Live Action Akira Director Says Its Characters Aren't "Interesting"

Recommended Videos

AetherWolf

New member
Jan 1, 2011
671
0
0
And what, is he implying that terrible cash-in licensed films in the west (like this one will inevitably be) do a better job at making deep, complex characters? If this guy thinks the characters of Akira are boring, it's a wonder that he managed to sift through the 600 or so pages of manga and still decide he wanted to direct a fucking movie about them.

In turn, he hopes to recreate the characters to be "strong" and to leave viewers with a capturing mystery that will bring them back for "Akira 2 & 3.
"Akira 2 & 3.
Akira 2 & 3
 

MeChaNiZ3D

New member
Aug 30, 2011
3,102
0
0
Tanis said:
"Japanese culture, they never have strong characters"

O...just...WOW.

Balls on this douche bag.
My thoughts exactly. You cannot be fucking serious. Any Ghibli film. Any.
 

Callate

New member
Dec 5, 2008
5,114
0
0
StewShearer said:
"Nobody's interesting. Tetsuo's interesting because weird shit happens to him, and Kaneda is so two-dimensional.
...Okay, that's... arguable, I suppose, but-

That's part of the Japanese culture, they never have strong characters. They're used as a way to move the other philosophy forward,
...That's kind of a grand oversimplification, don't you think? I'm sure there are plenty of-

In turn, he hopes to recreate the characters to be "strong" and to leave viewers with a capturing mystery that will bring them back for "Akira 2 & 3.
...

...Jaume? I'm going to suggest you start running now. I hear the sound of torches being lit and pitchforks being sharpened. I'm going to sit back and watch.
 

Casual Shinji

Should've gone before we left.
Legacy
Jul 18, 2009
21,012
5,905
118
Let's take a groundbreaking animated movie filled with Japanese cultural relevance, and turn it into an American live-action movie. Correction: 3 movies. PG13 rated no doubt.

Everyone can see this trainwreck coming, and we got no choice but to watch it happen.
 

Zombie_Moogle

New member
Dec 25, 2008
666
0
0
Tanis said:
"Japanese culture, they never have strong characters"

O...just...WOW.

Balls on this douche bag.
Now add on top that it's supposedly going to be set in Manhattan

...yeah
 

Milanezi

New member
Mar 2, 2009
619
0
0
Sadly, thinking back to the Anime, that I do love... It's true, the characters are pretty bland... If you get the manga on the other hand... The manga takes it's time to dwell on the gangs themselves, it shows much more of the characters and all, but you know, it's freaking huge. He can only put that in a trilogy movie of very long films, and I don't think that's the angle. The best he can do in a single movie is go the way the anime did, keep the essence, keep the action and story flowing and, sadly, dissect a lot of stuff :(
 

RJ Dalton

New member
Aug 13, 2009
2,285
0
0
Honestly, I don't see the point. For it's flaws, the anime was about as good an adaptation of Akira's story as you can get, given how bloody dense the story was. If you want to see Akira done better, read the manga. But I doubt this will get off the ground. Even if it does, a film with a history this long and troubled cannot possibly turn out good.
 

RJ Dalton

New member
Aug 13, 2009
2,285
0
0
fix-the-spade said:
the anime is fair enough, it compresses the whole thing into 90minutes
Hang on a sec, the version I've got is around 120 minutes long. Did you make a mistake, or do I have some kind of director's cut?
 

Casual Shinji

Should've gone before we left.
Legacy
Jul 18, 2009
21,012
5,905
118
fix-the-spade said:
I honestly wonder if he bothered with reading any of Akira, the anime is fair enough, it compresses the whole thing into 90minutes and is a bit 'this is Kaneda, he's a badass, this is Colonel Shikishima, he's a principled Badass,' but it's no worse than ninety percent of all films ever.
That was basically Kaneda in the manga too; Nothing more than a boy's adventure protagonist. Literally indestructable, spouting one-liners, racking up body counts. And beyond that, he was a bit of a prick too.

Honestly, I prefer Kaneda from the movie. You get a better feel for his relationship with Tetsuo.
 

Stabby Joe

New member
Jul 30, 2008
1,545
0
0
I haven't seen the original Akira anime yet I know of the audience and favor it has within the medium.

That said, whether what he says hold water or not, I'm pretty sure one prime rule is not to aggravate the original fanbase. That's already one portion of the audience gone from the start.
 

fix-the-spade

New member
Feb 25, 2008
8,637
0
0
RJ Dalton said:
Hang on a sec, the version I've got is around 120 minutes long. Did you make a mistake, or do I have some kind of director's cut?
Prepare for nerdiness.

Looking on the Manga Ultimate collection DVD boxes, one version is 124 minutes and one version has a running time of... 169 minutes(!!!), although I'm sure that's got to be including the little documentary on that disc. I was being a bit glib with the 90min remark.
 

Mangod

Senior Member
Feb 20, 2011
829
0
21
I'll be nice and agree that the Akira anime has problems, but this douchecannoes statements about Japanese culture are borderlin- no, not borderline, outright racist. Someone remove this schmuck from this movie before it becomes utterly unsalvageable.
 

MrBaskerville

New member
Mar 15, 2011
871
0
0
I think this sounds rather interesting, i don't neccecarily agree on his broad generalization of characters, but i do get what he means (And he's kinda right that it does work like this in the manga to some degree, though it manages to work because of the way it uses its basic characters to carry the ideas and concepts). The most interesting part of his statement is that he doesn't want to water it down and that there's apparently 3 movies in the works. I'm curious to see what happens with this, he might not have the best track record but maybe this is the first movie where he has some freedom to show us what he can do (if anything). I remain positiv, atleast he's thinking the right thoughts at the moment.

It's probably not gonna top the anime or the manga, but atleast it might be a good foundation for a couple of interesting sci-fi movies. I don't really mind if they take some liberties, i'd rather see them try something new and fresh instead of adapting the things that allready worked in the manga, because i read it allready).
 

Jupiter065

New member
Aug 12, 2008
88
0
0
He and Miyazaki seem to be largely in agreement. [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/131872-Hayao-Miyazaki-Anime-Suffers-Because-the-Industry-is-Full-of-Otaku]
 

Gordon_4_v1legacy

New member
Aug 22, 2010
2,577
0
0
Jupiter065 said:
He and Miyazaki seem to be largely in agreement. [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/131872-Hayao-Miyazaki-Anime-Suffers-Because-the-Industry-is-Full-of-Otaku]
Miyazaki is taking about the industry as it is now. I doubt very highly he's referring to the days when Akira the manga (1988-1990) and Akira the anime (1988) were made.