TheSubtleDoctor (post: 1476961) wrote:Super Dimension Fortress Macross: Do You Remember Love?
What a fantastic experience. I honestly can't picture an anime fan seeing this film and disliking it.
The production values are through the roof. This film probably has the most gorgeous animation, at least in terms of detail, that I have ever seen. Current stuff may be able to match DYRL's animation in fluidity, but I haven't seen anything done with today's technology that can match the hand drawn sequences of DYRL for detail.
The music is wonderful Japanese pop of the era, same as any Macross series. Stellar.
While the film had the tall order of cramming the first 26 episodes of the TV series into a two hour movie, it succeeds by and large. For anyone who has seen this and hasn't seen the TV series, I wouldn't think of DYRL as a compilation/summary movie so much as an alternate version of the story. Roughly, the high points of the plot are similar, but everything in between is quite different. The road Ishiguro and Kawimori take to get to the same destination is a quite different one this time around.
Minmay isn't nearly as annoying in this either. Now, she's still Minmay, but her bad qualities seem significantly toned down, save for the scene just before the climax of the film.
Great watch. Everyone should see it who is remotely interested in sci fi anime. If you are curious about Macross or just love the love triangle, then you gotta check it out.
There are a few of them on this site, if I'm not mistaken. I say "them" instead of "us" not because I dont' adore Macross (SDF is one of my favorite things) but because I've haven't seen anything produced after Macross Plus, but I hope to rectify that soon.Sapphire225 (post: 1477071) wrote:Glad to know i'm not the only Macross junkie.
ABlipinTime (post: 1476664) wrote:I love their vehicles. reminds me of some Indy 500 racecars.
Mr. Hat'n'Clogs (post: 1477277) wrote:Castle in the Sky was quite a bit better than I expected it to be, and I'd probably say it's my second favorite Miyazaki film after Spirited Away. As opposed to Nausicaa I really liked the oldness of it, and it didn't have nearly as many of Miyazaki's problems. I was expecting to dislike it and ended up enjoying it more than I would have though. The aerial sequences were fantastic and I felt for the characters, so all in all it was a pretty good movie.
Mr. Hat'n'Clogs (post: 1477277) wrote:Castle in the Sky was quite a bit better than I expected it to be, and I'd probably say it's my second favorite Miyazaki film after Spirited Away. As opposed to Nausicaa I really liked the oldness of it, and it didn't have nearly as many of Miyazaki's problems. I was expecting to dislike it and ended up enjoying it more than I would have though. The aerial sequences were fantastic and I felt for the characters, so all in all it was a pretty good movie.
I really disliked how it beat me over the head with its environmental message while implying that the people not from the land of Harmony With Nature were all evil, especially after having seen Princess Mononoke, which I felt gave the same message but with more subtlety and less people who hurt the environment being evil. I also didn't really like any of the characters, which is a pretty important part of any story.Maokun (post: 1477431) wrote:Oh? May I inquire about your qualms with Nausicaa? It is my fav Miyazaki movie along with Spirited Away.
Mr. Hat'n'Clogs (post: 1477580) wrote:I really disliked how it beat me over the head with its environmental message while implying that the people not from the land of Harmony With Nature were all evil... I also didn't really like any of the characters, which is a pretty important part of any story.
Mr. Hat'n'Clogs (post: 1477580) wrote:I really disliked how it beat me over the head with its environmental message while implying that the people not from the land of Harmony With Nature were all evil, especially after having seen Princess Mononoke, which I felt gave the same message but with more subtlety and less people who hurt the environment being evil. I also didn't really like any of the characters, which is a pretty important part of any story.
blkmage (post: 1476730) wrote:Pani Poni Dash, on paper, is the kind of show that I should really, really like. It's a Shaft animated and Shinbo directed comedy of the SZS type and has a stellar cast (although they were all probably a lot more green back in 2005). Unfortunately, there's nothing coherent about it and it's so overflowing with Shinboism that it reminded me why so many people have such a distaste for his style. It really shows that he's managed to rein it in over the last few years, because even as someone who loves his direction, PPD was a chore to go through.
TheSubtleDoctor (post: 1478029) wrote:Ponyo
The missus and I gave this one a spin last night, since it is available to stream on Netflix. We both enjoyed it quite a bit and aren't sure why the film is derided by anime fans and a certain other anime director.
TheSubtleDoctor (post: 1478029) wrote:Ponyo
The missus and I gave this one a spin last night, since it is available to stream on Netflix. We both enjoyed it quite a bit and aren't sure why the film is derided by anime fans and a certain other anime director.
Maokun (post: 1478035) wrote:It lacks the tension and thrills of films like Mononoke Hime or Spirited Away but also the calm simplicity of Totoro, which it is often compared to. It's technically a masterpiece, but a less than brilliant piece of narrative it.
Mamoru Oshii was very critical of the film. Then, he made The Sky Crawlers (note, I actually really want to see this film, as it's something I think I'd like, but many people dislike it).Maokun (post: 1478035) wrote:I'm curious. Which anime director dissed Ponyo? I liked it, but I can't say it's among my top Miyazaki films. It lacks the tension and thrills of films like Mononoke Hime or Spirited Away but also the calm simplicity of Totoro, which it is often compared to. It's technically a masterpiece, but a less than brilliant piece of narrative it.
I think backstory of the side characters has always been left a bit open in Miyazaki films. They tend to be well-rooted in the current situation but he leaves their pasts a bit of a mystery. Since the characters in question are indeed secondary characters, I think this is forgiveable due to the typical 90 minute runtime of his films.Atria35 (post: 1478036) wrote:What Mao-kun said. I also felt that the climax was rushed and unsatisfying. Some of the backsotry/characters went underdeveloped (why did her dad leave for the sea in the first place?). And the big threat to the world? It's never explained or clarified like it was in other films. You knew exactly what was going to destroy the world, and why, in M's other films. It gave the characters a palpable enemy to fight against. This one, it was merely said that something was going to destroy the world. It couldn't make me care.
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