It's a veritable bonanza of anime!
Apr. 21st, 2003 10:22 pmPast weekend was fun, saw lots of anime and friends and family and ate lots of food on Easter. Here's a rundown of what I watched:
Yaiba:
Low budget as can be, but rather than take away the fun, it adds to it. A kid learning to be a samurai to fight an impending big bad guy, lotsa laughs along the way.
Secret of Cerulean Sand:
So it's the 19th century Victorian England, and there's this young girl born into a wealthy family that must own half of England. Based on a Jules-Verne novel, it tried to be Miyazaki-esque, it really did. But the only one who can pull that off is Miyazaki himself.
Naaja:
Great, another "young girl on an adventure of a lifetime" gig. Main character is 12 years old, but at least she doesn't look disturbingly overdeveloped. Meanwhile there's a Tuxedo Mask-like character running about, doing a Robin Hood schtick. Set in the same country and time period as Secret of Cerulean Sand. Maybe the main characters of each show will happen across each other? I don't know.
Machine Robo Rescue:
Ok, a bunch of 10-12 year old kids that can pilot some mostly-sentient robots makes for a really long toy commercial. Obvious CG going on there.
Scrapped Princess:
Princess on the run from a world that wants her dead. I can dig it. Character design has a tried-but-true look to it; Studio Bones is using what works. Looking forward to more.
DNAngel:
Some kid with an alter ego as an angelic thief. Looks like something worth investigating further.
Ninja Scroll TV series:
Like the movie, but not as bloody, cause it's going on tv. But Jubei still kicks ass, and the supporting characters are no less freaky than in the movie.
Last Exile:
21st century technology in a 19th century setting. It looked like it took a lot of inspiration from Final Fantasy games. Animation style looks the same, too.
Dear Boys:
Slam Dunk, but with the bishounen settings cranked way, WAY up. Just what the world needs, more yaoi fodder. Although, it did inspire a new Anime Law: When fast techno music is playing in the background, the hero's chances of succeeding at his task increase astronomically.
Air Master:
Ok, the main character is a schoolgirl that's close to 7 feet tall. Ok, I have no problem with that. She can kick ass by using her mastery of gymnastics and air currents. No problem there either. But why the two-foot kid who's constantly bawling her head off? Fighting opponents who give speeches for (what feels like) days at a time? A girl who has massive breasts providing the sole comedic effect? Why?
Anyway.
Fixed my laptop. New keyboard and PRAM battery, took mere minutes to install.
Had an interesting dream the other night, where there was a mysterious disease going around, and the only symptom was that the victim's eyes would gradually turn gray over a period of several days. When the eyes turned completely gray, they would die. It spread randomly, and the only exception was that if the victim already had gray eyes, then they would turn blue, producing the same end result. So in this dream, I asked my sister what color my eyes were. She knew why I was asking. "Don't worry", she said. "They're gray, like they've always been."
After waking up, I looked in the mirror, at my blue eyes...
Fortunately, dream logic subsides rather quickly. Just not as quick that morning.
Yaiba:
Low budget as can be, but rather than take away the fun, it adds to it. A kid learning to be a samurai to fight an impending big bad guy, lotsa laughs along the way.
Secret of Cerulean Sand:
So it's the 19th century Victorian England, and there's this young girl born into a wealthy family that must own half of England. Based on a Jules-Verne novel, it tried to be Miyazaki-esque, it really did. But the only one who can pull that off is Miyazaki himself.
Naaja:
Great, another "young girl on an adventure of a lifetime" gig. Main character is 12 years old, but at least she doesn't look disturbingly overdeveloped. Meanwhile there's a Tuxedo Mask-like character running about, doing a Robin Hood schtick. Set in the same country and time period as Secret of Cerulean Sand. Maybe the main characters of each show will happen across each other? I don't know.
Machine Robo Rescue:
Ok, a bunch of 10-12 year old kids that can pilot some mostly-sentient robots makes for a really long toy commercial. Obvious CG going on there.
Scrapped Princess:
Princess on the run from a world that wants her dead. I can dig it. Character design has a tried-but-true look to it; Studio Bones is using what works. Looking forward to more.
DNAngel:
Some kid with an alter ego as an angelic thief. Looks like something worth investigating further.
Ninja Scroll TV series:
Like the movie, but not as bloody, cause it's going on tv. But Jubei still kicks ass, and the supporting characters are no less freaky than in the movie.
Last Exile:
21st century technology in a 19th century setting. It looked like it took a lot of inspiration from Final Fantasy games. Animation style looks the same, too.
Dear Boys:
Slam Dunk, but with the bishounen settings cranked way, WAY up. Just what the world needs, more yaoi fodder. Although, it did inspire a new Anime Law: When fast techno music is playing in the background, the hero's chances of succeeding at his task increase astronomically.
Air Master:
Ok, the main character is a schoolgirl that's close to 7 feet tall. Ok, I have no problem with that. She can kick ass by using her mastery of gymnastics and air currents. No problem there either. But why the two-foot kid who's constantly bawling her head off? Fighting opponents who give speeches for (what feels like) days at a time? A girl who has massive breasts providing the sole comedic effect? Why?
Anyway.
Fixed my laptop. New keyboard and PRAM battery, took mere minutes to install.
Had an interesting dream the other night, where there was a mysterious disease going around, and the only symptom was that the victim's eyes would gradually turn gray over a period of several days. When the eyes turned completely gray, they would die. It spread randomly, and the only exception was that if the victim already had gray eyes, then they would turn blue, producing the same end result. So in this dream, I asked my sister what color my eyes were. She knew why I was asking. "Don't worry", she said. "They're gray, like they've always been."
After waking up, I looked in the mirror, at my blue eyes...
Fortunately, dream logic subsides rather quickly. Just not as quick that morning.
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Date: 2003-04-22 08:46 am (UTC)~Sarah
PS. I finally can post pictures!