Apart from Shinji's yelling, Evangelion became a religion because of its ending. Without that, it would've been just another mecha anime. If you want rosy petals, you stop at the TV series. If you want the full psychedelic horror, you watch the movie too. Choice is always goodafrojason said:Does Evangelion even need to be mentioned?
Well, it was supposed to lead into Blood+ (as a flashback) and it served that purpose quite well... however, Blood+ rather sucked so... *shrug*darkstarangel said:I thought that Blood: the last vampire was a bit of a let down. I couldn't understand why such a short anime with little plot & mundane finish got so much hype & advertising.
A lot of people ***** about how a certain character from the first season is gone by the ending. I'm actually okay with season 2. The problem for me was.Scrustle said:What was so bad about the ending?Jonluw said:Death note comes to mind.
Although the ending wasn't exactly the worst part.
Oh gods, Incognito...razer17 said:A lot of animes that ended before the manga they were based on ended. Hellsing was good for the episodes it stayed on track then went to shit. Theres a bunch of others but I can't think of names right now.
Oh fucking hell, I didn't think anyone would point this out before me.neoontime said:Desert Punk.
That ending was a 180 leap into the toilet.
Jonluw said:Scrustle said:What was so bad about the ending?In the first part of Death note, L and Light are two magnificent minds pitted against eachother.
If one of their plans fail, you can rest assured it's because the other saw through it and made an equally ingenious countermeasure.
Now what was it that caused Light's ultimate demise in the end?
They'd already dropped all the excellently intelligent 'battle of minds' stuff at this point, but the ending really infuriated me because:
Light 'loses' because the guy who at this point was doing all of Kira's work wasn't good enough at hiding the Death note when he was asked to.
Well, whoop-die fucking doo. Did I ever feel sorry for thinking they'd come up with some actually clever ending.
In the beginning of the series, L uses logic to work out what Kira is doing and how to stop him, and for the most part, we get to see the entire reasoning he uses. This is great storytelling.
In the end of the series, Light's plan is stopped because the Death note doesn't work.
Why doesn't it work?
Why, because, as we're told in the form of a flashback, N's subordinates looked through Light's assistant's locker at some point in the past and stole the real Death note.
This is shitty storytelling.
They could have done it well. They could have devoted time to showing us how N worked out what Light's plan was and finding a way to counter it through brilliant logical reasoning. N could have dug up clues towards Light's future movements and spent time figuring out his assistant's hiding place and pieced things together impressively, but noooooo. We'd rather just go all deus ex machina and poof a solution to it all out of nowhere.
Instead we just got a pointless reveal "Oh, by the way: N stole Light's Death note while he weren't looking, so N wins. The end."
You mean the anime movie or Blood+ the anime series? I was a big fan of thatdarkstarangel said:I thought that Blood: the last vampire was a bit of a let down. I couldn't understand why such a short anime with little plot & mundane finish got so much hype & advertising.
Im mentioning it! Horrid horrid horridafrojason said:Does Evangelion even need to be mentioned?
Scrustle said:Jonluw said:In the first part of Death note, L and Light are two magnificent minds pitted against eachother.
If one of their plans fail, you can rest assured it's because the other saw through it and made an equally ingenious countermeasure.
Now what was it that caused Light's ultimate demise in the end?
They'd already dropped all the excellently intelligent 'battle of minds' stuff at this point, but the ending really infuriated me because:
Light 'loses' because the guy who at this point was doing all of Kira's work wasn't good enough at hiding the Death note when he was asked to.
Well, whoop-die fucking doo. Did I ever feel sorry for thinking they'd come up with some actually clever ending.
In the beginning of the series, L uses logic to work out what Kira is doing and how to stop him, and for the most part, we get to see the entire reasoning he uses. This is great storytelling.
In the end of the series, Light's plan is stopped because the Death note doesn't work.
Why doesn't it work?
Why, because, as we're told in the form of a flashback, N's subordinates looked through Light's assistant's locker at some point in the past and stole the real Death note.
This is shitty storytelling.
They could have done it well. They could have devoted time to showing us how N worked out what Light's plan was and finding a way to counter it through brilliant logical reasoning. N could have dug up clues towards Light's future movements and spent time figuring out his assistant's hiding place and pieced things together impressively, but noooooo. We'd rather just go all deus ex machina and poof a solution to it all out of nowhere.
Instead we just got a pointless reveal "Oh, by the way: N stole Light's Death note while he weren't looking, so N wins. The end."But more seriously...Lotta spoilers.
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I see what you're saying about Near and Mello being crap compared to L, and the story telling being worse compared to the first half, but that's not necessarily about the ending. I thought it was quite powerful.
It didn't matter how clever anyone was or how much anyone thought they could control the Death Note, or the reasons they were using it. In the end everything ended up how Ryuk warned it would us right at the beginning. Being faced with the utter futility of defeat reduced Light to a pathetic jibbering madman. Someone who was originally a genius and had everything thought out far better than any of us ever could was still utterly destroyed by it.
Even though you can kind of see it coming towards the end, as you see Light becoming more and more insane, and making minor slip ups, we still expect him to win or be redeemed somehow at the end. We expect a good ending because we're rooting for him. And let's be honest, he was mostly the only reason anyone watched the show at that point. To have it end the way it did, with the hero of the story running away and cowering, and eventually succumbing to the very tool he had used through the whole story because of his failure made a huge impact. It's not a happy ending, but it's damn powerful. Or at least to me it was. Although I see your point about Near pulling that shit out of his arse at the last second. That should have been handled much better.
Nouw said:Eve's arc never got any closure. Hell, they have extra episodes revolving around Vino's love and some new guy with a thing for wrenches but you can't show Eve finally getting to meet her long-lost brother? The never-ending story bit is nice but that's no excuse to leave an arc hanging.
You should watch the movie for FMA. As well as watch FMA: Brotherhood.Gorog2 said:I recently just finished watching "fullmetal alchemist", and felt let down by the ending...
I know that not every story has a happy ending, or sad bitter sweet ending. But after watching all of the plot twists come to the conclusions that it did, and knowing it was over.... I felt disappointed...
I have felt this way about other Anime's but was wondering.
What Anime's have you ever felt let down by, or saddened at the ending?