I was reminded today of the very weird, very dark, uncomfortably intense Flowers of Evil. The manga was a lot better done than the anime, but the anime adaptation was... interesting.
In the original manga, the characters are in middle school, while the anime ages them up to late high school. It feels weird to say, "This dark, sexually charged story needed to be about middle schoolers," but it kiiinda did. The inciting incident is Kasuga stealing the gym clothes of his crush, which is definitely weird and not-ok, but for a middle schooler it's a little more understandable. He doesn't even really know why he does it, it's just a burst of adolescent stupidity that he pretty much immediately regrets. Like he has sexual desires but he doesn't really have any kind of understanding of them yet. Then his classmate Nakamura finds out, and blackmails him into increasingly weirder, sexually charged performances. Nakamura is depressed and probably self-harming, and also abusive towards Kasuga, often with a sexual tinge to her abuse. The manga never comes outright and tells you why she is the way she is, but it's pretty heavily hinted that her father is sexually abusing her, and that she is in turn acting out sexual abuse on Kasuga. Nakamura and Kasuga go into a downward spiral together, culminating in them attempting a public suicide attempt at a festival.
Luckily they're stopped before they can hurt themselves, and then the manga timeskips forwards to Kasuga in his last year of high school, basically still trying to get his life together and to form healthy relationships.
The mangaka also wrote Inside Mari, which is a pretty interesting take on the whole freaky friday body swap scenario, although he pretty blatantly loses interest in it in the final third and the quality plummets.
A trap is for fish: when you've got the fish, you can forget the trap. A snare is for rabbits: when you've got the rabbit, you can forget the snare. Words are for meaning: when you've got the meaning, you can forget the words.
if a show seems interesting just type in the title on google + "streaming", 95% of the time one of the first 3 links will be the official stream.
A trap is for fish: when you've got the fish, you can forget the trap. A snare is for rabbits: when you've got the rabbit, you can forget the snare. Words are for meaning: when you've got the meaning, you can forget the words.
if a show seems interesting just type in the title on google + "streaming", 95% of the time one of the first 3 links will be the official stream.
Of which, the vast majority of said official streams are still either unannounced or just say TBA.
Look, I can figure out how to watch a thing, I’m just saying the haphazard way that streaming services actually announce their schedules is bad and does very little to actually promote most of their shows.
if a show seems interesting just type in the title on google + "streaming", 95% of the time one of the first 3 links will be the official stream.
Of which, the vast majority of said official streams are still either unannounced or just say TBA.
Look, I can figure out how to watch a thing, I’m just saying the haphazard way that streaming services actually announce their schedules is bad and does very little to actually promote most of their shows.
Is it the streaming service, or just the actual schedule being decide super late?
I've watched up to the 13th episode of Eva now and I think I'm getting bored, it's starting to feel repetitive and samey
here's three scenes establishing the character-based storyline this week, oh no an angel!!, let's spend the next 15 minutes of the episode fighting the angel, and a 2 minute wrapup of the character story and maybe one little worldbuilding hint
it's still good, but after the first 5 episode that were outstanding it feels like a letdown seeing it just be a regular ass TV show
I know it's supposed to change in some kinda way as it approaches the end, I'm just taken aback by how conventional a lot of these episodes have been so far
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~3700 years later, one strong willed dude busts out of the stone, and finds his friend had done the same. The friend knows all the Science, so from caveman level technology the two of them attempt to survive, then depetrify other people, then rebuild society.
It's written by the Eyeshield 21 author, and drawn by Boichi, who did Sun Ken Rock, among other things.
I like it a lot. The science bits are especially interesting.
Yeah, it's worth a look. It's basically Shonen Civ (how will we rebuild civilization!) but also with some conflict, and it...how to put it? It reinvents what the challenge of the time is pretty regularly, which works well for it.
Also it's got some of the best reaction panels of any manga, so hopefully that translates well to anime.
At this point I'd say its primary weakness is the style with which Boichi draws females? It's kinda odd.
Also it's got like NCIS levels of "science" in terms of what would actually work but we handwave it because manga.
Speaking of new anime season, crunchyroll has the first episode of the first new series of the season, To the Abandoned Sacred Beasts.
The concept for it made it sound like it could have potentially gone in an interesting direction. The idea is that during a civil war, one faction uses genetically engineered monster soldiers to turn the tide, but what happens to them once the war is over?
Unfortunately it appears to have just turned into good monster man fighting monster people who have lost themselves in monster mode, and his motivation is that the big monster man shot the girl he loved.
I mean, maybe they’ll be smart and have it go an x-men route where some of them join the obviously wolverine inspired hero, some of them join the villain (whose name is goddamn Cain Madhouse...who decided to give him powers again???) and some are just trying to get by. But right now I’m doubtful.
It's real goofy, but fun. It's way more exaggerated than his usual art, so it should adapt pretty well to anime? And it stays pretty high energy without a million fight scenes, which is nice.
Yeah, it's worth a look. It's basically Shonen Civ (how will we rebuild civilization!) but also with some conflict, and it...how to put it? It reinvents what the challenge of the time is pretty regularly, which works well for it.
Also it's got some of the best reaction panels of any manga, so hopefully that translates well to anime.
At this point I'd say its primary weakness is the style with which Boichi draws females? It's kinda odd.
Also it's got like NCIS levels of "science" in terms of what would actually work but we handwave it because manga.
Yeah my biggest criticism of it is that basically every female character is drawn in this really cheesecakey way.
Also the latest storyline may dip into “haha man dressed as a woman” jokes which is... not great!
Apparently I was making stuff up. In the manga PenPen comes from a previous research facility Misato worked at and she took it home to spare it from euthanasia when that lab closed. Here’s what Anno had to say about it:
Series creator Hideaki Anno explained in an essay on his official website how the character of Pen Pen was created and named (italics are inserted info by Evapedia):
"Super straightforward naming, but I thought the repetition sounded cute. His name has officially become the 2nd power of "Pen ("Pen" being short for "penguin," repeated as " Pen² "). I was reluctant at first, but we thought we needed a mascot character, so we had an animal appear in the show. As it happened, the show is set in Hakone, which is famous for its hot springs, which in turn are associated with monkeys (the Japanese Macaque monkey is famous for bathing in hot springs, such as in Hakone [1]). But that is no fun, so we decided to make it a penguin, the animal most unsuited to a hot spring. I'm positive that "hot spring penguin" was Sadamoto's idea."
I was reminded today of the very weird, very dark, uncomfortably intense Flowers of Evil. The manga was a lot better done than the anime, but the anime adaptation was... interesting.
In the original manga, the characters are in middle school, while the anime ages them up to late high school. It feels weird to say, "This dark, sexually charged story needed to be about middle schoolers," but it kiiinda did. The inciting incident is Kasuga stealing the gym clothes of his crush, which is definitely weird and not-ok, but for a middle schooler it's a little more understandable. He doesn't even really know why he does it, it's just a burst of adolescent stupidity that he pretty much immediately regrets. Like he has sexual desires but he doesn't really have any kind of understanding of them yet. Then his classmate Nakamura finds out, and blackmails him into increasingly weirder, sexually charged performances. Nakamura is depressed and probably self-harming, and also abusive towards Kasuga, often with a sexual tinge to her abuse. The manga never comes outright and tells you why she is the way she is, but it's pretty heavily hinted that her father is sexually abusing her, and that she is in turn acting out sexual abuse on Kasuga. Nakamura and Kasuga go into a downward spiral together, culminating in them attempting a public suicide attempt at a festival.
Luckily they're stopped before they can hurt themselves, and then the manga timeskips forwards to Kasuga in his last year of high school, basically still trying to get his life together and to form healthy relationships.
The mangaka also wrote Inside Mari, which is a pretty interesting take on the whole freaky friday body swap scenario, although he pretty blatantly loses interest in it in the final third and the quality plummets.
I wish they had done a second season for this but the Blu-Rays sold abysmally in Japan.
I was reminded today of the very weird, very dark, uncomfortably intense Flowers of Evil. The manga was a lot better done than the anime, but the anime adaptation was... interesting.
In the original manga, the characters are in middle school, while the anime ages them up to late high school. It feels weird to say, "This dark, sexually charged story needed to be about middle schoolers," but it kiiinda did. The inciting incident is Kasuga stealing the gym clothes of his crush, which is definitely weird and not-ok, but for a middle schooler it's a little more understandable. He doesn't even really know why he does it, it's just a burst of adolescent stupidity that he pretty much immediately regrets. Like he has sexual desires but he doesn't really have any kind of understanding of them yet. Then his classmate Nakamura finds out, and blackmails him into increasingly weirder, sexually charged performances. Nakamura is depressed and probably self-harming, and also abusive towards Kasuga, often with a sexual tinge to her abuse. The manga never comes outright and tells you why she is the way she is, but it's pretty heavily hinted that her father is sexually abusing her, and that she is in turn acting out sexual abuse on Kasuga. Nakamura and Kasuga go into a downward spiral together, culminating in them attempting a public suicide attempt at a festival.
Luckily they're stopped before they can hurt themselves, and then the manga timeskips forwards to Kasuga in his last year of high school, basically still trying to get his life together and to form healthy relationships.
The mangaka also wrote Inside Mari, which is a pretty interesting take on the whole freaky friday body swap scenario, although he pretty blatantly loses interest in it in the final third and the quality plummets.
I wish they had done a second season for this but the Blu-Rays sold abysmally in Japan.
It's an interesting idea, but the execution on the rotoscoping and stuff was pretty dire, tbf.
Like that video mostly picks from better done sequences, and they DO get better at it as the series goes on. And I like that the art style is a little ugly and uncomfortable. But sometimes it was just baaad.
A trap is for fish: when you've got the fish, you can forget the trap. A snare is for rabbits: when you've got the rabbit, you can forget the snare. Words are for meaning: when you've got the meaning, you can forget the words.
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Probably NSFW, though the only nudity is a bit of dudebutt
https://youtu.be/DeAtzp7ig1k
Luckily they're stopped before they can hurt themselves, and then the manga timeskips forwards to Kasuga in his last year of high school, basically still trying to get his life together and to form healthy relationships.
The mangaka also wrote Inside Mari, which is a pretty interesting take on the whole freaky friday body swap scenario, although he pretty blatantly loses interest in it in the final third and the quality plummets.
That’s worthless to me as it doesn’t tell me when or where I can actually watch them
And Fire Force. There's a few things this week, but Friday is when we hit critical mass for premiers.
I think live chart links where to watch things as soon as it's known.
Of which, the vast majority of said official streams are still either unannounced or just say TBA.
Look, I can figure out how to watch a thing, I’m just saying the haphazard way that streaming services actually announce their schedules is bad and does very little to actually promote most of their shows.
C'mon now, this one should have been a layup.
Naughty Succubus "Saki-chan"
it's a lot more wholesome than it sounds!
(as in it contains absolutely zero lewdness/H etc)
(just IMPLICATIONS for COMIC EFFECT)
it feels so out of place!
a penguin that drinks beer.
Basically, a bunch of comedians are gathered and asked to pay a million yen entry fee
Then they're placed into a room
If you laugh, you're eliminated. Last one standing gets the whole pot
Much of the comedy revolves around them taking their clothes off and doing stupid shit
It's incredibly tacky and stupid, and I am in enjoying it very much
Oddly enough, that sounds like something I've heard crows actually say out in the world.
No need for Wolf to put a Gon to Woolie's head like that...
Steam ID XBL: JohnnyChopsocky PSN:Stud_Beefpile WiiU:JohnnyChopsocky
crows are smart though. like they are way smarter than almost all other birbs
i feed him sometimes
have you no shame? no integrity?
From what I've heard it's got one hell of a title and not much else. Which already puts it ahead of some other isekai, sadly.
Is it the streaming service, or just the actual schedule being decide super late?
And with a bunch of Isekai series coming this is still somehow in the running for one of the better if not best of the batch.
I think Cult of Personality works better given some of them aren't presidents, honestly
here's three scenes establishing the character-based storyline this week, oh no an angel!!, let's spend the next 15 minutes of the episode fighting the angel, and a 2 minute wrapup of the character story and maybe one little worldbuilding hint
it's still good, but after the first 5 episode that were outstanding it feels like a letdown seeing it just be a regular ass TV show
I mean it’s still angel attacks but you’re definitely in the part that feels more like a typical giant robot show
I hear about it in passing but im not familiar
All of humanity is turned to stone one day.
~3700 years later, one strong willed dude busts out of the stone, and finds his friend had done the same. The friend knows all the Science, so from caveman level technology the two of them attempt to survive, then depetrify other people, then rebuild society.
It's written by the Eyeshield 21 author, and drawn by Boichi, who did Sun Ken Rock, among other things.
I like it a lot. The science bits are especially interesting.
Yeah, it's worth a look. It's basically Shonen Civ (how will we rebuild civilization!) but also with some conflict, and it...how to put it? It reinvents what the challenge of the time is pretty regularly, which works well for it.
Also it's got some of the best reaction panels of any manga, so hopefully that translates well to anime.
At this point I'd say its primary weakness is the style with which Boichi draws females? It's kinda odd.
Also it's got like NCIS levels of "science" in terms of what would actually work but we handwave it because manga.
The concept for it made it sound like it could have potentially gone in an interesting direction. The idea is that during a civil war, one faction uses genetically engineered monster soldiers to turn the tide, but what happens to them once the war is over?
Unfortunately it appears to have just turned into good monster man fighting monster people who have lost themselves in monster mode, and his motivation is that the big monster man shot the girl he loved.
I mean, maybe they’ll be smart and have it go an x-men route where some of them join the obviously wolverine inspired hero, some of them join the villain (whose name is goddamn Cain Madhouse...who decided to give him powers again???) and some are just trying to get by. But right now I’m doubtful.
Yeah my biggest criticism of it is that basically every female character is drawn in this really cheesecakey way.
Also the latest storyline may dip into “haha man dressed as a woman” jokes which is... not great!
It’s never explicitly mentioned in the series IIRC, but it’s a memento from her father’s trip to Antarctica. edit: see below.
...and based on a real life pet penguin that was popular in Japan at the time.
I wish they had done a second season for this but the Blu-Rays sold abysmally in Japan.
It's an interesting idea, but the execution on the rotoscoping and stuff was pretty dire, tbf.
Like that video mostly picks from better done sequences, and they DO get better at it as the series goes on. And I like that the art style is a little ugly and uncomfortable. But sometimes it was just baaad.
just one man's take