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Looking for any good slice of life dating anime
    • Bloom into You - girl falling for girl though
    • Whisper of the Heart - movie
    • A Sign of Affection
    • From Me To You
    • Maid Sama!
    • Tomo-chan Is a Girl!

    First two I rated Great 9/10, second four I rated Very Good 8/10.

  • Japan seeks international coordination to thwart online manga, anime piracy
  • I don't see how trademark and copyright law would be a hindrance. Any multinational company and any company with global markets has to gain this expertise, and they contract lawyers to do so.

    Steam can do it. Bandcamp can do it. Netflix can do it. Amazon can do it. What is supposed to be so different for manga or anime?

  • Japan's Massive Number of Anime at Risk if Failing Currency Problems Continue
  • alleged that 90% of animators quit their jobs in three years

    Insane number. But not implausible to me. Bad working environments with impossible schedules do that.

    I wish they would improve working conditions. As an industry, or through regulation because evidently, the industry doesn't.

    To finance it - I wish they would make anime more easily accessible and buyable.

    Less oppressive checkboxed mass/standard productions would surely improve what we see as products too.

  • Ninja Kamui (2024) - From Very Good to Mediocre/Bad

    Episode one has great action scenes and great peaceful-family-life with foreshadowing introduction - in great production quality. To the point where I can point to that first episode as great examples of action and mood-setting life-like family life in anime.

    Unfortunately, it quickly goes downhill - for me at least - and by episodes 6 and 8 onwards becomes a CGI mech story with silly over-the-top villains and characters.

    I was so excited and hopeful after episode one. Unfortunate.

    I sat through the rest of it, which was at times worthwhile, but I skipped through the end which was predictable and more of the same in a style I didn't like.

    I can certainly recommend checking episode 1 out for its production quality.

    Have you watched it? How did you find it?

    3
    'Does Everyone Hate Real World?': Ghost In The Shell: Arise Director Bemoans The Rise Of Isekai Anime
  • What do you mean by traditional material?

    I can see your argumentation being followed by misguided production management, but I doubt it's necessary or can positively influence world-building.

    All kinds of mechanisms and progression can be presented naturally, intuitively, and embedded within the world. I doubt a noticeable number of people are so far gone they can only understand the world through the interface of video game interfaces.

  • 'Does Everyone Hate Real World?': Ghost In The Shell: Arise Director Bemoans The Rise Of Isekai Anime
  • I don't think it's about "everyone". It's about production companies picking what's popular, the currently popular theme, and produces shovelware standard-productions in a narrow, uninspired target-audience checkboxing way. They contract producers and creatives, but restrict them and likely invest so little that it ends up with what it is. The industry as a whole, many titles, end up as forgettable, mediocre, similar shovelware.

    Much like Hollywood produced an abundance of hero movies until everyone was sick of it. Or how EA produced the same sports game each year. Or Call of Duty. Or Battlefield.


    I agree with there being a lot of sub-par and mediocre productions, and the overpowered, harem, and video game elements are big offenders and indicators of what most of the time end up as bad products.

    I enjoyed Reincarnated as a vending machine. Simple formula, very forced, but hilariously absurd.

    Most overpowered protagonist anime end up between bad and awful. But The Eminence in Shadow makes use of it as poignant satire. And I remember seeing another series where they made it work through enemy hybris, and the punishment/revelation was satisfying enough that it worked, in large part through direction and production quality.

    The most "wtf" regarding isekai I recently saw was when the entire series was not about being an isekai, but - not at the begining nor end - they put a random scene in where the protagonist had a vision from modern Japan city and was like "what is this about?" and that was it. Maybe they included it just so it can have the isekai product tag? I have no idea.


    Coming back to the original theme and hypothosis, the differentiation of and popularity of fantasy vs isekai escapism is interesting.

    Ghost in the Shell is certainly fantastical. Enjoying or viewing or getting invested in fantastical stories is inherently partly escapism too. Isekai specifically puts a - most of the time - normal modern human into a fantastical setting though, materializing escapism as a fact on the protagonist.

    I'm not sure there's such a hard line to draw though.

  • Deafness Explored in Anime - A Sign of Affection (2024) and A Silent Voice (2016)
  • I've thought about the clear inner voice during watching too. I found it acceptable, not that detrimental. Something different could have had more impact, but I didn't find it that bad.

    It's certainly the easier way in terms of directing.

  • Deafness Explored in Anime - A Sign of Affection (2024) and A Silent Voice (2016)

    A Sign of Affection (2024) is a very good romance series. (jp Yubisaki to Renren)

    A Silent Voice (2016) is a great movie. (jp Eiga Koe no Katachi)

    Both explore deafness in a very meaningful way.

    Have you watched them? What were your experiences and thoughts on it?

    ---

    My personal assessment:

    A Sign of Affection starts great. Positive, vibrant, and meaningful and with depth, exploring deafness. At some point, I felt like it's kind of the same throughout (stylistically and the kind of things happening), but it never lost its continuous progression in fitting pace or its quality at least.

    I've wanted to rewatch A Silent Voice for a while, which also has deafness as a central theme, and I remember it being great - albeit quite different to the aforementioned romance. It has more struggling themes, and is a movie rather than a series.

    Both had very interesting, insightful, and respectful depictions of deafness, which certainly elevated them into something very good and unique.

    7
    Which less-known series do you recommend?
  • Kagami no Kojou is great. A movie from 2022. (Is it "less-known" or "hidden"? AniDB has only 95 votes, so I thought it would be. But MAL has 6k.)

    Now and Then, Here and There is great. A series from 1999. Outside of the dated 480p visuals it’s exceptional. It has great depth. my short review and a clip

  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)KI
    Kissaki @ani.social
    Posts 2
    Comments 13