A Filipino artist's comic about Filipino folklore finally becomes animated and will be on Netflix.
Moderator: Moh
Celedam wrote:As a fan of semi-old-school Gundam, I am saddened. They'll slap the name "Gundam" on almost anything these days.
And oh yeah, get off my lawn.
(0079, Zeta, and ZZ were a bit before my time, but I'm familiar with them. I got in with 0092: Char's Counterattack, 0080: War in the Pocket, and especially 0083: Stardust Memory.)
Celedam wrote:For Gundam, I recommend that people start with the self-contained, 13-episode 0083: Stardust Memory. It's starting to show its age, but it still feels relatively modern and mature. It's also a classic and very representative Gundam story that references the rest of the Universal Century (UC) timeline without getting bogged down by the Amuro-Char rivalry, the Federation-Zion politics, or the Newtype silliness. (Of course, many fans say those things are what classic Gundam is all about, so… *shrug*)
I can't keep up with the more recent Gundam series. They keep the archetypes and just rewrite the setting over and over again. It's like a string of parallel worlds, and in almost every one, it's a replay of Amuro versus Char. Yeah, 0083 did it too, but it was the first to do it. It had not yet become a trope.
Celedam wrote:Gundam has been on Hulu for a while, although I don't know if that means anything for people outside the U.S.
I'd still like to see my personal favorite, Gundam 0083: Stardust Memory, be made available. It's been buried and forgotten by all of the other, newer series — especially standalone, non-UC series — over the last couple decades. Sure, Gundam Wing (a.k.a. Boy Band Gundam) was immensely popular and opened the way for those other series, but it twisted the franchise a bit and made it less palatable to old-school fans who prefer the worldbuilding and military realism of Universal Century.
Nayoko-Kihara wrote:Celedam: Earlier today I was browsing new additions to one of the libraries I use, and this just happened to pop up: "Critical Role: Vox Machina Origins Series I & II Collection"
Maybe this will be an alright way to summarize my way through (part of?) S1? At the very least I feel like the universe is yelling at me now, so I'm putting a copy on hold for my nex library run.
This looks good too, will be adding to the Watchlist.Amped wrote:A Filipino artist's comic about Filipino folklore finally becomes animated and will be on Netflix.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3IhCjxVjM-A
Celedam wrote:Campaign 2 might be wrapping up soon, so you could jump in fresh with Campaign 3…
Nayoko-Kihara wrote:Moh: [...] Might marathon it on a free trial once the whole season is complete though.
It was a bit much, but it wasn't bad. Though I did end up with a slightly sore arm because I was too stubborn to leave the couch for 2/3 of it. I think I liked Keyleth the most (not too surprised, I really like druids - used to play druid a lot in WoW). Grog and the twins were nice too (the bear was cute).Celedam wrote:Yeah, that's overkill if you're not already a dedicated fan. I thought you were getting the regular TPBs.
It's on sale for $22, though. Hmm.
I appreciate it!Celedam wrote:Campaign 2 ended last night with Episode 141. I'll let you know when Campaign 3 begins..
erilaz wrote:Celedam wrote:Amped wrote:Anime talk : the 2009 Anime film "Summer Wars" (highly recommend)
Summer Wars (2009) is gorgeous, but The Girl Who Leapt Through Time (2006) is the better film. Same writer/director team at the same studio.
I haven't seen Wolf Children (2012), which was the third film by that team.
I'm not a big anime fan, but I loved all three. The Girl Who Leapt Through Time is in fact my favorite non-Ghibli anime. I also enjoyed Hosoda's more recent films, The Boy and the Beast (2015) and Mirai (2018), but not as much as those three.
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