Your going to have more restrictions on an early-morning anime than you are on a late-night show. By the same token, your going to have more restrictions having a show on network television than you are on a more independent cable channel. That's just how it is.
I don't see why animation can do something "better". It can do it differently, sure, but better? It might not be constrained by stunts or retakes (though retakes in the form of voice acting would take place) but its not any less believable and it doesn't really affect anything. When CGI costs as little as it does now, though, its not like stunts even have to take place. It's true that some episodes (bottle episodes) are sometimes shot in one location or similar due to the budget being used on an explosion elsewhere, but that sometimes works out for the best and stops people using an CGI robot here and instead focuses on the characters -- but that's besides the point.
I don't watch an anime and think about all the poor souls that put there heart and soul into every single frame and getting poorly paid for it. It's probably on my mind, but I like to just get involved, in the way they would want me to. The same for film. It's hard work doing anything in an entertainment business and you are always going to be doing red-tape.
tl;dr, I just find it strange how people think anime can do stuff live-action can't. And then talk about the money side of things when its... meaningless. Sure, Avatar cost tons more than Ghost In The Shell, but it still done it.
By the looks of it though, I'm gonna go ahead and agree to disagree.
I don't see why animation can do something "better". It can do it differently, sure, but better? It might not be constrained by stunts or retakes (though retakes in the form of voice acting would take place) but its not any less believable and it doesn't really affect anything. When CGI costs as little as it does now, though, its not like stunts even have to take place. It's true that some episodes (bottle episodes) are sometimes shot in one location or similar due to the budget being used on an explosion elsewhere, but that sometimes works out for the best and stops people using an CGI robot here and instead focuses on the characters -- but that's besides the point.
I don't watch an anime and think about all the poor souls that put there heart and soul into every single frame and getting poorly paid for it. It's probably on my mind, but I like to just get involved, in the way they would want me to. The same for film. It's hard work doing anything in an entertainment business and you are always going to be doing red-tape.
tl;dr, I just find it strange how people think anime can do stuff live-action can't. And then talk about the money side of things when its... meaningless. Sure, Avatar cost tons more than Ghost In The Shell, but it still done it.
By the looks of it though, I'm gonna go ahead and agree to disagree.