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ThatGuyWhoLikesThings
Joined: 04 Jul 2013
Posts: 1029
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Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2020 1:40 pm
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It should be noted that the specific wording in JP Kyoya uses to describe his talent is much closer to "immortality" than "invincibility". He's more than just extremely resilient, death is a flat-out impossibility for him, not to mention he's also unaging, which explains some of his quirks. Unfamiliar with modern slang, into retro games and manga, suggests playing with a weird doll as an alternative, his archaic way of talking (which can't be entirely reflected in English, but the subs do have him refer to Nana as "kid", which isn't someone the same age would do) - it serves to hint at the fact that he's at least quite a bit older than he looks.
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darkchibi07
Joined: 15 Oct 2003
Posts: 5510
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Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2020 1:49 pm
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I have to admit, I did get a little spoiled by the "big twist" at the end of the first episode after hearing a lot of hoopla over it so it kind of ruined the shock factor for me. But regardless of that, it feels so freakin' refreshing to see an anime series with a female lead doing these battle-of-the-wits thing. I doubt this will reach the heights of Death Note or the like, but I'm on board with this show as long it doesn't peter out badly.
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FilthyCasual
Joined: 01 Jun 2015
Posts: 2368
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Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2020 3:31 pm
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I suspect that Nana actually hates that old manga because being forced by a bunch of adults to fight and kill superpowered monsters at great personal risk to yourself is a pretty raw deal.
I was spoiled on the show going in, which is the entire reason I watched it in the first given how painfully rote the character designs and PV were. Can't say I share the frothing hatred of "potatoes", but it was quite satisfying to see Nana show her true colors. After the great finish to episode three, I'm curious where the show will go. Will Nana continue focusing on Kyoya or will she try killing someone instead and avoiding him?
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Florete
Joined: 21 Jan 2018
Posts: 379
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Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2020 4:34 pm
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FilthyCasual wrote: | I was spoiled on the show going in, which is the entire reason I watched it in the first given how painfully rote the character designs and PV were. |
Me too, lol. I had no interest in the show until I read about the 1st episode twist.
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bennyl
Joined: 06 Apr 2019
Posts: 123
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Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2020 6:02 pm
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Maybe it's just me, but I don't like anime that I can't root for the protagonist and I can't root for a straight up serial killer. And killing people because they might do something bad in the future? It doesn't get more yikes than that.
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immblueversion
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Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2020 6:30 pm
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I remember this for a certain article years ago that criticized it for the way its twist destroyed its worldbuilding, and while I understand that some of it gets explained down the line (like why the government would send a single assassin to take out the students instead of other methods like poison or bombings), there's a point to be made in how many holes pop up in the premise the more you think about it. So instead of worrying about that, I took it as unashamed pulp fiction about a bloody cat-and-mouse game and got my enjoyment out of it that way.
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FilthyCasual
Joined: 01 Jun 2015
Posts: 2368
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Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2020 7:08 pm
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bennyl wrote: | Maybe it's just me, but I don't like anime that I can't root for the protagonist and I can't root for a straight up serial killer. And killing people because they might do something bad in the future? It doesn't get more yikes than that. |
she's cute tho
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Animegomaniac
Joined: 16 Feb 2012
Posts: 4157
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Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2020 7:21 pm
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bennyl wrote: | Maybe it's just me, but I don't like anime that I can't root for the protagonist and I can't root for a straight up serial killer. And killing people because they might do something bad in the future? It doesn't get more yikes than that. |
I can't stand the series as Nana is killing them as they are in fact helping people. And it's kind of sick seeing how Steve gets off on this. I'm supposed to relishing the death of each character? That's... odd as the only character I'm hoping to see die right now is Nana.
I don't watch Friday the 13th movies to see Jason kill teen after teen, I watch them to see the Final Girl finally stop him.
I'm expecting yet another twist, one to untwist that twist but I don't know if it'll be worth it.
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harminia
Joined: 24 Aug 2015
Posts: 2045
Location: australia
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Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2020 8:30 pm
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Animegomaniac wrote: | I don't watch Friday the 13th movies to see Jason kill teen after teen, I watch them to see the Final Girl finally stop him. |
Good for you but a lot of people watch horror movies because they want to see people die. That doesn't discredit your opinion, and likewise your opinion doesn't discredit theirs. If you don't like it, that's fine. Don't watch the show. Don't interact with the people you think are "sick" because they enjoy it. Clearly this show, and it's fanbase, are not for you.
Feel like people are reading too much into an anime that's basically just a trashy suspense story.
I enjoy Talentless Nana but man, it's really not that deep.
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ThatGuyWhoLikesThings
Joined: 04 Jul 2013
Posts: 1029
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Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2020 8:39 pm
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[quote="youarenotanorc"]Post removed[/spoiler]
But I think you're misunderstanding what steve is even getting at. all he was saying that nana being a very calculated subversion of the "manic pixie dream girl" trope (which can definitely be construed as sexist, although it can depend on the context) is a decent bit of feminist writing, regardless of whether that was the author's intention. no one is trying to argue talentless nana is a work of feminist art (because i can definitely tell you upfront it's not, even if nana herself is a very respectable protagonist all things considered).
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BodaciousSpacePirate
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Joined: 17 Apr 2015
Posts: 3019
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Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2020 9:24 pm
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I am incredibly concerned that this is going to end in a huge "go buy the manga" ending.
ThatGuyWhoLikesThings wrote: | That won't be as hard as you think because one of the few girls Nana kills is in fact a total psychopath and one of Nana's few justified kills. She kills 2 other girls, but they're jerks in the typical teenager way, not irredeemably awful. |
Agreed. How much or how little I've been "on Nana's side" has typically had absolutely nothing to do with whether she's trying to kill a boy or a girl.
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John Thacker
Joined: 28 Oct 2013
Posts: 1009
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Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2020 10:13 pm
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Quote: | male entitlement in an incalculable number of anime and manga series |
Yes, generally the ones aimed at boys. And the ones aimed at girls with a female lead character do exactly the same thing with impossibly amazing boys and men falling all over the unremarkable girl next door stand in for the viewer. It's not really much of a case of male entitlement, more of a case of self-insertion, wish fulfillment, and identifying with the main character.
As far as Death Note goes, it's a perfectly excellent demonstration of Lord Acton's maxim but certainly you can't make any sort of work like that without having Bad Fans. It's quite clear that Walter White is irredeemably evil and not justified in anything that he did from the very beginning (and there were always other options), but that doesn't stop people from rooting for him or Tony Soprano.
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arkhangelsk
Joined: 18 May 2019
Posts: 20
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Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2020 2:53 am
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bennyl wrote: | Maybe it's just me, but I don't like anime that I can't root for the protagonist and I can't root for a straight up serial killer. And killing people because they might do something bad in the future? It doesn't get more yikes than that. |
Well, she's cute, she's the underdog despite her relative intelligence, she's exploited (by the government even if they are right).
And when the estimated casualties are in the millions, the calculus of pre-emptive strikes based on probability changes.
John Thacker wrote: | Yes, generally the ones aimed at boys. And the ones aimed at girls with a female lead character do exactly the same thing with impossibly amazing boys and men falling all over the unremarkable girl next door stand in for the viewer. It's not really much of a case of male entitlement, more of a case of self-insertion, wish fulfillment, and identifying with the main character. |
But even then, the allocations are different. Notice that in the examples cited, the boys are still the ones with the abilities. Japanese writing is often quite sexist in regard to allocation, but ironically I think it does make the series with female TUEEE characters more viewable than those with male TUEEE characters. The Japanese writer's instinct is to create moments of weakness and vulnerability, which ironically gives the characters some much needed roundness to be more cute than disgusting.
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Anneyuno1
Joined: 20 Jul 2019
Posts: 68
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Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2020 5:11 am
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what I like me about Nana is to have raised her first episode as a generic "magic high school battle anime" full of cliches just to finally shoves them all a trash.
This series is the destruction of fantasy chuuni, Nanao is basically a representation of "anime protagonist" archetype as Touma and Shirou Emiya an apparent loser with a hard life or traumatic past he wich is presented with a supernatural event where he can prove that he is better than others while all the girls around him fall in love with he.
It may not be a good anime and the script is full of plot holes, but it has a lot of merit to have created a series (perhaps the only one of its type) that goes against self-insert fantasies.
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Seagloom
Joined: 04 Nov 2017
Posts: 298
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Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2020 5:52 am
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Anneyuno1 wrote: | it has a lot of merit to have created a series (perhaps the only one of its type) that goes against self-insert fantasies. |
It doesn't. It really, *really* doesn't. All it does is trade one cliché for another. The review's reading of the first episode is interesting and I like it; but it is unfortunately inapplicable to this series in the long run. That will not be evident in the material this season covers, however.
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