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	<title>Yukan Blog! &#187; 21st Century Digital Boy</title>
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		<title>Essential Anime</title>
		<link>http://yukan.dasaku.net/featured/essential-anime/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 23 Nov 2008 04:56:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>21st Century Digital Boy</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://yukan.dasaku.net/?p=3075</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Sometimes, love em or hate em, there are shows you just have to watch. 
Just as it is essential to eat certain healthy foods to maintain life, and it is essential to study if you want to score well on tests, there are certain anime that, as an anime fan, are essential to watch. (shit analogy, I know.) They aren&#8217;t necessarily shows everyone will love, as there&#8217;s really no show that everyone will love, but are shows you&#8217;d have to give at least a try lest you miss outon something ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone" src="http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b269/MetalSonic700/utena-1.jpg" alt="" width="767" height="299" /></p>
<p>Sometimes, love em or hate em, there are shows you just have to watch. <span id="more-3075"></span></p>
<p>Just as it is essential to eat certain healthy foods to maintain life, and it is essential to study if you want to score well on tests, there are certain anime that, as an anime fan, are essential to watch. (shit analogy, I know.) They aren&#8217;t necessarily shows everyone will love, as there&#8217;s really no show that everyone will love, but are shows you&#8217;d have to give at least a try lest you miss outon something you&#8217;d potentially love. In this post I will not be mentioning any Hayao Miyazaki, Satoshi Kon, or GAINAX shows because, well, that&#8217;s just too obvious. Here are some other anime that anyone and everyone should give a shot for one reason or another (in no real order).</p>
<p><strong>1. Macross</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignnone" src="http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b269/MetalSonic700/macross_cast.jpg" alt="" width="512" height="355" /></p>
<p>I am not nearly as qualified to talk about Macross as, say, <a href="http://ghostlightning.wordpress.com/2008/11/21/how-to-remember-love-macross/">ghostlightining</a>, but it needs to be mentioned. Macross has influence and popularity second only to Gundam in the history of anime culture. This 80s anime from director Shoji Kawamori fused epic space battle with a romance love-triangle &#8211; a fusion that was totally alien to anime at the time. Macross, like Gundam, has spawned an assload of series over the years (though not nearly as many) and is widely regarded as a classic. The show was only just recently released in it&#8217;s original form in America thanks to copyright issues involving the dub version, Robotech. Robotech was brought to America in the late 80s (I believe) on Toonami and was a slightly different version in which both of the female leads were total bitches.</p>
<p>Whichever version you see, though, Macross is a show that&#8217;s hard not to love. The story is engrossing and interesting with plot elements that feel fresh even by today&#8217;s standards and classic characters you will never forget. I had first gotten into Robotech when I was a newbie anime fan years ago and even though I usually strayed away from older-looking anime I still fell in love with Robotech. I even bought some of the games, though the Gamecube ones kind of sucked (and I sucked at them). Also like Gundam, Macross is so integral to anime&#8217;s backbone that it is near impossible not to find it&#8217;s influence and references in modern shows.</p>
<p><strong>2. Rose of Versailles</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignnone" src="http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b269/MetalSonic700/Oscar5.jpg" alt="" width="480" height="339" /></p>
<p>Most of the best anime of the 70s and 80s can be attributed to the genius directing of Osamu Dezaki (Rose of Versailles, Space Adventure Cobra, Ashita no Joe) who has since only directed the Air and Clannad movies (which is so very strange.) Somehwere in the midst of all the kids shows and space operas of the time, Dezaki directed what remains one of the most original anime ever. Well, while original for anime, the story is classic &#8211; being that of Marie Antoinette. Rose of V is a very surprising show in that it is definitively shoujo but has badass sword fights, a super-GAR heroine (who is referred to as a man so much that it&#8217;s hard not to think of her as one) and puts all the drama and catfights into historical and political context. There is a little something in this show for all viewers, and Oscar is just such an insane badass everone will have to fall in love with her (even if it makes you feel oddly gay).</p>
<p><strong>3. Turn A Gundam</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignnone" src="http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b269/MetalSonic700/turnagundam.jpg" alt="" width="200" height="200" /></p>
<p>Telling you that you need to watch Gundam would be too obvious. When it comes to anime, Gundam is the very definition of classic. If you want an easy guide to watching Gundam, start with the original movies, move onto Zeta Gundam, and go from there on the path that unfolds. However, if you don&#8217;t really like Gundam, watch Turn A. Turn A Gundam is definitely the black sheep of the universal century gundams (if you don&#8217;t know what UC is, they are the gundam shows that all follow a story starting from the original series. the non UC Gundam shows are all the ones with pretty boys like Wing and 00.) Other than being strange for Gundam, it&#8217;s just a strange show altogether. It is set in a post-apocalypse world where society has been reset to the place we were in the 1800s, until invaders with future (or rather, past) technology come from the moon colony to reclaim earth and simultaneously, earthlings stumble upon this great old technology underground. Turn A Gundam is full of eccentric and memorable characters who create an endlessly fun experience. The show is just pure fucking chaos. Over 50 episodes there is non-stop going in circles between war, peace, and what the fuck as people continually make things better and worse at the expense of everyone. The show is full of thrills and fun and is sure to bring a smile to the viewer&#8217;s face all the time.</p>
<p>4. <strong>Mushi-shi</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignnone" src="http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b269/MetalSonic700/mushishi.jpg" alt="" width="248" height="320" /></p>
<p>Mushi-shi is possiblyy the most well-done monster of the week show about someone who can see spirits ever made and certainly the widest appealing. Mushi-shi is a rare show that mixes a somber and melancholy experience with a fun and always amazing atmosphere. There is enough variety between episodes to never really get old and the stories are always both intelligent and amazing. Even someone who&#8217;s seen a bunch of shows about Japanese spirits and the like will be interested by the stories in this show. In addition, the main character manages to wrap a cool, mysterious atmosphere around a knowable and attractive person. Even though we aren&#8217;t given much info about Ginko early in the show, one will instantly feel like they know him and want to see more of him. The animation and art are breathtaking beyond almost any other TV-anime as well.</p>
<p><strong>5. The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignnone" src="http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b269/MetalSonic700/firma3copy.jpg" alt="" width="480" height="180" /></p>
<p>I&#8217;d almost say this was too obvious, especially since just about everyone has seen it, but I really wanted it on the list because many seek to discredit it&#8217;s importance, despite it possibly being the most important anime of the best five years. Haruhi is the ultimate fusion of genres and anime styles and if it was less popular I doubt there would be next to any haters. Haruhi definitely raised the bar for the current generation of anime and left everything else struggling to compare.</p>
<p><strong>6. Revolutionary Girl Utena</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignnone" src="http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b269/MetalSonic700/utena-2.jpg" alt="" width="619" height="407" /></p>
<p>I&#8217;d actually have a pretty tough time telling you exactly how insanely boss Utena is. For starters it is BY FAR the most well-directed and thorough anime ever created. Every damn second of it was carefully crafted with symbolism, double-meanings, and background info. The imagery is constantly creative, and the story is outright zany. The cahracters are all hilarious and fun and interesting and&#8230; and&#8230; dammit watch Utena! It&#8217;s got one of anime&#8217;s most inventive and fun soundtracks and lots of great voice acting, too. There&#8217;s like, NOTHING wrong with this show. If you don&#8217;t mind spoilers, you can read <a href="http://bignanime.wordpress.com/2008/04/14/who-what-where-which/">this ingenius in-depth review of it</a>, but if you haven&#8217;t seen it, fucking take my word for it and jst go watch the damn show.</p>
<p><strong>7. Otaku no Video and Genshiken</strong></p>
<p>(photobucket is being strange all of a sudden)</p>
<p>Otaku no Video and Genshiken are defining otaku shows of two different generations. OnV, released in 1990, shows everything about the lives of otaku from the old days of worshiping Gundam and Macross and Maisson Ikoku. Genshiken is a modern version with the eroge and moe obsessed nerds of today. Both are very insightful, very worth watching, and sure to get any anime fan even deeper into their hobby as well as understanding the vulture even better. Both anime were major advancements in my fandom personally as they introduced me to more of the anime world. Besides just being fun for anime fans, tough, both are also just damn fucking good shows.</p>
<p><strong>8. Cowboy Bebop</strong></p>
<p>(this post will so be updated when my comp stops being a fuckstick)</p>
<p>This is another anime that is almost too obvious though as we move further toward 2010 more and moe anime fans have goen without seing it. Even I have not seen it in quite a while and would do damn well to rewatch it. Bebop is an episodic anime entirely in a class of it&#8217;s own. Yoko Kanno definitely eliverse the most diverse and interesting soundtrack in anime history and the show&#8217;s style is outright incomperable to anything before it and has never been matched since. It&#8217;s classic cool that really stays with you. I couldn&#8217;t even picture my anime fandom without Cowboy Debop and it&#8217;s hard to imagine that some have gone without it.</p>
<p><strong>9. Escaflowne</strong></p>
<p>To be honest, I really despise Escaflowne for being the most disappointing anime I have ever seen. However, I am in the extreme minority with that opinion and even though there are things I hate about the show there are others I absolutely love. It&#8217;s a perfect fusion of shounen and shoujo, mech and fantasy, and great perks like animation and music from champs (Yoko Kanno for the 3rd time on this list, she really just turns everything she touches into gold.) Escaflowne has all the makings of a classic, which is how most people will see it, as we who hate the second half are a lesser breed.</p>
<p><strong>10. Haibane Renmei</strong></p>
<p>I think it is pretty much mandatory that at leas tone of Yoshitoshi ABe&#8217;s works be seen by everyone, and the most accessible is certainly Haibane Renmei. This is another show that had a lot of heart and soul poured into it&#8217;s creation. For a 13 episode series, it is absolutely incredibly engrossing with a deep world that the viewer can&#8217;t help but feel like a part of. The story is riveting drama with an ending that none can find unsurprising. Every character is a world unto themselves &#8211; 13 episodes have never been so thorough. Haibane is one of the few shows I could watch again and again and just fully immerse myself in.</p>
<p><strong>11. Honey and Clover</strong></p>
<p>This is almost an odd choice for this list because I don&#8217;t think it has the same wide appeal as everything on this list. Hachikuro is definiteively aimed toward an older audience and is a good bit more realist than more anime. That said, you can&#8217;t beat it in terms of introspective rom-com slice-of-life mastery. Some episodes are the funniest episodes of anime I&#8217;ve ever seen, some are the most heart-wrenching, and some are the most true-to-life. It has one of the most respectible casts ever and they slowly become something like  your own family as you go along. The only other show I could compare to this is Nana, but that one is way more aimed for girls whereas Hacjikuro can be enjoyed by anyone who is familiar with the ways of, well, life.</p>
<p><strong>12. Martian Successor Nadesico</strong></p>
<p>Finally, the most important on this list, the king of the crop, Nadesico. The definitive post-Ea mech craze anime that so brilliantly stands for everything that it is within itself. Ermm, it is what it is. Nadesico is fundamentally infallible and thus could be considered one of the greatest anime of all time. But don&#8217;t take my word for it, read this insightful quote fro the Almighty Omoikane.</p>
<p>&#8220;To make a lofty and senseless analogy, Nadesico is like a man&#8217;s heart. Deep, subtle, but very real. On the surface it&#8217;s superficial and it can be really funny at times, but each passing wave is just a shadow of the profound inner workings that lies beneath. The uncovering of that is what made Nadesico my favorite ever since I watched it through the first time. It managed to be funny, easy to swallow, but my mind chews on it like tough jerky, releasing plesant &#8220;flavors&#8221; each time I think back to it.&#8221;</p>
<p>Wiser words are rarely spoken.</p>
<p>So anyway, that&#8217;s my list of Absolutely Essential Anime. If you have any more you&#8217;d like to add, lets definitely discuss them in the comments.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>53</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Studio 4c &#8211; Studio Studies Part Four</title>
		<link>http://yukan.dasaku.net/miscellaneous/studio-4c-studio-studies-part-four/</link>
		<comments>http://yukan.dasaku.net/miscellaneous/studio-4c-studio-studies-part-four/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 01 Nov 2008 01:27:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>21st Century Digital Boy</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Miscellaneous]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://yukan.dasaku.net/?p=2772</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Having discussed my favorites, I&#8217;d now like to go over the studio I have the most respect for, Studio 4c. 
It was founded by genius director Koji Morimoto and company president Eiko Tanaka, with whom you can read a great interview from Asian Cinema site Midnight Eye, in 1986. As mentioned in the article, 4c began as just Tanaka and grew bit by bit over time. The group has a core 45 or so members and works on whatever the fuck they feel like. They have madeassloads of animated shorts, ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone" src="http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b269/MetalSonic700/mahou-shoujotai-ep-35_16166-1.jpg" alt="" width="762" height="260" /></p>
<p>Having discussed my favorites, I&#8217;d now like to go over the studio I have the most respect for, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Studio_4C">Studio 4c</a>. <span id="more-2772"></span></p>
<p>It was founded by genius director <strong>Koji Morimoto</strong> and company president <strong>Eiko Tanaka</strong>, with whom you can read a <a href="http://www.midnighteye.com/interviews/eiko_tanaka.shtml">great interview</a> from Asian Cinema site Midnight Eye, in 1986. As mentioned in the article, 4c began as just Tanaka and grew bit by bit over time. The group has a core 45 or so members and works on whatever the fuck they feel like. They have madeassloads of animated shorts, music videos, and other obscure shit. Because 4c has a decently sized catalogue and so many different kinds of works, I won&#8217;t be doing this post totally chronologically as I have before, and will only cover the works I&#8217;ve actually seen (3/4 or so). I will, however, mention that their first animated feature was a 3-part movie called <strong>Memories</strong> that is commonly considered a classic, released in 1995 with collaboration from <strong>Madhouse</strong> studio. For a full list  of their works, see the Wikipedia link above or head over to <a href="http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/company.php?id=359">ANN</a>. In addition, I will try to provide Veoh or Youtube links for most of these since a good amount are under 20 minutes long. I would like to stress my advice that you watch them since words don&#8217;t do any of them justice.</p>
<p>4c&#8217;s first animated short, produced in 1995, was <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3vN5dkU1iQ">Tobira o Akete</a> (not to be confused with a 1986 OVA of the same title.) This whimsical and cute ten-minute short is by no means one of the studio&#8217;s best works, but serves as a good show of what&#8217;s to come and not a bad start. 1997 saw the release of probably the most highly regarded Studio 4c short, <a href="http://www.crunchyroll.com/media-61625/Noiseman-Sound-Insect-Movie.html?hires=1">Noiseman Sound Insect</a>. This 15-minute film features music by <strong>Yoko Kanno</strong> and an incredible sound and video production in general. I like to think of it as a Disney film condensed into 15 minutes with 10 times the creativity. <a href="http://www.veoh.com/videos/v808209a8S6362P?rank=0&amp;jsonParams={%22order%22%3A%22default%22%2C%22range%22%3A%22a%22%2C%22query%22%3A%22eternal+family%22%2C%22numResults%22%3A20%2C%22rlmax%22%3Anull%2C%22contentRatingId%22%3A2%2C%22rlmin%22%3A0%2C%22sId%22%3A%22835106888513023478%22%2C%22veohOnly%22%3Atrue}&amp;searchId=835106888513023478&amp;rank=1">Eternal Family</a>, also from 1997, is one of my personal favorites though the repeated toilet flushing animation gets annoying before it ceases. The 20-minute movie is quite hilarious and by the end, endearing. 2003 saw one of the studio&#8217;s frequent collaborations with Madhouse and <strong>Production I.G</strong>. with the production of <strong>The Animatrix</strong>, for which they animated the parts <strong>Beyond</strong>, <strong>A Detective&#8217;s Story</strong>, and <strong>Kid&#8217;s Story</strong> (the latter 2 of which were directed by <strong>Shinichiro Watanabe</strong> of Cowboy Bebop and Samurai Champloo fame.) Another of these collaborations formed in 2008 on <strong>Batman: Gotham Knight</strong>, for which 4c animated <strong>Have I Got A Story For You</strong> and <strong>Working Through Pain</strong>, the former of which is the most fun Batman will ever be while still being Batman.</p>
<p>In 2004 Studio 4c produced cult hit <strong>Mahou Shoujo Tai Arusu</strong> (now licenced as <strong>Tweeny Witches</strong> and currently being released), a show with 40 episodes at 15 minutes an episode. This show is a family-friendly fantasy with an imagination the size of a fucking country. It gives the word &#8216;whimsical&#8217; an entirely new meaning and never stops being incredible. The DVDs are only about 10 dollars a pop at Best Buy and carry considerable content &#8211; Isuggest you go buy them now. 2008 saw the birth of another great Studio 4c show, the wildly popular  <strong>Detroit Metal City</strong>. GO TO DMC! GO TO DMC! GO TO DMC!!!! Disappointingly, Studio 4c is apparently somehow involved in the currently airing new Transformers series on Cartoon Network. I don&#8217;t know if it&#8217;s because they are only involved and not totally in control of it, but this show sucks so fucking hard it&#8217;s difficult to conceive. It has some of the shoddiest fucking animation in a cartoon I&#8217;ve dared towitness. It&#8217;s outright embarrassing that something like that airs on television.</p>
<p>Probably the most interesting works of the studio are their collections of smaller film series. Usually these will be a few short animations with extremely different styles and plots and directors connected for some incomprehensible purpose. One of these, <a href="http://www.veoh.com/videos/v825789Axq8EdKp?rank=0&amp;jsonParams={%22order%22%3A%22default%22%2C%22range%22%3A%22a%22%2C%22query%22%3A%22digital+juice%22%2C%22numResults%22%3A20%2C%22rlmax%22%3Anull%2C%22contentRatingId%22%3A2%2C%22rlmin%22%3A0%2C%22sId%22%3A%227081365628850782208%22%2C%22veohOnly%22%3Atrue}&amp;searchId=7081365628850782208&amp;rank=1">Digital Juice</a>, is a 6-part 20-minute video that, like everything Studio 4c, is 40% unique, 40% awesome and 20% random. It&#8217;s been a while, but I distinctly remember totally loving certain parts and totally hating others &#8211; a curse that plagues several of these compilations. The second of them, 2002&#8217;s <strong>Sweat Punch</strong> series, is less a compilation as each of the 10-minute films is definitely separate. Oddly I haven&#8217;t managed to see the first part, and the fourth part,Higan, I did not find enjoyable. However, parts 2 and 3,  <a href="http://www.veoh.com/videos/v808134DBYZSFBr?rank=11&amp;jsonParams={%22order%22%3A%22default%22%2C%22range%22%3A%22a%22%2C%22query%22%3A%22end+of+the+world%22%2C%22numResults%22%3A20%2C%22rlmax%22%3Anull%2C%22contentRatingId%22%3A2%2C%22rlmin%22%3A0%2C%22sId%22%3A%228747108626389877760%22%2C%22veohOnly%22%3Atrue}&amp;searchId=8747108626389877760&amp;rank=12">End of the World</a> and <a href="http://www.veoh.com/videos/v10181633S4gExrQ4?rank=0&amp;jsonParams={%22numResults%22%3A20%2C%22rlmin%22%3A0%2C%22query%22%3A%22kigeki%22%2C%22rlmax%22%3Anull%2C%22veohOnly%22%3Atrue%2C%22contentRatingId%22%3A2%2C%22order%22%3A%22default%22%2C%22range%22%3A%22a%22%2C%22sId%22%3A%224960977076142726144%22}&amp;searchId=4960977076142726144&amp;rank=1">Comedy</a> (or Kigeki) respectively, are by far my two favorite Studio 4c productions. Though they are complete opposites in style, both feature highly memorable and exciting plots that could match most feature-length films. Comedy pretty much single-handedly introduced me to a love of animated shorts. The 4-part 2006 compilation <a href="http://www.veoh.com/videos/v156138317J2CsTb3?rank=0&amp;jsonParams={%22order%22%3A%22default%22%2C%22range%22%3A%22a%22%2C%22query%22%3A%22amazing+nuts%22%2C%22numResults%22%3A20%2C%22rlmax%22%3Anull%2C%22contentRatingId%22%3A2%2C%22rlmin%22%3A0%2C%22sId%22%3A%226055747771866734592%22%2C%22veohOnly%22%3Atrue}&amp;searchId=6055747771866734592&amp;rank=1">Amazing Nuts!</a> is another in which I found 2 parts to be great and 2 to be totally worthless. The first part, <strong>Global Astroliner</strong>, vibrates with cool and looks a lot like a Gorillaz music video. My favorite of the four is the gloriously stylized <strong>Kung Fu Love </strong>featuring the most memorable character to be seen in a film so short &#8211; I&#8217;d love her to have her own series. Also the cover of Faust volume one looks identical to this film.</p>
<p>2007&#8242; <strong>Ani*Kuri 15</strong> is another collaboration done with a myriad of studios &#8211; a collection of 15 1-minute animations each by a famous director or person otherwise involved in animation that was createdbecause NHK needed money. Some of the directors include  <strong>Satoshi Kon</strong> (Paranoia Agent, Perfect Blue, Millennium Actress), <strong>Makoto Shinkai</strong> (Voices of a Distant Star, 5cm Per Second), and <strong>Shoji Kawamori</strong> (Macross, Arjuna). The latest Studio 4c collection also features the use of many famous directors (including Shinichiro Watanabe once again) doing pieces between 3-20 minutes collected into a feature length film called <strong>Genius Party</strong> (also released in 2007), with the sequel <strong>Genius Party Beyond</strong> planned for the future.</p>
<p>Studio 4c has also produced 3 full-length movies that it is probably most well-known for. The first is <strong>Spriggan</strong> (1998), a turbo-violent action-packed romp through funland. I haven&#8217;t seen this movie in years so I have little memory of it but it used to be one of my favorites. 2004 gave birth to the most experimental project 4c has done (and probably one of the most experimental animated productions ever), <strong>Mind Game</strong>. I&#8217;m not going to say much about Mind Game &#8211; it&#8217;s a movie with a split audience. A lot of people (caughpretentiouscaugh) think it&#8217;s one of the greatest anime ever. I fucking hated it. The director went on to do <strong>Tekkonkinkreet</strong> in 2006 and later Kaiba in 2008 with Madhouse.</p>
<p>Perhaps one of the most interesting categories of 4c&#8217;s productions is their music videos. You&#8217;ve probably seen the video for <strong>Linkin Park&#8217;s Breaking the Habit</strong> &#8211; that was all them. While some of the songs they&#8217;ve done were for Japanese artists, they are also open to doing bands from all around the world. I&#8217;ve seen all the music videos but to stick with the ones I like: <a href="http://www.veoh.com/videos/v157631709YYFPacX?rank=0&amp;jsonParams=%7B%22numResults%22%3A20%2C%22rlmin%22%3A0%2C%22query%22%3A%22ken+ishii+extra%22%2C%22rlmax%22%3Anull%2C%22veohOnly%22%3Atrue%2C%22contentRatingId%22%3A2%2C%22order%22%3A%22default%22%2C%22range%22%3A%22a%22%2C%22sId%22%3A%22496010286664145195%22%7D&amp;searchId=496010286664145195&amp;rank=1">Extra</a>, <a href="http://www.veoh.com/videos/v831227PbSPJDDq?rank=0&amp;jsonParams=%7B%22numResults%22%3A20%2C%22rlmin%22%3A0%2C%22query%22%3A%22glay+survival%22%2C%22rlmax%22%3Anull%2C%22veohOnly%22%3Atrue%2C%22contentRatingId%22%3A2%2C%22order%22%3A%22default%22%2C%22range%22%3A%22a%22%2C%22sId%22%3A%224847973334547891200%22%7D&amp;searchId=4847973334547891200&amp;rank=1">Survival</a>, <a href="http://www.veoh.com/videos/v15650369czh8hgQA?rank=0&amp;jsonParams=%7B%22order%22%3A%22default%22%2C%22range%22%3A%22a%22%2C%22query%22%3A%22ayumi+hamasaki+connected%22%2C%22numResults%22%3A20%2C%22rlmax%22%3Anull%2C%22contentRatingId%22%3A2%2C%22rlmin%22%3A0%2C%22sId%22%3A%224063156004135108608%22%2C%22veohOnly%22%3Atrue%7D&amp;searchId=4063156004135108608&amp;rank=1">Connected</a>, and <a href="http://www.veoh.com/videos/v831532k6AtFwp9?rank=0&amp;jsonParams=%7B%22order%22%3A%22default%22%2C%22range%22%3A%22a%22%2C%22query%22%3A%22first+squad%22%2C%22numResults%22%3A20%2C%22rlmax%22%3Anull%2C%22contentRatingId%22%3A2%2C%22rlmin%22%3A0%2C%22sId%22%3A%228106440053389998080%22%2C%22veohOnly%22%3Atrue%7D&amp;searchId=8106440053389998080&amp;rank=1">First Squad</a>. It has since been announced that First Squad will be turned into an animated series, which if you see the video, you will know is abadass prospect.</p>
<p>That about covers it &#8211; Studio 4c is the paradigm of uniqueness. They aren&#8217;t even comparable to any other studio out there because they abide by none of the normal standards. It&#8217;s almost apples and oranges to even compare them to other studios at all, but they are yet worth of note and praise.</p>
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		<title>SHAFT &#8211; Studio Studies Part Three</title>
		<link>http://yukan.dasaku.net/miscellaneous/shaft-studio-studies-part-three/</link>
		<comments>http://yukan.dasaku.net/miscellaneous/shaft-studio-studies-part-three/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Oct 2008 23:00:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>21st Century Digital Boy</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Miscellaneous]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://yukan.dasaku.net/?p=2686</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Now that I&#8217;ve covered what I consider the best along with the most influential studio, I have to talk about my personal favorite, SHAFT.

SHAFT was formed in 1975, which comes as a surprise to me because besides their first single-handed production in 1987, Yume Kara, Samenai (which I only just now learned about because I guess this information has just recently surfaced in English whatsoever) they didn&#8217;t do many full-on productions for something like 30 years. SHAFT was originally formed to to digital paint and in-between animation on other shows ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-2726" title="ef" src="http://yukan.dasaku.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/ef.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p>Now that I&#8217;ve covered what I consider the best along with the most influential studio, I have to talk about my personal favorite, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaft_(company)">SHAFT</a>.</p>
<p><span id="more-2686"></span></p>
<p><strong>SHAFT</strong> was formed in 1975, which comes as a surprise to me because besides their first single-handed production in 1987, <strong>Yume Kara, Samenai</strong> (which I only just now learned about because I guess this information has just recently surfaced in English whatsoever) they didn&#8217;t do many full-on productions for something like 30 years. SHAFT was originally formed to to digital paint and in-between animation on other shows and eventually came into their own as an animation production studio. Between 1995 and 2003 they produced some rather average-to-shitty anime that you can read about on that link above, and they also collaborated heavily with GAINAX on that studios average-to-shitty shows. It wasn&#8217;t until 2004 that SHAFT became something important and it was mostly one man to thank for it: <strong>Akiyuki Shinbo</strong>.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s not totally fair. It&#8217;s <strong>Akiyuki Shinbo</strong>, <strong>Tatsuya Oishi</strong>, and <strong>Shin Ounuma</strong>&#8217;s combined forces that brought this escalation of awesomeness to SHAFT, but Shinbo definitely serve as the center and inspiration of works to come. This is made obvious by looking at Akiyuki Shinbo&#8217;s history as a director, which you can do by going over to my Director Worship page and reading about Shinbo though such might be pointless after reading all of this lol. The first SHAFT show to feature this dream-team was 2004 cult hit <strong>Tsukuyomi ~Moon Phase~ </strong>(which is now getting big with it&#8217;s constant play on the FUNimation channel.) Moon Phase could almost be looked at as the groundwork for the structure that SHAFT shows would take in years to come. Even though it is based on a manga, SHAFT put a completely unique twist on it in terms of storytelling, style, and especially direction. Akiyuki Shinbo&#8217;s unique techniques and signature shots rose up frequently and especially in certain episodes of complete and total trippiness. One of the most negatively remembered aspects of the show was the ungodly low budget. Two entire episodes were released with no animation whatsoever. However, this was also the beginning of SHAFT&#8217;s trend of redoing episodes on DVD to make them look nicer which pleased most fans. Even though some (see: Wildarmsheero) consider Moon Phase to be the best SHAFT show to date, I personally couldn&#8217;t get into it and dropped it after 13 episodes &#8211; it was too fucking tsundere.</p>
<p>The next SHAFT title in 2005 would be the definitive landmark of their style -<strong> Pani Poni Dash</strong>. Based on a 4-koma manga, the manga-ka and Shinbo wanted to make it as little like Azumanga Daioh as humanly possible so they set forth to produce one of the most arthouse comedy series around. Pani Poni Dash is what happened when a bunch of otaku with fucking enormous imaginations sat down and put every single thing they possibly could have wanted to put into one anime. Pani Poni Dash is a show that no American could ever fully understand unless they have been living in Japan for a while. The show is constantly making cultural anime references to the point that there are moments in which what is going on in the foreground, what is in the background, and what is being heard can all 3 be referencing something different at the same time. These references cover everything one could think of and then some &#8211; it&#8217;s been speculated that the show may have actually referenced every anime known to man as well. The insanity doesn&#8217;t stop there, though, as Akiyuki shinbo put forth every directing trick he has ever imagined into this show, and the rest o the staff threw in ideas like crazy as well. In an interview, it was noted how basically someone would say something like &#8216;lets do this scene as if it were an RPG!&#8217; and the rest of the staff would say &#8216;why the fuck not!&#8217; essentially. I can only imagine that this was the funnest show to make ever. Unfortunately for fans who don&#8217;t know Japanese the show can be painful to watch. Reading the translations of the fast dialog and the background text at the same time can get to levels of insanity and it is highly suggested that this show be watched any number of times. I personally haven&#8217;t gotten past episode 15 because I frequently get headaches after episodes. It should also be noted I have never finished a Shinbo show in under a year. I don&#8217;t know why.</p>
<p>Interestingly, SHAFT&#8217;s next anime in 2006 did not involve the dream-team at all and was comparably high budget in contrast with other SHAFT productions. This 9-episode anime with 9-minute episodes was <strong>REC</strong>, a very adult but adorable romantic comedy mor in the vein of Hollywood romances than Japanese ones both in style and content. This show was directed by another of my favorite directors, <strong>Ryutaro Nakamura</strong> (Serial Experiments Lain, Kino&#8217;s Journey) but isn&#8217;t experimental (not that the directing isn&#8217;t great anyway). REC is easily the widest-appealing SHAFT anime and if no other, the one I recommend that you watch.</p>
<p>Later that year, SHAFT&#8217;s next low-budget Akiyuki Shinbo-directed production<strong> Negima?!</strong> along with it&#8217;s two OVAs was released (and later in 2008 a third OVA would be made.) I haven&#8217;t seen this show so I can&#8217;t say much about it, but I&#8217;ve read a lot about it. The common consensus is that it started off with all the visual style you&#8217;d expect from Shinbo and SHAFT but around the halfway point it started to get more average and that combined with the already low budget made it no longer worth watching. This has been most commonly attributed to &#8216;the team getting bored.&#8217;</p>
<p>Early 2007 gave birth to my favorite and my introduction to SHAFT/Shinbo, <strong>Hidamari Sketch</strong>. This was another anime based on a 4-koma manga and once again, it is set apart from peers by it&#8217;s visual style. Hidamari Sketch was Shinbo&#8217;s first time showing off completely new directing techniques that matched with the tone of the show to give it a thick, perfect atmosphere. Hidamari Sketch is a very quiet slice-of-life show about four girls in high school with some comedy and a good amount of obscurity, though unlike most anime, the obscurity is never outlandish or the center of attention &#8211; it&#8217;s just taken as everyday occurrence which helps even more to thicken Hidamari Sketch&#8217;s style and make it more fun. Hidamari Sketch also saw the perfection of SHAFT&#8217;s budget-hiding technique. Even though the show was low budget and featured very little animation, the directing and techniques used mask it so that the poor animation goes almost totally unnoticed. It is a very, very powerful technique for a studio to have. Because of Hidamari Sketch&#8217;s nature as an experimental anime with no real plot, parts were able to be used purely for experimentation &#8211; namely the famous episode 5 which featured an acid-trip-like dream sequence that made me into the fan I am of this studio. Hidamari Sketch got 2 specials later that year and the sequel, <strong>Hidamari Sketch x365</strong>, aired in mid-2008. It took me almost exactly a year to complete the firs series and I&#8217;ve yet to start on the second lol.</p>
<p>In the time between that and their next anime, SHAFT produced the second 30-minute <strong>Kino no Tabi</strong> movie, <strong>Byouki no Kuni -For You-</strong>, teaming up once again with Ryutaro Nakamura. I have yet to see this movie. Deeper into 2007, SHAFT/Shinbo produced the show that would start to get Akiyuki Shinbo recognized in western fandom, <strong>Sayonara Zetsubou Sensei</strong>. <strong>Kouji Kumeta</strong>&#8217;s riveting black comedy manga was almost like it was tailor-made for studio SHAFT. As noted in a <a href="http://easternstandard.pbwiki.com/Sayonara+Zetsubo+Sensei">review by Andrew Cunningham</a> (translator for the Boogiepop and Kino novels as well as a good amount of the light novels currently published in English), the manga is at all times positively coated in jokes, and all of the humor is decisively black. Using the joke-hell techniques from Pani Poni Dash combined with Shinbo&#8217;s extremely dark gothic style (as seen in the SoulTaker and PEtit Cossette) SHAFT created the insane force to be reckoned with that is SZS. Even though it is neither Shinbo&#8217;s best directing job nor SHAFT&#8217;s best production, I credit it with being one of the most amazing anime I&#8217;ve seen simply for being so incredibly thorough and so definitively unique. SZS received a sequel, <strong>Zoku Sayonara Zetsubou Sensei</strong>, two seasons later in 2008. Zoku would be the beginning of SHAFT&#8217;s trend of receiving a higher budget only to spend it all on an over-the-top opening episode and go back to low-budget production on those following. I have yet to complete Zoku. There is also a new OVA called <strong>Goku Sayonara Zetsubou Sensei</strong> which has, BY FAR, the greatest fucking opening sequence in anime history, period.</p>
<p>At the end of 2007 SHAFT produced the visual novel adaption <strong>ef ~a tale of memories~</strong> with Shinbo actually performing as &#8217;supervisor&#8217; and Shin Ounuma taking the director&#8217;s chair. This doesn&#8217;t lessen the stle at all, and ef features possibly the best use of SHAFT&#8217;s style to date. While the visual effects are super-frequent and at first seem meaningless, most of them turn into something with more meaning as the series progresses, and visual techniques are often used to reflect a scene&#8217;s emotion in a way that heightens it to a level not commonly seen in anime. I could go on all day about ef, because it&#8217;s my favorite anime of all time, but I won&#8217;t. The sequel, <strong>ef ~a tale of melodies~</strong>, is airing currently. Both series, and the sequel especially, are notable for having significantly higher budget production than most SHAFT shows, either because of the game they are based on or the immense popularity of the show (much more than any other SHAFT production).</p>
<p>SHAFT is rumored to be adapting the manga <strong>Shina Dark</strong> into anime at some point as well as the manga <strong>Maria Holic</strong> and the novel series <strong>Bake Monogatari</strong> by heavily talented author <strong>NISIOISIN</strong> (Death Note: Anothe Note, xxxHolic: another Holic). Wether an of this is true will be seen with the approach of 2009.</p>
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		<title>UFOTable &#8211; Studio Studies Part Two</title>
		<link>http://yukan.dasaku.net/miscellaneous/ufotable-studio-studies-part-two/</link>
		<comments>http://yukan.dasaku.net/miscellaneous/ufotable-studio-studies-part-two/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Oct 2008 18:52:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>21st Century Digital Boy</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Miscellaneous]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://yukan.dasaku.net/?p=2679</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
The greatest studio currently operating? Probably.


UFOTable is, at least in the West, one of the lesser known production companies that has developed a hardcore cult following in the last few years. The company formed in 2000 and there is little information in English about the staff. From what information ANN has, I can gather that the team is a core staff who works on all of the shows and has been with UFOTable from the beginning. The same names are present on all shows, usually in the same positions.
UFOTable’s early ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-2728" title="garden-of-sinners" src="http://yukan.dasaku.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/garden-of-sinners.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p>The greatest studio currently operating? Probably.<span id="more-2679"></span></p>
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<p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ufotable">UFOTable</a> is, at least in the West, one of the lesser known production companies that has developed a hardcore cult following in the last few years. The company formed in 2000 and there is little information in English about the staff. From what information ANN has, I can gather that the team is a core staff who works on all of the shows and has been with UFOTable from the beginning. The same names are present on all shows, usually in the same positions.</p>
<p>UFOTable’s early works, too, are a bit confusing to figure out. According to Wikipedia, UFOTable started in 2002 with <strong>Weiss Kreuz Gluhen</strong>, a sequel to the mildly popular bishonen action series. ANN, however, has no information of this. Luckily my limited knowledge of Japanese helped me discover that they did, in fact, produce this show, but their site also lists many other things they produced around this time. It is possible that these are all shows they helped on and weren’t the main studio for, as ANN lists them for In-between animation and Digital Paint on a handful of series from this time. That said, it adds to the mystery that none of the staff who would be the regular production team on future shows were around for Weizz Kreuz, and the show had nothing in common with later productions.</p>
<p>The first series to be produced by UFOTable featuring their signature style in 2003 was <strong>Dokkoida?!</strong> (or Sumeba Miyako no Cosmos-sou Suttoko Taisen Dokkoider for you anal retentive out there.) Dokkoida, like many proceeding shows by this studio, was a bit of a cult classic, and was even licenced by Geneon despite the fact that you’d have a fat chance walking into your average forum and finding more than 1 person who’s seen it. Dokkoida?! is a parody of sentai-style anime (transforming super heroes for those of you a few pages behind) that has the sort of situational, character based, and slapstick comedy combinations you could only find elsewhere in a SHAFT show. It’s hilarious, high degrees of self-referencing, and yet it contains memorable characters with backstories that can really draw you in. The show is comparable to Martian Successor Nadesico in it’s mix of hilarity, parody, and underlying (though not as extreme) serious business. And it’s also on <a href="http://forums.megatokyo.com/index.php?showtopic=1691093&amp;view=findpost&amp;p=3613695">Omo</a>’s favorite list.</p>
<p>UFOTable’s next work is probably their most well-known in the west thanks to heavy marketing by <strong>Nozomi Entertainment</strong> over the last year, 2004’s hilarious slipstick ninja comedy <strong>2 x 2 = Shinobuden</strong> (or Ninja Nonsense in English). This show is more reminiscent of Hare and Guu with it’s childish and obscure yet often inappropriate humor. A plot summary on any anime database would be more than enough to understand the show’s concept, as most of the show is completely random situational comedy involving lesbianity, ninjas, and the preverted yellow Geodude named Onsokamaru (voiced by Norio Motherfucking Wakamoto). Like Dokkoida?! It is very self-referential (even more-so even.) This show doesn’t have the devoted fanbase of other UFOTable productions most likely due to it’s lack of real plot. 2004 also saw release of a 2-episode OVA game adaption called <strong>Aoi Umi no Tristia</strong>. I haven’t seen it, but it receives unilaterally mediocre reviews from anime sites.</p>
<p>The next UFOTable show is likely the most definitive of their style to come forth in future productions and the one that started to get them noted for said style. 2005’s <strong>Futakoi Alternative</strong> also has the most devisive following as well as the most cultish and rabid. Among fans, it is almost always mentioned in lists of shows that ought to be liscenced. Futakoi Alternative is amusingly a sequel to heavily bashed and hated 2004 harem comedy Futakoi, a show about a town in which girls are always born as twins. The location and the twins aspect is about all that made the jump to Alternative, though, and instead of a harem comedy what we got is one of the most insane, spastic, and most confusing genre combinations of all time. Futakoi Alternative jumps, sometimes from episode to episode, between being a high-octane action series, a hilarious rom-com, a grindingly slow slice-of-life, an epic fantasy, a depressing drama, and a philosophical journey. And these changes come without. Fucking. Warning. This has simultaneously earned the show it’s devoted fanbase and the legions who avoid it. Futakoi Alternative is perhaps most well known for one of the most explosive first episodes of all time in which cute little girls are seen wielding machine guns, taking down helicopters with rocket launchers, and blowing up airplanes. The show features powerful themes of man’s need to be happy above all else and the real meanings of love, friendship, and responsibility in a light a bit more serious than most shows. It’s also got the epic phrase ‘HAPPY DESU KA?!’</p>
<p>2006 saw the release of UFOTable’s first completely original work <strong>Coyote Ragtime Show</strong>, which features all of the high-octane action of Futakoi Alternative but present throughout. The best way I can think to describe it is a lower budget shounen version of Cowboy Bebop. Coyote Ragtime show is nonstop excitement following a band of space pirates who break their boss out of prison to go look for a treasure on a planet that only has 7 days before it is destroyed. The crew has to fend against a team of 12 insane gothic lolita assassins along the way as well. Shit gets blown up and blood flies while cocky friends spit one-liners alongside speeches of friendship. I’ve only managed to see 4 of the 12 episodes, but they are a shitload of fun and I look forward to eventually finishing the series.</p>
<p>In 2007 UFOTable produced what most fans consider their Magnum Opus to date and what I consider one of the most important anime ever created: <strong>Gakuen Utopia Manabi Straight</strong>. This show features the same mic of high energy and extremely serious undertones seen in Futakoi Alternative, only with the pacing issues fixed and this time an even more engrossing and meaningful story as well as some of the most memorable characters to spring out of 2007. It could be considered the ultimate culmination of everything UFOTable had been trying to do finally perfected. Much like Gurren Lagann in my GAINAX post, there is nothing ‘objective’ I can say about Manabi Straight &#8211; it is unquestionably one of the greatest anime ever created. It was even the first anime to make <a href="http://forums.megatokyo.com/index.php?showtopic=1691093&amp;view=findpost&amp;p=3613695">Omo</a>’s main favorites list since 2004. Later that year UFOTable also produced a 4 episode OVA of the popular RPG game <strong>Tales of Symphonia</strong>, which while facing obvious problems for trying to cram an entire game into 4 episodes, is said to be one of the better video game adaptions out there.</p>
<p>From 2007 into 2008 UFOTable began work on their most ambitious and spectacular continuing project to date: <strong>Kara no Kyoukai</strong>. Originally, Kara no Kyoukai was a novel written and illustrated by <strong>Type-Moon </strong>founders <strong>Kinoku Nasu</strong> and <strong>Takashi Takeuchi</strong> (respectively) which began as a cult hit and swept the otaku nation quickly becoming one of the best selling books in Japan and is now considered amongst Japanese otaku to be a classic and a must-own for every collection. Instead of making the novel into an OVA or a series, UFOTable took on the incredible and groundbreaking task of making 7 50-minute films to play in theaters based on each chapter of the original novel. In an interview in <strong>Faust</strong> (in which the original novel is now being published) Nasu and Takeuchi went into detail about how the UFOTable staff is incredibly hardworking, open-minded, and creative, allowing their opinions on how to make the movies completely perfect, and even going so far to extend running time just to fit in exactly what needs to be seen, which is near unheard of in the anime industry. Nasu is quated as saying, “I’m just happy that the UFO staff never tell us something can’t be done.”</p>
<p>UFOTable works are all well known for their simplistic character designs and characters who move around a lot (though Kara no Kyoukai features it’s original character designs.) The are also known for having ending theme videos made using clay and stop-motion animation, also used in commercials for the Kara no Kyoukai movies. UFOTable is definitely one of the most ambitious and exciting studios out there and one to watch out for with wide open eyes. They are, above ANY other studio, one I will rush to see a new show from.</p></div>
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		<title>GAINAX &#8211; Studio Studies Part One</title>
		<link>http://yukan.dasaku.net/miscellaneous/gainax-studio-studies-part-one/</link>
		<comments>http://yukan.dasaku.net/miscellaneous/gainax-studio-studies-part-one/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Oct 2008 21:29:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>21st Century Digital Boy</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Miscellaneous]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://yukan.dasaku.net/?p=2603</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
This totally isn&#8217;t copypasta. I promise. &#62;.&#62; 
Since everyone seems to be saying how they don’t pay much attention to studios and stuff, or that studios don’t matter, I thought I’d go through a few of them with you. You’ve prolly heard of some of them, but we’ll just stress their importance anyway.
GAINAX &#8211; Yes, we’re starting with the obvious. GAINAX was formed by 6 university students: Hideaki Anno (who directed all the early work) Yoshiyuki Sadamoto (character designer for most of the shows, yes, that means he is why ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://danbooru.donmai.us/post/show/332510/ayanami_rei-bandages-bed-blue_hair-deep_cleavage-k"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-2673" title="gainax-studio" src="http://yukan.dasaku.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/gainax-studio.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>This totally isn&#8217;t copypasta. I promise. &gt;.&gt; <span id="more-2603"></span></p>
<p>Since everyone seems to be saying how they don’t pay much attention to studios and stuff, or that studios don’t matter, I thought I’d go through a few of them with you. You’ve prolly heard of some of them, but we’ll just stress their importance anyway.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/company.php?id=54">GAINAX</a> &#8211; Yes, we’re starting with the obvious. <strong>GAINAX</strong> was formed by 6 university students: <strong>Hideaki Anno</strong> (who directed all the early work) <strong>Yoshiyuki Sadamoto</strong> (character designer for most of the shows, yes, that means he is why Rei is so hot) <strong>Tamaki Akai</strong> (the one who called 2channel an anus and then left GAINAX) <strong>Toshio Okada</strong> (the original president of GAINAX and original OtaKing. He recently renounced this title because, like every other 80s obsessed douchebag, he got fed up with moe)<strong> Shinji Higuchi</strong> (did storyboards, a ton of shit on Eva like writing, storyboarding, and assistant directing, and Shinji Ikari was named after him) and <strong>Yasuhiro Takeda</strong> (on whom I can find little information other than that he’s a producer.)</p>
<p>GAINAX may not be the biggest or most wealthy studio around, but they are easily the most famous &#8211; and infamous. GAINAX has faced no shortage of controversy over the years, which is kind of a given because they made <strong>Neon Genesis Evangelion</strong> which might as well have been called ‘insert controversy here.’ Many of my blog’s readers may remember last year’s controversy involving Japan’s mega-forum, 2 channel. After Gurren Lagann episode 4 (which I think was a great stylistic decision) people on 2 channel bitched about the animation, and Tamaki Akai bitched back, which pretty much cost him his job because 2 channel has some kind of hold on the anime industry in Japan apparently.</p>
<p>GAINAX started as <strong>Daicon Productions</strong> and their first 2 animated shorts were <strong>Daicon III</strong> (1981) and <strong>Daicon IV</strong> (1983). Daicon III is a short (like 2 minutes), kind of cute, kind of fun video about a loli with superpowers fighting so she can water a radish. It’s not something that’s very memorable, which is where Daicon IV comes in. This 4 minute video has the little girl transforming into a magical girl in a bunny costume who fights her way through every pop culture reference imaginable and then, literally, the direct precursor to End of Evangelion happens. you know that scene with all the crosses an  the blood covering the earth? It’s almost the same fucking shot. Daicon Productions became GAINAX in 1985.</p>
<p>The first full-length production by GAINAX was <strong>The Wings of Honneamise</strong> (1987), a movie commonly considered a classic that I haven’t yet seen. Their next work was Hideaki Anno’s first ever directing job, the seminal classic <strong>Top wo Nerae! Gunbuster</strong> (1988) which solidified them as a production force to be reckoned with. The Gunbuster OVAs feature incredible artwork, memorable scenes and characters, and brilliant fusions of both the real robot and super robot genres as well as shounen and shoujo styles. The OVA features over-the-top imagery and a ‘GANBARE!’ attitude that would be seen in GAINAX works to come. Anno’s directing style is also made evident with things like an entire episode in black and white and his frequent use of text and nameplates for emphasis, especially with dates (an important concept in Gunbuster.)</p>
<p>In 1990 GAINAX began their first series with Anno directing again. <strong>Nadia: Secret of Blue Water</strong> is not quite an adaption of 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea, but is heavily inspired by it and other Jules Verne works. The show is very childish and adventurous with a very family-friendly vibe. Most notably the show features some fun and cool characters, namely Nadia, a headstrong young female in the vein of Nausicaa or other Ghibli girls. Despite beng favored by those who’ve seen it and having the GAINAX/Anno factor, the show is rather little known to western audiences (most likely because of it’s age and length, being 39 episodes.) I personally haven’t finished it either.</p>
<p>Between 1989 and 1991 GAINAX produced 4 OVAs that are not only near unheard of but all seem to be very odd. Beat Shot and Circuit Wolf are apparently about baseball and racing respectively, but that’s all I could find out. The most well known of these four, Blazing Transfer Student, is a 2-ep OVA parodying 70s anime like Ashita no Joe, and is apparently hilarious. I have fucking searched for subs of this, but no luck. There was also Money Wars which apparently had to do withthe stock market and shitty character designs.</p>
<p>1991 then saw the birth of GAINAX’s next big OVA and probably the greatest, and while perhaps not most well known, most likely the closest to the heart of it’s fans (mine at least.) <strong>Otaku no Video</strong> is the name, and it is a movie that simultaniously heralds and parodies otaku culture of the time, leading to not only hilarity, but an uplifting and exhilerating story that would inspire any otaku to rise up as otaking. There are 2 sort of plots going on in Otaku no Video &#8211; an animated story about a man’s change from a normal person into an otaku and eventually into Otaking over the course of his life, and a live-action mocumentary in which various otaku are interviewed with their faces blocked by mosaics and their voices morphed. The OVA is chock full of references both to popular 80s anime like Cobra and Macross to GAINAX’s own shows, especially Daicon IV.  Honestly, there isn’t much I can say besides ‘go watch it’ because you really do need to. OnV is a masterpiece in it’s own right and as a big anime fan or otaku you owe it to yourself to see this.</p>
<p>1995. For most of you, I could just say that and you know exactly where I’m going: <strong>Neon Genesis Evangelion</strong>. To some, it’s Hideaki Anno and GAINAX’s masterpiece. To others, it’s the most overrated anime of all time. To some, the ending is a mess of fuckshit and assdick. To others, it is the only thing in the universe that makes sense. Everyone has an opinion on Eva &#8211; do you hate Shinji or relate to him? Asuka or Rei? Or both? Or neither? What does all the religious symbolism mean? Why is there all this text? Why is it so depressing? WHERE IS YOUR GOD NOW?! Indeed, Evangelion is the single most talked about anime ever. While you couldn’t call it the most famous anime ever because of mainstream stuff, NGE is certainly the most well-known and highly regarded show in anime fandom. It has spawned hundreds of figures, millions of fan works, and an infinity of text. Evangelion will be in encyclopedias and textbooks about anime in the future, and will likely not stop getting talked about  fucking ever &#8211; especially if GAINAX keeps rereleasing it every now and again.</p>
<p>Evangelion was always controversial, but the first big controversy surrounded the ending &#8211; people were so pissed off at the ending that hideaki Anno literally received death threats if he did not make a new ending (at leas tthey liked the show a lot!) So he did. And he made <strong>End of Evangelion</strong> (1998) (and, I guess, Death and Rebirth (1997), though I really don’t care.). And it was glorious. However, it certainly couldn’t have been what those people were looking for since while the end of the series at least had the decency to make sense, the movie didn’t. That said, it is <strong>the single greatest animated feature ever to be created</strong>, so if you haven’t seen it <strong>go watch it before I kill you</strong>.</p>
<p>Also in 1998 came the adaption of popular shoujo manga <strong>Kare Kano</strong> (or His and Her Circumstances) which faced, you guessed it, more damn controversy! Kare Kano featured some extremely awesome directing by Anno who incorporated all of his visual tricks to the fullest extent on every episode which put an interesting twist on the shoujo style. The first major trouble with this show, though, is that the budget was pretty low and there was a ton of space filled in with frequent recaps and reused frames. Even so, things still went along pretty well until Anno got into a dispute with the manga-ka who wanted the series to be more traditional romance and less comedy. This dispute caused Hideaki Anno to leave the production after episode 16, and the director seat was filled by his protegee <strong>Kazuya Tsurumaki</strong>. Tsuumaki was very not ready for this job, though, as made evident by the fact that the rest of the series completely fucking sucks. Kare Kano is commonly considered a would-be classic offset by production dispute.</p>
<p>In 1999, GAINAX made 24 5-minute episodes of <strong>Orochiban Ebichu</strong>, an extremely fucking disturbing but quite hilarious story about a hamster who’s trying to help her female single owner trough life. There’s lots of outlandish sex and violence that never stops being shocking.</p>
<p>While GAINAX made a definitive US breakthrough with Evangelion in the 90s, their first show to become especially popular in the US was <strong>FLCL</strong>, released in 2000 in Japan and I believe 2003 in America. FLCL, like Eva, is something I’m sure you’ve all seen and if you haven’t, you need to, because it’s fucking incredible. Unlike Evangelion, which is mindnumbingly popular across the sea and inspired every mech show since in some way, FLCL wasn’t so popular in Japan and got a better reception in the US. Like Evangelion, it is a show that can be seen both in every ‘favorite’ and every ‘least favorite’ anime thread in any forums.</p>
<p>2001 saw the beginning of a much darker time for GAINAX. Starting with <strong>Mahoromatic</strong>, GAINAX began to produce more average shows with more subdued styles, less original plots, and more adaptions. On the upside, this was also around when SHAFT came into being and started collaborating with GAINAX, but that’s for another post. <strong>Petite Princess Yucie</strong> continued this dark trend in 2002.</p>
<p>A light of hope ought to have come from 2002’s other anime <strong>Magical Shopping Arcade Abenobashi</strong>, a slapstick and extremely strange comedy with style very reminiscent of FLCL. This show couldn’t live up to it’s predecessor though and while it’s not completely unpopular, it is widely considered decent and not much more. GAINAX was very busy during 2004, starting with their collaboration with JCStaff on<strong> Melody of Oblivion</strong>. Melody doesn’t get talked about much and I’ve only seen 2 episodes but I can safely say it’s one of the most strange and offputting anime I’ve ever seen. It’s basically like if Shinbo decided to direct a porn but then changed his mind midway and made it an action series with the same plot. Or something. GAINAX then collaborated with SHAFT again on <strong>This Ugly Yet Beautiful World</strong> &#8211; an anime that tried, though not very much, to be a new take on harem shows, but the amount of separation was very small and it pretty much came out as your slightly above-average but forgettable harem.</p>
<p>As if to counterbalance this spew of mediocrity, GAINAX also produced one good and one great OVA in 2004. The first was <strong>Re: Cutie Honey</strong> &#8211; a new take on the classic <strong>Go Nagai</strong> manga that pretty much ignited the magical girl genre as well as Hideaki Anno’s return to directing. It’s 3 episodes of which I’ve seen one, but it’s a hilarious, action and nudity packed fun ride through total 70s styles and throwbacks that will make any well-learned anime fan grin and anyone who want some good violent softcore porn grin harder. 2004 also began the 2 year production of <strong>Top wo Nerae 2! Diebuster</strong>, Kazuya Tsurumaki’s sequel to the old Gunbuster OVA that elped put GAINAX on the map. It’s a lot of fun, and contains most of what made Gunbuster great with a new paint hob and a lot more of the style seen in FLCL. While Tsurumaki pays respectable homage to Anno’s maseriece, Diebuster falls a tad short with some notably awkward pacing and less directional plot. Many fans still consider it to be just as good if not better than the original, though. In the meantime, <strong>He Is My Master</strong> continued GAINAX’s trend of lame shows in 2005.</p>
<p>The trend ended in 2007 with the next masterpiece of GAINAX, <strong>Tengen Toppa Guren Lagann</strong>. While not quite on the scale of Evangelion, it has been talked about ad nauseum and is as widely regarded and highly respected as it is seen as over-valued, though generally the reception has been more commonly positive. I can’t say anything ‘objective’ about Gurren Lagann &#8211; it’s pretty much the only thing keeping End of Evangelion out of my top spot, after all. This is an anime that not only should no fan go without, but no person could to wrong to give a try.</p>
<p>Currently, GAINAX is in the process of releasing <strong>Rebuild of Evangelion</strong> &#8211; a 4-film retelling of the Evangelion story with some new changes as well as a Gurren Lagann movie slated for release this year. They are also currently releasing the shounen action series <strong>Shikabane Hime Aka</strong> about an undead princess you must collect 1000 corpses to come back to life. The sequel,<strong> Shikabane Hime Kuro</strong>, is slated for release next year.</p>
<p>GAINAX is truly the ultimate by-otaku for-otaku animation studio and above any other, one to be watched out for. Even if you don’t find yourself enjoing the GAINAX sows (in which case get the hell out of life) it’s important to see their place in anime history as shows like Evangelion are some of the most influential to other anime to ever be released.</p>
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		<title>Comment On This Post. (OR Because I Like Knocking My Own Posts Off The Front Page)</title>
		<link>http://yukan.dasaku.net/miscellaneous/comment-on-this-post-or-because-i-like-knocking-my-own-posts-off-the-front-page/</link>
		<comments>http://yukan.dasaku.net/miscellaneous/comment-on-this-post-or-because-i-like-knocking-my-own-posts-off-the-front-page/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Oct 2008 03:30:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>21st Century Digital Boy</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Miscellaneous]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://yukan.dasaku.net/?p=2481</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[

Clannad picture got your attention? Good. Now pay attention.
I&#8217;m going to talk to you about a little thing called anime bias. Everyone has one or two even if we hate to admit it. Because I like so many genres and so many elements of shows, I tend to forget my own bias, but I do have them. I am biased against traditional relationships. I am heavily biased against love triangles. I am biased against outer space and fantasy settings. I am a little biased against harem anime, and recently I&#8217;ve ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone" src="http://i106.photobucket.com/albums/m242/JamesLeeson/Yukan%20Fixes/Digital_Boy_01.jpg" alt="" width="768" height="304" /></p>
<p><span id="more-2481"></span></p>
<p>Clannad picture got your attention? Good. Now pay attention.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m going to talk to you about a little thing called anime <strong>bias</strong>. Everyone has one or two even if we hate to admit it. Because I like so many genres and so many elements of shows, I tend to forget my own bias, but I do have them. I am biased against traditional relationships. I am heavily biased against love triangles. I am biased against outer space and fantasy settings. I am a little biased against harem anime, and recently I&#8217;ve started to get just slightly biased against galge adaptions. What&#8217;s funny is that most of these biases are the opposite of my old ones when I got into anime. In the beginning, 4 years ago when I read Shounen Jump, watched Adult Swim, and my favorites were Naruto and Rurouni Kenshin, I loved anything with a simple action plot, as little romance as possible, and fantasy settings were great. When I got back into anime last year, I started with Air and Kannon and worked up from there. Now, you&#8217;d have to pay me to watch the shows I was watching 4 years ago like Samurai Deeper Kyo and Naruto and even though I want to rewatch Air and Kanon, I just can&#8217;t see them being somethign I&#8217;d enjoy anymore.</p>
<p>However, lately I&#8217;ve been breaking these biases one by one. You see, bias is a lot like racism. There are two major causes of bias. The first is seeing a few shows from the genre that you don&#8217;t like and thinking that it&#8217;s the genre which made you hate the show. The second is crowd mentality &#8211; a lot of people hate moe and loli because of the people who like it or the context in which it is considered, or hate harem because people who like &#8216;good&#8217; anime usually don&#8217;t like harem. But these biases are all <em><strong>FUCKING BULLSHIT</strong></em>.</p>
<p><img class="alignnone" src="http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b269/MetalSonic700/1224187138209.jpg" alt="" width="628" height="560" /></p>
<p>The bottom line is, in no genre is every show the same. It is a rule, not an exception, at you will like certain shows of any gerne. Many would like to say something like &#8216;well that show branches out&#8217; or &#8216;that show is better written&#8217; and therefor they like it, however truthfully they are trying to find an excuse to mentally seperate it from a genre they otherwise wouldn&#8217;t admit to liking. Chances are, if you see a show from a genre and like it, there&#8217;s another show from that genre you are going to enjoy, and perhaps another, and suddenly it isn&#8217;t that the genre itself &#8216;isn&#8217;t your thing&#8217; but that certain shows aren&#8217;t your thing, despite you enjoying the genre.</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t honestly dislike love triangles in general. My favorite anime of all time, ef ~a tale of memories~, features a prominent love triangle, and I&#8217;ve always tried to use the excuse that I only enjoy it because unlike other love triangles it is defiant of traditional values. However, I only think I hate love triangles because there have been others I dislike &#8211; it&#8217;s not the case that I hate all love triangles, it&#8217;s the case that I hate their portrayal in, for example, True Tears. In reality, I can be tolerant of love triangles so long as they happen to appeal to me, such as Kashimashi or Kanokon. My acclaimed hatred for traditional romance also falls through when I love Kare Kano. I can&#8217;t hate galge adaptions totally because I still love Higurashi and the Type Moon adaptions, and as far as I know Kanon could be just as good a second time through.</p>
<p><img class="alignnone" src="http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b269/MetalSonic700/1224800164415.jpg" alt="" width="450" height="600" /></p>
<p>Recently, I even tackled my least favorite genre, political sci-fi. I had a gut feeling that I might not be as biased as I thought because I really enjoyed Starship Operators when I saw it way back. Every time I say how I won&#8217;t watch a political sci-fi I think back to how much I would love to see another Starship Operators. finally, I watched the first episode of Tytania when it aired, really enjoyed it, and then watched a few episodes of Legend of Galactic Heroes and enjoyed that as well. Once again, my biases were lifted. Kanokon for harem, Revolutionary Girl Utena for shoujo, Space Adventure Cobra for 80s &#8211; I&#8217;ve almost killed off all of my biases.</p>
<p>Now I want YOU to do the same. I know you have a bias. If you didn&#8217;t, posts with a super moe picture wouldn&#8217;t get 9 times as many views and comments as ones with something less than cute. BRANCH THE FUCK OUT. Watch something that you didn&#8217;t think you&#8217;d like. If it sucks, watch another one &#8211; you&#8217;ll be surprised at how fast you&#8217;ll find a show that you never ever would have expected to be one of your alltime favorites.</p>
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		<title>Mouryou no Hako 1 RETREAD &#8211; Because Blissmo Doesn&#8217;t Get It</title>
		<link>http://yukan.dasaku.net/anime/series-introduction/mouryou-no-hako-1-retread-because-blissmo-doesnt-get-it/</link>
		<comments>http://yukan.dasaku.net/anime/series-introduction/mouryou-no-hako-1-retread-because-blissmo-doesnt-get-it/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 19 Oct 2008 04:29:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>21st Century Digital Boy</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Series Introduction]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://yukan.dasaku.net/?p=2386</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[     
Let&#8217;s try this again. 
So, Blissmo posted about episode 1 of Mouryou no Hako about a week ago and hated it, so I stole her images and went on a journey to write her wrongs, since she obviously won&#8217;t cover the show anymore. Mouryou no Hako is not only my favorite show of the season, but this episode was my second favorite opening episode of all time.
Mouryou no Hako is for the kind of person who likes shows with lots of flowery, cryptic, philosophical dialouge, ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="../wp-content/uploads/2008/10/vlcsnap-52472.png"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-2190" title="mouryou-no-hako-01-01" src="../wp-content/uploads/2008/10/mouryou-no-hako-01-01.png" alt="" /></a> <a href="../wp-content/uploads/2008/10/vlcsnap-53097.png"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-2192" title="mouryou-no-hako-01-02" src="../wp-content/uploads/2008/10/mouryou-no-hako-01-02.png" alt="" /></a> <a href="../wp-content/uploads/2008/10/vlcsnap-53595.png"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-2194" title="mouryou-no-hako-01-03" src="../wp-content/uploads/2008/10/mouryou-no-hako-01-03.png" alt="" /></a> <a href="../wp-content/uploads/2008/10/vlcsnap-53764.png"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-2197" title="mouryou-no-hako-01-04" src="../wp-content/uploads/2008/10/mouryou-no-hako-01-04.png" alt="" /></a> <a href="../wp-content/uploads/2008/10/vlcsnap-54043.png"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-2198" title="mouryou-no-hako-01-05" src="../wp-content/uploads/2008/10/mouryou-no-hako-01-05.png" alt="" /></a> <a href="../wp-content/uploads/2008/10/vlcsnap-54302.png"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-2200" title="mouryou-no-hako-01-06" src="../wp-content/uploads/2008/10/mouryou-no-hako-01-06.png" alt="" /></a></p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Let&#8217;s try this again. <span id="more-2386"></span></p>
<p style="text-align: left;">So, Blissmo posted about episode 1 of Mouryou no Hako about a week ago and hated it, so I stole her images and went on a journey to write her wrongs, since she obviously won&#8217;t cover the show anymore. Mouryou no Hako is not only my favorite show of the season, but this episode was my second favorite opening episode of all time.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Mouryou no Hako is for the kind of person who likes shows with lots of flowery, cryptic, philosophical dialouge, and that is me. It&#8217;s also for people who like very intense and dramatic imagery &#8211; also me. It&#8217;s dark, but not brooding or shocking so much as gallant and smirking. It&#8217;s got style and class. The easiest comparisons that come to mind are ef ~a tale of memories~ or Paranoia Agent or Vampire Princess Miyu OVA. It&#8217;s a dark but glittering essece of romanticism, like an old-school vampire story where the girl falls in love with her vampiric captor before he drains her life juices in a gothic castle.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Since you probably haven&#8217;t read the second Boogiepop volume, and therefor don&#8217;t know about the opening chapter, I won&#8217;t bother to make the comparison. I can probably tell you that if you like Boogiepop, you&#8217;ll like this, though. The first episode has some yuri overtones, but not the trampy yuri, more like the Blue Drop or Marimite dramatacular yuri full of pent-up emotions. And emotions there are many &#8211; the girl who narrates this episode is an emotional bomb, full of joy so overflowing you can swim in it at the sight of her companion and full of rage so thick you can cut it with a knife at her mother and her stepfather. Much like the victim of vampirism, she falls in love with something she doesn&#8217;t understand, obsesses over it, and lets it take her, placiing everything she is into it only to watch it&#8217;s existence threatened by itself. She is confused. Meanwhile the other girl is one who thinks she understands everything and has that sort of inhumanity that makes her take your breath away. Actually, episode 3 of Boogiepop Phantom is another good comparison.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Add in the absurdly great animation. Madhouse has done it once a fucking gain making something visually unbelievable. I&#8217;ll say straight up, the scene around the 10-minute mark where the two girls are dancing brought ters to my eyes it was so beautiful. CLAMP&#8217;s designs really come to life here. In addition, the thick atmosphere made the show&#8217;s two creepy bits extremely creepy. The one in the beginning left my jaw dropped and the one later had me shocked. Very very fucking good directing, especially from someone doing their first show as the head man (though he&#8217;s been working for Madhouse for a while). Better still is that the scriptwriter has worked on a lot of great projects.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Mouryou no Hako doens&#8217;t show it&#8217;s whole hand in the first episode, but what it gives is un-fucking-believably good. I can safely call this the best of season and mos likely to land on my favoirtes list.</p>
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		<title>REGRESSION &#8211; Volume One: Falling Away From the New ~Part A~ Too Young Be You For Nastalgia / First Chapter _ Looking Back</title>
		<link>http://yukan.dasaku.net/miscellaneous/regression-volume-one-falling-away-from-the-new-part-a-too-young-be-you-for-nastalgia-first-chapter-_-looking-back/</link>
		<comments>http://yukan.dasaku.net/miscellaneous/regression-volume-one-falling-away-from-the-new-part-a-too-young-be-you-for-nastalgia-first-chapter-_-looking-back/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Oct 2008 18:30:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>21st Century Digital Boy</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Miscellaneous]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://yukan.dasaku.net/?p=2323</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Holy Shit that anime looks OLD!

The current season is easily the best this year. The past 2 seasons were a whole ton of &#8216;meh&#8217; sprinkled litely with decent and leaving only 1 to the light of OMG WIN, that being Kure-nai. This season has a number of spectacular, a gathering of great, and a group of good. There&#8217;s still a handful of shitty, but there&#8217;s so much good you barely notice. In any case, this is one of the few seasons that you really should look out for.
But the currently ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone" src="http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b269/MetalSonic700/cobra_space_adventure.jpg" alt="" width="640" height="480" /></p>
<p>Holy Shit that anime looks OLD!</p>
<p><span id="more-2323"></span></p>
<p>The current season is easily the best this year. The past 2 seasons were a whole ton of &#8216;meh&#8217; sprinkled litely with decent and leaving only 1 to the light of OMG WIN, that being Kure-nai. This season has a number of spectacular, a gathering of great, and a group of good. There&#8217;s still a handful of shitty, but there&#8217;s so much good you barely notice. In any case, this is one of the few seasons that you really should look out for.</p>
<p>But the currently airing shows are not everything. A lot of you seem to have what I am going to call a &#8216;cut off point&#8217; in your anime watching history. I&#8217;ve noticed that a lot of people watching the shows airing right now are people who haven&#8217;t seen that much anime. It seems to me like a lot of people have seen some shows that got them into anime and then started following what was airing now and never looked back. It could be from any point in time &#8211; some people started watching anime back when Adult Swim started and after seeing the shows on there started watching the new stuff out of japan. A lot of people started in 06 with Haruhi and a lot more in 07 with anything Key and worked from there. As a result there are a shitload of people who&#8217;s top shows are all popular things from the past couple years &#8211; things that someone who doesn&#8217;t watch new anime would never know about, but things that someone who&#8217;s seen anime before 2006 would never have on their list.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m not saying there&#8217;s anything wrong with liking what you like. But it&#8217;s really funny when I see someone who has Shakugan no Shana in their top 5 but has never seen any of the similar shows that came before it which they might like even more.</p>
<p>I know it&#8217;s difficult for you, too. Old anime can be unattractive. Once you go back past 2000 then anime is all drawn by hand and shit. Though if you still like Cowboy Bebop or Evangelion or Slayers or whatever, you really should have a problem with that anyway. I&#8217;ve seen a ton of people looking for anime recommendations who will throw in the phrase &#8216;I don&#8217;t want anything made before 2002.&#8217; What a great way to miss out on all the awesome stuff that came out before then! I mean besides the obvious aforementioned classics like Neon Genesis Evangelion and Cowboy Bebop, a lot of the greatest anime around cam out in the 90s that anyone would probably love if they gave it a chance. If you like any romance, you will love Kare Kano (His and Her Circumstances). If you like shows such as Nanoha, you&#8217;ll love it&#8217;s predecessor CardCaptors Sakura. If you like harem anime, Ken Akamatsu has a bunch of series from the 90s and there&#8217;s Tenchi and others. Mecha fans will adore Martian Successor Nadesico and many other of the post-Eva mech shows. Even if you&#8217;re a fan of dating sim adaptions only you could go a couple years back and watch To Heart or something. And everyone, and I do mean everyone, should see Revolutionary Girl Utena, period.</p>
<p>And that&#8217;s just the 90s. There have been great anime coming out forever. Fans of shoujo can watch things like Rose of Versailles from the 80s, mecha fans can see all of the Gundams of the era, back when Gundam was good. Anyone who love Gurren Lagann should see the classics like Gunbuster (Top wo Nerae). If you like shows about badass motherfuckers, Space Adventure Cobra is the way to go. Just explore a little &#8211; don&#8217;t only watch the shows that are new or are just now coming out &#8211; go back and see what you missed.</p>
<p>- Unable to Properly post about currently airing shows &#8211; DigitalBoy</p>
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		<title>Negative Happy Chainsaw Edge = NHK &#8211; Hikkikomori + Fighting</title>
		<link>http://yukan.dasaku.net/miscellaneous/negative-happy-chainsaw-edge-nhk-hikkikomori-fighting/</link>
		<comments>http://yukan.dasaku.net/miscellaneous/negative-happy-chainsaw-edge-nhk-hikkikomori-fighting/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 17 Aug 2008 07:15:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>21st Century Digital Boy</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Miscellaneous]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://yukan.dasaku.net/?p=1498</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[

Just came across this a few hours ago and had to spread the word &#8211; this is a brand new manga (5 chapters scanslated out of like  based on the  first novel from the writer of Welcome to the NHK called Negative Happy Chainsaw Edge. It&#8217;s about a young man in high school who is walking home one day and stumbles into a battle between a man in a hooded trenchcoat weilding a chainsaw and a schoolgirl with a wooden sword. After an assessment of his life&#8217;s state, he ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone" src="http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b269/MetalSonic700/00-cover-1.jpg" alt="" width="716" height="300" /></p>
<p><span id="more-1498"></span></p>
<p>Just came across this a few hours ago and had to spread the word &#8211; this is a brand new manga (5 chapters scanslated out of like <img src='http://yukan.dasaku.net/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_cool.gif' alt='8)' class='wp-smiley' /> based on the  first novel from the writer of Welcome to the NHK called Negative Happy Chainsaw Edge. It&#8217;s about a young man in high school who is walking home one day and stumbles into a battle between a man in a hooded trenchcoat weilding a chainsaw and a schoolgirl with a wooden sword. After an assessment of his life&#8217;s state, he decides he will find the girl and help her fight the chainsaw man in any way possible.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s what a plot summary looks like, but isn&#8217;t what this manga is really about. Essentially, it&#8217;s what happens if you take the equation NHK &#8211; hikkikomori + battles. Our main character is bored with his life and very emotionally stressed and confused, always wondering when things are supposed to change or how life can be more interesting. The recent death of one of his 2 best friends has him in a depression and his shitty grades aren&#8217;t doing anything to help him out of it. After his first encounter with the fighting girl and the chainsaw man, he decides that he wants to fight with her to give his life meaning, and even if he dies in his fight, it will have been to protect a beautiful girl! Of course, it quickly becomes apparent that he is totally useless in a fight and winds up being the girl&#8217;s mode of transportation instead.</p>
<p>What also is evident from early on is that this manga really isn&#8217;t about finding an escape from normalcy &#8211; it&#8217;s about how anything becomes normal when you get into a repetition, and reality is inescapable &#8211; one must find their place in reality and learn to be happy there. It gets these points across rather quickly and bluntly in comparison to NHK, though neither does a bad job of it.</p>
<p>Character-wise, the main character is pretty much Satou if he weren&#8217;t a hikkikomori, and the girl is easily as mysterious as Misaki, though about 70% more tsundere, and it&#8217;s apparent she might turn out to be equally unstable. As of chapter 5, there&#8217;s what I think will be a big plot twist starting to become evident, though I&#8217;ll let you decide/figure that out for yourself.</p>
<p>If you like NHK, this will almost feel like a repeat, but not an unwelcome one. Worth a shot, at least.</p>
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		<title>Retroview: Gunparade March 2</title>
		<link>http://yukan.dasaku.net/miscellaneous/retroview-gunparade-march-2/</link>
		<comments>http://yukan.dasaku.net/miscellaneous/retroview-gunparade-march-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Aug 2008 19:10:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>21st Century Digital Boy</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Miscellaneous]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://yukan.dasaku.net/?p=1488</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[

For those who don&#8217;t have an insane memory, I talked about Gunparade March episode 1 on this blog a while ago and my reaction was pretty much stumped. Between a ton of fighting and ensemble cast, it was hard to tell what the hell this show was supposed to be about. The mixed and slow-yet-fast character development is reminiscent of Baccano or Inifinite Ryvius, though Gunparade is even more confusing because the viewer is thrown headfirst into a conflict we know nothing about.
Thankfully, episode 2 was much, much more clear ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone" src="http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b269/MetalSonic700/GunParadeMarch.jpg" alt="" width="383" height="234" /></p>
<p><span id="more-1488"></span></p>
<p>For those who don&#8217;t have an insane memory, I talked about Gunparade March episode 1 on this blog a while ago and my reaction was pretty much stumped. Between a ton of fighting and ensemble cast, it was hard to tell what the hell this show was supposed to be about. The mixed and slow-yet-fast character development is reminiscent of Baccano or Inifinite Ryvius, though Gunparade is even more confusing because the viewer is thrown headfirst into a conflict we know nothing about.</p>
<p>Thankfully, episode 2 was much, much more clear and fun, putting it&#8217;s foot down about where this show plans to go. Unlike the first episode which was 75% battle scene, there was no fighting at all in this episode (reinforcing my theory that the fights in episode 1 were just a way of hooking in the viewer.) What we have instead is more or less an ensemble school comedy, but thankfully with good writing. The episode doesn&#8217;t necessarily contain anything you haven&#8217; seen before and come to expect from a school comedy series, however the lack of one central character and fast-paced character exposition will keep you on your toes and paying attention.</p>
<p>Most of the episode is centered around everyone&#8217;s reactions to the new girl in school &#8211; one girl is an instant rival, and one boy&#8217;s instantly in love &#8211; some kindhearted people want to make friends and some want to make some distance between themselves and their new classmate. There&#8217;s some laughs, and some tension, and more than enough to have me looking forward to the next episode.</p>
<p>And now&#8230;. CROWNING MOMENT OF AWESOME &#8212; EPISODE 2:</p>
<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t tell me you two are&#8211;!!&#8221;<br />
&#8220;As they say, tres bien!&#8221;<br />
&#8220;I think you mean LESbian.&#8221;</p>
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