Some Gurren Lagann thoughts.

October 6th, 2007 by Brack

Gurren Lagann finished last week. Here are some thoughts have occupied my mind since it finished.

* Playwright/Stage Director Kazuki Nakashima could well prove to be the best thing to happen to anime writing for ages. For all it’s ties to mecha shows of the past, the story is stripped down of the sort of filler and padding that dogs most anime shows. It arguably fits 2-4 different series into 27 episodes, changing tone to fit the story, but still maintaining core themes all the way through.

* Talking of themes, the story is revolves around what seems an essentially Japanese heroic archetype. The hero isn’t predestined, instead relying on hard work and the help of his friends/team. But there’s an interesting trick Nakashima seems to have done to reinforce this. Littered through the story are hints that things are predestined, that there is some “bigger story” unseen as yet. But there isn’t, in the end it’s clear that it boils down to human nature, and the simple choice of fight or flight.

* But it’s not just the writing, any other year this would be the best animated TV of the year. I’d give that to Dennou Coil at present as that looks to be pushing things forward somewhat. GL, polished as it is, is firmly mired in the imagery of anime from years past. Hiroyuki Imaishi does have a style that I’d like to see him use in a longform work (namely the one used in the ED of Paradise Kiss), but his more commercial style is in the shadow of the likes of Yoshinori Kanada and Osamu Dezaki. As well as borrowing Dezaki’s trademark postcard memory freezes at various times, one key shot is taken directly from Ashita no Joe (which Dezaki animated). In fact it’s kind of sad that the one episode where a director’s own visual style comes through the clearest is the one that was least liked, namely Osamu Kobayashi’s episode 4. At least in the final episode, where Imaishi’s fingerprints are most clearly visible, we get some of the heavy black lines he brought to Dead Leaves and Trava.

* Despite those gripes, the animation is amazing. The disgustingly talented Sushio really comes into his own on episode 15.

* Here’s how much I loved it - I won’t wait for the boxset when ADV release it. There’s enough quality on an episode by episode basis to warrant buying it in single volumes.

* I’ll probably return to it at the end of the year, or at least when I’ve seen all of Denno Coil, Mononoke and Oh Edo Rocket (based on a stage play by Kazuki Nakashima), as I think they bear looking at in comparison with each other, in terms of what they do with animation and story. And then I’ll return to it again when the ADV DVD releases come out as I’d like to do an episode by episode look at it, but the fansubbed versions were admittedly weak in accuracy, so I’d like to do that with a professional translation.

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Kid Acne - Sliding Doors

October 3rd, 2007 by Brack


I’ve been listening to Kid Acne’s album Romance Ain’t Dead today. This isn’t a review, just some brief rambling. My main thought is how much I’d lost touch with some Yorkshire slang since leaving Uni. I got all nostalgic over hearing someone describe rain “lagging it down”.

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HATE FUN? October Anime! Part 6~!

October 2nd, 2007 by Brack

Bits and bobs I missed. One more to come after this I think.

YOU’RE UNDER ARREST: FULL THROTTLE is some more YUA anime. Now I prefer YUA to AMG!, but it doesn’t exactly set my world on fire. Fujishima’s a better artist than a writer, but anime versions of his manga aren’t ever going to capture his draughtsmanship. What is especially mind boggling is that this series is being directed by Koichi Ohata (MD GEIST, MD GEIST II - DEATH FORCE, GENOCYBER) I am half expecting the cast to be cyborgs. I had no interest in watching this series until I learnt this, I am now curious in a rubbernecking a car crash sort of way.

MOONLIGHT MILE 2 is the sequel to Moonlight Mile, a show I have seen 1 episode of that I enjoyed for it’s over the top manliness rather than it’s animation which was perfunctory. I guess if you watched the first series, here’s more of the same.

KAWAII JENNY is a scary scary stop motion (?) show designed to sell dolls/traumatise young minds. Jenny battles eyepatched Hitler Teddy Bears in a Giant Robot.

MOYASIMON: TALES OF AGRICULTURE had me at the welcoming cartoon of microorganisms that greets you on the show’s website. I’ve read that this is about an agricultural student who can see and talk to microorganisms. THIS SOUNDS LIKE THE GREATEST THING EVER.

DA CAPO 2 is more moe shit.

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HATE FUN? October Anime! Part 5~!

October 1st, 2007 by Brack

And still they come…

PRISM ARK is fantasy anime based on a pornographic videogames, directed a man familiar with both videogames AND pornography, Masami Obari. Obari is a talented animator who has worked on awful lot of stuff that peddles to the lowest common denominator, and a lot of it has been of his own devising. At the best you can hope for is the series might produce some nice action sequences you can watch on youtube at a later date. I really don’t see it being worth following.

SHION NO OH is the shogi/murder mystery anime you’ve all been demanding. It’s a Studio DEEN production who are OK, nothing really to write home about. And it might seem odd coming from someone who’s looking forward to Kaiji, but I’m not feeling the character designs.

SHAKUGAN NO SHANA SECOND is, surprise, surprise, the second series of Shakugan no Shana, the kinda popular moe-action show. I saw the first ep of the first series. It had some nice animation, but the story bored me stupid, and I hate the character designs.

SHUGO CHARA! is the latest anime adaptation of a manga by the bargain basement CLAMP, Peach-Pit. Peach-Pit’s “me too” product’s popularity bewilders me, it really does.

SKETCHBOOK ~FULL COLOUR~ looks to be another “girls doing stuff” anime. Anyway, this looks simpering rubbish for soft lads.

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