Casual Shinji said:
CantFaketheFunk said:
Casual Shinji said:
This is all that modern day anime consists of.
Soulless fanservice.
I'd disagree with that in both this specific case and in a general matter, actually.
For all the first half of Nanoha is so standard paint-by-numbers magical girl cutesy, I actually enjoyed the series overall, mainly because the second starts taking it in a drastically different direction that continued in the sequels. Less "boo hoo I want to be a normal girl but have this duty!" and more "Whelp, there's bad-guys that need a good talking-to, time to blow them up with giant magical lasers."
It ends up feeling like a magical girl show that thinks it's a super robot show, bizarrely enough.
I'm sure there are a fair amount of good shows out there still. But nothing stands out anymore. Where are the
Nadia's, the
Neon Genesis', the
Cowboy Bebop's, the
Serial Experiments Lain's, etc? Where are the big animated features like
Akira,
Ninja Scroll,
Memories,
Ghost in the Shell or even
Metropolis? The late 90's were the golden age for Japanese animation, but since then the quality has fallen like a ship from heaven. Maybe it's me? Maybe I've grown out of touch with what the today's audience wants.
<a href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sturgeon%27s_law#.E2.80.9CNinety_percent_of_everything_is_crud.E2.80.9D>Sturgeon's Law was originally applied to science fiction: "Ninety percent of everything is crud." Anime, like video games, television, film, or anything else, is no different.
Back in the bad old days, anime fans had to make due with third-generation VHS copies. Maybe, if you were lucky, you got a fan-sub made with Video Toaster or some other thousand-dollar cutting-edge technology. The quality of anime was
subjectively viewed as better for two reasons:
(1) Only the better anime could get through this filtering process. Boring daily fare, or impenetrable dramas that wouldn't make too much sense to outsiders, didn't get widely copied.
(2) The rarity of the product artificially inflated the product's value. There was so little anime making it to the US, there wasn't as much to compare it too. Emotional investment couldn't be discounted - because, obviously if you were spending $50 and 100 man-hours to get a random episode of some kiddie show, it
must be good!
These days, version-1 DVDs are freely available of almost anything, so there's more to choose from. Good thing you have us reviewers to watch it for you!
As for "where is the good anime?" ... I still can't recommend <a href=http://www.escapistmagazine.com/articles/view/editorials/reviews/anime/6357-Anime-Review-Welcome-to-the-N-H-K-Part-Two>Welcome to the NHK enough, for any fan of cinema, much less anime. And I suppose I should make it clearer that I found <a href=http://www.escapistmagazine.com/articles/view/editorials/reviews/anime/6407-Anime-Review-xxxHolic>xxxHolic to be a classy production of the "magical high school student" genre, full of self-confidence that's lacking from
Nanoha.