Forum - View topicThis Week in Anime - On The First Day of Anime Christmas...
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FireChick
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Posts: 2494 Location: United States |
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To quote a blogger I know who saw and hated Guilty Crown, Shu isn't so much a character as he is a plot device, and his personality changes because the plot demands it. Yeah, I remember this anime being shit on when it first aired, and IMHO, it's well deserved.
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Glordit
Posts: 685 |
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I'd say "And Yet the Town Moves" above everything else, Majestic Prince 2nd, Noein 3rd, BECK 4th. Have yet to see KEY
Guily Crown is more like a case study in how terrible a show can become. |
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Andrew Cunningham
Posts: 527 Location: Seattle |
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I finally watched the And Yet the Town Moves anime this year as well, having translated some of the later manga volumes for Crunchyroll (and grabbing all the author's work.)
I enjoyed it for what it is, but there's definitely a degree to which it fundamentally doesn't get the source material. Like Shaft seem to think Hotori is hot, but in the manga when she's drawn sitting around the house in her underwear it just makes her look like a [expletive] slob, and that's so much funnier. The anime also didn't quite get to the point where Futaba entirely stole the position of second lead, so there wasn't nearly enough of her. |
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harminia
Posts: 2064 Location: australia |
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Despite never finishing it I love Noein. It used to air on TV here and I enjoyed watching sporadic episodes. I have the full season now but I'm stuck debating whether to watch it in the dub I'm familiar with or in sub, which I usually prefer for anime.
Guilty Crown was one of those shows you really had to be there watching as it simulcast. I feel like the only way to capture the fun of watching it nowadays is in a group watch. Everyone coming together to observe it's painful slide into shitness was truly an experience. The soundtrack still goes hard though. Not many songs out there can beat Bios.
I think it's available on Tubi? At least, I started watching it on Tubi last year or so. |
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Takkun4343
Posts: 1586 Location: Englewood, Ohio |
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Oh hey, I've actually seen four of those!
Noein was in 2007, through our good ol' friend Sci-Fi Ani-Mondays. I remember liking it, but it was a little too high-concept and confusing to really stick in my mind beyond key moments. SyFy apparently agreed, as it never got rerun after the premieres finished. BECK was in 2010, via FUNimation's Viridian Collection set. There are some rough patches, less in the sense of animation quality and more Koyuki's social connections in the first half, but taken as a whole, it's good stuff. Guilty Crown was in 2011-2012, a seasonal viewing. I mostly only watched this because this was in my "watching (almost) every recent Production I.G anime" phase, and while it wasn't as bad as BLOOD-C a season earlier or Fena: Pirate Princess a decade later, it was key proof that I.G was, in fact, capable of missing. But still, I feel more sorry than I should for shows that are dunked on and ripped apart ruthlessly, so as much as it annoyed me from start to finish, I still like the show more than I don't. Tsugumi is best girl, and it amuses me that her seiyuu and Shu's are married now. And Yet the Town Moves was 2021-2022, an "out-of-seasonal" viewing. Very fun show, well worth my time. Last edited by Takkun4343 on Wed Dec 20, 2023 7:28 am; edited 1 time in total |
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prime_pm
Posts: 2375 Location: Your Mother's Bedroom |
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I just couldn't get into And Yet The Town Moves. Just never thought it was that funny. It's like a bunch of things that I'm supposed to be laughing at but I just can't. Just didn't do it for me.
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Key
Moderator
Posts: 18494 Location: Indianapolis, IN (formerly Mimiho Valley) |
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The only thing worth remembering about Guilty Crown is its powerhouse OP. But it is also part of one sordid fun fact: it was not the only series in its debut year to feature a young man reaching into the chest of a young woman to obtain something mystical. (See also The Mystic Archives of Dantalian.)
As for Key the Metal Idol, I (obviously) join Steve in advocating for this one at every opportunity. Its first three episodes only scratch the surface of how brutal a condemnation it is of the idol industry, and those three episodes alone aren't enough to show how little its plot resembles anything else in anime. Its weakness is, indeed, that its movie-length next-to-last episode is a bit of a chore to get through (it's mostly one epic info dump), but the plot has some fascinating turns and I'd stack it against any modern idol show for song quality. I also agree that its OP is among the greats. |
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pi8you
Posts: 196 Location: Minneapolis |
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Some mighty fine gifting in there.
BECK's an all-timer for me as well, and contains one of my favorite scenes in all of anime towards the end (music rights be damned). The soundtracks are so good they don't leave the rotation for too long either, even all these years later. Noein was a blast to watch week to week, blending some really engaging sci-fi ideas with great action. I really need to revisit it though, see how it holds up. Ditto for Birdy the Mighty: Decode, which I would love to see on blu-ray someday. I watched And Yet The Town Moves at the start of this year, and finally got around to reading the manga earlier this month before Crunchyroll could pull the plug on its service (along with Kawai Complex, which had also been long overdue for a read). SHAFT definitely left their mark on it, but the parts the show doesn't cover go to some truly excellent and/or out there places. |
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Top Gun
Posts: 4828 |
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Heh, I am here for any and all shitting on Hisashi Hirai's, um, "talents." I enjoyed both Infinite Ryvius and s-CRY-ed, but it was despite his derpy--ass character faces, not because of them.
Some really good choices in here. Beck is as much of an all-time banger as its soundtrack. I've seen multiple people refer to it as possibly the most indie-film-ish anime series ever made, and I think that tracks. It has such a genuine feel to it, perfectly capturing the screw-ups and successes and struggle and triumph of a bunch of kids getting together to form a great band. A special shout-out has to go to the job FUNi did dubbing the songs, because the English cast was absolutely up to the challenge. I caught Noein when SyFy aired it right at the beginning of its Ani-Mondays block. As the column noted, it's a spectacularly creative show from a visual standpoint, playing fast-and-loose with its animation in a way few series successfully pull off. My fondest memories of it involved the weekly discussions I had with a group of friends who were all watching along together. I had to apply my undergrad physics degree to reading up on quantum mechanics concepts that were quite frankly well over my head, and then attempting to explain them in a way that the rest of the group could understand. I'm not sure I accomplished much besides giving everyone massive headaches. I actually just picked up a copy of Key the Metal Idol, largely due to the praise heaped on it by Key and others. My backlog's pretty much a lost cause at this point, but maybe I can spur myself to dive into it. |
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Shay Guy
Posts: 2337 |
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I got 10 episodes into Noein back in 2017; maybe I should give it another shot. Though with my current treadmill-focused watch patterns, it's quite possible I could miss too much of the plot to follow. It's pretty dense.
I'm pleased with myself for anticipating this joke on Twitter Saturday.
Yup, Arjuna's still there, both sub and dub. At least here in the States. |
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Joe Mello
Posts: 2316 Location: Online Terminal |
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Two powerhouse OP's. |
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One-Eye
Posts: 2267 |
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Beck is a classic (I have the old amp LE box) though for a show about music it could have used 1-2 more songs. Noein doesn't quite reach its ambitions, but its creativity is easily seen. And Yet the Town Moves I haven't seen in over a decade and I remember it being ok, but it was not a keeper for me. Majestic Prince was a mixed bag with the mech action sometimes being good, but then there being times when it was obvious that the budget was tight and the story had its moments but it also sometimes dragged. Unless you don't like slice of life, I'd say Beck is a must watch and to a lesser extent Noein as well. The others are only if you have the free time (again can't say anything about Key).
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aereus
Posts: 576 |
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Yeah MJP I felt was pretty mediocre throughout, as far as story and characters goes. One of the few shows where I got to ep20+ and finally had enough and dropped. I just realized, it shares a lot of parallels to why I disliked and didn't finish Macross Delta: Uninteresting characters, with a weak ongoing plot, where the MC seems to power up simply by getting more angry: Screams and flails around and turns into a DBZ fight sequence where they're trading blows 30 times a second.
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