Denizen
Retired Member
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Yeah I see what you mean. I just get weirded out because I've never heard anyone say "Cash" like that before.
Yeah I see what you mean. I just get weirded out because I've never heard anyone say "Cash" like that before.
Korra season 2 has some good and bad parts:
Well technically speaking all cartoons are anime, but not all anime is cartoons. Let me explain if you consider the literal meaning of anime (animation) then yes cartoons=anime. But as anime as taken a different definition for it self (animated in Japan for a Japanese audience) then all cartoons=/=anime (with a few exceptions arguably). :P
I don't think that's right, saying that all cartoons are anime is like saying that all martial arts is Boxing.Well technically speaking all cartoons are anime, but not all anime is cartoons. Let me explain if you consider the literal meaning of anime (animation) then yes cartoons=anime. But as anime as taken a different definition for it self (animated in Japan for a Japanese audience) then all cartoons=/=anime (with a few exceptions arguably). :P
I've always wondered why people insist that clearly anime styled shows like Avatar: The Last Airbender aren't anime.Anime are cartoons. I'm comfortable with watching cartoons. I love 'em. Venture Bros, Metalocalypse, Samurai Champloo, Abenobashi, Aeon Flux, Adventure Time, etc.
People need to get over themselves and just be ok with watching cartoons instead of trying to make the argument that Anime is somehow above that.
I agree. Most anime is far less mature than its audience would like to believe. Blood and tits do not a mature story make.
But that's silly.I see it this way. Who the "Animated Show" was made for determines the genre. If it was made for Japanese people, it's an "Anime" (Japanese Animation). If it was made for Americans, it's a Cartoon or some other better word.
I hate it when people call The Boondocks an anime just because it looks like one. It's an American made show for Americans. It can be dubbed in Japanese and aired in Japan but it still won't be an "Anime."
That's why animation doesn't really have any set genres except for how they are made, like hand drawn 2D or computer animated 3D.
That's why instead of actual genres people refer to Animation by their national origins.
EDIT: Also everyone should watch the South Park episode "The F Word."
THAT SHOW IS THE VERY DEFINITION OF GARBAGE
I think I got that. I didn't need you to explain with tautology.Let me be really clear, short, and simple about it.
If Naruto was made by Americans, for Americans, in English, in the U.S., But still looked identical it would be American animation, not Japanese animation (Anime).
If Adventure Time was made by Japanese, for Japanese, in Japanese, in Japan, but still looked identical it would be Japanese animation (Anime), not American animation.
Even if you look Russian, if your Blood is Japanese, you are Japanese.
This argument makes a bit more sense to me, and I thought about it a bit when I was writing out the last two posts... The problem with it is, lots of anime doesn't heavily use Japanese culture but is still anime. For example, how is Gurren Lagann so heavily influenced by Japanese culture that it couldn't have been made anywhere else? And yet, a lot of people consider this show as their favorite anime of all time, despite negligible relations to Japanese culture. What about anime that go as far as to base the setting on an entirely different culture, like Attack on Titan. And, yet again, anime fans love that show. Even if you look at a show that's deeply engulfed in Japanese like Azumanga Daioh, if the entire cast were to live in the United States, would it lose an element so vital to its entertainment value that anime fans would no longer like it? Do they like Azumanga because it's Japanese, and not because of the characters and the comedy? And to reference Avatar: The Last Airbender again, doesn't this show draw from ancient Japanese shinto mythology and culture, especially when it talks about spirits? (It draws from other asian cultures too, but that's aside from the point.) Why is it still separate from anime?I would simply say that anime is a term used for animation that relies on a specific cultural heritage. The reason many anime fans specifically point out that instances of non-Japanese animation are not 'anime' is that they don't rely on the same history/background, or try to do so but end up with a tooth-grindingly awful end-product.
Anyway, my original point was that it makes logical sense for the two types of content to be in the same section, so that we don't have endless debates over whether Avatar should be in this section or that section, etc.
Hey I learned a new word today.
It's not Anime (Japanese Animation), because it's made by Americans, for Americans, in the U.S., etc...
I understand that. I understand that if something was made in Japan then it's Japanese. I also understand that if something was made in America then it's American.Hey I learned a new word today.
It's not Anime (Japanese Animation), because it's made by Americans, for Americans, in the U.S., etc...
Japanese Animation (Anime) is not a style or a setting or a story type. Same thing goes for American Animation. They are just terms for describing who made it, who it was made for, where it was made, etc. All of these are terms outside of the actual show. They are separate from plot, setting, art style, etc. They don't connect or affect each other.
It's doesn't matter how much Attack on Titan is based on Germany, it's Japanese Animation. It doesn't matter how heavily The Legend of Korra borrows from Japanese culture, its still American Animation.
I'm just saying that Anime is not a genre. It's Japanese Animation.
This argument makes a bit more sense to me, and I thought about it a bit when I was writing out the last two posts... The problem with it is, lots of anime doesn't heavily use Japanese culture but is still anime. For example, how is Gurren Lagann so heavily influenced by Japanese culture that it couldn't have been made anywhere else? And yet, a lot of people consider this show as their favorite anime of all time, despite negligible relations to Japanese culture. What about anime that go as far as to base the setting on an entirely different culture, like Attack on Titan. And, yet again, anime fans love that show. Even if you look at a show that's deeply engulfed in Japanese like Azumanga Daioh, if the entire cast were to live in the United States, would it lose an element so vital to its entertainment value that anime fans would no longer like it? Do they like Azumanga because it's Japanese, and not because of the characters and the comedy? And to reference Avatar: The Last Airbender again, doesn't this show draw from ancient Japanese shinto mythology and culture, especially when it talks about spirits? (It draws from other asian cultures too, but that's aside from the point.) Why is it still separate from anime?
Plus, at this point, when it's become so associated with an art style and a writing style and all that stuff... It's a genre.
So we can agree that american animation can be anime? I just want to be clear on that.I haven't watched any of the anime you listed through to the end, so I'm not really able to debate specific points. That said, when I was talking about culture I didn't mean Japanese culture but rather the culture that Japanese animation has developed for itself. Using an element of Japanese culture or mythology as a central element doesn't make the product anime in the same way that painting a picture using squares doesn't make it neoplasticist.
For example, if someone was to grow up in Japan but never watch/read any anime/manga and have absolutely no exposure to it at all (e.g. hasn't even heard how other people in Japanese society reacts to certain themes, tropes, styles, etc. in it) and then decided to make an animation, the result would almost certainly not be anime. What makes an animation anime, at least in my opinion, is the way that they are influenced both by previous landmarks in Japanese animation (Akira, etc.) and to a lesser extent the way that Japanese Culture views and responds to anime in general. The reason that American animation is often not-anime is that it is often influenced by specific anime titles (e.g. Evangelion) rather than the elements of Japanese culture and Japanese animation culture that led it to be created (the whole Gundam/giant robots thing, and the underlying themes present that can be traced back to the aftermath of WWII in Japan), while at the same time being altered by other external influences (American animation and action movies).
Yes, I'd say that anime can come from outside Japan, but I've yet to see one. Even some of the commonly used examples of American 'anime', e.g. Avatar, I would argue are not true anime but for reasons that are caused by being made in the US rather than just because it is.
I have to get myself a hunting knife...