Has anyone seen Towa no Quon? thoughts on this film?
I'm just wondering what the intended endgame is, since I can't imagine the show will actually go with a "Magic is totally worthless; shut this school down" ending. It'd be interesting if they went with a "magic as artistic expression" angle, which the Shiny Chariot performance gives a basis for. Then they could take the show in the direction of a defense of the value of the arts in a world of science. I'd like to see that, since that's a topic I feel strongly about as an artist,
If she's so good why isn't she voicing Serval instead of a one off friend like Tsuchinoko ?
Checkmate, Atheists.
Has anyone seen Towa no Quon? thoughts on this film?
Has anyone seen Towa no Quon? thoughts on this film?
It's pretty good! Awesome fights, AMAZING music and great characters.
The first and last episodes have good action animation, but otherwise it's a mediocre series.
duckroll forced like a quarter of the thread to watch it.Has anyone seen Towa no Quon? thoughts on this film?
Wow nobody insults Kana Hanazawa around me and gets away with it.
Has anyone seen Towa no Quon? thoughts on this film?
Has anyone seen Towa no Quon? thoughts on this film?
Where were you last year when I made EVERYONE watch it. Lol.
Where were you last year when I made EVERYONE watch it. Lol.
Has anyone seen Towa no Quon? thoughts on this film?
Sangatsu - 18
Just how much does Akari know? And how does she know?
Everyone but me.Where were you last year when I made EVERYONE watch it. Lol.
Everyone but me.
Well you don't watch anything so that's to be expected.And me.
I've got a few thoughts about this:
- The idea that every major narrative event that happens in a story needs to proceeded by a Chekov's gun to set it up feels very weird to me. I don't think that's a standard that writers should held themselves to. Is it it necessary for every little thing to set up in advance? Doesn't that artificially limit creativity of the writer? What if they have a better idea later on that they never set up?
.
This is to degree true but even then, it's clear that it's a very rare occurrence, for the viewer the first and given the specifics of Mob powers very possibly the first of the kind in the universe. Besides, there's a strong delineation a psychic skills among its users thus strengthening the impression that each is unique to them. The show also made quite a bit of how these powers require training in most cases and can be hard to control, yet Reigen, a total no-entity in the field does that casually. Finally, the transference wasn't even of Mob's accord or will IIRC. It was a completely random case of the power acting on its own, which was something completely new.- The series never goes out of its way to explicitly lay down the rules regarding psychic powers. There's no Nen training sequence out of Hunter x Hunter, with nice clear guidelines about everything. There's consistency to how psychic powers are used within the universe, but beyond that ONE doesn't put any limits on them.
And to think I thought these people were crazy in the first episode.
[Late, late addendum to the past discussion.]
Then they should have planned out their story better ? Making a consistent world where things don't "just" happen at writers convenience is one of the hallmarks of good writer I dare say. Otherwise you just end up with Bleach. And what happens in the last episode isn't a little thing, it's the crucial point of resolution to a major arc with lessons for Mob and plethora of general preaching from Reigen.
This is to degree true but even then, it's clear that it's a very rare occurrence, for the viewer the first and given the specifics of Mob powers very possibly the first of the kind in the universe. Besides, there's a strong delineation a psychic skills among its users thus strengthening the impression that each is unique to them. The show also made quite a bit of how these powers require training in most cases and can be hard to control, yet Reigen, a total no-entity in the field does that casually. Finally, the transference wasn't even of Mob's accord or will IIRC. It was a completely random case of the power acting on its own, which was something completely new.
Nana ep.1
And thus, a new journey has begun. I'm not sure where this journey will be taking me, but I can already tell that this "boyfriend" will be a douche after his actions from the first episode. I difference in personality between the two Nana's should be fun to watch though!
I binged Another last night, which I rather enjoyed. The issues I have are that it starts off too slowly, uses music somewhat poorly (hamming up scenes that just aren't scary), and things like random to cuts to dolls to be "scary" (at least early on).
But, I found the premise to be genuinely creepy and the plot is told rather well. There are red herrings all over the place, but in hindsight, the clues for the "real killer" weren't buried. The typical "dumb horror actions" tend to actually be well rationalized and even help solve the mystery in a meta way. Also, I liked the approach Another took to some of the kills. Some of them are the random happenstance style used in Final Destination, but a fair amount of the deaths are clever in that they very plausibly would have died, regardless of any "curse" or whatever. The blend of both styles works really well, though I'd prefer less of the Final Destination type deaths. Especially in the finale, where they were kind of hilarious.
The finale could have certainly been better executed, but I don't want to really spoil anything. Just that Akazawa deserved better. Based on the differences that I've read, the book does not have many of the problems the anime has (though, 600 pages does seem too long for the story so the pacing may be slow, too).
As an aside: Why do the english subtitles translate things like "onii/onee-chan" to the brother/sister's name? I also notice that english uses "you"/"yours" whereas the characters sounds like they are fully speaking the names.
Reigen doesn't completely control Mob's powers, all he does is just stroll around and casually slap away people's shit. Nothing fancy. The idea is that Mob's power is so much, much more powerful than the enemies that Reigen is impervious and has to do fuck-all to win. And it was Mob's subconscious decision, the anime makes it really obvious.[Late, late addendum to the past discussion.]
Then they should have planned out their story better ? Making a consistent world where things don't "just" happen at writers convenience is one of the hallmarks of good writer I dare say. Otherwise you just end up with Bleach. And what happens in the last episode isn't a little thing, it's the crucial point of resolution to a major arc with lessons for Mob and plethora of general preaching from Reigen.
This is to degree true but even then, it's clear that it's a very rare occurrence, for the viewer the first and given the specifics of Mob powers very possibly the first of the kind in the universe. Besides, there's a strong delineation a psychic skills among its users thus strengthening the impression that each is unique to them. The show also made quite a bit of how these powers require training in most cases and can be hard to control, yet Reigen, a total no-entity in the field does that casually. Finally, the transference wasn't even of Mob's accord or will IIRC. It was a completely random case of the power acting on its own, which was something completely new.
@ Mob Psycho 100 stuff
I maybe wouldn't be so critical of Mob's psychic transference shenanigans if they weren't also used as character death subversion and even episode cliffhanger. That's just undeniably cheap writing and direction.
Kuzu no Honkai 06
And to think I thought these people were crazy in the fist episode.
The descent of Moka&Mugi's descent to the path of scum in particular was awfully sudden and even with Hanabi&Sanae, its not a direction of things I'm particularly fond of.
And to think I thought these people were crazy in the fist episode.
I think you're be too liberal with sexual abuse here since none of this is forced upon anybody.You are 100% correct, these "ships" are friggen' horrible is so many different ways I can't even count..
Both of the men in this case are going to be "preying" on the girls.Sanae is preying onMugi is going to take advantage of Moca's open "use me" by doing her dirty like he does his blond headed senpai.Hanabi's need for affection and confusion over her own feelings, and those of someone much younger than him obviously, and try take her viginity at the same time (just like Mugi.)
Not sure I appreciate the writing there. I mean, I know it plays along with the "Scum" narrative of the show, but this is the potential "sexual abuse" I was referring to after the first episode that makes things really uncomfortable to watch.
Every week the people get worse and the suffering gets deeper.Woah, they've already advanced that far?
I really hope they adapt more down the road.
I found it to be clever misdirection when coupled with the preview as mob's murderous explosion seemed unavoidable before we ended up conned just like the Reigen as leader episode ending earlier.
I think you can make a case that what Ecchan is doing is coming pretty close to the line. Moca on the other hand is absolutely someone who loves Mugi so much that she is willing to take anything he'll give her, even if he doesn't care about her.I think you're be too liberal with sexual abuse here since none of this is forced upon anybody.
If a person knows another person just wants to use them for sex, in both cases Moka and Hanabi know the guys just want them for sex, then it isn't abuse per say. Its just people being starved for attention and willing to submit to sex for it.
All the sex in this show has been completely consensual, the uncomfortable part is that these people don't love each other, or they do and are making selfish/bad decisions.
Woah, they've already advanced that far?
Well, I will be hard pressed to ever regard cliffhanger character death reversals, via unforeseen 'magical' powers no less, as clever misdirection.
In Reigen's case I can look back and say "hah, yeh, with his strong presence I could imagine the grunts expecting him to be their boss". It adds up.
For the power transference the best I can do is "well, I guess his powers are so loosely defined that this can happen. Ok."
I think you're be too liberal with sexual abuse here since none of this is forced upon anybody.
If a person knows another person just wants to use them for sex, in both cases Moka and Hanabi know the guys just want them for sex, then it isn't abuse per say. Its just people being starved for attention and willing to submit to sex for it. Excluding the teacher of course, she just likes sex and fucking with people.
I think you can make a case that what Ecchan is doing is coming pretty close to the line. Moca on the other hand is absolutely someone who loves Mugi so much that she is willing to take anything he'll give her, even if he doesn't care about her.
OK, Igotthatreference.gifWoah, they've already advanced that far?
Then they should have planned out their story better ? Making a consistent world where things don't "just" happen at writers convenience is one of the hallmarks of good writer I dare say. Otherwise you just end up with Bleach. And what happens in the last episode isn't a little thing, it's the crucial point of resolution to a major arc with lessons for Mob and plethora of general preaching from Reigen.
They really fucked up here I think.
TRIGGER made an anime about a young talentless witch who goes to school to learn magic because magic is cool.
Fine.
But magic is losing public interest in the world of LWA because it's supposedly inferior to modern technology.
So they need to make magic fun for the viewers but also useless for it to make sense. Obviously they can't do both at the same time so it's just fun for the viewers and the other side of the story is a quagmire of question marks.
The Mugi/Moca thing really is about his morals rather than anything legal, Mugi isn't preying on Moca because he was never interested in her from the start. Hell he actually seems to think she's annoying. Would Mugi be wrong for having sex with her when she is 'throwing' herself at him because she's so infatuated with him? I wouldn't be surprised that a teenage boy bites at the opportunity nor am I surprised she's taking this opportunity to go out with him knowing he doesn't love her.I think it goes along with the whole thought process behind how statutory rape is viewed. There is physical abuse, which is easy to detect, but there is also mental and psychological abuse that is much more understated and harder to detect.
This is clearly the case for those to and as Kraytar pointed out Ecchan as well.
Moca is clearly going to be exploited by Mugi and Hanadi by an older guy taking advantage of a younger highschool that clearly wants to cling on, but doesn't know what is "OK" and what isn't
While it's still not right, there is a mutual understanding between Mugi ad Hanabi, which makes it "OK" however, with these other two, the lines are clearly blurred and even breached of sorts, which is what makes both cases uncomfortable.. We all know "that guy" in school that took advantage of a girl or girls and even if they "consented" you know EVERYTHING about the situation was 100% wrong and unnatural.
There's a difference between inconsistent world building and world building that doesn't lay out every rule and possibility at the beginning. A writer of fiction, especially in the context of a serialized narrative that's going to be going on for years, shouldn't have to preface the beginning of his story with "here is every rule of what can happen in my fictional world that I am going strictly adhere to for the next 7 years."
When in doubt, nanomachines.