Time for another round of my thoughts on things I've watched lately.
Paranorman
Despite the main character being annoyingly passive and whiny for most of the film, I liked it a lot. The designs are great, both in the  characters and their environments. They're full of unusual  shapes and angles, and the result is a film with a really unique  look to it, which is rare. The story and characters felt pretty familiar, but the  filmmakers did throw in a couple of clever twists. The ending sequence was  genuinely creepy, and featured really impressive animation. Overall Paranorman was truly a breath of fresh air in American animation. I'm now  interested in what else Laika has done, which means I'll have to finally see  Coraline. 
  
Download
Directed by Rintaro, this OVA  from 1992 has impressively loose, wild animation. Yoshinori Kanada did  the character designs, as well as some animation. It also has some  amazing Tatsuyuki Tanaka scenes, which are what made me want to track it  down.Unfortunately this thing is ridiculously obscure-- it's never even  been released on DVD in Japan, let alone translated into English. And  obviously the name makes it difficult to look it up online. So I  couldn't understand most of what was going on in the story, but it was  very enjoyable.
Neo-Tokyo
I may have covered this  late 80's anime anthology before on my blog, I can't remember. But  anyway, here's what I thought upon seeing it again recently-- I  absolutely love the first segment, "Manie-Manie" which is also by  Rintaro. It's probably one of my favourite animation pieces ever. It's  packed with neat ideas in the designs, the direction, the  animation and the sound work. Too bad it ultimately  doesn't seem to have any real point. "The Running Man" has lots of  great FX animation but again, there's not much of a story. This one feels longer  than it is. The final segment by  Katsuhiro Otomo, "The Order to Stop Construction" feels a bit like a warm-up for Akira. It's pretty fun. All three shorts work better as mood pieces than as narratives, in my opinion, but they all have great visuals. I'd say it's worth seeing.
Samurai Champloo
I'm  only up to Episode 9, which has the Masaaki Yuasa animation sequence,  which was just as amazing as I'd expected. Overall I like the show, but it's not quite as absurd as I hoped. There are some hip-hop elements  and some funny moments (my favourite example of both being the vomit  scratch-cut in Episode 6) but neither the hip-hop flavor or the comedy  are as prevalent as I'd expect from a series that bills itself as  "samurai/comedy/hip-hop." So far it's mostly just been a bizarrely anachronistic samurai series. I do love the main title sequence though.
Shin-Chan Season 1 Part 2 
I  picked this up cheap and I'm really enjoying it. Up until now I'd been  avoiding the English dub because I didn't think I'd like all the extra  dirty jokes they added, but it turns out I do like a lot of them, and I already  knew I liked the original series so this is turning out to be a lot of  fun. I'm now trying to get the other volumes at a decent price. The  English voices are surprisingly close to the Japanese originals. My only  problem is that they cut the great opening theme short.
Yellow Submarine
Every time I watch it I feel the same way--  there are a ton of cool visuals, and obviously the music is spectacular,  but the script is a jumbled mess and I find it hard to watch the whole  thing in one sitting.
Tenguri
(a late-70s one-off short by the staff of Lupin III)
The  story is ridiculous and childish but the Miyazaki-animated scene near  the end is fantastic. Between this and his epic battle scene in Animal  Treasure Island, he's become one of my favourite animators. His animation work is a lot more cartoony and wild than I'd have thought from his directing style.
Roujin Z
Written  and directed by Katsuhiro Otomo, soon after Akira. The budget is  noticeably lower but there is some very good animation in certain  scenes, and it's generally a well-told satire about how society treats  the elderly, with a wacky science-fiction bent to it. I like the  character designs, even though they're not as caricatured as the stuff I  usually prefer. They don't really stand out that much but there's  enough variation within the characters to keep them interesting. The  ending theme has been stuck in my head for days now.
I  also re-watched Shin-Chan - The Adult Empire Strikes Back and Urusei  Yatsura - Beautiful Dreamer which are both still great.
In other news, I'm back to school for my final year. It's going pretty well so far. I'm also working on Scout Raskin's Bakerman and the Bunnymen short, coming up with ideas for another project and working on designs for Fester Fish t-shirts. The shirts should be available soon, I hope...
середа, 12 вересня 2012 р.
Rambling Reviews
Posted on 16:24 by dipty
Підписатися на:
Дописати коментарі (Atom)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
0 коментарі:
Дописати коментар