Friday, December 28, 2012

Waiting... and waiting... and waiting

*Includes spoilers. All media credits go to their owners.*

As it's still the holiday season and I am in no mood if forcing myself into writing something extremely meaningful (lol, as if I ever do that anyway), I'd like to talk about waiting. Waiting for new anime seasons, that is. Have you ever watched that one show that you love and then after it ends half way into the story, you know you have to wait for the next season for AGEZ. Seriously, first you have to wait to see a new episode every week and then it ends - and you'll have to wait AGAIN, to see the rest of the story.

http://cdn.myanimelist.net/images/anime/4/40977.jpg
Like Btooom! - I loved it. I thought it was nice and brutal and awesome - and now it god-damn ended. They fit like 50 chapters into those 12 episodes and it was good too, but now there's like only 60+ chapters out and we'll first have to wait for those to finish and only then, IF the sales are great enough, there will be another season. Bleh.
Same with Kuroko's Basketball. Will there be a next season?? Well I sure hope so, cause that was the most thrilling sequence of 25 episodes in a row that was actually exciting all the way.

Not that lots of exciting animes so far haven't been canceled half way through.
http://www.animegallery.animeappeal.com/var/albums/Tenjou-Tenge/Tenjou%20Tenge%20012.jpg?m=1326685968
Like Tenjou Tenge. If there are epic fighting techniques, demon swords and bloodline abilities around then I'm surely hooked enough. I would think that other people would enjoy such topics as well - especially when there are huge boobs mixed into the concoction. But apparently the Japanese were not interested enough to go out and buy DVDs!! Damn it!
Not sure if the same happened to Claymore or what - but to be fair, I had way higher hopes for it. Women having demon blood in them? Sounds legit. But in the end there was just some random small time bashing going on. Tssk.

http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/anime.php?id=14781
Aaah! But there is one good news though! From the new 2013 Winter season, the sequel of Chihayafuru will be starting!!! And thank goodness because that ending was not satisfying at all. I hope this season will bring great luck in love for Taichi and that Arata will get ditched. I didn't like him. He may be good at the game but he's horrible with people. Boo!

One great question remains - was the 13th episode the last of Tonari no Kaibutsu-kun? It kind of seemed like they were trying to break it from there, but when I last checked the episode updates it still said nothing about whether it was the end or not. I personally hope it was not, of course. But if it was... then I can't even imagine how long we'll have to wait for the new season x.x Please no. Please make it go on!!

(P.S. I checked it. It really did end. ARGHHHHHHHHH.)

http://farm9.static.flickr.com/8314/8042402571_942db6ed9a_o.jpg
See you next week!
 

Friday, December 21, 2012

Kurisumasu

Merry Christmas from my best friend Haruhi and the girls, yo!

http://4206e9.medialib.glogster.com/media/c626e213520021de9c7b2f2a2b16b33031720f8d1bb02067314c7dcf70a59ae4/20-christmas-anime-5-wallshq-com-1-1-.jpg

All the preparing is taking up too much time to talk seriously about anime - but there's always next week (provided the World doesn't end today after all) ^^

Friday, December 14, 2012

Happy to be from the West!

*May include spoilers. All media credits go to their owners*

Today I want to write about something that has always been on my mind whenever I watch anime or read something related to the Japanese culture - how differently society behaves here and there. And especially when watching anime, I find myself wondering whether the things they show there are really how things work. I mean, it's likely that school life is more or less exactly like it is pictured - children changing their shoes in the lobby, changing seating a few times per year and getting sorted into new classes once every couple of years. But is it really true that the most popular guy in school has food grades, is good at sports and acts nice to everyone?

When I think back to my high school times - which by the way ended like 5 years ago - I don't remember any of the cool kids being awesome at studying. Sure, there were athletes and yeah, there were nice guys too. But there were also random people who did nothing but drink and hang out doing, well - nothing, and their popularity was based mostly on being bad at school. Seriously, that gang in the back who never listened to anything the teachers said and played cards even during classes, that was "teh leetzor" gang to belong to. Now, I personally don't have a very vivid experience with the entire thing since we had 30 girls and 1 guy (poor dude) in the class - obviously the popularity contest can't really happen if there is no audience to compete before. The girls just formed groups based on interests or similarities and that's how it went. I also played in a rock band and liked playing video games so the fucks I gave about the entire girls-class thing was an absolute 0. But I did hang out with some of the cool kids from other classes because we had music to connect us and to be quite blunt - I don't think they were neither smart nor soulful.

http://cdn.myanimelist.net/images/characters/5/47839.jpg
Tomoya
Looking at school life in anime though, being a delinquent is generally looked down upon (which is completely the other way around here). Your grades should be at least a medium ranked to be able to charm anyone with your looks and kindness. Think about Tomoya from Clannad for a second. He was obviously rather handsome and evidently pretty kind and caring, but most of the people from their class still thought badly of him since he didn't care about studying. What kind of a society does it take to make kids think studying is awesome? In a sense, I think I would actually prefer that society. You are urged from an early age to strive for something and be someone. True, it will probably be challenging at times but by then you would already be used to it. You are constantly urged to form bonds, participate in events - student councils and committees are serious institutions and you actually get some credit for being the class rep. Then again, you would be competing with a mass of hard working ants who all aim for similar goals. Also, regardless of whether it's popular or not to study in the Western countries, if you do it well you'll probably have better shots at things. But to stand out from a mass of study bugs you'd have to be 100% dedicated to working your way through academics.

Here we come to another point that has always bothered me. The amount of dedication children in school settings are forced to put into things. I agree that one must be taught how to focus and reach goals, but do you really have to set goals for your entire life when you're 15? You don't even know who you are entirely and what you want or what you like. All you know is that people like parents, teachers etc have expectations and you need to set your aim in life to start working towards it with all your might. The day you walk out of high school you better have a new place to go to - otherwise you'll be kicked out of your parents place or thought of as a burden. Of course it's not any better to be dwindling about and not knowing where you are going in life for years and years after you finish your school life, like it happens around here a lot. But if you already set goals during puberty then it's rather likely you will wake up one day when you're 30, working on a meaningless post, and find yourself questioning whether you made any of the choices yourself or was your mind just molded to that direction by others. 
Young people actually need the time to fail and be free in order to find out what really matters to them in life. Can this really be accomplished by expecting them to choose when they're still children? I don't know. But I do know that there is a bunch of weird people in Japan who like to sniff girls panties and do extremely disgusting things to find some shelter from the iron setting the society has pressed upon them.

One last extremely important thing about being a teenager and finding out what is important to you is about love - and romance in general. In this sense I'm extremely glad that there are animes to sort of guide young people through it. Another thing I am glad about is how important they show the 'confession' part of the process to be. It's a climax point of the innocent love where you really need to pull yourself together and accomplish something. I admire the people who have the courage to face their crush in the broad daylight and confess their feelings. But that is not usually how it works around where I live and I believe it's more or less the same everywhere else in the West. 

http://s5.favim.com/orig/54/i-love-you-anime-boy-confession-Favim.com-513012.jpg

Here people get together at someone's house -> get drunk -> start making out. After that it's probably pretty obvious one or both of the parties like the other
"I like you!" "Yeah, your tongue in my throat gave it away." 

Sure, I've witnessed some innocent love myself even, where the boy and the girl actually tell each other how they feel, go for walks, hold hands, kiss for the first time. But that ends with kids turning like 13-15 and finding out how easy it is to get someone to buy you alcohol. After that you don't really need to face your embarrassing feelings alone and if you lack courage you can supplement for it from the bottle. But that also makes it so much easier to go too far too easily. You get drunk and happen to sleep with a guy? Well now, no use crying over spilled milk, eh? The amount of sex that is shown on TV doesn't really help with the image what is good and what is not.

That's why I think that it's an important thing to actually face someone with no extra help from alcohol and tell them how you feel. Sure, it's embarrassing and sometimes useless since you might already know what the other is going to say. But to muster up your courage and go for it while knowing you might be both accepted or rejected is something you will remember for your entire life. It gives the whole business a meaning. Making out while drunk and then dating them cause you might as well, will turn into a mass of hazy memories when you're older, none of them really meaning anything. I sincerely believe that everyone should have to confess at least once as a teenager to know what it really means to try to reach someone with feelings

Yet, I don't think I would actually prefer living in the Japanese society. Regardless of how many good points the collective consciousness has, it's important to be free too. If you don't feel the direction you've chosen in life is right for you then all you have to do is take your life into your own hands and work for the things you really want. And people will support you. But in animes people seem to be so tightly set in their own tracks that when the time comes to change something, it seems to be the hardest thing in the world. True, there are people like that here too, but at least societies urge people to go for what they really want. There the world revolves around what the society wants...

Thank you for reading my blabber and hopefully some of my points have reached you.
Will be back next week!

Friday, December 07, 2012

Real life topic anime

*May include spoilers. All media credits go to their owners.*

I haven't seen a lot of anime that could be classified as 'themed'. What I mean by that is - I don't really watch anything that doesn't have something mystical in it. Obviously these animes could also be referred to as 'themed' - mostly themed for boys because of the battles and abilities - but what I envision when I use that word is something like sport or music or art or culture. I think the very first anime about sport that I saw was Attack No. 1 - or maybe Captain Tsubasa. But little difference which one of them was the first because I hated both of them. I admit that I did watch Attack No. 1, or Mila Superstar as it was called in German on the RTL2 channel where I watched it, but only because it was just before Sailor Moon for some time. Mostly I was the fastest remote control clicker in the world when it came to any of the sports animes. Not sure if I saw any music animes back then - but if I did, I probably switched the channel just the same.

http://www.anigamers.com/media/entry-uploads/chihaya-lunge_110412_174041.jpg
Chihayafuru
So having a vague memory of not thinking anything of these shows, it will not surprise you that I avoided watching any 'themed' animes for a very long time. The very first thing that sparked my interest years later was Chihayafuru - and I only started watching that one because of Uta Koi and the beautiful poetry. But to be fair, Chihaya and her friends were more engaged in Karuta as a sport rather than a noticing the rich history and context of the 100 poems. Still, even though every one of them had a special ability or angle for approaching the sport, I had no idea that was actually what captures the viewer when it comes to sports animes. So when Chihaya came out with her epic hearing, Taichi with his memorization skills and Arata just being OP and having a long history, I thought it was all some kind of new way of displaying action. Little did I know that that's exactly what you look for in these kinds of shows.

When it was then suggested I watch Kuroko's Basketball or Kuroko no Basuke, I was still clueless about what it was going to be and, frankly, also very skeptical. That changed within the first episode. When I realized that every single one of the characters was going to have a special power - very similar to supernatural or mystical powers that the characters in my usual animes have - I was all over that show. No joke. Did I think that some of those abilities were ridiculous? Of course. Would it really be possible for someone to have so little presence that he gets away with all kinds of sneaky tricks - surely not. Especially when he generally sucks at basketball. But is that an awesome idea to portray and make possible in an anime - definitely yes. Not to mention that epic copy-ninja style of Kise, Kagami's jumps, Midorima's long range shots and the monstrous Aomine. Can't say that the only girls in the show have any less worthy abilities. If Riko's special power is somewhat logical and might be possible in reality - even if not to that extent - then Momoi's power is just mental. And awesome. And OP. But when playing against it, it makes winning that much more desirable. All in all, I had no idea basketball could be shown with so much feeling and action. I watched one episode at my college the other day and a basketball player sitting next to me commented on how dramatic the show looked. He was right - and that's what makes it epic!

Very recently, however, I watched Nodame Cantabile. I admit that I chose it because it was on a rather high spot in the ANN top 50. I knew it was going to be an anime about music and even though my sister had actually suggested I watch Angel Beats or something of that name, I had never watched anything remotely related to music before. At least not on purpose. So as I started it, I had no idea what to expect. When the show evolved though, I realized that it was kind of in the same style as the sports animes. Most of the time they just pointed out how great musicians the main characters were, how much better than other players, but here and there they added effects like: "When he conducts, people start seeing flower petals" or "When she plays, it feels like we are all in a fairy tail". Sure, that might not qualify as a special power exactly, but I know enough about music to know how people talk about the pieces they just heard - at least in my own country. And mostly these talks do not involve flower petals - or black feathers and princes, which were also present, by the way. So hearing what was right and what was wrong with their technique or approach was pretty much like improving oneself on the battlefield - this time the battlefield was the competitive musical world.

http://images2.fanpop.com/image/photos/10300000/Piano-and-Violin-nodame-cantabile-10333573-350-256.jpg
Nodame Cantabile
And I loved it! The show was amazing, even with the sometimes overextended music and the nonexistent animation. Seriously - not too much fun to watch a conductor just stand in place, doing nothing. Still, it had humor and some extra relationship topics and most of all the growing of their personal skills and ambitions.

I guess what I'm trying to say is - if it ever comes to watching these themed shows, don't be too conservative like I was. They might be more epic than you know.

See you next week!