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|    alt.anime    |    Japanese Anime and Hentai worship    |    1,634 messages    |
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|    Message 882 of 1,634    |
|    Rob Kelk to All    |
|    [INFO] The Anime Primer, or "What Anime     |
|    01 Sep 05 17:30:46    |
      [continued from previous message]              demonic captain of the high school football team, Hiruma, decides to       rebuild the team around Sena, with Sena disguised as the mysterious       running back "Eyeshield 21".        What results from this is a fast-paced, unpretentious story with       surprisingly adept character development and smart, consistent comedy.       Add to this reasonably good animation and a lively soundtrack and you       have a nice bit of old-fashioned fun done in a thoroughly up-to-date       manner. So forget about anything you ever knew about American High       School Football, sit back, grab a bottle of "sports water", and enjoy       the action.        [Entry by Dave Baranyi]                     F               FAKE: A very gay detective story with young man and woman in care of       the officers in an alternate version of NYC.        The senior detective, who is in love with the younger who is       Japanese-American, sets up a vacation for both in England. He bribes       the young man to stay behind so that he and the object of his affection       can enjoy a truely romantic weekend.        Too bad the hotel they have chosen is the scene of a mystery which       has attracted the attention of a senior officer of the NY State Police.       A woman vanishes and then the kids show up to prevent seduction.        Well the vacation is already spoiled when a flaming fellow officer       insists on following them to the site and they get a harsh suprise on       their return to the station house.        Very amusing!        One 60 minute OAV, from Anime Works        [Entry by bobbie sellers]        [Parental Advisory: FAKE does touch on male/male romantic       relationships, but it's clean. There isn't even any nudity in it past       the occasional male chest. - David Watson]               FAM AND IHRIE: see RUIN EXPLORERS               FANCY LALA: FANCY LALA is the story of a girl and her magic sketch       book. I think that cleared all of the DBZ heads out. For the rest of       you, no, there are no magical princesses fighting evil by moonlight,       nor are there any convoluted love polygons. What we have here is a       simple show about how a young girl, Shinohara Miho (all names in       Japanese name order) obtains the power to grow just a bit older from       some 'funny dinosaurs' (Pigu and Mogu, her wise helpers ... yea right,       they spend more time arguing and eating all the food than helping) and       her not so meteoric rise to stardom. Her alter ego's name is Lala,       for short (Fancy Lala in full). She's got powers that every little       girl would want: growing older, drawing all the cool clothes you       could ever want with a magic pen (just say Dabu Dabu and the clothes       become real!) and meeting all your favorite stars (in Miho's case it's       the fabulous male idol, Aikawa Hiroya).        However, this show's best aspect is its unusual realness. Lala's       rise to stardom is no instant success. It's a lot of hard work full       of bright lights, pushy stars, and time spent away from friends. Her       time as Miho isn't all sugar sweetness wrapped in a candy cane either.       Miho's a rather real little girl, genki or not, and she gets       frustrated and tired. An interesting point is the depth of character       is actually accentuated by Miho having two forms. Seeing how       characters react to each form shows their characters in more detail       than otherwise would be possible. That's it, except for maybe that       mysterious guy... (Fushigi-san, called 'Mystery Man' in the       commercial version). Maybe he has something to do with Miho's       spectacular transformation? This 26 episode series was on Japanese TV       in 1998, and now is released in the US by Bandai Entertainment. An       extra note: it's a homage to CREAMY MAMI, a 1983 magical girl show       along the same lines (both done by Studio Pierrot).        [Entry by Hana no Kaitou]               FIGURE 17: Some young anime girls get wands or pens that let them       transform into powerful fighters. Tsubasa got a twin sister.        This anime takes place in rural Hokkaido, a quiet place just right       for slow character development, quiet childhood life, and the occasional       fight against an alien menace that could destroy the planet. And shy,       out-of-her-element Tsubasa is caught in the middle of it all when her       father moves there and an alien spacecraft crashes. After getting that       "twin sister" (actually an alien AI), who names herself Hikaru, Tsubasa       spends most of her screen time learning how to open up to her new       classmates, and about close friendship. However, there's still the       alien menace to be dealt with, and it seems that only Hikaru and       Tsubasa, working together as "Figure 17", are up to the challenge.        FIGURE 17 will seem familiar to old-school anime fans; the show was       originally presented as one 50-minute episode every month, so the pacing       is very much like the original OAV anime series of the 1980s. (However,       the anime was first released to cable television, not to video.) The       production values are state of the art for the turn of the millennium,       though. The show also doesn't pigeonhole into convenient genres; it's       roughly equally a "coming of age" story and an "intense battle" story.        Parental advisory: There is some violence, and people do die.       Please preview the show before letting pre-teens watch it.        13 episodes, available in North America on six DVDs from Anime Works.        [Entry by Rob Kelk]               FIRE TRIPPER: One of the more serious of the "Rumik World" stories       by Rumiko Takahashi. A young woman gets sent back in time to feudal       Japan, but how? And what happened to the young boy that was with her?       Was available from USMC.        [Entry by Rob Kelk]               FLCL: What makes a boy a man: older women, baseball and rock and       roll. FLCL is a hilarious, surreal comedy from GAINAX (NEON GENESIS       EVANGELION, KARE KANO).        Naota is a 12-year old boy in a boring town that has the steam-iron       shaped Medical Mechanica factory as its most distinguishing feature. He       lives in the shadow of his older brother, a local baseball star who went       to America, and his life is going nowhere. He spends most of his time       hanging around with his brother's ex-girlfriend, Mamimi, and being       manipulated by Ninamori, the class president.        Then SHE comes to town, Haruko Harurura. Riding an Italian Vespa       scooter and carrying a wicked electric guitar she starts like a       chainsaw, she enters Naota's life and turns it and the town upside down.       Just what is it she wants with Medical Machinica and why do robots keep       bursting from Naota's head!?        Visually, it is as if Chuck Jones decided to make anime. It's wild,       frenetic and full of hilarious sight gags, but it's also a coming of age       story. It will remind you of your awkward "tween" years as you       discovered the opposite sex, feeling cynical about adults and the       question, "Where do you want to go with your life?"        Age: 12+ Warning: Suggestive scenes, fan service, no nudity.        Available in North America from Synch-Point.        [Entry by Travers Naran]               FRUITS BASKET: This is a shoujo story about an orphaned girl who is       taken in by a wealthy clan that has been cursed to transform into       animals from the Chinese zodiac. While there are the usual tropes of       growing up in the face of loss and dealing with being an outsider,       FRUITS BASKET treats it with a wry sense of humour, an excellent cast of       characters and genuine warmth. But despite the overall cheeriness of       the series, there are darker undercurrents to the story and some       powerful moments when the characters utterly break down in the face of       something they can't deal with.        [Entry by "IwillneverbeaJedi"]                     [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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