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There aren't that many animesque works with setting or stories atypical for that style of art
Comments
Heartcatch was great, Suite was great, Smile is neither bad nor good. It's like warm flavourless pudding that I still enjoy greatly.
B-b-but... Yayoi!
^ Yayoi, Akane, Reika and Akaoni VS Everything Else
Detroit Metal City is hilarious.
^^ Well... yeah, okay, pretty much.
In any case...
OreImo? Or is that not recent enough? Or not harem enough?
In either case, Denpa Onna to Seishun Otoko was pretty good.
Nisemonogatari was pretty good even if it wasn't as good as Bakemonogatari.
I had forgotten Nisemonogatari! Thanks. But I cannot vouch for Oreimo or Denpa Onna, haven't watched either.
Glennmagusharvey: So you would only want medieval stories if they had anime trappings such as animation and a more "current" soundtrack?
Then why would you want a medieval story in the first place? Why isn't the work as it is good enough for you?
OreImo? Or is that not recent enough? Or not harem enough?
No, it's not good enough
>Detroit Metal City?
>Of course it sucks, but hey, it is anime about a metal band.
Bitch I will cut you.
You can leave that one to the expert, Malk.
METAL FANS! ASSEMBLE!
hey you don't get to steal my phrase!
Spice and Wolf is a pretty decent show about Medieval European trade stuff. I can't remember what the music is like, though.
Star Driver discussion: It's a mecha show, and a decent show, but I really wouldn't call it a good mecha show given that the mecha fights were the worst part of it and the slice-of-life parts were what made it worth watching.
@Actual thread topic: I have to agree with not understanding why you would want modern music in a show about medieval times or whatever, but I do agree that more variety in anime and such would be nice.
^ again, you guys have obviously never played the Ys series.
So far, 4 named female characters have shown up. Of those, one is the main character's girlfriend, one has a boyfriend, one tried to murder him, and one he can't even remember.
That's kind of an odd harem.
I should have written a "Discuss." at the end of my post. Anyway...
Actually, I'd love to see more music that's used not because of superficial cultural association (e.g. "Asian jingle" for China, double-harmonic scale for the Middle East, bagpipes for Scotland), but used for emotional association (slow organ, harpsichord, and drums in C minor for a desolate Mayincatec "temple of doom" obscured in torch-lit darkness and complete with deathtraps).
Not that much closer; if we're talking about, say, the 1300s, then you're talking music from the 1800s versus music from the 1900s.
That's why I have stuff like Taishou Baseball Girls (historical fiction, to some extent) and Moyashimon (a guy can talk to microbes) in my to-watch list.
So basically, reverse Nanoha?
Well, to be fair, mecha shows do tend to have a certain set of conventions to go along with them. For example, block-looking mechs are par for the course, as are battles between them, using human-like motions, and piloted by humans, and stuff like that. As well as a focus on said battles.
Instead, if you had giant robots that were more rounded in shape, and were used for rescue missions rather than combat...yes, they'd still be mecha but it would be more unusual.
What about counting shows in terms of market or audience share?
Adding to my watch list.
Not a big heavy metal fan, but I would still like to see it. I enjoyed the production/management side of Idolmaster, after all.
I think it's that I'm not really a "period piece" person. I have to be specifically in the mood for, say, a story set in Medieval Europe to go and enjoy something like this, and at other times, the story doesn't have as much to hook me in and then make me engrossed in it.
For example, I might be hooked in initially by the plot of this movie (based on my guess from watching it for twenty minutes) for its focus on politics, intrigue, and war. But the largely unfamiliar setting, the thickness of the accent (which makes it harder for me to understand what's going on when lines are muttered for emotional effect), and general style of the presentation make it less likely for me to become engrossed in it emotionally by, say, feeling an emotional resonance with a character or set of characters.
I think this problem is related to my not really liking the pacing of movies in general. Stuff in them happens too fast--there's too little time for me to become emotionally invested in the plot or characters.
Maybe I might more enjoy something like a historical TV series, such as the Rome series.
Probably generic anime soundtrack fare, which is decent and kinda up my alley. I haven't watched it yet though. That said, it IS on my watchlist.