• Tag Archives Movie
  • Gekijouban: Sword Art Online -Ordinal Scale-

    The SAO incident, which trapped 10,000 people in a virtual reality game for several years, is in the past and the survivors are now moving on with their lives. Technology is advancing as well and a competitor to the Amusphere soon appears on the market, one which provides a similar experience using augmented reality. Marketed as being safer than the full-immersion required by VR, the Augma quickly amasses a large following… but as Kirito and his friends discover, this AR experience is far more dangerous than it appears.

    An action-drama with a romance subplot that takes place after Sword Art Online II. While it provides a brief recap of previous events at the beginning, there isn’t much point in watching it if you haven’t at least seen Sword Art Online.

    More Information:
    aniDB
    Wikipedia


  • Kimi no Na wa.

    Taki Tachibana lives in Tokyo while Mitsuha Miyamizu lives in the countryside. Despite their distance the two will both occasionally awake from a dream to find that they have swapped bodies. What is the source of this phenomenon and how will they cope with having to live a stranger’s life?

    An otherwise conventional romance with a bit of supernatural mystery and a prominent amnesia theme.

    More Information:
    aniDB
    Wikipedia


  • Kizumonogatari

    Walking home from the store one night Koyomi Araragi finds a vampire on the verge of death, and against his better judgement he decides to sacrifice himself so that she can survive. He does not die however. Instead, she transforms him into a vampire and tasks him with recovering her lost limbs from the hunters who stole them.

    A prequel to Bakemonogatari, this series of movies fully fleshes out the brief flashback you get there. Content composition is similar with the main difference being that a larger percentage is dedicated to action and horror.

    More Information:
    aniDB
    Wikipedia


  • Kaze no Na wa Amnesia

    A mysterious wind blows through the world and inflicts complete and total amnesia upon the populace. In this decimated landscape a young man, re-educated by an experimental subject unaffected by the wind, comes across an enigmatic woman traveling to New York. Together they set out on a cross-country journey to see what has become of humanity.

    A post-apocalyptic action drama with a strong philosophical bent.

    More Information:
    aniDB
    Wikipedia


  • Random Movies & TV Shows

    On a whim I decided to check out some of the many, many non-Anime TV shows I’ve been ignoring for the past 12 years or so (along with a few movies as well):

    TV Shows

    • Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. – Everyone’s far too smug.
    • Almost Human – A very good buddy-cop action series. It’s practically criminal it only got one season.
    • Alphas – Not bad; the pieces are all there… they just don’t cohere into something greater. It’s serviceable and no more.
    • Andromeda – Eh. Everything about it screams low-budget.
    • Caprica – I don’t know what I was expecting really, but it wasn’t this. It’s an odd collection of disparate elements that don’t really work on any level.
    • Dark Angel – Deliberately avoided watching this in the past for no particular reason. Checked it out now and something about the atmosphere/tone/look doesn’t quite work for me.
    • Defiance – Reminiscent of Farscape and surprisingly good. Both expansive and structurally coherent with an engaging cast of characters. The third season however goes too far off the rails.
    • Falling Skies – Could do with less children and the protagonist’s constantly bemused expression is annoying. Those issues aside it doesn’t seem to know whether it wants to be post-apocalyptic survival or hi-tech sci-fi.
    • Nikita – Huh. I wasn’t really expecting anything from this reboot, but it seems to capture the mood and tone of the 1997 version rather well (based on my hazy recollections from that time).
    • Sanctuary – Okayish. Kind of rough around the edges though and the episodic stories are all over the place… deliberately it seems.
    • Sherlock – More like a collection of movies than a TV series/mini-series. While they’re a bit ambling and the lectures are kind of dry (and it becomes more and more unhinged as the seasons progress), there’s some good banter scattered about.
    • Space: Above and Beyond – The sci-fi aspects here are almost incidental; a few visual tweaks and this would easily pass for a conventional war drama.
    • Stargate Atlantis – I don’t like how a random pilot suddenly becomes the hotshot ranking officer protagonist with zero transition time. Other than that it’s perfectly watchable, if formulaic and overly episodic.
    • Stitchers – Only took a look at this because I wanted to see what else the actress who played Claudia in Warehouse 13 was in. Curiously, it reminds me of a peppy Le Femme Nikita… which is surprisingly engaging.
    • The 100 – Remarkably well made post-apocalyptic survival… assuming you don’t mind young protagonists.
    • The Expanse – Pretty good. Reminiscent of Battlestar Galactica if that show happened to have police procedural elements.
    • The Last Ship – Starts out surprisingly similar to Stargate Atlantis, just with stiffer character interactions and far more engaging storytelling. Unfortunately it deteriorates once the focus moves to the government, with events seeming to occur for the sole purpose of artificially dragging things out.
    • The Magicians – Something’s off here. There’s a distinct air of contrivance, with events coming across as especially forced.
    • Threshold – Feels staged; looks awful.
    • Torchword – Doesn’t look professional in the slightest. It’s as though it were filmed in someone’s backyard with a camcorder.
    • Warehouse 13 – Brings to mind a cross between Bones and Fringe. A nice mix of episodic stories, overarching plotlines, and character dynamics… though the dialog can be cringe-inducing at times.
    • Z Nation – The camerawork is all over the place, which gives a distinctly amateurish impression.

    Movies

    • Autómata – Decent enough. Feels more like a TV miniseries than a movie though.
    • Dredd – A solid, entertaining action movie.
    • Green Lantern – There’s a lot going on here, most of it extraneous. The childhood flashback and related family drama along with the whole alien-autopsy subplot, for instance, could’ve been removed without losing anything. Aside from that the only notable aspect is the pretty great CGI.
    • Rogue One – Better than The Force Awakens, but the characters just didn’t grab me.
    • Sherlock Holmes – Good action scenes.
    • Sherlock Holmes: A Game Of Shadows – More madcap than the prequel. Which is a positive.
    • Star Wars: The Force Awakens – Average I guess? Neither the characters nor events are particularly interesting and it has the air of fanfiction.

  • BLAME!

    Far in the future humans are forced to live in scattered pockets of a city they’ve lost their connection with, hiding from the autonomous machines which seek to eliminate them. A group from one such hidden village stumbles across a mysterious lone wanderer while out scavenging for food: His name is Killy, and he’s searching for someone with the net terminal gene in order to restore the city to human control.

    A fully self-contained action movie that uses cell-shaded CGI.

    More Information:
    aniDB
    Netflix
    Wikipedia

    Continue reading  Post ID 3635


  • GANTZ:O

    After being stabbed to death in a train station, Masaru Katou finds himself transported to a sparse room filled with several other people. There it’s explained that his old life is over and in this new life he must hunt down and kill aliens in an elaborate death game.

    A full-CGI sequel to the 2004 TV series Gantz that can be viewed as a stand-alone story. It mostly consists of gore-heavy action scenes, though there’s also some drama and a small amount of romance mixed in.

    More Information:
    aniDB
    Netflix
    Wikipedia


  • Da Yu Hai Tang

    On an alternate plane there exists beings neither human nor god who control the forces of nature on Earth. As a right of passage, on their 16th birthday they travel there to spend a week experiencing the elements firsthand while avoiding the attention of humans. During this period a girl by the name of Chun accidentally causes the death of a human boy, setting in motion a chain of events that threaten to destroy the heavens.

    A high-fantasy fairytale drama with a small number of action scenes mostly concentrated in the third quarter and a bit of romantic development.

    More Information:
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    Wikipedia

    Continue reading  Post ID 3635


  • Eiga Chibi Maruko-chan: Italia kara Kita Shounen

    Six kids from around the globe have come to Japan for a 10-day homestay. Originally staying together at Shigeru’s, they’ve since been split up among the members of Maruko’s class to better experience normal Japanese life. The boy from Italy takes a strong interest in Maruko and, to her great annoyance, ends up at her house.

    Part comedy and part inspirational, this movie tells an essentially stand-alone story. The comedy, which is personality/reaction-based, ends up secondary to Andrea’s search for his grandfather’s friends and his eventual bonding with Maruko.

    More Information:
    aniDB
    Wikipedia


  • Lupin Sansei: Hemingway Paper no Nazo

    Lupin and the gang, each for their own reasons, all end up traveling to the same Mediterranean island at the same time. There they find themselves embroiled in a conflict between the armies of rival treasure hunters.

    A stand-alone story just like the ones found in the parent series; a combination of over-the-top action scenes mixed with comedy. This one does not dip into fantasy and plays things relatively seriously.

    More Information:
    aniDB
    Wikipedia

    Continue reading  Post ID 3635