Friday, September 18, 2020

Imagine We Still Had VHS - Persona 4: The Animation (Volume 1)

*Blog post started on September 17th with a September 16, 2020 flashback.

Does work set you free? I am in the midst of a 12-day stint between both my banking and retail jobs, and I will say that there is not much on my mind because of it. The only stress is not being liquid right now and that HostGator decided to collect on the MainEventOfTheDead.com domain. The Sonic hot dog lunch yesterday and the Garcia's Pizza in a Pan Monday meal tasted far too good. Of course that taking up my remaining checking accounts' funds would come at a greater price.

With the apparent lack of interest in exploring my zombie pro-wrestling script, "Main Event of the Dead", (If this comedic B-Movie idea sounds interesting, request a treatment of the script by emailing russthebus07@gmail.com. I would also be happy to take advice on how to get this project out of development hell.), you think the wise thing would be to just let the renewal pass. But, the domain hosts my memorial to the best person I ever knew, Stacia Marie Hardin, which is still near the top of the Google search, so I cannot afford to lose that. If anything, I am more angry at myself for not tweeting out the link to pass on my numerous Twitter accounts on the 16th anniversary of her death to further promote her legacy.

I have already worked out how I will replenish my checking account to take care of my website expense. It just sucks saying goodbye to an NES Zapper that had some nostalgic value. When are we going to get "Duck Hunt" on the Nintendo Switch? That would be a better buy than "Super Mario 35".

On the topic of video games, a series that I have gotten into in the last decade was "Persona". It is the otaku in me, but I also think I like the turn-based RPGs over the action-based modern style. You can have my curiosity with a classic manga style. My attention will be earned with "Pokemon" battle rules.

Do I put a Monsieur Candie meme into this blog to drive the point home with that Tarantino tribute?

After about two hours of watching static characters tell the story before actual gameplay, finding out "Persona 4: The Animation" existed seemed like a time-saving purchase. Especially when I bought the entire series on clearance before the closing of the last Suncoast: The Motion Picture Store in Illinois.

It kind of feels nice that the exit is not on I-57. The time saved not being detoured in Joliet to visit flash shops is nice on me and my wallet.

Of course anime and video game adaptations are like movie and video game adaptations. Trying to appeal to a wider audience or create an actual narrative can ruin the adaptation for the fans and the audience. With "Persona 4" art seemingly captured exactly, surely this will be the exception to the rule.

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All the Tropes - Persona 4: The Animation

Persona 4: The Animation (Episodes 1 through 3)


Monday, September 14, 2020

Imagine We Still Had VHS - Samurai Champloo - Volume 1

*Blog post started on September 3, 2020.

I cannot really recall the last time I truly slept in since moving to my new place. Perhaps I just need to use the cushy bed in the bedroom opposed to the firm twin that is in the living room. It is either that or come up with an accident for Skimble. The cuddling is great but my sinuses are not. Maybe some threatening photo(s) like Skimble in my air fryer or stock pot will light a fire under my ex to move out of her the place she shares with her boyfriend who was moved to tears by the Republican National Convention.

I do not know that paranoid guy's last name, which is silly because I worked with his bilingual brother who is living with the "Mexican Super Friends" from my last hospitality job. Why would I want to know his last name? So that I could go and include him on my list of conservative trolls to harass when they go after the best Americans. That kind of heat would further encourage my former better quarter to find a cheap one bedroom to care for fluffy allergy boy.

It is 3:45 pm, and it feels like I am just now waking up. The headache has finally faded. If it is my sinus instead of taking fat soluble vitamins on an empty stomach, the pain is migrating and spread out through my face. This sensation is rather Pink Floydian.

I best be careful with how quickly I finish this blog. If I conclude it today, then I will want to watch something tonight and stay up way too late. Pizza and straight to bed sounds like the best strategy.

If you have kept up on my blogs, thank you. I request that you do not give me too much grief about eating the obvious blood sugar spiking that comes with dough. There is nothing in my fridge otherwise except an egg and Eggo waffles. Yes, chicken drumettes are also in the freezer, but I do not want to get tired of chicken. It is all I have left.

One of my coworkers had just turned 24 today, and as we were documenting something, I thought they were going to sign in the wrong place. It turns out I was wrong which sucks because it would have been great to make an aging joke about the potential mistake.

The oldest employee here (me) made the error and tried to cover up by acknowledging their comedy strategy. In turn, the targeted employee said how they were still waiting on their AARP card. I responded with you are not even halfway there. And then the math in my head occurred, and I realized that I am 80% the way to receiving those discounts for Consumer Cellular.

We could not help but laugh at the concept of retirement. I laughed because retirement is a pipe dream for a blogger. They laughed because they claimed that they were just going to die young. To that I responded with, "You need to put a lot more initiative into that plan." A high SPAM diet is not going to get you there. My body has been abused for years and yet I stand.

I held up on suggesting that it is all about how you slice with the blade. I swear that I did not know it was a long the arm, not across. Do not fear, I am working to a segue here.

My best suicidal tweet/Facebook status update did not end up being a tweet. This was on a flip phone when I would text Twitter to post. Too bad my phonebook was organized in a way that put Mom's number next to Twitter's. The text went something like this:
I wish my cat had opposable thumbs so that she could be my second so I could commit seppuku. She could take off my head after the disembowelment.

Mom was a little freaked out, but seemed to appreciate the drama behind it. When you take in my last ten years or my 2005/2006 into consideration, I wonder if she understood ritual suicide to restore honor. I never knew she watched so much samurai-related programming. Was "Kill Bill" enough for her to get it?

She does not get Quentin Tarantino, that is for sure. His admiration for urban culture in the arts and relating to them via the concept of ACAB is something she will not get behind. The moment he stated that, Mom has refused watch any of his films. The woman just refuses to understand the power of great art. If she did, maybe I could expose her to "Afro Samurai" (She loves Samuel L. Jackson's Capital One ads.) or the far superior "Samurai Champloo".

Samurai Champloo - Episodes 1 - 4

Fuu was a waitress at a tea and dumpling house that had to deal with a dubious clientele which primarily consist of the local magistrate's son and his samurai friends. Once the rogue vagrant Mugen stopped in to coerce some dumplings from her by offering to get rid of the gang, her life goes through a complete upheaval. The restaurant is burnt down by a samurai Mugen mutilated. He is in turn arrested for the murder of the magistrate's kid who did not make it out before the flames consumed the building.

Mugen is not imprisoned alone. Jin, a calm ronin who had just dispatched the magistrate's body guard to protect a man who failed provide the magistrate an acceptable offering for work, was drawn to the racket at the tea house. Hearing that he killed three of the most feared swordsman in Japan, the rogue immediately engages in combat with him. Only when the flames became to intense did their fight end.

With no job or family, Fuu sees the two warriors as a means to fulfill her destiny. She offers to help them escape their death sentences provided they assist her in finding the samurai who smells of sunflowers. They accept, probably because they did not expect her to come through on her end of the agreement.

Our trio and Fuu's flying squirrel Momo are now off to scour Japan in search of Fuu's samurai. Mugen and Jin just want to get this over with so that they may conclude their battle. Since neither is familiar with the scent of sunflowers, this mission will more than likely last a long time.

That is provided their past does not catch up with them first or the urge to go their separate ways does not overtake them. Good luck to Mugen and Jin on the latter. Fate seems to allow Fuu to always bring them back together. Perhaps they are destined to be the family she never had.

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ELTaay - Pinterest

"Samurai Champloo" is the ultimate product of cultural appropriation. Being set in 17th century Japan while celebrating hip hop culture, both Western and native audiences get to understand what each society holds dear about the other. This is something that no other anime that I have viewed has captured.

Shinichiro Watanabe had previously directed "Cowboy Bebop" which is the series that I would claim allowed anime to be part of Adult Swim. The setting of that series, an interplanetary future, allows for a blend of all modern cultures and the pasts we hold on dearly to. "Samurai Champloo" incorporating cultures in a setting that would not allow it serves as a greater celebration of two cultures instead of trying to show that we will all end up being the same. It suggest we are already the same. If only we had a way to do that with the culture divide in this country but I digress.

The series knows that it is embarking on an experiment, and wisely is quite self referential to the aesthetic not being what the past was. Like "Bebop's" jazz, the hip hop allows any viewer who is not a fan of the action subgenre to settle in and be comfortable. "Champloo" also has an art style that is totally distinct from "Bebop". It captures a more Western vibe while still incorporating the big eye, small mouth style fans of anime as a whole enjoy.

What "Champloo" offers that makes it more amusing to me than "Bebop" is less of a dependency on the standard 30-minute story arc. "Bebop" seems to jump into that immediately while "Champloo" gets the most out of introducing up to these characters before the situational format of resolving a primary plot is the standard. It will end up doing that, but you will not pick up on that so quickly.

"Samurai Champloo" is a step in the evolution of director Shinichiro Watanabe that furthers my need to watch his most recent Adult Swim offerings. Story wise, it is an improvement upon the legendary "Cowboy Bebop" and you have to appreciate the director changing his character design style. The best thing about the series is that it demonstrates that anime is not just an Eastern product.

It is meant to be appreciated by any animation fan. I hope to find more products like this. "Samurai Champloo" shows that this otaku has a lot of catching up to do. It shows a bright future that being stuck in my ways had deprived me of.



Friday, September 11, 2020

Techi Muyo! In Love - Before Streaming Services Made Sequels


Achika (37K...Scanned from the VHS Box)Techi Muyo! In Love - Tenchi the Motion Picture

Genre: comedy/sci-fi fantasy Length: 95 minutes (Theatrical Film) 
Audience Age: 13+
Opinion: A great video to view and to introduce those who are unfamiliar with the series.

This is a review of the dubbed VHS version (close captioned).

© 1996 AIC • Tenchi Muyo Committee • Pioneer Entertainment (USA) L.P.

Tenchi and company are watching an eight-millimeter film of Tenchi's mother, Achika, on her high school field trip to Tokyo (it is 8mm film because that was what they used in the 70's for home movies. The film has nothing that would have anything Nicolas Cage would need to investigate). Suddenly, our protagonist starts to disappear and the entire house starts to fall apart. Luckily, the self-proclaimed, most brilliant mind in the galaxy, Washu, is able to prevent our hero from vanishing and explain what is going on. By looking at each individual frame of the film, the group sees that Achika is slowly disappearing from the reel, so something must have happened in the past to cause this.
At the same time Tenchi and company are learning about this wrinkle in time, the Galaxy Police Headquarters is destroyed. The final transmission:
Class A Criminal Kain...
Who is Kain? Does this have something to do with the time trouble? No matter what this villain's involvement in this dilemma is; Tenchi, Ryoko, Ayeka, Sasami, Mihoshi, and Kione must go back in time to 1970 to prevent anything from happening to Achika. This is the only way to save their future, and to buy some cool souvenirs from the past.
The plot of Tenchi Muyo! In Love seems to put too many responsibilities on the Tenchi cast since they have enough problems handling normal situations in the "Tenchi Muyo! OVA series", but you know some how they will pull it out. I think the only other flaw with the film's screenplay is that like all other anime motion pictures ("Sailor Moon S: The Movie" as an example), it just comes across as overly dark and dreary. 

Beside for that script weaknesses, everything else about this film is great except for the hit and miss soundtrack by "Babylon 5's" Christopher Franke. I figure if you are going to get a Sci-fi, Western Society composer, get one with "Star Trek" experience or John Williams (for any of those nerds who feel I'm insulting Bab 5, e-mail me at bitemeotakus@animeflow.cubs). All of the technical aspects of this film have really been stepped up from the prior series, "Tenchi Muyo!" and "Tenchi Universe", which is a real treat for those established fans of the Tenchi series.
The numerous qualities of Tenchi the Movie make this a great video to view and to introduce those who are unfamiliar with the series since all the characters' quirks overcome the need for exposition about them. Personally, this may be the strongest Tenchi title since I was willing to buy a new copy after a anime tape-viewing marathon/fumbling incident destroyed my first copy. If that is not a great testimonial, I do not know what is.




Tuesday, September 8, 2020

Imagining We Still Had VHS - "RIN: Daughters of the Mnemosyne - Volume 1"

*Blog post started on August 27, 2020.

And I am immediately regretting the TV/Blu-ray that I watched last night. First off, it is because the schedule for blog publicization (Because I want to see how everything looks, they get published about a week a head of the @maineventzombie tweet storm.) needed to be switched up. That is actually secondly when I try to put everything in chronologic order.

Firstly, I tried to add to my "Chris Memoirs" about how past loved ones seem to determine that I am an agent of chaos while Trevor Noah is discussing actual chaos. It is tough to document how I feel sorry for myself when the only life that I am fucking up is my own. What that lead to was me feeling guilty about my race's responsibility of oppressions towards the downtrodden? Talking myself down saying it is okay because I at least recognize my white privilege and have stood up for change leads me to feeling useless when my parents have a narrative to punish me if I challenge their, "It is what it is mantra".

My life feels like a mess in which I am always wondering if I can actually fix it. I feel like I am pretty useless and it feels like the moment that I left settling on a Caterpillar job at 21 (I am not Trent from my "Memoirs"), no one has put any faith in me to succeed in pursuing my passions. There are no little Scoops wondering Central Illinois. Choosing not to just shag anything I can with no caution taken should be applauded and shows that I am still dedicated to my aspirations. It is either I have not grown up or people just do not care about me. Why believe in someone who does not believe in your system?

At least that is directing me to try and be more independent. If you are not going believe in me, I cannot count on your support. But, as I was writing last night, I crave chaos beyond myself. Here is to holding off the shunning till after I get those nights in October.

The lengthiness of what I wrote about second definitely shows that it deserved more time. My third concern is rather trivial. I did not need to watch an anime last night to review. It seems like I may as well just review all six episodes of  "RIN: Daughters of the Mnemosyne", the first entire anime series that was a blind purchase at regular price.

I suppose it was not totally blind. First off, there was probably a gift card involved, so was it really my money? Secondly, aside from the erotic tones the box art put off, I did look at the production company, Xebec, and recall they were responsible for "Martian Successor Nadesico". How I could I resist seeing what the team behind my second favorite giant mecha series do with this genre? The description gave me "Hellsing" and "Highlander" vibes, so how I could fault this purchase?

And then I got Netflix.

"RIN: Daughters of the Mnemosyne" - Episodes 1 and 2

Rin Asougi and her vodka-loving partner, Mimi, operate the Asougi Investigation Agency in Tokyo. They will take on any job be it locate a lost cat, find a 100-year old stamp, or the case of Kouki Maeno. After the cat Rin was searching for causes a tanker truck to crash, a 20-year old college student is found stumbling around Shinjuku. His seeming out-of-the blue appearance intrigue's Rin, and once a gang of business suit wearing thugs try to capture him, Kouki has captured her attention. She quickly subdues the thugs and talks Kouki into returning with her.

It turns out that Kouki's memory is scattered and he states that it does not feel real. Mimi's hope that a night of heavy drinking would straighten his head fails, so Rin decides to abandon the cat search for now and focus on helping their young friend. After another assault by goons, they find out that they are connected to Aoyama Pharmaceuticals, a company that Kouki remembers working for as a drug test subject. To find out more about this company, Rin goes undercover at a promotional ball and seduces a top executive to access his computer and get all the dirt.

Just as she is stealing the data for Mimi to decipher, an assassin who seems to be targeting Rin breaks into the hotel room. This is the same assassin who seemingly successfully obliterated our protagonist with a shot gun at the beginning of this series.

We find out that Rin and Mimi are immortals, infected by time fruits from a mysterious tree that can only be seen by those who cannot die by traditional means. Women who are implanted with the fruit live forever while men become what the women call angels. Angels are flying monsters who have difficulty resisting their baser instincts of feeding and mating. Naturally, the immortal women are their targets and they decide to feed and mate at the same time to survive. Otherwise, these creatures are lucky to survive a week in their state.

Any kind of attack on Rin is assumed to be planned out by Apos, a mysterious being obsessed with immortality. Because the attack is associated with Aoyama, Rin suspects whatever happened to Kouki, Apos is behind it. It looks likes the answers can only be found at the research facility Kouki was held in. Apos's involvement means these humans probably have the same obsession, so our two heroes are going to be walking into the most evil realm that the stock market can create.

"Mnemosyne" has the ideal mix of beauty in its character designs and twisted brutality. With only six episodes, you get to see and appreciate where all the production's money was spent. It definitely is not for the faint of heart or morally high strung. Throw in a solid metal soundtrack, the series is ideal for the stereotypical otaku.

My review for these episodes tries to avoid spoilers, so the concepts of the second episode are buried like how I skipped telling the story of the first episode chronologically. The first two episodes are 45 minutes long, so there is a lot of story to be told. Because it takes two episodes to get into an explanation of immortality, this series expects you to pay attention to everything. This might backfire in gaining the fandom of casual Toonami fans because the story's love to shock the audience.

Beyond the frustrations the story may cause, I cannot say there is much to complain about this series. The animation can be a bit static because when it comes to our female characters, Xebec really wants the viewer to appreciate how beautiful their sexy characters are. Thus, smooth movement can be lacking in scenes. It "flaws" always come back to the storytelling. The tonal changes can upset the flow of the episodes.

Perhaps trying to have a sense of humor hinders it a little. If I recall correctly, chuckles will eventually be lost as the series goes on. As I recall that, would I be interested in continuing to watch if it did not rely on humor to begin with?

I can only compare it to the movie "Upgrade". The movie is a damn near perfect action flick, but there is no levity to it, hence why I have no desire to rewatch it. Humor is virtually devoid in the second "Godfather", but we get the moments where our "heroes" gave the antagonists what they deserve.

Better yet, "Ex Machina" is considered by many to be a downer (I for one welcome our AI overlords.), but we get the dance number. A long with "Upgrade", I have associated this post with an episode of "The Connect" from The Ringer Podcast Network. I best remember to tag the podcast's hosts when I start tweeting this publication out.

When it comes down to it, one's ability to stick with "Mnemosyne" depends on the tolerance of for the show's wanting to throw in way too many elements from sci-fi and horror. Again, I want to avoid spoilers, but lets say some of the experiments the villains try can stun the viewer with a "Really?" response. This is not relatable like the Makoto Shinkai's work, so if you want down to earth, "RIN" will not be for you.

"RIN: Daughters of the Mnemosyne" is a great jumping off point into the overly sexualized world of anime. The first episode lets you know that anything and everything will probably happen, but the characters, humor and art allow all of this to look good. If craziness is what you demand from your animation, "Mnemosyne" is the perfect package.