esm wrote:
Violet Evergarden - I started this a few years ago with a friend but never continued, so I started over from the beginning. It's definitely one of the best anime I've ever seen. I stayed up late to watch almost the entire series at once.
I think I watched like a half episode of that a couple years back. I'll have to check it out again.
I recently finished Jojo's Bizarre Adventure (at least, the seasons available on Netflix). It's such an odd show to get into. The characters are all ridiculously hyper-macho and drawn in an exaggerated comic book style. Everyone is super serious, and the story is all tragic and grimdark, and then you start to notice that (mild spoiler)
a lot of the characters are named after 80's music groups.
After that it becomes more and more obvious that the show is really a next-level sendup of its genre. Characters constantly getting beaten to within an inch of their lives, getting stabbed, shot, bleeding out of various orifices and then kicking asses in the next scene. During fights the participants engage in extraordinarily lengthy banter between blows, or their over the top interior thoughts are vocalized. The Jojos (they're a dynasty) are always predicting what their opponents will do with absurd levels of precision.
The first season is a bit subtler because the overall story is played straight. The later seasons start to drop that pretense and more and more overtly silly things happen, and the bad guys' powers get increasingly fanciful. Crucially though, the characters always remain deadly earnest and never break their own sense of unwavering commitment to the world they are presented with. For that reason, you start to get attached to them after a while. (To put it in terms of "The Office," it's the reason why as the series went on, Dwight Schrute arguably became a more compelling character than Jim Halpert. Dwight, no matter his ridiculous flaws, really believed in himself and that made us want to root for him. Jim on the other hand was always very arch and above it all, treating everything as a joke. That diminished him in our eyes, and made it harder for us to deeply care what happened to him.)
The big boss in the later seasons had a coolly confident god-level overpowered demeanor reminiscent of A**** from Bleach (spoiler'd for the 3 people who are still intending to get around to that).
In short, I really liked it, although I felt a bit off-balance the entire time.