K-ON! Eps 1-12 (complete) June 24, 2009
Posted by ayasawada in Anime.Tags: Anime, K-ON, KyoAni, moe, slice-of-life
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After School Teatime: Mio, Ritsu, Yui, Mugi
A fun and enjoyable, if slightly disappointing, entry to the KyoAni canon. K-ON! had a concept oozing potential: four high-school girls join the ‘light music club’, forming a band that makes music, friendship, and good clean fun.
This sort of moe slice-of-life show normally screams off-beat hit for me (I am, after all a sucker for stuff like Azumanga Daioh, Manabi Straight and Ichigo Mashimaro), and with the hallowed KyoAni at the helm I was totally expecting another Lucky Star level of greatness with awesome music scenes on a par with Suzumiya Haruhi’s infamous Live Alive episode.
But I just didn’t feel that spark. I know this is controversial, given that a lot of other anime fans have gone nuts over K-ON! (I can feel the flames already), but does it really compare with the likes of Lucky Star and Haruhi on the KyoAni classics scale? (more…)
1/144 HG Strike Noir Gundam June 14, 2009
Posted by ayasawada in Gunpla.Tags: Gundam, Gunpla, model, plamo, Stargazer, Strike Noir
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Some kits sit around for ages before you actually get around to making them. I got this one about three years ago, when my sister went on a trip to Japan. I’d actually wanted it mainly for the free promo DVD that came bundled with it. She came back with a heavily discounted box — marked down because it was sans DVD. Let this be a lesson kids, be honest why you want something when you ask people to buy things for you.
Thankfully I like the Gundam itself too — who wouldn’t love a black version of Strike Gundam with added weaponry? The Strike Noir is the main mecha from the Gundam SEED: Stargazer OVA anime, a spin-off of Gundam SEED Destiny with little to do with the main show. That actually worked in its favour given the stinking pile of crap Destiny turned out to be. For a three episode series lasting a grand total of 45 minutes, it was pretty good and I loved the ‘upgrades’ of the original SEED Gundams.
This is the first 1/144 kit I’ve made in a while, and probably the last I’ll do, since I’ve vowed to invest only in the better quality MG and PG kits. To be fair, Bandai’s gotten pretty good with it’s HG 1/144 line these days. With HG, a 1/144 scale figure no longer looks as cheap and nasty as the no-grade versions. While a splash of painting helps, there is nowhere near as much as used to be required and a quick and dirty job using just the stickers would yield a decent looking model.
Red Cliff Parts 1 and 2 (2008/2009) June 3, 2009
Posted by ayasawada in Film.Tags: Chinese movie, Film, John Woo, Red Cliff
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John Woo returns to far east cinema with an ambitious take on a legendary Chinese tale. The Romance of the Three Kingdoms is a literary epic, at once China’s Shakespeare and Lord of the Rings, and a worthy source for the country’s most expensive movie to date.
The film(s) focuses on one of the most famous stories in the work, the Battle of the Red Cliff, when two of the kingdoms united to defend themselves from the Imperial Army. I’m not even going to try to summarise the plot. The word ‘epic’ also tends to mean convoluted mess of characters and subplots, so read the Wikipedia entry if you’d like to know the historical details. The significant factors are three outstanding leaders, two accomplished armies, a gang of legendary warriors and a war that may or may not have been started over a woman.
It’s so much that the film was released in two parts in Asia, but will be cut down for the West. That’s a good and a bad thing, in my humble opinion. On the one hand, it’ll help move things along. At times, Red Cliff does resemble a long, meandering period drama, and you could easily see this being a TV mini-series if Asia had a HBO equivalent. But while the condensed version will get you to the action quicker, it will lose the appreciation of politics, strategy and relationships that really make the story gripping.
Ashamedly for a Chinese person, I’m not exactly familiar with the Romance stories or the history of China. So I was fascinated by the tactical genius on display here (what can I say, I’m a sports fan too) and the mix of scientific knowledge, wisdom and brilliance that lent many of these great men an air of mysticism. Some aspects of the story have clearly been embellished for the screen (the idea of a princess undertaking a spy mission, is, quite frankly, ridiculous), but accepting that blend of history and fantasy that the likes of Lord of the Rings has brought us, it’s not really too much of a problem.
Of course, Lord of the Rings also brought us epic battles on a scale never before seen. Woo aims to repeat that, and possibly surpass it, on the Asian scene. The battles, particularly the finale, are drop dead spectacular and certainly rival anything Peter Jackson came up with. The fact that it’s elegantly choreographed martial arts may even push it ahead (and with John Woo’s trademark doves to boot).
The film(s) is beautifully crafted with an all-star cast (Tony Leung and Takeshi Kaneshiro to name just two) and high standards all round. It’s well-worth seeking out the two-part edition to appreciate this on all levels: action, drama and history. I certainly hope the single film edition will do well enough to warrant an ‘extended edition’ release in the West.



