Orgun said:bakum4tsu said:hyper violent or pornographic??? usually i get the opposite thoughts like anime is for kids LOL
Back to 1991/2 when Manga Entertainment started releasing Anime in the UK most of was very violent (FOTNS, AD Police etc) and then they released Urotsukidoji which skewed most people who weren't fans view of anime, and this is the viewpoint he was coming from.
ayase said:Code Geese: Lulus of the Rebellion 1-5
In a world where a prince can go into hiding by changing only his surname while continuing to live in a huge mansion and attend school, a young man named Lulus is given the power of Derren Brown by the mysterious Shih Tzu who enjoys Kwik Save No Frills® pizzas.
size=85]*Seriously, it's Karen. The Japanese written text translates as Karen. It sounds like Karen. Karen is an actual name. I don't care how it's written in English in Japanese publications, they get things wrong all the time. Kallen is a ridiculous bit of translation and whoever was responsible for it should actually be shot as a warning to other translators.[/size]
I thought Code Geass was enjoyable enough, though only dubbed because Jun Fukuyama's hammier-than-a-pig-farm performance as Ledouch was unbearable, but it never truly grabbed me. I think a big reason for this is because the two leads are opposite sides of a really, really annoying coin. The theatrically smug one and the intolerably sanctimonious one. Ugh. It's a shame because the show looks great and has some mighty fine wimmins.ayase said:Obviously, this is a show that requires perhaps a little more than usual in the suspension of disbelief department. But that's not to say that it isn't engaging, it is in fact very watchable and after these first few episodes questions abound. Will Lulu become more ruthless and (un)likeable as a result? Will Suzaku become the voice of reason or an establishment tool? Why aren't tops like Karen*'s popular? Will Nunnally ever open her friggin' eyes? I'm genuinely excited to find out.
ayase said:This pitch for this show must have been great:
"The basic outline of the project is this: What if Batman was Che Guevara, but also a hypnotist?" There is much nodding, and an unassuming bespectacled salaryman sheepishly raises his hand.
"Can it have giant robots and a moe little sister?" The chair of the committee fixes him with a steely glare.
"Of COURSE it can have giant robots and a moe little sister! Where do you think we are?"
ayase said:Obviously, this is a show that requires perhaps a little more than usual in the suspension of disbelief department.
Well that's another thing, it should be written like that then: C2 or C-two. You don't say "This car has a 1600 C2 engine" or "J R2 Tolkien" do you? Do you really find that annoying? You're welcome to find my sense of humour annoying but please don't take my comments the wrong way and think I'm some sort of whingeing uber-otaku who honestly gets uptight about these things. I mean I am quite annoyed, but more at the stupidity of everyone else in the world, constantly. Which for some inexplicable reason endears me to people, and as it's pretty much the only thing that does I don't intend to stop.Rosencrantz said:The L vs R issue plagues a lot of stuff, they went for Kallen. I find it somewhat annoying that you moan about that an then butcher C.C's name, (pronounced 'C two')
Yeah... That was what I was commenting on, that they'd stripped out the advertising and left the boxes blank like a no frills product.Rosencrantz said:The no frills pizza is actually Pizza Hut, they stripped the advertising out for our releases (it was everywhere before as Pizza Hut were a major sponsor of the show)
Hmm, that doesn't sound so promising. I'm certainly getting a bit of a politician vibe from Suzaku but I thought Lulu might turn out to be a decent guy. We'll see.fabricatedlunatic said:the two leads are opposite sides of a really, really annoying coin. The theatrically smug one and the intolerably sanctimonious one. Ugh.