Anime fans do some weird things. For one, anime is an import, meaning it's literally written for another audience and then brought to and translated for Americans, the process of which doesn't convey everything meant for the original audience to the average American anime fan. Almost like Family Guy.
Why do anime characters say everything they think out loud? It seems like a huge waste of money and it doesn't make any sense. To help move the plot along and to let the viewer see the inner turmoil of the character. Books do it too and TV but it's usually in the form of a confession or soul bearing.
Because anime viewers are dumb and don't get the point unless you bash them with the point on the head. Because anime often times isn't that good at the whole show vs tell thing. Which is kinda bad considering it's a visual medium. This is pretty much correct.
Because all things anime tend to be lumped together, it's tempting to think of anime as a genre. It isn't, at least no more than animation itself is a genre, but rather a description of how the material is produced.
This is due to anime often being an adaption from manga, where it is harder to convey emotion without the use of screen tones, backgrounds, or some form of over exaggeration. These effects often find their way into Animes, and is more often referred to under a more catch-all term: Manga effects.
Most anime fans become interested in their favorite shows because they like the characters. They want to draw them, act like them, dress up as them, and so on. Their favorite characters are usually young, aesthetically pleasing, and possess desirable traits like confidence, determination, and a positive attitude.
Answer by William Flanagan, longtime manga and anime translator: The high-pitched tones of some of the characters are there to serve the story. They are there to emphasize the childlike qualities and innocence (or, in some cases, contrast the innocent sound with evil intent) of the characters.
The feel of Japanese animations and the visual look that they exhibit is a very improved form of how the same is exhibited in traditional cartoons. The facial expressions of the characters in Japanese anime are very distinct and closer to reality than cartoons.
Anime can affect our mentality in many different ways depending on which genres you are referring to. Some anime genres may not have very beneficial impacts on us while others may allow us to explore new perspectives and change the way we see things.
To get over an anime addiction, start by reducing the amount of time you spend watching it every day. Limit yourself to watching only 2 or 3 of your favorite shows, and avoid or delete anime fan sites from your browser favorites to prevent temptation.
10 Anime Characters With The Weirdest Habits6 Mako And Her Hyperactive Tangents (Kill la Kill)7 Death The Kid And "Perfect Symmetry" (Soul Eater) ... 8 Gray And His Inability To Keep His Clothes On (Fairy Tail) ... 9 Jango, Who Keeps Hypnotizing Himself (One Piece) ... 10 Deku And His Creepy Muttering (My Hero Academia) ... More items...•
Employing a female seiyuu allows the character a high-pitched, youthful, cute sound, and the series can go on for decades without any need to replace the voice (whereas if a young male had been cast, his voice might break and become too low for the character).
Not All Japanese People Like Anime. So, yes, anime is popular in Japan.
The SpongeBob SquarePants Anime, simply referred to as SpongeBob SquarePants (Japanese: スポンジ・ボブ Hepburn: Suponji Bobu, pronounced Spongey Bobbu) is an ongoing Japanese anime television series produced by Neptune Studios to produce a quality fan series built around his and Narmak's ideas.
However, much like western media, there are stories in anime that are based on real-life events as well. There is actually a large amount of anime based on real events, whether they be large scale or events that simply happened to the author.
The history of anime can be traced back to the start of the 20th century, with the earliest verifiable films dating from 1917. The first generation of animators in the late 1910s included Ōten Shimokawa, Jun'ichi Kōuchi and Seitaro Kitayama, commonly referred to as the "fathers" of anime.
Many anime are based on manga, where the artists have the characters announcing their aims from one panel to another for dramatic effect and to keep the reader clued in about what is going on without having to resort to long blocks of narrative text.
Anime characters explain their tactics to the enemy because someone has to and no one better than the one executing them. A good example would be the characters from Naruto.
If Naruto would consider the earth an enemy. He would proceed to destroy the earth by making tons of shadow clones with a single mission. Kill everyone/thing you can with using little chakra. Now little chakra to naruto is not actually small. It’s just small for naruto because his reserves are massive along with having a tailed beasts reserves to use as well. After we respond with eventually taking out some of the clones the real naruto after observing and sitting somewhere with 5 clones collecting nature energy he deems it time to attack. He quickly heads for a town that he senses a lot of life forces coming from with nature energy then proceeds to throw several rasenshurikens leveling the entire town in seconds. Only seconds of screaming before total annihilation. Then seconds later naruto is gone going to the next town. Now why aren’t we catching naruto? Oh yea because we don’t have vehicles that can travel at the speed of light or even as fast as naruto. We can’t even track him. All we know is he pops up levels a town then goes to the next place. See you guys are trying to lower narutos power or slow him down but he would never stay in one spot long enough to even be hit with a tsar bomb or any bomb for that matter. The only thing that has a chance of hitting him is a bullet. Which even then he can evade that. Also humans don’t have the recognition and response time to react to someone that can move that fast. So good bye mankind.
No further screen time or production resources need be used up on explanatory extra or post-fight scenes that could disrupt the flow of the story.
In traditional martial arts, you frequently see names being given to techniques and moves to aid in instruction. When a teacher is structuring a lesson, it helps being able to just refer to specific moves instead
Remember this? This was the moment naruto was confirmed to have the reaction time and capability to move at the speed of light.
Imagine reading manga ,its confusing enough as it is .without any attack names written , it would be more confusing .We won't know what the characters are doing .
These differences show up in many ways including the artwork storytelling, breadth of material and even cultural nuances exhibited by the characters .
Anime art styles range from the flamboyant and outlandish in shows like "Samurai Champloo" and " FLCL" to the simple and direct in shows like "Azumanga Daioh! . " That said, even shows with more "basic" artwork can still be visually striking. Anime has this way of making everything look fresh and new.
There are even some animes aimed at older teens like "Death Note" and some for mature audiences only like "Monster" and "Queens Blade.". Japanese cultural attitudes about sexuality and violence require some titles to be placed a category higher than they might normally be.
Updated September 07, 2018. The word anime — pronounced " ah- knee-may" — is an abbreviation of the word animation. In Japan, the word is used to refer to all animation. However, outside of Japan, it has become the catch-all term for animation from Japan. For decades, anime was produced by and for Japan — a local product, ...
For decades, anime was produced by and for Japan — a local product, with a distinct look-and-feel to not just the artwork but the storytelling, the themes, and the concepts. Over the last forty years, it has become an international phenomenon, attracting millions of fans and being translated into many languages.
Because all things anime tend to be lumped together, it's tempting to think of anime as a genre. It isn't, at least no more than animation itself is a genre, but rather a description of how the material is produced. Anime shows, like books or movies, fall into any number of existing genres: comedy, drama, sci-fi, action-adventure, horror and so on.
What's most striking is how anime's impact is coming full circle. Some recent American cartoon productions, like "Avatar: The Last Airbender, " are openly inspired by anime itself, and live-action English-language versions of anime titles are starting to come into production more frequently.
Another incredibly common term is OVA, a term that has become so ubiquitous it's often bandied about without explanation.
The anime OVA is a staple of the industry, but though the term is still in use, its original meaning may have become obscure over time. There are many different terms and phrases in anime fandom and culture, many of which, like shonen or shojo, have to do with the series' genre or demographic. Another incredibly common term is OVA, a term ...
OVA is an acronym that stands for "original video animation, " with the first arguably being 1983's Dallos . These productions, as their name suggests, are tailor-made for home releases and are not screened or shown in any other format prior to this. Similar to the straight-to-video market in other countries, they were originally released as VHS tapes then DVDs, and more recently, Blu-rays, giving way to the term OAD (original animation DVD) to come into use.
One of the most notable OVA series' is the adaptation of the manga Legend of the Galactic Heroes. Instead of a few mere episodes, this OVA had a grand total of 110 episodes, which was further bolstered by 52 side story episodes.
An example of this is Tenchi Muyo, which began as an OVA before being spun off into multiple TV shows. Other franchises such as Higurashi received additional OVA episodes for some of their seasons or even OVA spinoff movies. One of the most notable OVA series' is the adaptation of the manga Legend of the Galactic Heroes.
Anime improves your imagination significantly and channels a part of your mind you never knew you could access. IT'S ART. The colors. The super detailed backgrounds. It's so beautiful to look at. Even if the anime is a dark anime like "Tokyo Ghoul" the colors and the style are just so fucking amazing.
Anime character development is always the first priority. The characters are always different and balance complexity and simplicity. You'll either sympathize with them or see them change during the series. I'm not saying live action shows don't do this but in anime the development packs more of a punch.
Look at a anime like "Assassination Classroom.". The plot of the story is A classroom of academically bad kids are chosen by a alien to assassinate a teacher and if they don't complete the assassination in a certain time then Earth will be destroyed by the alien. The catch is that the alien is their teacher.
The Matrix was inspired by "Akira" and "Ghost In A Shell" 2 of the most iconic anime films ever. Ask Kanye West what his favorite film is. Oh yeah I forgot he said his favorite movie was "Akira" a anime film. Silly me. Almost all your favorite live action films were inspired by anime.
The friendships and bonds that are formed from anime never break. Ever. You want to talk about what happened on Naruto, Soul Eater, Black Lagoon. Everything.
Anime these days are typically adaptations of a source material, usually a motionless comic or a story exclusively from one person's perspective. The elements being talked about here are things that move the story along in these other mediums and were arguably more appropriate there, but when making the transition to anime, the ones doing it don't tend to get creative about how they adapt and just 1:1 some of these elements.
Because these shows are made for young audiences a lot of the time and Japanese animation is lazy when it comes to character animation. They don't use body language to convey subtle things so they have to spout it out loud.
Also known as, bad writing. If it's something we should hear, and they're against doing inner monologue, then find a good way to do it. Just having the character say their thoughts out loud is unnatural, and lazy. ...and it doesn't make any sense.
To help move the plot along and to let the viewer see the inner turmoil of the character. Books do it too and TV but it's usually in the form of a confession or soul bearing.
In the end, however, it's all circumstantial. There will be shows that literally tell everything or show everything yet execute it very well. But, more often than not, it's about striking that balance between the two. Indeed, anime isn't (the vast majority of the time) just characters talking and isn't just visuals moving on a screen -- it is a combination of both.
This is pretty much correct. Anime in general tends heavily towards stating the obvious and hit ting the viewers on the head with 'the point'.
Continue Reading. Anime fans do some weird things. For one, anime is an import, meaning it's literally written for another audience and then brought to and translated for Americans, the process of which doesn't convey everything meant for the original audience to the average American anime fan. Almost like Family Guy.
Since the physical world is learned by DOING, the subconscious assumption about those avoiding that effort is that they are somehow not seeing it. It forces the observer to ask, “Why doesn’t this person just DO THE THING already?”
Face it, anime can be very weird. Sometimes that’s part of the charm of it too. Heck, almost every anime fan I know has at least a few shows they got into just because they sounded weird and wound up loving them. And non-fans of anime typically only hear about stuff that gets talked about enough that even they hear it.
Cause there are a lot of term non anime fan don't understand that some people like to use in a normal non anime related conversation and there are some people who like to do cringey things that only work in animation form and there are some people who doesn't wear headphone when watching in public when they should know that anime have these unique noises that might sound inappropriate.
When in reality it is much more mature than cartoons (depending what you watch) with much deeper plots and even super graphic 18+ stuff sometimes. It’s ignorant people who say anime is weird and all of them are generally hardcore conformists, can’t expect them to leave a lasting expression on the world.
And anime fan culture, is a tad bit different from western fan culture. I mean, all obsessive fans tend to be ridiculed, regardless if they like anime, movies, cartoons, etc. But anime has different weird things about it that westerners won’t be as used to… and so will think it more weird to obsessed with that.
and also this is a personal take: generally anime characters are very feminine, in the pitch of their voice and their physical design (male characters are usually twinks with noodle arms, but that doesn’t stop them from being able to lift a 100 kgs from the tips of their fingers) and female characters that do not have muscle can also do the same.
But it's not like the studios are butchering incredible scripts. The writers write the melodrama into the script, because they know what works in their industry. A script you can't produce on time and on budget isn't a particularly helpful script. And besides, it's not like every writer is a master of nuance either.
Humans kill flies because they annoy us, not for food. Do any other animals kill other species for reasons other than food or defense?
With anime, the year is divided into four periods called "cours". They're super simple to remember: winter is January - March, spring is April - June, summer is July - September, and autumn is October - December.
In a way, think of it as a new season, even though there's at most a 1 or 2 week gap between episodes, or often no gap at all. These changes help build excitement and try to get people to tune back in for the second cour despite being tempted by all the new series starting at a the same time.