The Girl Who Leapt Through Time

June 22nd, 2008 by Brack

This ran at the BFI yesterday, so I took the opportunity to see the film on a big screen. For some reason they moved it to the main NFT1 screen, possibly it was doing better in ticket sales than they thought as the theatre was packed. Regardless, it was superior experience to whichever of the theatres I saw Mind Game in a couple of years ago, I wasn’t squashed up against the side of a wall. Also, unlike Mind Game, it was actually screened off a film print rather than a DVD. Unfortunately the film print had seen better days, the start of the film had a lot of noise and dirt on the print, and there were glitches here and there later in the movie. Nothing too detrimental, but a little annoying at the start.

Watching the film with a full audience reasserted in my mind that Mamoru Hosoda is the anime director that people have bemoaned is lacking - someone who can create excellent films, with broad appeal, whose surname isn’t Miyazaki. And he does it without aping the Ghibli style. Hosoda’s style is distinctly recognisable as his own. For awhile I wasn’t sure if the look of his films was his own, or that of his frequent collaborator Takaaki Yamashita, but seeing some of Yamashita’s work away from Hosoda, makes me think it’s firmly Hosoda’s vision that we see on screen.

Hosoda’s work frequently uses shots that frame the world in a way that simulates the point of view of someone standing in that world (though not a character POV). Lots of wide shots, low horizons and high skys. Often, rather than changing shots, or using tracking shots and close ups, we see a scene act out within that shot. Late in the film he plays with the idea of a tracking shot, using it as he would any of his other shots, by having a character move within the frame of the tracking shot, effectively outrunning the speed of the “camera”.

Also he takes great care in positioning characters within a shot, drawing your focus to them, even when there is a lot going on in the background. Hosoda is interested in rooting his animated world in reality, even if the story involves time travel, digital monsters or super-powered pirates, and here he gets to do that to it’s fullest extent yet. Often shots are full of bustling human life meaning that, unlike much anime, the characters don’t live in a vacuum of their own existence. And the movements of the main characters themselves aren’t some idealised, smooth version of human movement, they are clumsy, bumbling and rambunctious.

Story-wise, this is my favourite sort of science fiction, where a single idea is all that separates the fictional world from our own. It is a charming and light concoction, indeed, it is commented within the film that it’s good that the ability to time travel is used so trivially. The performances of the three leads are for the most part good, though Riisa Naka as Makoto is far better at the comedic aspects of her role than the emotional parts. Her crying really left a lot to be desired (a distressed walrus springs to mind) but there’s only really one scene that comes up in.

Easily the best animated film of 2006, it’s good that Kadokawa & Bandai have been attempting to give it the international recognition it deserves.

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1994: The Year Faye Valentine Was Born

June 22nd, 2008 by Brack

All the news you can no longer use from Issue 7 of Manga Mania, cover date January 1994.

UK NEWS:

  • Manga Video: The Guyver begins its monthly release schedule at £6.99 for a VHS containing one episode of the OAV series. I think this may be more important than either Akira or Legend of the Overfiend in the early growth of the UK anime market. Also out was Rumic World: Fire Tripper and some cinema screenings for Golgo 13:The Professional.
  • Kiseki finished off Macross II.
  • Anime Projects released Otaku no Video.
  • In the historical curiosity stakes, there’s a big one this issue. The announcement of Crusader Video, and their mission to release anime that goes against the trend of “exploding demon rapes and robotic death machines”. They were aiming “children’s titles with the same appeal as Saturday Morning cartoons like Trevor and Simon and The Magic Roundabout.” More on Crusader Video in later installments of these posts. But come on, people in the past, Trevor and Simon were not cartoons. Get it right, you were there! In the past!
  • Remember those news items about the Akira computer game and Akira on BBC, well they are reported as delayed here.
  • Demon Records release an Akira OST on CD. This was an evergreen CD in HMV, Our Price and Virgin Megastores for many, many years. Don’t know if that meant it sold well and they restocked often, or they were never able to get rid of them…
  • Andi Watson’s “Samurai Jam” is picked up by SLG.

US NEWS:

  • Pioneer add Giant Robo and Ambassador Magma to their Laser Disc slate.
  • Trish Ledoux gives AD Vision some back handed compliments on their picking up of Akane Nagano’s Fantasia.
  • AnimEigo - AD Police, Urusei Yatsura
  • Dark Image Entertainment - Devilman
  • LA Hero/US Renditions - Ambassador Magma, Macross II, SuperDimensional Century Orguss
  • Streamline - Doomed Megalopolis, Akira Criterion release
  • Viz - Ranma 1/2 Desperately Seeking Shampoo
  • Manga - notable new titles include Silbuster, Ultraman Classic

JAPAN NEWS:

  • This stuff was coming out:
  • Super Soldier Sonic Borgman
  • SuperDimensional Century Orguss OAV
  • Ranma 1/2 OAV 2
  • JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure
  • Protect My Earth!
  • Dominion
  • Cashan
  • Heroic Legend of Arislan
  • All Purpose Cultural Cat Girl Nuku Nuku II
  • Lance
  • Devil Hunter Yoko Super Music Clip
  • Ah! My Goddess

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The Title Blurb Read “Mighty Mecha Special!!”

June 20th, 2008 by Brack

More old news from 1993 courtesy of Manga Mania Issue 6, December ‘93.

Editorial: Figured I might start talking about these too. In this issue, Cefn Ridout bemoans the bad publicity anime was getting in the press. Well, one article in the Independent - “CARTOON CULT WITH AN INCREASING APPETITE FOR SEX AND VIOLENCE” by David Lister (not the Red Dwarf character one presumes). This perceived witchhunt of anime tends to be blown a little out of proportion by anime fans from this time. I think part of the feeling of belonging that a fandom gives a person, comes from the persecution complex most subcultures have, and the niche anime fandom at this time was no different. The people who were buying all those copies of Akira, Overfiend and Guyver are a completely different matter though. I doubt they gave two hoots what people like Lister thought and just wanted more sexy violent cartoons. Which is fair enough. GO TEAM SEXY VIOLENT CARTOONS!

UK News:

  • Kiseki had more of Macross II
  • BBC2 schedule Akira over Xmas, alongside a documentary called Manga.
  • BBC1 were showing the 90’s anime version of the Moomins.
  • Channel 4 were showing the overlooked UNICEF sponsored allegorical Dutch/Japanese production, Alfred J. Kwak. Melvyn Hayes as the Hitler Crow character was one of the great UK voice performances.
  • Manga Video had more Crying Freeman and Doomed Megalopolis
  • There was a report on a visit to Yaohan Plaza/Oriental City in Colindale, London, which was a popular haunt of UK anime/manga fans during the 90s. It was under threat of demolition a few years back, and just 3 weeks ago was “closed for redevelopment”. It’s probably a little odd that despite being into anime/manga since 1995, I never once went there.

Japan News:

  • Anime producer Haruki Kadokawa was arrested for smuggling cocaine.
  • Roujin Z due out.
  • Dirty Pair Flash announced. Lord, did this kick off a stink. The fuss was still around when I entered the fandom a couple of years later. The vemon it generated from hardcore Dirty Pair fans in the US and UK was mighty.
  • Anime Street Fighter film announced. The US live action film is mentioned in passing.
  • OAV/Laser Discs out included:
  • Comet Machine Gun Gakusave
  • Super Sonic Soldier Borgman
  • KO Century Three Beastketeers II
  • Fantasia
  • X2
  • Ushio and Tora
  • Machine God Corps
  • The Hakkenden
  • Black Jack

US News:

  • Viz - Mermaids Scar, Ranma TV First volume of the this long running 2 eps at a time VHS release. Anyone want to do the maths on how much it would have cost to get all of Ranma in this way?
  • US Manga Corps - The Ulitmate Teacher, Maris The Chojo/Laughing Target, Odin.
  • Anime 18 - Urotsukidoji II: Legend of the Demon Womb.
  • AD Vision - Guy - Awakening Of The Devil/Second Target.
    Ledoux gets in a dig at ADV’s T&A reputation at the time.
  • Dark Image - Outlanders.
  • Streamline - Neo Tokyo, 3×3 Eyes, Nadia movie collection.
  • AnimEigo had the fourth Urusei Yatsura film, Lum The Forever.
  • Manga releases: More of whatever was here before. Plus first time listings for Antarctic Press were included. A company that has a lot to answer for, but more on that down the line.

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The Middleman - Episode 1 - Sanction

June 19th, 2008 by Brack

Let it be said, I am not a man afraid of whimsy. Indeed, I am willing to embrace it. And so this adaptation of Lost scribe Javier Grillo-Marxuach and Les McClaine’s comic book series was right up my alley.

Temping artist Wendy Watson gets attacked by tentacle monster during a dull day at work at A.N.D. Laboratories. She manages to wound the creature before The Middleman intervenes and saves her. Impressed by her composure in the face of weirdness The Middleman ends up recruiting her as his partner. Their first mission as duo is a strange case involving mobsters and genetically engineered gorillas.

Whereas most modern sci-fi is coloured in drab grays, blues and browns, this is a primary colour world of square jawed pulp action. The closest current series to the look and viewpoint of the show is Pushing Daisies, though The Middleman’s budget doesn’t quite amount to same unified level of hyper-reality that Pushing Daisies manages. Rather, it has more in common with 60’s science fiction programming, many have pointed out similarity in tone to the Adam West Batman series and the show itself makes reference to The Avengers’ starting credits when Wendy joins The Middlemen. It has a low budget, make-do pep to it’s step. There’s also Preston Sturges, Howard Hawks, Due South, The Tick, and Venture Bros comparisons to be made.

But forget all that, here’s all you need to know:

It’s Torchwood without all the crying.

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HATE FUN? SUMMER’S HERE KIDS - ADDENDUM

June 19th, 2008 by Brack

Stay alone, put a record on, listen to the songs, keep yourself at home

You know, I think I failed to actually point out exactly what I am excited about seeing, so lets start with two things I didn’t list, and then the rest in order of excited-ness.

GOTHAM KNIGHT - The Batman OAV is out over here in July and I’ll be picking this up. At least half the directors involved I’m a fan of so this should be fun, fun, fun.

DETROIT METAL CITY - This is DMC’s year (or maybe next year if the film gets an international release). Anyway the manga is, along with Chi’s Sweet Home, the most obvious choice for manga to be released in English, and the Studio 4°C adaptation looks ridiculously faithful to it’s brilliance. Fingers crossed that as it’s Studio 4°C it might have subtitles included. A man can dream.

BIRDY THE MIGHTY DECODE - Noein creative team reunite.

COBRA THE ANIMATION

ULTRAVIOLET: CODE 044

There’s a bit of gap ‘twixt Ultraviolet and the next lot in measure of hopping up and down in expectedness.

SOMEDAY’S DREAMERS: SUMMER’S SORA - I am a mark for Osamu Kobayashi

NATSUME YUUJIN-CHOU - Takahiro Omori has goodwill with me after Baccano!

SLAYERS REVOLUTION - Oh nostalgia.

CHOCOLATE UNDERGROUND
- Not holding much hope of seeing it given it’s release format, but if the opportunity arose I’d check it out.

RYOKO’S CASE FILE - I am also a mark for mystery/detective shows

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The fifth of those Manga Mania flashbacks.

June 18th, 2008 by Brack

This what was being reported in Issue 5, cover date October 1993.

UK News:

  • Manga Video release Wicked City, Heroic Legend of Arislan.
  • Kiseki had Macross II coming out.
  • Contanimeted 1993 was taking place in October at the New Cobden Hotel, Birmingham.
  • The lack of anime stylings in the UK releases of Barcode Battler and Z Knights is bemoaned.
    3 years later I would have a lecturer at university try and impress me and my friends by boasting he had a Barcode Battler. It was quite a surreal moment.

US News:

  • AnimEigo announced Ah! My Goddess. And they released AD Police 2, Kimagure Orange Road Laserdisc, more Urusei Yatsura, Dagger of Kamui
  • LA Hero/US Renditions were putting out the Macross II Lovers Again CD soundtrack
  • US Manga Corps had Astro Boy 30th Anniversary Collection, Gall Force 2, Area 88 Act 3
  • In manga news: Venger Robo and Mobile Suit Gundam 0083 were starting at Viz.

Japan News:

  • Yoshinobu Nishizaki announces in Anime V that a new Yamato project is due in 1994. I guess this was the Yamato 2520 OAV.
  • OAVs out included:
  • Wataru
  • Super Soldier Borgman
  • Cashan
  • Arslan Chronicles
  • Machine God Corps
  • Ranma 1/2 OAV
  • Dominion

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Puroresu Wednesday - Open The GAMMA Gate

June 18th, 2008 by Brack

GAMMA is great man.

He’s not the best worker, or the hardest worker in the world, but he is an awesome, awesome heel.

His current angle in Dragon Gate is that he has won the “Open The Brave Gate” championship. His first act was to break off the name plate (an eight piece plate representing the participants of the first tournament to determine the champion) and replace it with his own, renaming it “Open The GAMMA Gate”.

The angle then steps up a notch when the concept of GAMMA Gate commissioner Yoshito Sugamoto is introduced. The commissioner has so far over-ruled two theoretical losses of the belt. Firstly declaring that a pin by Super Shenlong in GAMMA’s second defence didn’t count. Then in GAMMA’s third defence declaring that the title could not be lost on ring outs after GAMMA got counted out.

Yoshito Sugamoto happens to be the real name of GAMMA, but surely that’s just a coincidence.

Not sure where this is going as we’re only 4 defences in, but with Shingo Takagi likely to take the role of top heel in the new Real Hazard group (the remains of Muscle Outlawz and New Hazard after they turned on SpeedMuscle and BxB Hulk), this looks like a great way for Real Hazard to garner even more heat across the bill.

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Barry Eating A Sandwich

June 17th, 2008 by Brack

Discuss.

Posted in Vagaries | Tags: , , | No Comments »

HATE FUN? SUMMER’S HERE KIDS

June 17th, 2008 by Brack

Take a trip, join me in the sun, but not really though, cause I ain’t having fun.

Yes, the bane of gamesfaqs forum posters is back! Let’s put the boot into summer season anime before they even air.

Ikkitousen Great Guardians
Yuji Shiozaki’s alleged Tenjo Tenge-plagarising Romance of the Three Kingdoms as bouncy high school girls manga get’s it’s third season of anime. The first season had two unfortunate problems - it aired during the far superior Airmaster’s run. And it was shit. At least it only has one of those problems this time.

SEQUEL/REMAKE COUNT: 1

Chocolate Underground

Alex Shearer’s Bootleg gets the Original Net Animation treatment. Quick poll: What’s a more soul destroying phrase - Original Net Animation (ONA) or Mobisode?

Telepathy Shoujo Ran

More light novel fun for NHK. This time from TMS. No director listed on ANN, so no idea if I should be excited or not. However the screenwriter, Makoto Nakamura, has apparently been responsible for many crimes against taste (Air, Clannad, Kanon).

UltraViolet: Code 044

It’s the anime spin off of the crappy film. But forget that.

It’s Madhouse + Osamu Dezaki + Romi Paku. So it should be well worth a watch.

SEQUEL/REMAKE COUNT: 2

Sekirei

Standard anime for soft boys too afraid to buy actual porn.

Slayers REVOLUTION

As a huge roleplaying game nerd, I was immediately drawn to Slayers when I first saw it in… 96?97? But I eventually lost interest, outside of catching the films and OAVs at cons. I’m interested in this as both a nostalgia kick and as part of possible trend in anime.

SEQUEL/REMAKE COUNT: 3

Someday’s Dreamers: Summer’s Sora

Another sequel~! And, it’s another magical realism anime. Talking of trends, THAT definitely is a trend in recent manga/anime. Geneon had announced this for US release, before disappearing from the US market. Oh, hey, it’s directed by Osamu Kobayashi. Colour me interested.

SEQUEL/REMAKE COUNT: 4

Antique Bakery

I imagine this will have a lot of interest based on the popularity of the manga. However I’m not sure there’s any appeal in the production to non-fans.

Hidamari Sketch x365

The only anime with the codec that will be used to pirate it in it’s title.

SEQUEL/REMAKE COUNT: 5

Strike Witches

GONZO spin off their OAV into a TV series. Director Kazuhiro Takamura has worked on some decent shows, but what he’s been more influential on have been pretty rubbish (Mahoromatic, This Ugly Yet Beautiful World). And by that I mean they were both pretty AND rubbish.

SEQUEL/REMAKE COUNT: 6

Birdy the Mighty Decode

Noein director Kazuki Akane is in charge.
Noein screenwriter Hiroshi Ohnogi is writing.
This will be good.
SEQUEL/REMAKE COUNT: 7

Ryoko’s Case File

This is a mystery. Both it’s genre and the fact I don’t know anything about it.

Zero no Tsukaima ~Miyoshi Hime no Rondo~

This show I’ve never heard of gets it’s… (checks) third series. Third!

SEQUEL/REMAKE COUNT: 8

Natsume Yuujin-chou

A young boy has the ability to see ghosts and is shunned by humans because of it. No, it’s not GeGeGe No Kitaro, it’s Yuki Midorikawa’s shojo manga about a boy with book of ghosts. Baccano!’s Takahiro Omori directs this new Brains Base show, so it could be worth a look as he has a proven record in strong adaptations.

Mission-E

Sequel to CODE-E. I think I watched 5 minutes of that once. It was enough.

SEQUEL/REMAKE COUNT: 9

World Destruction

Production IG/Sega’s videogame RPG tie-in. This won’t be any good.

Koihime†Musou

Dogakobo’s moe adventure game tie-in. This will be worse than World Destruction.

Blade of the Immortal

Yay, a Blade of the Immortal anime. Wait… What? Bee Train are making it? Koichi Mashimo is directing it? Can I take that yay back? Thanks.

Nogizaka Haruka no Himitsu

Popular moe ideal student is secretly an otaku. I am not so secretly completely disinterested.

Cobra The Animation

That yay I took back for Blade of the Immortal, I’m using it here.

YAY!

oh and…

SEQUEL/REMAKE COUNT: 10

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More Marvellous Manga Mania Memories

June 16th, 2008 by Brack

ISSUE 4~! OCTOBER 1993~!

IN THE UK:

  • Manga Video were releasing Doomed Megalopolis II: Disaster, Crying Freeman II: The Enemy Within and Tetsuo II: The Bodyhammer.
  • Anime Projects had Hurricane Live 2032 & 2033 out.
  • And in computer games, ICE were releasing Akira for Commordore Amiga, CD32, PC and PC CD-ROM.

    Maybe in a later issue Wil Overton will overrate it in his videogame review section. Good lord, the tat that got 7/10s in that section of the magazine, this issue has SD Great Battle II getting the videogame review “average”.

IN THE US of A:

  • There had been some Anime Conventions and they were briefly, vaguely, reported on:
  • Anime America (25-27 June 1993) - 1200 attendance listed. Guests: Haruka Takachiho, Monkey Punch, Kenichi Sonoda and Megumi Hayashibara. Described as having great events, but poorly run.
  • Anime Expo (2-4 July 1993) - 1800 attendance listed (wikipedia gives 1,693). Guests: Well I don’t know, it lists a load, then says four didn’t show, but beyond mentioning Haruhiko Mikimoto not showing, I don’t know who the other three who didn’t show were. Described as having poor events (presumably down to lack of guests), but well organised.

    Depressing thought of the day: The biggest anime-based con in the UK is now roughly at the size of the Anime America of 1993 (and has been for the last few years), and it’s idea of a guest is Monica Rial.

  • CPM/US MANGA CORPS were releasing Venus Wars, Area 88 Act II
  • ANIMEIGO had Dagger of Kamui, Urusei Yatsura OAV Vol. 6
  • DARK IMAGE ENTERTAINMENT made with Devilman - The Birth of Devilman
  • US RENDITIONS released The Guyver Vol. 4.
  • Manga releases:
  • Dark Horse Comics: Caravan Kidd, Version 2.2
  • Eternity Comics: Robotech II: The Sentinels, Robotech: Return To Macross, Robotech: Invid War, Ninja High School, Zilliion
  • Viz Comics: Battle Angel Alita, Maison Ikkoku, Ranma, Genocyber, Sanctuary, Pixy Junket, Crying Freeman, Sanctuary, Nausicaa, Guyver, Silent Mobius
  • New Society Publishers: Barefoot Gen: Out of the Ashes

IN JAPAN:

  • The Cockpit
  • Dirty Pair
  • Votoms
  • Borgman
  • Idol Defense Force Hummingbird
  • Erotic Beast High School “Climax Collection”
  • KO Century Three Beastketeers II - Chapter 3
  • NG Knight Ramune & 40 DX, Chapter 3

    The Satoru Akahori script machine in full effect here.

  • A-Girl
  • Ah! My Goddess
  • Eight Man After
  • Epic Fantasy Ellcia
  • Chameleon 2 “Siblings From Hell”
  • Machine God Corps
  • No Need For Tenchi:Demon Emperor Ryou Special - The Night Before The Festival

    Still loving that translation

  • Bad Boys
  • Moldiver

ELSEWHERE:

  • Tsui Hark announced as directing the Mai the Psychic Girl live-action film.

    Did this ever get anywhere? I remember at one point reading Sparks had the rights to make the film.

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