/ramble
The first anime films I saw that impressed me were
Akira and
Ghost in the Shell - both thematically (cool visions of the future) and in terms of storytelling...I don't know whether it's elements of visual storytelling (i.e adaptation from manga) or if it was due to cultural difference...but I hadn't really been exposed to many films that told their stories in that
way before...
i.e didn't give me all the answers or explain things as it was going along...(and yes, now I'm aware there are plenty of films that do this
)
They had a big influence on me at the time and I still think they're amazing films.
I then saw
Patlabor and
Roujin Z which impressed me significantly less
I don't even remember them clearly now.
I enjoyed
Ninja Scroll and
Monster City (er. despite this on Monster City:
"Hyper's Daniel Wilks criticises the film for having "only vaguely interconnected action scenes punctuated by some rather dull talkiness marred by horrible accents (the heroine is unconvincingly British and the childish sidekick speaks with a mangled Mexican drawl)".[1] Ironically, as the film was dubbed in Britain, the aforementioned heroine is a genuine British person."
though the dub was probably not an issue as, apart from Cowboy Bebop, I always prefer subs...
...though Ninja Scroll did irritate me somehwat with the improbable speed that the relationship between the central characters develops. "Oh Jubei!" goddammit...
)
Most of the above I watched as a child/teenager. Also,
3x3 eyes which I enjoyed at the time and also enjoyed as an adult. Wiki cites the genre as "Adventure, Fantasy, Horror" - it has the typical fantasy anime mainstay of LOTS AND LOTS OF DEMONS
but doesn't do the filler-battle shite...stuff happens for a reason, and the characters are engaging. Wouldn't mind watching it again actually.
Perfect Blue was a pretty cool film...plenty of wtfness going on and is the only psychological thriller anime I've seen. Though I've seen better psychological thrillers in general.
I caught some of
Fist of the North Star late night on channel 4. It was hilariously awful.
An unpopular choice, but I enjoyed
Dragon Ball Z initially - it was amusing and had charm; I mainly enjoyed the characters and the interactions between them. But as previously mentioned, the ever increasing threat of THE WORLD IS IN DANGER...er...THE UNIVERSE IS IN DANGER...er...and ever increasing power levels just got boring. And the sagas dragged on and on only to be concluded by Goku arriving in the nick of time and saving the day. (since I have found the same thing in Naruto, Bleach and probably countless other shows I haven't seen. I do not like this method of story progression).
Still, it does contain one of my favourite quotes from anything ever:
[Vegeta while in Buu's stomach]
I will not suffer the same fate as cream filling!
Ok, they're pretty much pitching for under 12s here, but I find toilet humour immensely amusing >.>
I did enjoy
Blood, but it was almost like watching a game demo (or, I guess literally an art demo). It was absolutely gorgeous. But somewhat lacking in substance other than being a technical accomplishment. Which by now is probably dated anyway.
I started watching
Cowboy Bebop when I was in college and have obtained the box set in recent years
After the first episode I was lukewarm about it for a variety of reasons...I was concerned it would be like some sort of cop-show; the format would be predictable and formulaic - Spike and Jet would tour the universe, catching a bad guy per self-contained episode. It didn't interest me.
I was so,
so wrong. Probably the wrongest I've ever been
After episode 5 or so, when more characters were introduced and Spike's backstory began to develop, I was thoroughly hooked. There are many things I love about Cowboy Bebop (far too numerous to name in an already extensive post) but it's anything but formulaic - it's very imaginative and I enjoy the extent it incorporates musical genres, as well as exploiting genre boundaries themselves...it takes risks by changing tack from one episode to the next, but is also a very controlled and contained story with a clear beginning and an end, that through rewatching, you can see the end in the beginning. I.e, it was always meant to end how it ended, and isn't drawn out. In fact, the creators refused to do any more of the series despite demand as
that is where it was supposed to end.I wish more people would take that line instead of drawing things out long after they've reached a conclusion for $$$
Anyway, Cowboy Bebop is absolutely my favourite anime show, but it's also one of my favourite tv shows ever.
T.H.E.M Anime Reviews said the series has "sophistication and subtlety that is practically one-of-a-kind", touting it as a masterpiece that "puts most anime...and Hollywood, to shame."
I concurr.
I caught
Full Metal Alchemist which I think can be easily underrated and dismissed due to it's colourful and childish presentation. If anything, the juxtaposition between the saturday morning cartoon style and the themes it tackles makes the story all the more powerful and poignant. One episode fairly early on had me rocking back on my seat wondering what they just did to me (I'm specifically thinking of episodes 6 and 7). Certain things you expect to be sacrosanct - such as children and innocence - are dealt with fairly harshly and uncompromisingly. Maybe gratuitously in some respects - the premise alone is fairly horrific.
I found
Elfen Lied enjoyable though it did seem somewhat over-the-top and gratutious.
I liked
Ergo Proxy (hm, just remembered from looking at the wiki that the outro was Radiohead's Paranoid Android - it's been too long since I've seen it) it was genuinely engaging and interesting. Though at times maybe it wobbled a bit too near pretentious, I dunno.
I saw bits of
Samurai Champloo after loving Cowboy Bebop, but it didn't make as much of an impression. This could be because I only caught an episode here and there though; it could well be a different experience if watched from start to finish.
Grave of the Fireflies was probably the first Studio Ghibli film I saw, as I came into them late. It was bleak and a devastating (anti) war film told from the perspective of children. I can't say I love it for the aforementioned reason, but I certainly admire it - anything that can make me feel deeply has done it's job well imo. I suffered less on subsequent rewatch (I avowed not to watch it again after the first time given the funk it put me into, but bought it in order to subject it on other people
my mum cried buckets and my dad was angry that I'd made him watch "a nasty film")
The other Ghibli works I've seen have been by Miyazaki who I greatly admire. These are
Spirited Away,
My Neighbour Totoro,
Howl's Moving Castle,
Nausicaa and the Valley of Winds,
Princess Mononoke and
Ponyo. I enjoy his storytelling for a variety of reasons...they tend to look at environmental themes but not in simplistic ways...the central characters are often complex and resourceful and the worlds created imaginative. I absolutely loved Princess Mononoke, but thoroughly enjoyed the other films too (though Ponyo less, tbh).
Hare & Guu - Hare meets Guu. Guu destroys his reality without any mercy.
I've been watching
Hare + Guu again recently and it's quirkyness amuses me. Guu is a fantastic character - she's like, epic troll
Anyway! There's probably more I've watched over the years and forgotten about.
I kind of agree with Lallara's point here (though I'm going to use it to talk about something else
)
Spent a few years in my youth watching all kinds of anime, from the soap opera stuff to the 'classics'.
Two things.
Poor writing is poor writing even in animations.
Let me elaborate. Anime is not immune to the same mind numbing dullness that goes with mass produced entertainment.
And I think this is absolutely true - because anime is incredibly broad and not in a sacrosanct bubble...I would hesitate to call myself an anime fan (despite the extremely long post above) because some things I've really enjoyed and other things I've thought are utter crap. I'm not going to like something simply because it's anime, because the scope in that is
huge. It's almost like saying "I like films." The fact that it's animated really doesn't tell you anything else - sure there are trends and tropes and things that are massively popular, but there are also some really individual works. And it's also like saying "I don't like films" which is why it kind of irritates me when people make blanket statements about the whole of anime - I think generally it's a matter of catching some kids show or seeing an apallingly bad anime intro with dancing and j-pop and thinking ...
It's an extension of equating everything animated as a child's cartoon, or, conversely, someone seeing some tentacle hentai and thinking all anime is porn.
Which to me seems a little silly as I've barely dipped my toe into the water, and yet I've seen and enjoyed things meant for kids, things for adults, and things that should
never be shown to kids. I've watched a variety of genres; fantasy, comedy, horror, sci-fi, war-film, psychological thriller, and some that cross genre boundaries in interesting ways (Cowboy Bebop, I look at you). I've seen things which I've thought have been pretty good compared to other anime I've watched, and I've seen things that have been pretty good compared to
anything I've watched.
And things that've totally sucked.
So to paint it all with the same brush is just...madness. Madness I tell you.