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Showing posts with the label animation

Watching: Stop! Hibari-kun

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 I'd reviewed this series briefly on my Letterboxd already, but I wanted to talk a little more in depth about the show.         In late 00's (or perhaps it was 2010?) a couple fansubbed episodes of Stop! Hibari-kun popped up on Youtube. I'd discovered them quite accidentally, I think via someone on twitter mentioning the show, and right then and there I was hooked. At that time, I wasn't really encountering a lot of trans media and hadn't yet started to think of myself as trans, but it definitely caught my interest. Sadly, it was only a few episodes and the updates stopped. I'd also found the manga, but it was also in a state of only partial fan translation. Flash forward to the present day, where I was happy to learn that not only was a full fansub completed, but the whole series is now available in a good crisp quality. It looks gorgeous and I'm so glad this odd little slice of queer anime history has been preserved. I'd love for there to be an offici

Decontextualization- Memes, Viral Content and "Weird" Art

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         Patricia Piccinini's sculpture "Young Family"      There's something I really resent about "weird" media going viral, mostly in that it loses context or becomes harder to find information about- such as original creator, or even the original unaltered video/piece itself. Rumors spread, urban legends even crop up about the content. It's interesting as a cultural phenomena but it's also kind of maddening. I especially dislike when something becomes permanently attached to a streamer, YouTube critic, or an influencer, moreso than the original creator. I also dislike the trend of YouTube videos "explaining" any media, including viral art projects. There's this ever-expanding economy of clickbait that self perpetuates and thrives on further decontextualization of everything, which has happened in part due to YouTube's own algorithms and the ongoing struggle that video creators have to be seen and get paid for their work. The tre

Watching (and reading): Banana Fish

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 Content warning: discussions of rape and CSA. Also spoilers about the series and how it ends. If you don't care about spoilers, give it a read.        Where to begin, really? I finally finished my watch through of Banana Fish, a series I'd started on some years prior but hadn't watched in its entirety until recently. I'd also read through a good portion of the manga and it's interesting to note that the anime is fairly faithful in its adaptation- just updating the setting to the contemporary and swapping the Vietnam war for the gulf war in the backstory.     At its heart, Banana Fish is a tragic romance between two teen boys from vastly different worlds- Ash Lynx, a former child prostitute turned gang leader who'd been groomed by a mafia don to be a successor, and Eiji Okumura, a gentle Japanese boy accompanying a journalist as an assistant. They meet on a story focused on Ash's gang and their lives get turned upside down as Ash is caught up in a deadly con

Watching: Castlevania season 4 (with monster screencaps)

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       Wow! Honestly I love the way Castlevania wrapped up. For all its grimness and violence and tragedy, the series is ultimately quite hopeful- its characters have chances to grow and change, to think of themselves as their own people and not beholden to someone else's grand plan, instead moving towards ideas of building a kinder future for everyone. Isaac especially has a neat story arc and I love how it resolved. Alucard also gets a girlfriend who is bisexual and poly, good for him. All-in-all a fun watch, would recommend if you like horror, fantasy, and dynamic battle scenes. Playing the games is not necessary for you to enjoy or understand the series.   Moral of the story- just don't fucking kill Dracula's wife. Here's screencaps, though I didn't cap the last two eps because that felt spoiler-heavy.