Monthly Archives: March 2007

Haibane Renmei Alternative

One thing that bugged me about Haibane Renmei is that in the second half of the story, we’re lead to believe that Reki lived a colorful existence during her earlier days. The eventual parting of her friends, mentors, and mentees must have added color to it all. Colors that we don’t see in this grey tale of overcoming depression.

What if? Wouldn’t it be cool if a spin-off based on this charming little idea existed?

Without the squids.

The thought of a story between little punk loner Reki, her better-to-do friend Nemu, and a potential romantic interest who runs a gang? That’s like 3 wholesome American teenage drama archetypes rolled up into one. Add the painter-teacher, and apply liberal gang violence and ghetto culture shock and we have …

Perhaps all the more this exercise taught me that sometimes it’s just better to keep it simple. Subtlety is not an American trait.

Today I read about another alternative: this one involving people rowing boats, and it just happens that Rakka rowed boats in the anime. It doesn’t take a genius to put two and two together.

Alice's seiyuu-san is...

Sort of a real-life update: been hauling around computing hardware these past few days, so lacking updates due to that. Will probably continue to haul hardware in the next few days…


Your Favorite Anime Sucks

-_-

No, not really.

I am a bit fustered. Partly because of this, but also I’ve hit some kind of a dry spell. Just haven’t been thinking about much other than work lately, so not much to write about.

When all else fail, let’s try insulting random things. Maybe it’ll get the juices flowing.


The Girl Who Leapt through Time

You know, when Kanon 21 “hits” someone made a “Toki wo Tomare” joke–basically a Jojo character’s special attack that allows him to freeze time, complete with the lame color invert.

Makoto Konno, the teenage tomboy star in Toki wo Kakeru Shoujo (Tokikake for short), or The Girl Who Leapt through Time, pulled a couple off.

I think I was doing that with my blog all last week.

At any rate, this film is making a minor run across North America. It showed itself sometime last year in Canada IIRC, and then just earlier this week/last week in Boston. Tonight it was NYC. Thanks to the New York International Children’s Film Fest… (I think it’s playing again next week, and then to San Fran next.)

So unlike the Boston screening or Waterloo or many of other limited or film fest screenings I’ve been to, this one is filled with parents and grade school kids. The viewing is subbed (yea, kids can read subs!), so when the line “Why are you here so early? Did you skip jerking off?” came on the screen, we LOLOLOLed especially hard. I guess it was also a surprise. But LOLOLOL.

Tokikake itself is full of laughs. It’s by no mean a comedy, but when it’s funny it’s quite funny. It’s definitely a romantic coming-of-age sort of thing, but at the same time the sci-fi twist just makes it hurt your head a little? I came away from the film generally positive, but at the same time I’m a little confused and it rubbed me not in the right way.

Starting with the very delicious Yoshiyuki Sadamoto character designs–it’s great, but given how the film sometimes bends backwards to be cartoony, it almost clashes. The strange pacing was great but the double-pop at the climax (referring to tension-and-release) was rough. The director definitely knows his stuff, and it shows, but at the end the plot is simple enough that sometimes it seems things in the movie are in the movie for no reason.

Perhaps the worst part of the movie for me was the main actress. She got on my nerves. She did a good job, I think, but I felt as if I was inside her brain the whole film, hearing every little sound she made. And she made a lot of sounds. Often alone. The sound effects in the movie was pretty good, but at those times it could get excessive.

But once I got over that, the film was very smooth. It went down clean, and it is fairly cohesive and engaging. All the characters came together very well–from the myseterious “witch” aunt, the Enma Ai-evoking imouto, the two boys, the confession trio, to even the rather minor but fairly significant girl-friend–it felt relevant and not contrived.
Animation was clean, as it suits Sadamoto’s design style. The animation was fairly organic, smooth, but at times broken into chunkiness as either Makoto breaks into a crying fit or tumbling fall. The background is delicious, too, but given how this is a film about going back and forward in time, it gets a little overused (I’m thinking we need more shots of the Kanno house). You can tell they went an extra mile to try to mitigate that, though, by reanimating most of the flashback scenes.

The film is obviously not age-rated by any official thing, but the filmfest gave it 10+. YMMV, but definitely a good film to take your girlfriend to. Kids…if they’re teenagers I guess.

As to the plot? Time waits for no one. Here’s a much more comprehensive description of what goes on in the film dated last year, and read that if you want. The original story is based on the sci-fi book of the same title by Tsutsui (same guy who wrote Paprika). Official home page is Makoto jumping over into the blue sky.

Makoto Kanno Leapt in NYC

Give it a watch. It’s worth your while just for the laughs. And maybe the simple, sweet romantic story will make up for the rest.


New York Comic-Con 2007 – Not Enough Pancakes

I haven’t been to a honest-to-goodness scifi/comic con since forever, so I figured why not when a couple old friends invited me to go with them this past weekend to the NYCC. Unfortunately Friday was my only free day that weekend and one of my friends can’t make it, making the ordeal a little less worth my while. I think it worked out well because the other friend I went with was someone I just didn’t talk to much after we parted ways however so long ago. Old friends got lots to catch up and all. Even if I had to buy a weekend pass as a result.

Friday is suppose to be the less crowded day, mostly because unlike an anime con, a larger part of the demographic works. Even if they go straight to the con (which opened at 4 for non-industry folks), they probably would have waited at least an hour on line after they have gotten to the convention. If they gotten out of work at 4:30 and took their 30 minutes of NYC commute-time to get there (30 minutes being generous), I would still have them beat by 2 hours.

The con itself is inside Javits Center, which is actually HEUG (bigger than BCC, where Otakon sits). But I think the con only uses about half of it. Lines weren’t so bad Friday, and that’s only because unless you wanted to go to the panels (and there weren’t really any interesting ones Friday), there’s only one thing to do.

Actually, there are a bunch of panels that I would go, but they’re all industry only. Poop. I think the only panels I sat in on was the TAN panel for 5 minutes, and most of the Stan Lee talk. He is a jolly old dude who doesn’t deserve half of the fame and glory he gets, and I like him for saying so. Very charismatic guy. I was in the TAN panel for 5 minutes only because it was mostly full of rambling from chatting girls who appeases TAN viewers (I get TAN but it cost extra so I avoid it) and have nothing substantive to say.

Yea, I spent most of my time in the exhibit hall. It feels a lot more professional because there are a lot more “pro” vendors with nice displays compared to even big anime cons. You’re talking about basically all the comic book studios and publishers, plus people like ADV and Viz. I think Brocolli had something there? I stole some pens, heh. AAA had a display of some kits, but nothing super fancy. One vendor actually had store some cool kits (like both Fate figures). I would’ve picked up a copy of Puerto Rico (as it’s the flavor of the week with the board gamers I hang out with) except the one vendor that carried these kind of things didn’t have it.

What else was amusing? Some Korean manhwa booth gave out random samplers and made reference to gay sex? I didn’t catch that. Actually there were some other funny stuff, but most of them involve my uncanny friend, so I better not share with you all as he’s probably overly sensitive about people talking behind his back on the intarweb. Oops.

Wizard of the Coast booth was fun. They made you do their game demos (or watch at least) for a chance to win some fairly good prizes. I got away with the Eberron settings book. Their Star Wars miniature game looks fun too, so chalk one up for lure with loot. I think they even had their board games and collector edition PHB as prizes. I’d say that’s worth the $20-30 and made my trip even.

Sadly, there are not much in terms of pictures. Just from my pinhole phone cam. I didn’t even take many pictures. Hit up Google or something for actual pics, I guess. There were a handful of costumers on Friday; some pros and some casuals. I like this cute girl in imperial navy officer outfit, for instance. Some girl cosplayed V and I noticed it’s a girl right off the bat? The quality of cosplaying is higher partly because, I guess, there were more pros at it, and only people who knew what they were doing wore something… including this random kid who walked around as Optimus Prime and a boombox.

Wish I could have:
*came back on Saturday and attend the Suzumiya Haruhi panel
*were into gaming to catch the significance of the game-related booths were
*go to the industry panels
*see Colbert
*not catch a bad cold on the next day and be unable to post this blog entry until today

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