"Semi-animation"
(due to current anime's insistence of using key frames, repeating frames and panning shots)
(due to current anime's insistence of using key frames, repeating frames and panning shots)
Hentanime...I like that, I'm going to start using that.ThatLankyBastard said:It's true... Anime does bring up pictures of Chulu and schoolgirls whenever I think of it... But I'm fine with that...
Hell! I've been calling it Hentanime for years now...
I actually like anime too, but if we're discussing something to change it to for ignorant english audiences then Japaninmation is cool.Mackheath said:I prefer Japanimation.
Dunno why, it just sounds a bit better.
Cartoon doesn't refer to all animation, just animated doodles. Things like claymation already have their own separate terms to refer to that branch of animation. Cartoons should be the official animated doodle term.A random person said:To play devil's advocate, the term "cartoon" has connotative meanings that, even if the proper definition works, would render it a problematic name for anime.Souplex said:We already have a name for it: Cartoons.
Just because it's from Japan doesn't make it not a cartoon.
To elaborate, whenever you think the word "cartoon," you most likely think of Bugs Bunny, Micky Mouse, Felix the Cat, and other mascots of old-school animated shorts. You may also think of things like Spongebob. Basically, the term implies animated shorts of zany characters doing zany things (kid-friendly or no; several Adult Swim series would fit the connotative meaning). Even though "cartoon" may simply mean animated (though I'll address that in a bit), by calling anime cartoons, you're lumping things like Gundam, Darker than Black, Baccano, and other things like that with things like Loony Toons, whether you mean to or not (not that I have anything against Loony Toons, but you can see the problem, no?). Basically, even if cartoons and anime are the same by proper definition, steps must be taken to avoid connotative issues (extrapolating, of course, you'd need to do the same thing with a good bit of western and (former) Soviet Bloc animation).
On a side-note, "cartoon" originally referred to newspaper comics in the early 20th century, becoming adapted to also refer to animations of the time due to their stylistic resemblance to said newspaper comics. Its referring to animation in general is a bit of an artifact.
Considering that both things are animated doodles, my point still stands. Also, claymation doesn't have the connotative issues I mentioned earlier.Souplex said:Cartoon doesn't refer to all animation, just animated doodles. Things like claymation already have their own separate terms to refer to that branch of animation. Cartoons should be the official animated doodle term.A random person said:To play devil's advocate, the term "cartoon" has connotative meanings that, even if the proper definition works, would render it a problematic name for anime.Souplex said:We already have a name for it: Cartoons.
Just because it's from Japan doesn't make it not a cartoon.
To elaborate, whenever you think the word "cartoon," you most likely think of Bugs Bunny, Micky Mouse, Felix the Cat, and other mascots of old-school animated shorts. You may also think of things like Spongebob. Basically, the term implies animated shorts of zany characters doing zany things (kid-friendly or no; several Adult Swim series would fit the connotative meaning). Even though "cartoon" may simply mean animated (though I'll address that in a bit), by calling anime cartoons, you're lumping things like Gundam, Darker than Black, Baccano, and other things like that with things like Loony Toons, whether you mean to or not (not that I have anything against Loony Toons, but you can see the problem, no?). Basically, even if cartoons and anime are the same by proper definition, steps must be taken to avoid connotative issues (extrapolating, of course, you'd need to do the same thing with a good bit of western and (former) Soviet Bloc animation).
On a side-note, "cartoon" originally referred to newspaper comics in the early 20th century, becoming adapted to also refer to animations of the time due to their stylistic resemblance to said newspaper comics. Its referring to animation in general is a bit of an artifact.
To be fair, when you think about it, that was gonna happen with animation in general when you realize that most vintage animation (i.e Loony Toons, Disney cartoons) was theatrical and in the form of shorts, meaning there was a bigger budget that had to be spread out less. When animation switched to television with TV's rise, it became far lower quality (think anime's cheap? Look at the kind of crap Hanna-Barbara did, even with good shows like Rocky & Bullwinkle. Hell, many saturday morning cartoons were called "illustrated radio" due to their cheap animation). As animation's also very expensive, inevitably studios were gonna think "hey, what if we didn't put as much money and effort into the smaller things people don't care as much about?" Have a good bit of action like many anime series do (for one reason or another, western animation was, and still is in many respects, more focused on comedy), and the budget will be going where it's needed most. Oh, and stylization is also accompanied by lower animation quality in many cases (see: Chuck Jones).Atmos Duality said:"Semi-animation"
(due to current anime's insistence of using key frames, repeating frames and panning shots)
*slowclap* Bravo, man, bravo.bruunwald said:The name is fine. What anime needs is a long enough break to come up with a mess of new ideas. Many of which will undoubtedly come from the West. Which brings up the other thing it needs: Fewer fanbois wrongly insisting that anime is soooo original and the West is "always stealing" from it. Uh, no. The Japanese are gigantic borrowers. I love them, but neighbors who borrow your lawnmower, paint it pink and put kitties on it and never return it, they most certainly are.
I love anime to death, and before you question that, you can imagine one-year-old Bruunwald sitting in front of a grainy TV in 1971, watching Speed Racer like it was a Christmas gospel, and proceed from there, through Gatchaman, Star Blazers, up through Akira, through a decade of great one-offs like Cyber City, Ninja Scroll and Wicked City, on to marriage to a woman who loves Fushigi Yugi, Love Hina and Boys over Flowers, and finally onto later series like Bleach, Trinity Blood, Claymore and Tsubasa. I even have always liked Sailor Moon and we own VHS of all the original Japanese broadcasts.
But really, at this point, after 40 years of anime, there are two important things I have learned.
One is that the little girl helping the heroes on their quest is actually the missing empress they are trying to find, that the hero who shouldn't overuse her power is going to become a monster by doing so but will be saved by the love of the person she tried to send away, that the two main characters who fight constantly are actually in love, that the girl the guy likes is going to punch him a lot, that two characters meant to hook up are never going to during the series run, that everybody knew each other in a previous life (or as children), that most situations can be resolved by the timely third act arrival of the title character, and that there is some hidden power deep within any hero that is going to rise up after he should have been defeated.
The other thing is that Western kids, especially Americans, possess such self loathing, and are so under-educated regarding their own folklore and myth, that they are unable to recognize endless incarnations of Western influence in modern Japanese storytelling, and will buy eagerly into any argument that our side of the world borrows solely from that side of the world without so much as a spellcheck. A wrongheadedness that is the greatest source of my frustration with, and gigantic dislike of Fanbois.
Seriously. Search Wikipedia. Do a little homework. Japan is the source of many interesting ideas. So is China. So is India. So is Africa. So are Germany, France, England, Ireland, the Slavic nations, Native American lore, South America and shock of all shocks - Greece (whod've thought?). Anime borrows from all of them, quite liberally (not to mention a too-heavy reliance on hackmasters like George Lucas), so please let us not continue on with the myth of the Collective Japanese Genius from Which All Things Borrow.
Instead of renaming anime, let's just educate its fan base.
I'd actually cite anime as part of my pro-globalization views; even though it definitely came from the west (though since America invented animation beyond those wheels with slits, that's kinda inevitable), it still came into its own as distinctively Japanese (why yes, I am trying to pretend that I learned something from my AP Human Geography class).toriver said:snip
Okay.Neverhoodian said:How about "animation where everyone has freaky-huge eyes?"
Hmmm, doesn't exactly roll off the tongue, does it? Ah well, I tried.
Seriously though, take a photo of yourself and enlarge your eyes to anime-style proportions. You'll have nightmares for weeks.
If this logic is applied, then live action tv should have 2 names: 1 for shows intended for adults and 1 for shows intended for children. The anime and cartoons are both animated so should have an umbrella term describing them both. It would be tragic that Gundam and the like would be lumped in with Bugs Bunny but they are linked. I don't think it should be under the banner of cartoon though because of your reasoning.A random person said:To play devil's advocate, the term "cartoon" has connotative meanings that, even if the proper definition works, would render it a problematic name for anime.Souplex said:We already have a name for it: Cartoons.
Just because it's from Japan doesn't make it not a cartoon.
To elaborate, whenever you think the word "cartoon," you most likely think of Bugs Bunny, Micky Mouse, Felix the Cat, and other mascots of old-school animated shorts. You may also think of things like Spongebob. Basically, the term implies animated shorts of zany characters doing zany things (kid-friendly or no; several Adult Swim series would fit the connotative meaning). Even though "cartoon" may simply mean animated (though I'll address that in a bit), by calling anime cartoons, you're lumping things like Gundam, Darker than Black, Baccano, and other things like that with things like Loony Toons, whether you mean to or not (not that I have anything against Loony Toons, but you can see the problem, no?). Basically, even if cartoons and anime are the same by proper definition, steps must be taken to avoid connotative issues (extrapolating, of course, you'd need to do the same thing with a good bit of western and (former) Soviet Bloc animation).
Niagro said:Here's the brief:
In the English language, the word 'anime' (ann-ihm-a), sounds feeble and is stained with the residue of tentacle porn in the mind of the general public.
Anime needs a new name, go for it, escapist.
[sub]what an unfortunate metaphor, that was not intended...[/sub]