Like I said. "I know that one is like fan made, but it's fucking Carolus Rex man."Akalabeth said:snip
I guess that makes sense to some degree.Cpu46 said:Snip.
Like I said. "I know that one is like fan made, but it's fucking Carolus Rex man."Akalabeth said:snip
I guess that makes sense to some degree.Cpu46 said:Snip.
No, it really wasn't. That was the point where the show went from "oh man, this is awesome" to "oh man, this is dumb."Ronack said:Eren Jaeger in his meat-gundam was a nice surprise twist, tho.
Akalabeth said:Uh . . . except for the lack of helmets. No spoilers but ya knowTerratina. said:Cherno Alpha as well.
They had the best drift suits as well.
Since no one has pointed this out yet, Idris Elba the guy who played Stacker Pentecost (the commander or leader) who replaced the Aussie dad after he got hurt is from England so I'm not sure what American you are talking about.fix-the-spade said:Even the friendly Aussies get sidelined, half replaced by an American then exploded.
I'm from New Zealand, not Australia. Notice the flag and country the image showed for the Jaeger I made on their site? Not to mention it's on my profile.Shanicus said:Hey now, we got two aussie pilots, an aussie robot and they actually showed parts of Sydney that wasn't the Opera House (granted they did show it, but how else would the rest of the world know it was Sydney?), so we got more than we usually do.chozo_hybrid said:From the film, I really liked Gipsy Danger.
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It's a shame, I was hoping my country might have featured in the film a little, but we basically never get mentioned in big films. Half the time, we aren't even on world maps...
The problem with the parallel to anime is that one stylistic choice made borrowing too much incredibly inefficient: Speed. What Pacific Rim went for is lumbering and forceful assaults and movements, every step feeling like it displaces water on a huge scale. The sheer resistance made taking "anime" designs a bit ridiculous. Sure, they were "inspired by" a couple of them, but they couldn't make a 100% translation. Giant thirty something story robots don't glide slide and other shiny shit, it just doesn't work.AuronFtw said:None of them?
After watching even a little bit of Gundam and/or Code Geass, the mechs featured in this movie were incredibly bland. Their primary mode of attack all seemed to be "punch things ineffectively," and only when shit got serious did they pull out their 1 (!) unique weapon, like a titty missile launcher or a zap cannon. The most "unique" themed mech was easily the chinese one, and they did *nothing* with the fact that it had 3 arms. Mount an arm on the chest, mount an arm on the torso, mount a long arm on the back and have it reach over the shoulder or under the legs or something; if you mount an arm behind another arm, so that it gets blocked by said arm any time you actually fight anything, the arm is totally pointless (as it was in the movie, the moment they came across a monster with a tail-arm they got their shit wrecked).
I was just put off by the lack of mech diversity. They look a little more unique than, say, anything from Bay's transformer snorefests, but given their origin in various manga/anime, they were unfortunately all very similar.
Just for a small preview of what could have been drawn from:
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The Epyon whip-chain-sword that Gipsy Danger pulled out was badass on several levels, but that was really the only moment I was "wowed" by anything the mechs in the movie offered. It seemed more sensible than they'd all have some kind of "weapon," even if it was just a giant sword or lance or tail-mounted flamethrower. Yknow? Even when he just picked up a ship and whacked the bad guy with it, it seemed to be far more effective than the silly punching they did for most of the film.