im wondering how Mr. J is gonna look, if he's even gonna be in this.
There probably going to give him a bun like a Samurai.
What's going on here? Are you even reading my posts? I can't fathom how you could read my post and produce this response. It makes no sense. It's like your having a conversation with my evil duplicate from another dimension, because nothing you just said has anything to do with anything I said.
First, I never said it didn't suit Batman. In fact, I said the exact opposite. I'll bold it for you, since apparently you missed it the first time: "true anime definitely works for Batman."
Second, I never said "anime as a whole is bad." I said three things: that I'm tired of it over-saturating the market, that I don't like the North American imitation of it (which this will likely be), and that it's popularity is hurting traditional western animation. These points having nothing to do with the style of anime chosen, or how awesome it may be.
Since you keep bringing style up, I will explain what will likely happen here: the series will not be anime style. It will most likely be North American anime style, such as that seen in Fantastic Four. This is not anime at all, but rather a cheap imitation produced by North American posers, commissioned by fool executives thinking they can cash in on the popularity of genuine anime.
The alternative, of course, is what was done with The Animatrix: genuine anime artists were hired to produce those animated shorts, rather than western animators trying to imitate anime. The work produced was excellent, and I would be thrilled to see the TDK project done like this. It won't happen, though. Far more likely is that they will use the imitation style, and it will suck.
Of course, I would prefer they use traditional western animation, as opposed to imitation anime or even genuine anime. This has nothing to do with anime being bad (except the imitation, which is bad). It is simply that western animation is dying out: computer animation means the traditional animated films never make it to theaters any more (Don't count on ever seeing anything like Mask of the Phantasm in theaters again), and the popularity of anime and imitation-anime is over-saturating television so completely that there is little room left for western animation.
So yeah, I'm a little annoyed that, yet again, the decision has been made to go with anime.
Yoshiaki Kawajiri would be fantastic too, or, who did Blood:The Last Vampire?
Yeah mang, thats what i'm talking about!
I wanna see the new highlander anime...kawajiri worked on that one too.
And he's gonna throw his Joker cards like ninja stars?
oh wait..they already did that in The Batman. LoL
I was under the impression what you were saying had at least something to do with the new Batman DTV. But apparently it had more to do with your distaste in "copycat" anime.What's going on here? Are you even reading my posts? I can't fathom how you could read my post and produce this response. It makes no sense. It's like your having a conversation with my evil duplicate from another dimension, because nothing you just said has anything to do with anything I said.
I skimmed over that part somehow, so my fault on that.First, I never said it didn't suit Batman. In fact, I said the exact opposite. I'll bold it for you, since apparently you missed it the first time: "true anime definitely works for Batman."
Well we'll see when we find out who's behind this production. I'm willing to give them the benefit of the doubt though, as the whole Animatrix series was under WB after all.Since you keep bringing style up, I will explain what will likely happen here: the series will not be anime style. It will most likely be North American anime style, such as that seen in Fantastic Four. This is not anime at all, but rather a cheap imitation produced by North American posers, commissioned by fool executives thinking they can cash in on the popularity of genuine anime.
Don't like anime myself, but I'll watch anything that bridges the gap between the two movies regardless of the format it's in.
yea Figman, "The Batman" is the latest animated series...and in it, Joker throws his cards like throwing knives sometimes. I watch it from time to time and it enjoy it somewhat, but it doesn't hold a candle to the 90s series.
"The Batman" is more for kids.
Reading is clearly not your forte.I was under the impression what you were saying had at least something to do with the new Batman DTV. But apparently it had more to do with your distaste in "copycat" anime.![]()
I skimmed over that part somehow, so my fault on that.
Well we'll see when we find out who's behind this production. I'm willing to give them the benefit of the doubt though, as the whole Animatrix series was under WB after all.
So, since I love the 90's animated series....well at least most aspects. It's safe to say I should avoid this version thats more for the kids then?
It does have something to do with Batman series; perhaps you should read more closely. I can't be blamed for the inaccuracies of your skimming. I'll put it all in one place, so you don't miss it:I was under the impression what you were saying had at least something to do with the new Batman DTV. But apparently it had more to do with your distaste in "copycat" anime.![]()
It does have something to do with Batman series; perhaps you should read more closely. I can't be blamed for the inaccuracies of your skimming. I'll put it all in one place, so you don't miss it:
1. I am tired of the market being flooded with anime, therefore I am disappointed the series will be anime-style.
2. I am annoyed with the lack of traditional western animation these days, therefore I think the Batman series should have been done this way.
3. I dislike imitation anime, which this series will likely be.
Even if I hadn't said these things outright, it's a simple matter of connecting the dots to understand how my points relate to the Batman series in question.
dude its just some 30 to 40 minute direct to video tie-in anime Batman movie, its not a big of deal.
Well, no, it's not a 30-to-40 minute movie (DTV animated features are usually a little over an hour), in fact it is apparently not a movie at all: it's described as a series. This likely means it is a handful of half hour episodes, surely adding up to be as long--or likely longer--than the average DTV animated film.
Also, I am not treating it as a "big deal," so I'm not sure why you made this post at all.
Tie-ins animated movies are short, the chronicles of riddick tie-in DTV was 30 mins as was the one for Hugh Jackmans Van-hellsing.