August 04, 2005

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:54 PM | Comments (84) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Posted by: Susie at August 04, 2005 11:58 PM (PWYyH)
Having said all of that - I nominate Sailor Moon as most over hyped.
My personal favorite that did air on cable TV - Hellsing
Most visually pleasing full length feature - Spirited Away. Although I'm a big fan of Ghost in the Shell as well.
Posted by: Neal at August 05, 2005 12:31 AM (OdCKj)
Now having looked at the response - oh, come on! No one seriously offers Sailor Moon as an example of great art or great culture! It's a mahou shoujo/sentai hybrid. It is, as far as I can tell, the first mahou shoujo/sentai anime- though there might be other manga precursors that I'm not personally familiar with - since mahou shoujo and sentai are anime and rubber-suit-show genres, respectively, that's not particularly likely. As a subgenre first, that puts Sailor Moon one up on, oh, say, Evangelion.
And we get most of the good, decent, passable, and marginal new anime here in North America, sooner or later. That goes for both the more adult stuff and the kiddie stuff, although frankly, I think we get much less of the real kiddie stuff - all those horrible, interchangeable "Brave" giant robot shows which they crank out season after season, ferinstance. What we don't get as much of is the older stuff, the shows with the dated visual sense and older-fashioned sensibilities. Touch, for instance. And that's for a reason - they often look dated, even to Western eyes. And they've yet to figure out how to market the non-SF-ish genres to the North American market - look how little of a splash Hajime no Ippo/Fighting Spirit made last year.
All observations for the North American market. Dunno much about the Australian market except for the fact that you have a licensing company named Madman - which is, to my mind, a deeply cool corporate name.
Posted by: Mitch H. at August 05, 2005 01:13 AM (iTVQj)
Posted by: Neal at August 05, 2005 01:27 AM (H37Gq)
Huzzah!
Posted by: sadie at August 05, 2005 04:04 AM (7SNDe)
sadie: yes, it counts. It even counts as kiddie anime. But you'll have to provide an example of somebody rating it, let alone over-rating it, first. Pokemon sucks almost as much as its reputation would lead you to think, I believe. Which would mean that it's technically underrated, but come on, it's Pokemon. Who cares? It's the Barney of anime.
Posted by: Mitch H. at August 05, 2005 06:26 AM (iTVQj)
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 05, 2005 07:56 AM (4N+SC)
DRAGONBALL (and all it's attendent spinoffs).
I'm surprised there's even a discussion about this. Nothing else can even be in the same pungent room. Though Ikkitousen comes pretty close. It loses on sheer quantity... 26 episodes pales when compared to... what, 300+?
Oh, and Sailor Moon and Pokemon are actually pretty decent in their original forms.
Posted by: Wonderduck at August 05, 2005 10:26 AM (86QII)
Posted by: Neal at August 05, 2005 11:00 AM (pdiJG)
Hellsing kicked ass, as did the first 60 or so episodes of Ruroni Kenshin. The last 30 blew. Bigtime.
DB was a good gateway, but it gets old quite fast.
Sailor Moon was likewise a good show for a 13 year old boy *g*. but only for god's sake with the sound off.
If we want to talk just plain wierd, you gotta hit FLCL. I liked it, but mainly because i understand it when i'm drunk.
:-D
Posted by: tommy at August 05, 2005 12:00 PM (OJ+GI)
Posted by: phin at August 05, 2005 12:07 PM (DGPlf)
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 05, 2005 12:21 PM (AIaDY)
Which would be okay, I suppose, if there was any merit to the show.
There are only 13? I must have just felt like I was sitting through 26...
Posted by: Wonderduck at August 05, 2005 12:54 PM (G2sf8)
Posted by: Neal at August 05, 2005 01:09 PM (lhVve)
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 05, 2005 02:06 PM (AIaDY)
Posted by: Jojo at August 05, 2005 02:37 PM (08+db)
(wait for it)
...Cowboy Bebop. It's been a year and a half since the last time I've watched Bebop and I doubt I'll ever watch it again. (On the other hand, I have rewatched the Bebop movie several times. Isn't that strange? Actually, no, because the movie left all the angst and disfunction behind.)
Based on the reviews, I also expected a lot more from Gasaraki than I actually got. What a piece of shit!
I happen to be a big fan of DBZ, but I won't defend it as being great art. It's trash; it's just that it's my kind of trash.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at August 05, 2005 03:08 PM (CJBEv)
Everybody likes it, but not enough to, y'know, watch it or anything.
Posted by: Wonderduck at August 05, 2005 03:27 PM (G2sf8)
Assuming that you're not between the ages of, say, fourteen and fifteen.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 05, 2005 04:25 PM (AIaDY)
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 05, 2005 04:25 PM (AIaDY)
Fine. Akira it is. The animation is gorgeous, but that shouldn't be enough, and isn't - or people would speak in equally hushed tones about about On Your Mark. It is an incoherent abridgement of a much, much, larger manga plotline: it is, essentially, X - the movie, but with a reputation befitting another Spirited Away.
Evangelion is a worthy nomination. An effective execution right up to the end - and then, instead of an ending that gives meaning to all that came before, you get... well, quite a disappointment.
I don't want to go off topic too much, but CB deserves a good word. Bebop is a good show - once or twice through. Some genres, some works, lend themselves less to rereading; unless generally well-rated specifically for rewatchability, it doesn't seem overrated to me.
Most of the other nominations don't seem to be rated highly enough to be 'most overrated', whatever my opinion of their technical merits.
Posted by: HC at August 05, 2005 06:11 PM (aq1uU)
I've gone around the course a half-dozen times on Akira. First, it was the coolest thing my post-adolescent mind had ever been blown with. Then it was overhyped and badly dubbed, and fit to be mocked with great enthusiasm. Then, again, the Japanese original was subtle and brilliant and profound. Then, after I realized this particular sentiment was just fanboy bollocks, Akira was crap again, and I was haring off after Mamoru Oshii and Angel's Egg. I think I've gotten to the point where Akira is a technical marvel of the past, sort of like the 1939 New York World's Fair, or the Crystal Pavilion, and thus something to be considered in the spirit of historic investigation, and not immediate aesthetic responses.
Now Castle of Cagliostro, that still rocks, regardless of how old it is.
Stuff like Dragonball, or it's contemporary equivalent, Naruto, are critic-proof. I'm not sure those sorts of shows can even be rated in an aesthetic or critical sense.
Posted by: Mitch H. at August 05, 2005 11:40 PM (iTVQj)
Oh, and I want Yoko Kanno to do the soundtrack to my blog.
Posted by: Wonderduck at August 06, 2005 02:05 AM (+rGmJ)
X by Amano is also dull and overrated.
The best current series (yes, I watch Cartoon Network as well as getting anime on my own) is Paranoia Agent.
Akira is still cool, but you have to pause it and read all the manga to fill in the story that they couldn't possibly fit in to a feature-length film, before you watch the ending. It's like Nausicäa of the Valley of the Wind: there's far too much story to pack into two or three hours. It will inevitably end up getting losing its way.
Posted by: David at August 06, 2005 04:24 AM (c162X)
The Akira anime really... doesn't work on its own. It fades out into a 2001 burst of irrelevant abstraction, y'know?
I really do recommend Angel's Egg, if you can find it. Oshii recycled a lot of the imagery from that movie into his later, more commercial movies, but it doesn't have all that miserable yammer-yammer-yammer that he's prone to inflict on his audiences. Angel's Egg is like a Christian-themed hour-and-a-half-long dream sequence. Cool as hell. Shame it never got licensed in North America, aside from a Roger Corman drive-by about fifteen years back.
Posted by: Mitch H. at August 06, 2005 07:13 AM (iTVQj)
Sickest anime i've ever seen is: 3x3 Eyes.
then again, i haven't seen much anime. in high school, i was stuck on Gundam Wing for a year.
Posted by: kyer at August 06, 2005 07:51 AM (CME4l)
Regardless, to cite Samurai Champloo as a positive contrast with Cowboy Bebop because Bebop is all style and no substance is beyond me. In that respect, there is not a pin to choose between them. Champloo is occasionally magnificent, and does stand up to rewatch better than Cowboy Bebop - but this is precisely because it is so purely style without substance. It is just plain fun to watch the pretty colors go by - at least on those occasions when they don't go overboard with the stylized anachronisms.
Posted by: HC at August 06, 2005 07:58 AM (jJC6e)
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at August 09, 2005 01:01 PM (CJBEv)
No, wait -
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 09, 2005 03:37 PM (AIaDY)
(sheesh, it's hard to even act like that...)
Posted by: Wonderduck at August 10, 2005 06:02 AM (+rGmJ)
and gosh, i adore DBZ and Inuyasha.
junk food taste, i guess.
;-)
Posted by: matoko kusanagi at August 11, 2005 06:51 AM (PDOu0)
Here's a suggestion for an addendum to the rules:
4. When submitting candidates for most overrated anime series, do not fail to mention one's own favorite anime series (up to n, where n is some arbitrary prime number pleasing to Pixy Misa), with reasoning lengthy enough to be assailable.
5. Any series mentioned in accordance with 4 is fair game for criticism as being overrated or lacking in quality for any other reason, but all such criticisms must be made with reference to another anime as measuring stick.
Refutation is all very well, but the best defense is a good offense; courtesy dictates that you provide your sparring partner with a target for such.
I can't say whether that would stir the pot sufficiently, but there is a means somewhere out there.
Posted by: HC at August 11, 2005 07:40 AM (vXg7G)
Ghost and Innosensu should be the two animes one needs to see to become an otaku!
Posted by: matoko kusanagi at August 11, 2005 01:26 PM (JREvR)
Posted by: matoko kusanagi at August 11, 2005 04:02 PM (JREvR)
If you've seen those, you're a long-time otaku. If you saw them on videotape, you're an old otaku. If you saw them on a fan-subbed video tape, you're an ancient otaku. If you actually did the fansubbing yourself, you're an ancient, crazy otaku.
Posted by: Wonderduck at August 11, 2005 06:52 PM (HoSBk)
Check. But I'd put Maison Ikkoku or Urusei Yatsura here.
Ghost In The Shell
Haven't seen it. Have read the manga, though.
Bubblegum Crisis 2032
Bubblegum Crisis what? You mean the original OVA series, right? The sequel was 2040. Okay then.
Yes, BGC rocked.
If you saw them on videotape, you're an old otaku.
Whistles tunelessly... Notices he hasn't mentioned laserdiscs. Relaxes.
If you saw them on a fan-subbed video tape, you're an ancient otaku.
I didn't get into fansubs until they went digital, so at least I'm not ancient!
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 11, 2005 07:52 PM (AIaDY)
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at August 11, 2005 11:54 PM (CJBEv)
Good old Quest Labs Hyperspatial Research Division.
Oh, Ghost in the Shell sucks rocks. It's what Oshii made after he lost his balls. Nothing he's made after the second Patlabor movie has been worth wiping one's ass clean with. He was ever so much better when somebody had him chained in a basement directing genre rubbish like Patlabor and Urusei Yatsura.
Posted by: Mitch H. at August 12, 2005 12:00 AM (iTVQj)
Mitch: Had the Amiga, never had the genlock though. I did have a fan group ask if they could borrow some of my LDs, but nothing ever came of it.
By the way, if you consider Urusei Yatsura to be genre rubbish, I have to ask - what genre?
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 12, 2005 12:27 AM (4N+SC)
If you don't think SF high school comedy is a genre, then I offer you as an example Ben Dunn. There was some role-playing game based on the concept which somebody got me to play once, back in college. Can't remember the name of it off the top of my head...
Posted by: Mitch H. at August 12, 2005 01:29 AM (iTVQj)
On the other hand, UY was one of the first anime series I watched, which probably colours my opinion of it.
And yeah, there are lots of anime series that could fit into the SF high school comedy sub-sub-genre, so I'll grant you that. UY is also a mahou shoujo in reverse. And then there's Takahashi's incurable punning...
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 12, 2005 01:45 AM (4N+SC)
I suppose that i am so jejeune that i should fall on my knees and worship the judgement of my elders?
Ghost has survived the time test.
It spawned a worthy sequel.
It deals with the most important questions of the Age of Information--what is consciousness? who am i? is there a difference between information and reality?
Posted by: matoko kusanagi at August 12, 2005 02:45 AM (JREvR)
Ranma 1/2 - Saw it, loved the first season, thought the recurring martial arts x tournaments after the renewal were less gripping. Loved the original opening. (Also saw MI and UY, though I never liked MI much and never had the time to go through all of UY). And what about Kimagure Orange Road?
GITS - Absolutely. All of them. (Well, all but the GITS:SAC 2nd season...)
Bubblegum Crisis - saw it, didn't like it, kept looking.
As long as we're on the old days, who else remembers the endless Miaka! Tamahome! exchanges from Fushigi Yuugi?
VHS for the above, recent GITS aside; but some analog fansubs back in the day. This makes me considerably older than I had expected to be by this time in my life.
Mitch:
Weathering Continent? Fun stuff - haven't thought of it for years. I'd say that fansubbing it counts as crazy - whether it counts as ancient or not depends on your source, and apparently on the type of LD involved.
"Oh, Ghost in the Shell sucks rocks. It's what Oshii made after he lost his balls. Nothing he's made after the second Patlabor movie has been worth wiping one's ass clean with." Now we're cooking with gas!
Both Patlabor and UY are good, sure, and it's true that Oshii hasn't been involved in animating the steadily improving GITS:SAC series, and it's true that the GITS movies are, shall we say, highly abstract - but even conceding all that for the moment, I'd throw up Jin-Roh: the Wolf Brigade as something worthwhile that he's done since Patlabor 2. Little red-riding hood meets counterterrorism. Anyway, both GITS movies are pure magic if you like alienation and pretty pictures, and I do.
Three animes one must see? To be otaku? Hmm. One must see more than three to be an otaku, but here are three which, if seen, I think imply enough others to be safe indicators.
Revolutionary Girl Utena - repetitive, highly stylized, surreal, and very distinctively Japanese. Acceptable substitute: Abenobashi Mahou Shoutengai.
Gunbuster - the original one, not the bizarre remake. Acceptable substitute - hoshi no koe, director's edition.
Hikaru no go - if you'll watch seventy-odd episodes of animated go, you clearly watch too much anime. Acceptable substitute - any sports anime exceeding 52 episodes in length: Slam Dunk, Hajime no Ippo, Prince of Tennis (the horror!), etc.
Posted by: HC at August 12, 2005 02:47 AM (vXg7G)
now my typekey id won't work. >:-(
my three:
Ghost, Haibane Renmei:New Feathers, and Howl's Moving Castle or Spirited Away (two best Miyazaki)
Posted by: matoko kusanagi at August 12, 2005 02:50 AM (JREvR)
"The unthinkable has happened. Hayao Miyazaki made a lousy movie."
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at August 12, 2005 09:54 AM (CJBEv)
Mitch, you're a blasphemer! I've enjoyed everything GitS related that I've seen... and I'm up to (opens a different window) ep#19 of GitS:SAC 2nd Gig.
But you've redeemed yourself with a mention of the Girls With Guns. I've never heard of Weathering Hots or whatever it was you were talking about.
Bubblegum Crisis 2032. Sorry, Pixy, I thought that was the easiest way to distinguish betwixt the two series. Is it bad of me to like 2040 as much as the original? I actually LIKE Nene and Linna in 2040.
I listed Ranma 1/2 over Maison or Urusei because it was my first anime... back in (toneless whistling). I'd have no disagreement with either of them in the abstract.
Speaking of the Lovely Angels, has anybody heard anything about the original TV series coming out on DVD? I know ADV has the rights, and occasionally some rumor floats by, but...
Posted by: Wonderduck at August 12, 2005 10:04 AM (nqwdS)
Okay, so I imported it from Japan, and can't understand a word of it. Still...
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 12, 2005 10:12 AM (4N+SC)
I haven't seen "Howl's Moving Castle" but the reviews are distinctly unimpressive:
"The unthinkable has happened. Hayao Miyazaki made a lousy movie."
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at August 12, 2005 12:35 PM (CJBEv)
Interesting that the one film where he deliberately inserts his politics is his one film that sucks. Well, not so much interesting as inevitable and depressing.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 12, 2005 12:58 PM (AIaDY)
Posted by: matoko kusanagi at August 12, 2005 03:17 PM (gNc4O)
none of you have seen Howl so how can you argue it?
"war is bad" is a common enough theme with miyazaki. look at nausicca and laputa. so is redemption.
my miyazaki test is-- does it make me into a twelve year old again? Howl passes with flying colors.
so, i'm Fio to youse guys' infinte anime sophistication and experience? lol, older doesn't mean better. neccessarily.
Posted by: matoko kusanagi at August 12, 2005 03:41 PM (gNc4O)
He's dead, and everyone who knew him is dead, but the music lives on.
I judge the work, not the man. Ultimately the man won't matter, but if the work is good it will live forever.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at August 12, 2005 03:50 PM (CJBEv)
Matoko - fair enough. I'll reserve judgement until I've actually seen the film. After all, it wouldn't be the first time I've disagreed with a review.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 12, 2005 04:20 PM (AIaDY)
Not much of a flame war, is it?
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 12, 2005 04:21 PM (AIaDY)
you need to lower your blog's IQ gradient
or else give us some beer.
Posted by: matoko kusanagi at August 12, 2005 04:28 PM (gNc4O)
The plot is, however, muddled at best. The finale in particular is disappointingly rapid, resolving difficult questions with an unearned deus ex machina.
About Miyazaki's politics, well... he's always been that way, and his movies have reflected it before now - and they've been good movies. Nausicaa, for instance, is hard to see as anything other than environmentalist propaganda and still a good movie withal.
So... some of us have seen it, and it did not seem particularly good.
Back to potential flame topics - what about the darkest (worthwhile) series or the lightest same? Ideally this will lead to people disagreeing over the point at which a series dissolves into cotton candy fluff of no redeeming value or, going the other way, into depressing sludge of same.
I'd nominate Narutaru for darkest, and CCS for lightest.
Posted by: HC at August 12, 2005 09:09 PM (WdeJG)
Darkest worthwhile series? I'm not much into the doom-and-gloom, so I'll have to think about that. (And Narutaru has already taken the award for most misleading opening credits.)
But lightest? I'll see your CCS, and raise you an Azumanga Daioh. (I thought about Nanaka 6/17, Popotan, and Midori no Hibi, but Azumanga Daioh is lighter and better than any of those.)
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 12, 2005 09:26 PM (4N+SC)
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 12, 2005 09:28 PM (4N+SC)
So did Tremors. Wait, bad example. Er... so did Divergence Eve. There, much better.
It deals with the most important questions of the Age
...which is what made it seem so dated a few years later. Actually, that's more of a cogent critique of the manga than the movie. Frankly, Oshii's biggest problem is that he takes his own ideas, and his thought-processes on said ideas, far, far too seriously. Patlabor 2 is, if anything, even more talky than the Ghost in the Shell movie, but at least he had something interesting to say, there.
God, cyberpunk gets more dated every year. It's getting so that van Vogt seems timely in comparison.
HC: Jin-Roh was exactly what I was thinking about when I was bitching about Oshii. Dave Merrill's eviceration of that movie says it all far better than I ever could.
What were y'all expecting from Miyazaki? The man drew comics for the house organ of a Japanese Maoist party, for the love of Marx!
Posted by: Mitch H. at August 13, 2005 12:39 AM (iTVQj)
I like some things that dark in and of themselves, but my favorites are both harrowing and redemptive. This is why Grave of the Fireflies, admirable as it is, is not one I like; ditto SaiKano.
Narutaru's opening credits are a work of unbridled genius. If you've read the entire manga, you'll realize that not only do they give away massive plot secrets in the opening, but they do it boldly. Paranoid frame by frame analysis is actually advised here, and it's always nice when someone puts that much effort into making an OP meaningful.
Plus, they're fun to watch. The only thing I've seen to approach them is the ending animation for Argent Soma, and that isn't half so impressive.
I picked CCS because it seems to be constantly on the verge of dissolving into a sugar flavored soap bubble. Tange Sakura, Sakura's seiyuu seems like prolonged exposure would cause insulin shock, but she doesn't... quite. Azumanga Daioh, I would contend, is deceptively light-seeming. When you begin watching it, it looks like it's about nothing more than high school hijinks - by the end, you realize that it has effortless covered serious questions. Besides, a significant portion of the humor is mean enough that it doesn't seem light...
It is, however, better than light series mentioned so far, CCS included.
Posted by: HC at August 13, 2005 03:24 AM (xGJ+z)
To quote Neddy Seagoon: I did not wish to know that!
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 13, 2005 06:08 AM (ymzzr)
That's the one, although without trying to give too much away, um, it isn't.
I can't criticize it forcefully, not having seen it, but I will note this is the first comment which would make me consider seeing it.
Yep. I went in expecting total fluff, and was very much surprised. Oh, it's not the greatest show in all of creation, but it's a lot deeper than you'd expect. Plus the closing credits are hyper-cute.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 13, 2005 06:13 AM (ymzzr)
How could I forget? I've you'd taken them out, the series would have been four episodes shorter. MIAKA!!! TAMAHOME!!!!!
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 13, 2005 06:20 AM (ymzzr)
I've been meaning to get Haibane Renmei. I saw a couple of episodes (well, about three quarters of each of the first two) at an Anime con, and quite liked it. I think I even bought the first DVD.
My favourite Miyazaki remains Kiki's Delivery Service, and my favourite to show other people is still Totoro, but Spirited Away is very very good.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 13, 2005 06:24 AM (ymzzr)
As to the lightest worthwhile anime, I'd have to go with "Sugar, a little Snow Fairy" ("Yukitsukai Shuga"). Just the character designs have put some people off (as demonstrated by email I received after I gave it a strongly positive review) but it isn't empty fluff.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at August 13, 2005 07:56 AM (CJBEv)
Lighthearted anime? Does Adventures of the Mini-Goddess count?
Posted by: Wonderduck at August 13, 2005 03:55 PM (QbcjU)
Haibane Renmei is excellent. I don't know that I'd say single finest anime series I've seen, but it is a worthy contender for that place; Now & then, here & there, Azumanga Daioh, and Kodomo no Omocha might be some others. Maybe Kaleido Star. That's a list that can be fun to argue over, but sadly it usually ends in a group of candidates rather than war to the knife over the selection of a single victor.
Sugar, true to its name, does send people into insulin shock. I can't watch it for more than short stretches at a time; there are a few series like that, not all from sweetness overload. It is worthwhile, and it is pretty darn sweet - one might find something with a higher sweet x worthwhile rating, but finding one sweeter with a minimal worthwhile rating will be interesting.
Noir is great. Absolutely wonderful. If you like it, it's worth watching the first few episodes of Madlax to see how great the gap is between the same team, same premise, when everything comes together and when it doesn't.
Posted by: HC at August 13, 2005 05:31 PM (kZ/GI)
But when it happens to Sugar, it's definitely unique. What does stomach-rumbling sound like for a 5 inch tall fairy? The seiyuu had to come up with a sound which was convincing -- and cute.
And she did. The series is absolutely drenched in kawaii yet for me it really did work quite well.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at August 13, 2005 11:19 PM (CJBEv)
HC--
So... some of us have seen it, and it did not seem particularly good.
perhaps you don't have the correct perspective. Howl is the first romantic miyazaki, where the hero and heroine are of age. maybe i thought it was wonderful because i am a grrl, and, um, some younger than you guys? i loved Howl, beautiful, vain, selfish, childish. i loved that sophie morphed between ages, and she and Howl didn't notice. Howl loved sophie whatever age she was. i loved that sophie never whined. i especially loved the scarecrow with his ballet arms and pirouettes. i didn't read the book deliberately because i didn't want to spoil it, but it was just magic for me. Miyazaki said he made it for a young girl of 60--maybe he made it for all us young girls.
here's my talking points.
1. war is bad is a miyazaki theme. the seven days of burning in Nausicca, and the war robots of Laputa. warring behavior in mononoke.
2. no one is beyond redemption. evil characters are redeemed in mononoke and nausicca (btw, nausicca is not about the environment, but about courage, and doing the right thing, imho)
3. someone told me once the miyazaki animes are like making cloud pictures--you might see a cow where i might see a dragon. he has such a light touch that all sorts of magic and possibilities fill the screen. he just suggests, in some places, and lets you map your own dreams.
Posted by: matoko kusanagi at August 14, 2005 02:54 PM (ZpDbz)
Posted by: Wonderduck at August 14, 2005 05:23 PM (QbcjU)
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 14, 2005 05:34 PM (ymzzr)
Main Menu > [your blog] > Configuration > Preferences
There's a section for Comments on that page. I assume you have "Accept Comments from Unregistered Visitors" selected with "Enable Unregistered Comment Moderation"
However, if you have MT-Blacklist installed, you may have selected some weird options for "forced moderation" there (the last two options on the MT-Blacklist configuration page might be the problem)
Of course, all of those options are there to cut down on spam, so deactivate at your own risk

Posted by: Mark at August 15, 2005 03:14 AM (tNllG)
Posted by: matoko kusanagi at August 15, 2005 04:49 AM (ZpDbz)
I love it.
Posted by: Wonderduck at August 15, 2005 11:06 AM (nqwdS)
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 15, 2005 03:22 PM (AIaDY)
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 15, 2005 03:22 PM (AIaDY)
As for "dark" shows... I've lost interest, even in black comedies. After I found myself laughing entirely too much during "Very Bad Things," I decided I may need to take a break for a couple (dozen) years.
Posted by: yaminohasha at August 15, 2005 05:02 PM (DQVnR)

Surprisingly for the type of show it is, as far as I recall only one episode of Magical Girl Pretty Sammy is filler; all the others are directly related to the plot.
And Pixy Misa's theme song is priceless.
Dammit, I have it on VHS, so I've never seen the omake. Have to correct that!
Posted by: Pixy Misa at August 15, 2005 05:45 PM (AIaDY)
Yes, correct that. The omake almost make the DVD. The extras also include a movie trailer.
Posted by: yaminohasha at August 16, 2005 03:12 AM (DQVnR)
Go ahead, admit it... you want a pair.
Posted by: Wonderduck at August 16, 2005 07:04 AM (+rGmJ)
Posted by: matoko kusanagi at August 16, 2005 02:28 PM (wxUTp)
Posted by: ya pidoras at July 26, 2006 08:11 PM (NnxRL)
Processing 0.02, elapsed 0.024 seconds.
16 queries taking 0.0099 seconds, 104 records returned.
Page size 63 kb.
Powered by Minx 0.8 beta.