Statistics
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Days: 212.3
Mean Score:
6.08
- Watching36
- Completed1,075
- On-Hold8
- Dropped6
- Plan to Watch323
- Total Entries1,448
- Rewatched89
- Episodes12,524
Anime History Last Anime Updates
Shin no Nakama ja Nai to Yuusha no Party wo Oidasareta node, Henkyou de Slow Life suru Koto ni Shimashita 2nd
Apr 29, 6:47 AM
Completed
12/12
· Scored
5
All Manga Stats Manga Stats
Days: 23.7
Mean Score:
5.72
- Total Entries216
- Reread0
- Chapters4,284
- Volumes415
All Comments (146) Comments
I suppose. I'll take your word on this one as I have no plans of rewatching any part of this film to double check.
Honestly, either one of the two would have been better than the fownaying. That or not tacking on what the old lady said about nature, therein making it so we don't actually see anyone validate his actions.
I'll take your word that he does feel some remorse but ultimately decides that, yea, there's no need to dwell as the damage had long since been done. Kinda funny if this is how we see him accept reality several years late after the climax practically celebrated and cheered over what he was doing, and how the film set the arc up only for the people saying that to then beclme antagonists for him to not listen to.
I still disagree. Facing reality would absolutely be more on Hodaka accepting the nature of Hina's power/curse more than it would the one or two other people who try to stop him from stopping that brcause they know the untild calamity and death that would.otherwise unfold. Furthermore, I'd probably be a lot less bitter about all of this if Tokyo was anything more than just a normal city with a generally really pleasant society, barring a seedy underbelly that we only get a couple of guys as examples of. Doubly so since nobody else knows of this whole sacrifice thing, judt the rain stuff. Then again, at that point, the movie would have a much harsher tone until the final act.
Honrstly, if the tone and overall vibe is this supportive of his decision and at worst says "well he does feel some remorse over the flooding but that doesn't really matter and people are learning to deal with it anyway so let's get over it" then yea, I'd still say the film really wants this to be the takeaway. At the very least, it certanly was mine and I can't in good faith chalk it up to a media literacy issue despite the thing you pointed out that left my mind.
I don't remember it being purely limited to Tokyo (not that I'd realistically buy it) but in that case, it's still 100% sweeping the harm caused under the rug because something something nature is healing anyway so it's totally a good thing and Hodaka doesn't have to worry, not that I remember him genuinely rejecting that last part. It just doesn't mean anything to him, nor is it supposed to mean anything to the audience, otherwise they wouldn't downplay that. It's not just seen as worth it by the character, the film ultimately makes that final call rather than leaving it open to interpretation or scrutiny because of how actively it supported Hodaka actively going against the character development the first 2/3 of the film set up. That's why I feel the film wants to have its cake and eat it too, and why I despise the film's framing of this conflict and resolution.
At best, given that the supposed implication behind his suffocating home life is that it was in some way abusive, he's being sent back to shitty people for 2 years before being given the chance to resume his relationship with Hina. Naturally, that's a footnote (I understand this one, even regardless of how I feel the abuse implications were frankly so flimsy and nonexistent that him just being extremely scrappy and impulsive entirely on his own makes about as or even more sense). Still, again, the film downplays everything, giving the most cursory nod to part of the obvious so that it can comfortably treat everything as worth it rather than silently judge him or leave everything to the audience's call or show that this truly is something he has to live with. Why have him face reality like someone trying to enter the real world is actively being told to do when he can just be as juvenile as a teen at the cost of everything? Because he's a teen and the film wants its happy ending where they can still potentially get together, as we should accept that pretty much at face value. We need our actiontastic, bombastic climax with the overblown happy cheery music celebrating Hidaka reaching Hina in a huge setpiece, and by God you're gonna support it, like it or not.
This is framed as the absolute morally correct choice, and a convenient one too as nature is healing now, apparently, which is why we are barely shown anything more than large scale halting of daily life that would get resolved over time anyway because it would be quite uncomfortable to directly acknowledge all the untold global harm and destruction he caused with his decision. Fuck the world and fuck the adults who told him to just accept reality, but Hodaka doesn't, and he's largely absolved with little more than a 2 year house arrest that's treated as basically a slap on the wrist over an entirely downplayed catastrophe. Not only am I angry at the direction it took, I'm as frustrated as I am because the way they present the results is sheepish and cowardly to me, while also painting him as actually completely in the right. It also directly goes completely against the character development they set up for him, as if the movie set this up for the sole purpose of directly refuting the idea that he should grow as a person and accept reality to any extent. That last part isn't inherently bad, but in this particular instance, I think you can forgive me for finding it utterly maddening.
I don't know if I'd sac myself or someone I love, hell, I'd rather not be put in such an uncomfortable position, but I feel I'd ultimately head towards doing what's right for the greater good rather than just what's right for my happiness, even if it kills me or riddles me with sadness and guilt. This is, ofc, assuming that just like in the movie, there is no safe third option available.
These have major problems:
Tokyo Magnitude 8.0 - 1080i (JP BDs are 1080p), artifacting, JP track of episode 7 has this same audio problem as Kids
The World God Only Knows Season 2 - JP track of episode 12 has this same audio problem as Kids
Dream Eater Merry - 1080i (JP BDs are 1080p), artifacting
Kamisama Dolls - 1080i (JP BDs are 1080p), artifacting
Fate/Stay Night (both parts) - artifacting, 1080i is correct for it though, one of the discs of part 1 is missing chapter stops
Canaan - artifacting, 1080i is correct for it though
This Boy Can Fight Aliens - artifacting, I don't know if 1080i is correct for it
Legends of the Dark King - lossy Japanese audio, supposedly it looks bad but I can't confirm that
Appleseed - lossy English and Japanese audio
IIRC I think someone reported one of the episodes on one of their K-On BDs has this audio problem too. I don't know which one though.
Those are just the major problems. That isn't counting all of the small issues like typos and errors in the subs, mistiming of subs and chapter stops, etc. that numerous releases have.
The problem with Kids on the Slope, the audio came out of only the left speaker on one episode.
https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2013-05-06/retailer/sentai-filmworks-recalls-kids-on-the-slope-bd-release
Another problematic release from that time was Horizon in the Middle of Nowhere. Episode 7, for some reason, the second half is this horribly aliased mess. This was fixed in the 2016 re-release. Colorful the movie had a similar problem, towards the end of the movie, the video quality just massively tanks, that sadly hasn't seen a fixed re-release.
They also massively screwed up Penguindrum. They received interlaced masters instead of progressive (plenty of shows were like this around 2012/2013), and because Sentai is horrible with 1080i content even to this day, ugh. Penguindrum which is long OOP is definitely in dire need of a corrected re-release.
There are a couple big problems with Sentai's BD. Problem 1, the JP BDs are 1080p yet the US BDs are 1080i. The fact that the JP BDs are 1080p means the show is entirely 24fps so it's not because of the framerate. I suspect they were given broadcast masters instead of the JP BD masters or they just completely fudged the encode.
Problem 2, there appears to be serious compression problems particularly during the transformation sequences.
US 1 | JP 1
US 2 | JP 2
US 3 | JP 3
Those US shots are taken from Blu-ray.com's review, which of course doesn't say a thing about the compression artifacts. If anyone else who owns the Sentai BD and knows what they're looking at could confirm that those compression artifacts are indeed on the discs, that would be appreciated.
But yeah as you mentioned, the point still stands that the jokes relating their similarities in appearance were not funny and made no sense
https://www.blu-ray.com/movies/Gunbuster-vs-Diebuster-Aim-for-the-Top-The-GATTAI-Movies-Blu-ray/1143/
true dat man
> Gives Cowboy Bebop a 9/10, an anime that saw the main character suicide over a dead girl that had no story build up