a very interesting shounen entry, and with the number of episodes it was at, I sort of assumed at the time that it would eventually get the "Final Arc" treatment at least, if not the continuation reboot treatment Fairy Tail got. But, that never came to pass, and I recently began watching it again on Hulu. It's a charming show.
I think one of the things that hurts a show like Reborn is that it doesn't hold a ton of ancillary profit streams. I'm talking about figures, an ongoing manga to create a feedback loop with, or other merchandise. Hate to say it, but we all know that part of what kept Fairy Tail going, part of what keeps One Piece going, is the bevy of attractive females in the cast for which a lot of otaku merch is centered on. Hug pillows, ecchi figures, the endless stream of doujin... that all contributes to the swell of support that can propel a series to stick around even at the fringes. It's by no means a guarantee, and even past mammoth success is not a sure sign of future accomplishment. Take Bleach for example. As huge as it was, as big as it remained relative to other series, it's manga ending shows no signs of ever being animated. It hardly seems like it'll even garner much love for any future anniversary, outside of obligatory recognition and maybe a small batch re-release. |
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Ultimate N
Posts: 141 |
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I really hope the earlier episodes of Gintama will still be dubbed. The only reason I'm not buying the blu-rays right now is because I don't want to start the series part-way through. I am currently reading the manga and am a massive fan of this series now, but I want to watch this anime dubbed.
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TheAnimeRevolutionizer
Posts: 329 |
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Wow, this question sure brought up a big ol' zoo into the room.
Concerning an elderly like me, this just got me to ponder about how the early anime scene came to be, and how this is still relevant in today's world. I mean, say what you will about the OVAs and how awful they were, but as someone who likes to gather developer and conceptual insight to the video games and anime ova unison back in these times, I've had a lot of wealth of knowledge from gathering dev books and translating them, especially for cult classics like Toshinden and Gowcaizer. And as how Tekken the Motion Picture is hyped to be the most awful OVA to ever exist, having played the games, the Motion Picture is more of an accessory than an actual show. It's a fun watch when you've got the lore down, but it does do things un canon. Even for something like Psychic Force, which also had an OVA, it seemed wayyyy too rushed and had a lot of logic and plot holes despite its excellent production values. This taught me a valuable lesson regarding not just adapting video games into anime, but also their core contents: just make a show, and don't think you'll ever outdo the Street Fighter II The Animated Movie by making shortcut OVA movies. Seriously, the ideas and creative contents for all of those series were brimming with potential more than even Street Fighter, and could have made a goldmine of anime for the 90s. Voltage Fighter Gowcaizer was My Hero Academia before My Hero Academia, Fatal Fury could have been a martial arts anime done like a 1990s US primetime like Xena and Walker, Texas Ranger, Psychic Force was the true X Men the Anime, Tekken could have been a mystery martial arts thriller with elements of crime and drama, and Toshinden could have been an alternate history historic fiction 1990s world with strong themes of tackling social issues, sociopolitical commentary, mysticism, divine transcendence, and real world historic and religious allusions and references, but c'est la vie. And looking into nostalgia, sure the past wasn't all that great, and not everyone got it, but I do miss how that time anime was at such a crossroads for its crash wake into the USA. Sure, Apollo Smile's treatment implied either she was a shady person hoping to get rich off of the latest trends or was an innocent person whose career was slaughtered by rabid anime diehards, and nothing was absolutely squeaky clean even back then,but I liked how people, or at least I saw, thought about anime and were inspired by it. Sure, we didn't get everything from Japan at that time, and I was just a kid, but I did like how we got to enjoy the full spectrum than just got fat off of what was cool and in as we do today. It's truly a mind opener to know what is classy and ostentatious, what anime is out of the mainstream, and for me, to study what good could have come out of things that have flopped in its execution. And before anyone goes on about regretting that "oh we watched bad ovas and hentai", don't. You were a part of something that opened the eyes of an industry that was already languishing hard during at time where elsewhere something had what it would have given kingdoms and empires for. Stop it. In relation of this with the question, I'm curious as the new boom of licensing older anime will inspire some insight outside of what everyone is into today with anime. I'm not demanding publishers to import bad anime, but I've noticed from the recent WGN podcast Lynzee was featured on that there are a lot of turn of the decade adults who want to watch older anime. Hell, Dragon Ball Z started in 1989, and Yu Yu Hakusho started in 1994; when did we get them? About five or so more years later, and they still were great. Sure, those are special cases, but do some test runs if you're interested people. Anime isn't just about what is always great and in and now and "with taste" and the Miyazakis, it's well, just about everything. Like in Fahrenheit 451, you can't get flowers from flowers and fireworks from fireworks people. |
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dark13
Posts: 562 |
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https://myanimelist.net/news/50582644 If we are talking about Popular Today anime Mob psycho is a good example and it was ranked 69 Reborn at 64 YuYu hakusho at 65 People always Forgot that REBORN and titles like are so Big in Japan that even regular people in japan who don't watch anime in that country know what those shows are and being in the NHK rank is no Small Feet their the largest Broadcaster in japan. |
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