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Various thoughts on a variety of topics.

Various Thoughts

Various thoughts on a variety of topics.

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  • Tag Archives Science Fiction
  • Ueno-san wa Bukiyou

    Posted on March 25, 2019 1:59 pm by Offkorn Comment

    Though president of her school’s science club and a genius inventor besides, Ueno just can’t manage to confess her feelings for her clubmate Tanaka in a normal manner. And it certainly doesn’t help that Tanaka himself is completely blind to her intentions. Yet ironically enough it’s that very obliviousness she finds so attractive in the first place.

    An ecchi-centric gag comedy specializing in ignored romantic advances and misinterpreted sexual situations.

    More Information:
    aniDB
    Crunchyroll
    Wikipedia

    Continue reading → Post ID 6755

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    This entry was posted in 2019 - Winter Anime Related and tagged Comedy Comic Adaptation Crunchyroll Ecchi Finished Incomplete Source Romance School Life Science Fiction Series Televised
  • Egao no Daika

    Posted on March 23, 2019 4:48 am by Offkorn Comment

    This is the story of a young girl on a planet far from Earth, one forced to assume responsibility beyond her years when a hostile force begins laying waste to her lands, and those from the neighboring empire who wish to see her country fall before them.

    An action-heavy war drama with small splashes of comic relief.

    More Information:
    aniDB
    Crunchyroll
    Wikipedia

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    This entry was posted in 2019 - Winter Anime Related and tagged Action Anime Original Crunchyroll Drama Dropped Science Fiction Series Televised
  • Marvel Cinematic Universe

    Posted on March 16, 2019 12:23 pm by Offkorn 2 Comments

    Having recently seen Captain Marvel and wanting to do a little preparation for the upcoming release of Endgame I decided to finally watch a few Marvel movies I’d been passively avoiding following the disappointment of Thor 2 and The Avengers:

    • Guardians of the Galaxy – It’s good. It’s really good with a great mix of comedy & action along with some fantastic character banter.
    • Guardians of the Galaxy Vol.2 – Same as the above.
    • Avengers: Infinity War – The first Avengers movie suffered from being too busy, a problem this one managed to solve through a sort of compartmentalization. It separates the cast into several groups each doing their own thing and then manages to seamlessly merge those separate plotlines into a cohesive whole. It’s quite impressive and Thanos looks much better in motion than he does in still images.

    After the success of those three, and not really wanting to do anything that would require effort, it seemed catching up with a few more was in order:

    • Avengers: Age of Ultron – This starts out pretty meh, and honestly never manages to rise above decent. The only important takeaway is Vision‘s creation.
    • Thor: Ragnarok – This feels less like a movie and more like a TV episode. It’s not bad, and certainly entertaining for the most part, but it very much comes across like an episodic installment. If you’re not planning on watching Infinity War immediately after I’d strongly suggest just reading the plot summary and moving on.
    • Iron Man 2 – I’ve seen a lot of hate/disappointment directed at this movie, and honestly suspect I actually watched it once before and completely forgot everything that happened, but this time around it was a lot of fun.
    • Iron Man 3 – Hated the kid-related subplot and it gave me a very Bruce Wayne kind of feeling overall.

    Despite the mixed results, I was on something of a roll now and decided to move on to the last batch:

    • Captain America: The First Avenger – Very, very different from the other Marvel works. It starts out more period drama than flashy action spectacle, transforming into a relatively low-tech warfare thriller reminiscent of Command & Conquer.
    • Captain America: Winter Soldier – Ah, now here’s the action spectacle I was looking for. Still leans more toward special agent than superhero, and that’s not a bad thing.
    • Captain America: Civil War – Starts off and concludes very Avengers, briefly slipping back into spy games mode in the middle. Won’t make a great deal of sense unless you’ve already seen both the prequel and Age of Ultron.
    • Black Panther – This also happens to be quite a bit different from the other Marvel movies; less in genre though and more in theme and cultural focus. The disconnect/dissonance between the modern day high-tech setting and heavy traditional/tribal imagery is extraordinarily severe.

    So was all that necessary to watch Infinity War/Endgame? No, not at all. If you just want to see those two I would suggest going with the below viewing order:

    1. Age of Ultron (or read its plot summary)
    2. Civil War (just read the plot summary if you haven’t seen Winter Soldier)
    3. Captain Marvel (skip the post-credits scene)
    4. Guardians 1 & 2
    5. Thor: Ragnarok (or read its plot summary)
    6. Infinity War
    7. Endgame

    And maybe try to fit Doctor Strange and Black Panther in there somewhere pre-Ragnarok to cover a few extra references.

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    This entry was posted in Movie & TV Related and tagged Action Comic Adaptation Comic Relief Drama Marvel Comics Movie Romance Science Fiction Series
  • Alita: Battle Angel & Captain Marvel

    Posted on March 13, 2019 8:00 am by Offkorn 1 Comment

    The live-action Alita movie is pretty bad in ways fairly common to Anime adaptations: Spontaneous romance, questionable character behavior, and suspect plot developments. Then it decides to throw in some of the more eye-rolling tropes from superhero origin stories (“I know kung-fu!“, only worse) as a bonus. The action scenes at least are engaging for the most part, though that’s certainly not enough to outweigh the cringe-worthy performances (Zapan‘s is the only decent one, and even he goes to shit at the end) and face-palming events.

    Captain Marvel is an actually competently constructed adaptation comparatively. Though not without problems (most notably any scene designed to evoke sadness/sympathy) it’s a consistently entertaining mixture of action, comedy, 90’s references, and self-discovery with even the most minor characters getting a brief chance to shine. One aspect which could be taken either way is how events progress/develop at a brisk pace over a short timeframe; on the one hand this keeps you engaged with what’s happening, but on the other it makes the close Danvers-Fury friendship come across as pretty unnatural.

    The take-away here is that I’m definitely not watching any potential Alita sequels in the theater (where skipping through painfully awkward scenes isn’t an option), while I just might end up going to see Avengers: Endgame (which ties directly into Marvel‘s post-credits scene).

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    This entry was posted in Anime Related Movie & TV Related and tagged Action Comedy Comic Adaptation Comic Relief Drama Marvel Comics Movie Paranormal Romance Partial Adaptation Science Fiction
  • Mutafukaz

    Posted on February 14, 2019 2:20 am by Offkorn Comment

    Living in Dark Meat City, a slum on the west coast of the United States, is never easy. Yet after a traffic accident leaves Angelino suffering from hallucinations coupled with severe migraines it gets even harder, as now he must try to figure out exactly what happened to him while dodging hostile Men in Black intent on capturing him.

    A graphic, conspiracy-themed action movie threaded with splashes of comic relief.

    More Information:
    aniDB
    Wikipedia

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    This entry was posted in 2017 - Spring Anime Related and tagged Action Comic Adaptation Comic Relief Movie Science Fiction
  • revisions

    Posted on February 13, 2019 1:53 pm by Offkorn Comment

    Saved from a near-death experience when he was younger by a strange woman, Daisuke Doujima was told that many years in the future it would be up to him to protect his four friends. As time passed he became ever more overprotective, pushing most of those same friends away, to the point that now in high school he’s generally regarded as delusional. Yet the woman did not lie: On one morning just like any other the city of Shibuya is suddenly catapulted hundreds of years into a post-apocalyptic future, a future plagued by hostile lifeforms called ‘Revisions’.

    An action-drama with a few comic relief elements primarily focused on character psychology.

    More Information:
    aniDB
    Netflix
    Wikipedia

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    This entry was posted in 2019 - Winter Anime Related and tagged Action Anime Original Comic Relief Drama Finished Netflix Science Fiction Series Televised
  • First Salik War

    Posted on February 12, 2019 4:27 pm by Offkorn Comment

    The first part of the prequel trilogy to Jean Johnson’s Theirs Not To Reason Why series will be familiar to returning readers. It’s just as fond of verbose monologues and musings regarding ethics, with the only outliers being the inclusion of a seemingly pointless (beyond straining the ability to suspend disbelief) romance and a strangely heavy focus on Hawaiian culture.

    The second is a disaster: The protagonist morphs into a short-tempered scold, the Terrans reveal themselves to be hypocritical authoritarians, a couple extraneous deus ex machina pop up, and the work as a whole turns out to be a variation of the ‘enlightened foreigner sets out to save ignorant native‘ genre of storytelling with the one unique facet being the exploration of ageism via inconsistently conflating it with (alternately) classism and racism… which is most certainly not a positive. The romance aspects continue to lack any noteworthy purpose.

    There was only one thing in my mind that could possibly save the trilogy’s conclusion, and that was (at the very least) the acknowledgement of the hypocrisy inherent in the Terrans continuously demanding the V’Dan stop treating them like V’Dan when they themselves insist on treating the V’Dan like Terrans. An acknowledgment which unsurprisingly never came. Instead, we get the expected and infuriating result of the V’Dan people being forced to undergo what amounts to a partial lobotomy presented as a justified solution. An ultimately exhausting and ignoble end to what began as an entertaining first contact scenario (though there are a few decent combat scenes in the second half).

    So overall? I can’t suggest bothering with this trilogy unless you’re the type who likes to complain about microaggressions and want something that preaches to the choir with unearned self-righteousness. Anyone else would likely be better off reading through Mass Effect‘s backstory instead.

    Related posts:

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Jean Johnson Paranormal Romance Science Fiction Theirs Not to Reason Why
  • Kagewani: Shou

    Posted on January 11, 2019 3:50 pm by Offkorn Comment

    Sousuke Banba’s search for UMAs takes on new urgency now that he must find a way to defeat the original Kagewani before Kimura’s Kagewani clone overwhelms him, with the appearance of a new Kagewani hunter and the meddling of Kimura’s boss only further complicating matters.

    Action focused with secondary horror elements. It quickly abandons the mostly episodic structure of the prequel to move Banba and Kimura’s story to the forefront, making it necessary to watch that first.

    More Information:
    aniDB
    Crunchyroll
    Wikipedia

    Continue reading → Post ID 6755

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    This entry was posted in 2016 - Spring Anime Related and tagged Action Anime Original Crunchyroll Drama Finished Horror Kagewani Science Fiction Series Televised Urban Fantasy
  • Kagewani

    Posted on January 11, 2019 2:05 pm by Offkorn Comment

    Specializing in the study of mysterious creatures, the renowned geneticist Sousuke Banba investigates stories of UMA sightings across the country.

    A mostly episodic series of horror stories with visuals resembling a 3D picture drama. While most focus on drama, some include action elements or minor comic relief.

    More Information:
    aniDB
    Crunchyroll
    Wikipedia

    Continue reading → Post ID 6755

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    This entry was posted in 2015 - Autumn Anime Related and tagged Anime Original Crunchyroll Drama Finished Horror Kagewani Science Fiction Series Televised Urban Fantasy
  • Gakkougurashi!

    Posted on January 10, 2019 3:09 pm by Offkorn 1 Comment

    More literal than its name would suggest, the School Life Club’s activities are designed around finding ways to live at school without having to ever leave the building. Why not simply go home? Well, as it happens both the city and school have become the center of a zombie outbreak, indefinitely stranding the four club members at Megurigaoka High.

    A mix of schoolgirl club comedy and psychological horror with a few bursts of action.

    More Information:
    aniDB
    Crunchyroll
    Wikipedia

    Continue reading → Post ID 6755

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    This entry was posted in 2015 - Summer Anime Related and tagged Comedy Comic Adaptation Crunchyroll Drama Finished Horror Incomplete Source School Life Science Fiction Series Televised

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