Review: „Hotarubi no Mori e“ aka „Into the Forest of Fireflies’ Light“

Ein schöner 45-minütiger Film über ein Mädchen, das sich mit einem (adoptierten) Youkai anfreundet. Sehr ruhige, meditative Geschichte* (anfangs mit etwas merkwürdigen Comedy-Anklängen), die vielleicht nicht die alleroriginellste ist, mir aber grade wegen seiner Schlichtheit besser gefällt als vieles (längere) was ich in letzter Zeit gehen habe.

Vielleicht ist es nur die Ähnlichkeit im Setting (Youkai/Mädchen), aber wem das gefällt, dem/der würde ich auch A Letter to Momo ans Herz legen.

*Die mich von der Art her ein bisschen an Makoto Shinkai erinnerte, auch wenn ich mit seinen Filmen – bis auf eine Ausnahme – bisher wenig anfangen konnte.

Good Animated Feature Films

I’ve been planning a list of my favorite animated feature-length films for years and now that I’ve finally sat down to do it I realized that I’d need to rewatch 90% of them because I can’t remember much of the stories and I’m not sure if I’d be okay with them today (portrayal of female characters, themes etc.). But if you want to give it a try anyway here’s my

List of favorite animated feature films!

I’d be glad about recommendations.

Illustration: People Reading


Shaun Taun

Tor.com has a nice collection of people reading books in a wide range of media from fine art, illustration, cartoon etc. As these collections go, styles range from horrible kitchy to breathtakingly beautiful but since I have a weakness for all kinds of accumulations I totally dig this.

Oh, the also have collections on spring, summer, autumn, winter, archers, horses, etc.

Review: Brave

Spoilers galore!

Well, that was disappointing but nice at the same time. For me Brave was a prime example of expectation being crushed and replaced not by something terrible but goodokay. From the Trailers and Teasers* I thought Brave would be about Merida going on an adventure in the Highlands and I was quite disappointed for the first half of the movie when this was simply not happening.

I had also forgotten that this is a children’s movie aimed at children (unlike for example Brendan and the Secret of Kells (or most Ghibli movies) where it is clear that this is a children’s movie but it’s so good that you can still watch it at any age without flinching at the stupidity of what’s happening on screen every now and then) and therefore being full of stupid jokes and strange cartoon violence. I also reminded me why I don’t watch 3D-animated movies: the characters all look like puppets (which doesn’t have to be a bad thing, see puppet animation) with 3D-animation they look like plastic puppets and everything just feels unreal to me.

Continue reading Review: Brave

Animation: The Reward

Bromance.


The Reward from The Animation Workshop on Vimeo. via Catsuka etc.

Well, this has been all over the blogosphere already but Animationsfilme.ch pointed out the production blog which led me to some blogs of the people involved: a Making of by Paolo Giandoso and one by Kenneth Ladekjær.

The bandit leader is by far the coolest character, so sad she only gets about three seconds screentime.

Illustation: Adventure Time Artists

Here are twothree of the artists who put their sparkling creativity into the awesome Adventure Time:

Thomas and Peter Herpich:

and Natasha Allegri of gender bending fame (who was also responsible for the Mathematical Marceline/Princess Bubblegum lesbian love suggestion thingy. And we can’t have that, because, you know, if you show kids that being gay is totally fine they ALL BECOME GAY INSTANTLY.

Sigh.

Not to forget Pendleton Ward but he seems only doing the FB/Twitter both of which I’m not really a fan. Not that I am a tumblr fan, o no, but at least you can link to that shit (but no comments, soooooo stupid). Okay, his TwitPic is … um, ….

Review: Origin: Spirits of the Past

A few days ago I thought about watching Summer Wars again, which I quite liked and then gave Origin (what an exceptionally pointless name, even for a movie title which tend to be awful anyway) a try instead (can’t figure out the connection now, might just be IMDB’s „people also liked“-function). And since it’s produced by Gonzo, the people who brought us the fantastic all-female lead Last Exile: Fam the Silver Wing, I thought this might be worth watching.

But I was wrong. While the the movie has an interesting setting (a post-apocalyptic-world, who would not like that?) and some nice ideas like the people turning into trees, plus two cool female characters, the mayor(ess?) of the town and the soldier lady, the story wasn’t too surprising or original and the character-design ranges from cliche to ridiculous (the armor! -_____-).

My main problem was the ending, I was positively surprised by – SPOILER ALERT! – Agito dying at 3/4 of the movie and I thought this would finally be the time when there’s some character development in Toola. This would have been the chance to make her a strong person, going back to the town alone and setting things right, learning to come to terms with this new world and the forest. The volcano could have waited a little with erupting so she could get down the mountain (how is a moving volcano supposed to work anyway, that makes no sense). What an awesome twist that would have been: main character sacrifices himself so the sidekick can finish the quest? Nice one! It would also been a good reversal of the „sidekick/lover dies in the end to awake righteous anger in the main character“-trope.

But no, male main character comes back from the dead (ffs …) and mysterious sidekick from the past can keep on being saved and passive (aside from some random running around alone in dangerous places) like she did the whole fucking movie, except for when she decided to go with the bad, bad industrial people (which wasn’t a decision really, because they’d probably taken her by force anyway) and for three minutes Agita was dead (where she only did what he told her to do). So, so disappointing. And what was this scene with „women are allowed to wave at each other after being encouraged by males to do so“ in the end? Creepy!

So, sadly, don’t bother with this one. Fam the Silver Wing is nice though. But beware of the eastern European girl with the strange one curl anime-haircut. She actually might have been the main reason for me not to watched that ’til the end.

Ohne Kommentar #1: Orks sind keine Nazis

In letzter Zeit passiert es des Öftereren, dass ich schon geschriebene Kommentare nicht posten kann (manchmal wg. Noscript/Gostery etc. aber auch, weil ich keine Lust habe, der jeweiligen Seite Zugriff auf meinen Twitter-Account zu geben oder ähnliche alberne Login-Prozederes durchzustehen). Deswegen gibt es einige dieser Kommentare jetzt hier, Trackbacks, tut eure Pflicht!

Den Anfang macht ein merkwürdiger Artikel auf Direkte Aktion einem Blog, das ich früher stärker frenquentiert habe, weil es einigermaßen links ist und sich gegen Nazis, Atomkraft etc. ausspricht. Dann erschien ein recht unreflektierter und fahrlässiger Artikel, der Avatar, Harry Potter und HdR als Anti-Nazi-Filme auflistet:*

Ich kann zu den meisten Filmen wenig sagen (Avatar?** Harry Potter?*** … aua, aua, aua) aber Herr der Ringe ist – wenn überhaupt irgendwas – rassistisch. Die Filme (und Bücher) erzählen – überspitzt formuliert – die Geschichte von einem Haufen weißer Männer**** hust Ariern hust, die ihr Land gegen die (russisch-kommunistischen? asiatischen/arabischen?) Horden aus dem Osten verteidigen. Die Bücher sind zwischen 1937 bis 1949 geschrieben worden, d.h. Tolkien könnte vom Kampf gegen die Nazis beeinflusst worden sein, in der Geschichte kommt das aber nirgends zum Ausdruck.

Continue reading Ohne Kommentar #1: Orks sind keine Nazis

Illustration: Marian Churchland

I discovered Marian Churchland because she drew a chapter in Madame Xanadu which was by far the best about this otherwise totally neglectible and boring (= typical American mainstram) comic. She also drew maybe the best but certainly the most beautiful epsiode of the Northlanders series, a story about a girl in the Outer Hebredis. She also has a concept for a RPG computer game, called The Crossing which sounds almost as awesome (just look at these masks!) as her art is (naturally including PoC, look, it’s not that hard, fucking game-devs).


Wer mal wieder einen richtig guten Ghibli-Film sehen will …

… die macht jetzt Makoto Shinkai:

YT-Trailer hier, ist leider wg. abartigem Vorschaubild uneinbettbar.

Ich war ja von allem was nach Howl’s Moving Castle kam (Earthsea, Ponyo, Arietty) echt enttäuscht (Poppy Hill war da eine leichte Verbesserung, ist aber auch total belanglos)* und bin insofern alles andere als gespannt auf das, was da sonst noch so kommt (irgendwas autobiographisches mit Kampfpiloten …).

Continue reading Wer mal wieder einen richtig guten Ghibli-Film sehen will …

Unused „Nach der Zeit“-Illustration

While preparing my diploma for the Endzeit-Ausstellung at PENG Mainz I found this unused illustration (drawn on packaging cardboard), heavily inspired by Lovecraft’s Dagon (that was before I knew I was such a racist) and 2001: A Space Odyssey. The latter wasn’t my intention, I was thinking about the Georgia Guidestones which are inscribed with a kind of „Howto Rebuild Civilisation after the Apocalypse“ (how awesome is that?). The Wired has a nice article on the mystery surrounding their creation.

The exhibition will take place from 5.–8. December 2012 at PENG Mainz (directions are here).

Review: Duelist / Hyeongsa (2005)

This movie is so full of cliches and it does every one of them so perfect. It’s pure awesome: from the ultra-stylized visuals (probably half of the movie is in slow-motion), the soundtrack ranging from Samurai Fiction-style cheesy rock to orchestral uber-schmalz, to the characters: Namsoon, the main character is a tomboy, a police detective of course falling in love with the beautiful mysterious, melancholic and androgynous villain. Guess if it ends badly? It sure does!

The story isn’t really important and I don’t really get it every single time I watch it but I love everything about the movie, the ridiculous fighting scenes (not much flying, though), Namsoon drunk and crying and screaming and kicking ass at the same time, snow falling in slow motion. This is asian cinema at its best, gender-reversed and wonderful.*

I also love the A Serious Man-style beginning that doesn’t seem to have anything to do with the rest of the movie: the story of a man who invites himself into the spooky house of a sexy single woman, which gets interrupted because the guy telling the story is distracted. Why never find out what happens next. Nevertheless the thing comes to full circle because the last scene of the movie is the same guy telling how he witnessed the tragic „united in swordplay“-scene (which might arguably the real end of the movie) and almost jerked off to it.**

Oh, and don’t bother with the TV-series based on the same manhwa, it looks just terrible.

*Also no women or other supporting characters dying shortly before the final show-off as a plot-motif. Thumbs up.
** What is a nice comment on how this movie is taking itself not at all serious.

EDIT 2014: Pretty sure this doesn’t pass the Bechdel test, though (and if only barely), since this is one of these strange „only female character in there is the main character“-movies. It still totally rocks, anyway.

Dark Souls PC: Motionjoy PS3 controller mapping

UPDATE: The instructions below are for Dark Souls and don’t work for Dark Souls II (for me). However the Xinput Wrapper from here works like a charm (for me).

Since it took some time for me to figure it out: here’s the key-map for playing Dark Souls – Prepare to Die Edition … m( … with a Dual Shock/Sixaxis PS3 controller via Motionjoy on Windows XP (see how I squished every possible search term I could think of in this one shitty sentence?).

Continue reading Dark Souls PC: Motionjoy PS3 controller mapping