Lion King 2 - The Simbas Pride (Disney)
Simba and Nala have a daughter, Kiara. Timon and Pumbaa are assigned to be her babysitters, but she easily escapes their care and ventures into the forbidden lands. She meets a lion cub named Kovu and they become friends. What she and her parents do not know is that Kovu is the son of Zira - a banished follower of the now-dead Scar. She plans to raise Kovu to overthrow Simba and become the king of the Pride Lands. This tests not only Kiara and Kovu's relationship as they mature, but Simba's relationship with his daughter.
Ringo~Bingo said:Anime is too expensive at £15/20 for a couple of episodes of a series, not to mention the months of waiting in between for the next DVD which is annoying, especially when it's already fully released in America! it's embarrassing how out of date the UK is anime-wise! companies should wise up! they should sell the episodes at £1 or £2 each online and hire the fansubbers to sub them as their own attempts at subbing is borderline shocking in most cases! I used to buy the DVD's from the stores at the rip off rates up until 2 years ago, then I realized that I could just obtain fansubs for free that were released fast with excellent subs instead of hoping that the same shows might turn up 4 or 5 years later in the UK with pointless staggered release dates and crappy dubbing! the UK anime industry has to get with the program and cut prices, improve release date speed, and move to online-only distribution.
Look at Death Note though - thanks to Manga's twin-packs we've almost caught up with American release. Fansubs are a matter of personal choice and I'm not going to get into that, but I will say don't think the sub quality issue holds up any more. A few years ago it might have been true, but the companies have improved their translations a lot recently, Manga in particular. All this points to the fact that UK companies are wising up.Ringo~Bingo said:Anime is too expensive at £15/20 for a couple of episodes of a series, not to mention the months of waiting in between for the next DVD which is annoying, especially when it's already fully released in America! it's embarrassing how out of date the UK is anime-wise! companies should wise up! they should sell the episodes at £1 or £2 each online and hire the fansubbers to sub them as their own attempts at subbing is borderline shocking in most cases! I used to buy the DVD's from the stores at the rip off rates up until 2 years ago, then I realized that I could just obtain fansubs for free that were released fast with excellent subs instead of hoping that the same shows might turn up 4 or 5 years later in the UK with pointless staggered release dates and crappy dubbing! the UK anime industry has to get with the program and cut prices, improve release date speed, and move to online-only distribution.
ayase said:Look at Death Note though - thanks to Manga's twin-packs we've almost caught up with American release. Fansubs are a matter of personal choice and I'm not going to get into that, but I will say don't think the sub quality issue holds up any more. A few years ago it might have been true, but the companies have improved their translations a lot recently, Manga in particular. All this points to the fact that UK companies are wising up.Ringo~Bingo said:Anime is too expensive at £15/20 for a couple of episodes of a series, not to mention the months of waiting in between for the next DVD which is annoying, especially when it's already fully released in America! it's embarrassing how out of date the UK is anime-wise! companies should wise up! they should sell the episodes at £1 or £2 each online and hire the fansubbers to sub them as their own attempts at subbing is borderline shocking in most cases! I used to buy the DVD's from the stores at the rip off rates up until 2 years ago, then I realized that I could just obtain fansubs for free that were released fast with excellent subs instead of hoping that the same shows might turn up 4 or 5 years later in the UK with pointless staggered release dates and crappy dubbing! the UK anime industry has to get with the program and cut prices, improve release date speed, and move to online-only distribution.
You hear the "why don't they hire fan subbers?" argument a lot, I'm not sure how some people think the job market works - You're not likely to land employment with a company without applying, and especially not if they see you as being directly responsible for a loss of profits. Online distribution is a good idea, but it won't ever replace sales of physical media. I think in the next few years we will see a move towards the music sales model (a combination of online and retail sales ) not just for anime, but all visual media. These things just take time.
Ringo~Bingo said:just today actually I downloaded, Macross Zero, The Girl Who Leapt Through Time, The Place Promised In Our Early Days, Tokyo Marble Chocolate, Afro Samurai Movie, and GITS 1st & 2nd seasons all Blu-ray rips which look absolutely mind blowing on my HD setup!!
Why are you even downloading movies? I can understand TV series, but movies? They're pretty risk free since you're only paying the same price as any live action movie.Ringo~Bingo said:*insert lack of paragraphing and punctuation here*