Showing posts with label seriously. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seriously. Show all posts

Monday, January 6, 2014

Anime First Impressions: Recently, My Sister Is Unusual

Today I'm going to be reviewing what is very likely smut.  There's no other way to describe what I'm talking about.  The show I'm referring to is Recently, My Sister Is Unusual.  The show is about some guy likely in high school who discovers that his step sister suddenly started acting weird.  Weird, as in, like she's possessed by something and also is coming on to him.  Romantically and quite possibly sexually.

Basically, this is probably softcore porn featuring technically-not-incest.  And I already know for a fact that this is going to be messed up.  My only question is how messed up does it get, and how comedic of a spin does it take.  It's possible that this may actually be entertaining, but my hopes are definitely not high for this.  Currently, the show has a 2.6 star rating on Crunchyroll, and when you consider that every show on Crunchyroll is incredibly inflated, that score is probably closer to a 1.6 rating.  Also, confirmation that it's smut comes from a friendly warning:

Yeah, this is going to be incredibly perverted.  Crunchyroll does not give 18+ warnings lightly.  I am going to regret this.

Recently, My Sister is Unusual - Episode 1
0:00  Looks like a normal day in Japan.
0:15  Our main character wakes up to the sound of an alarm clock.
0:30  One day, he woke up and found that he had a younger sister.
1:00  Breakfast with the whole family, something every family should do.
1:30  Apparently, the father is flying to India soon.
2:04  It seems that the two kids are still strangers to each other, and each other's respective parent.
2:35  That was an awkward goodbye.
2:45  And now our main character is talking with a friend about this whole thing.
3:10  His friend has a serious fetish for little sisters, which is apparently culturally acceptable in Japan, and is surprised he hasn't slept with her yet.  Hint: DITCH THE FRIEND.  HE'S A TOTAL PERVERT.
3:50  Our hero looks out the window during his class to see that his new sister is terrible at athletics, but she is making friends.
4:05  And naturally the teacher is talking about marriage between siblings and how that used to be common.  Okay, maybe this is a cultural thing with Japan.  Or maybe this show is just bullshitting.
4:30  Another incredibly awkward conversation between brother and sister.
5:00  After trying just about every honorific, he finally gets her attention.
5:15  Okay, why did she just fall backwards off the stairs?
5:35  Well, she's dead.  That was a great show!
[Actually, this is where the fun all starts. And by fun, I mean smut.]
5:55  Darn it she only fainted.
6:04  Well no wonder she starts coming on to him later!  He's staring at her as she sleeps, and we all know how girls find that to be irresistably sexy.
6:30  Seems that she doesn't remember what
6:33  Damn, that heartbeat was so loud it knocked a painting off the wall in the next room over.
7:02  Oh no, here it all starts.  She just grabbed onto his coat after spending the last 30 seconds panting.
7:12  Wow, the most stereotypical porno music just started playing.  And now she's rubbing her hands across his back while in a hug, talking about how much she's always loved-
7:29 "DON'T TOUCH ME" she says as she kicks him out of the room and almost knocks down a doctor who was walking by.
7:39  Gee, I wonder what gave you that idea.  Though to be fair, that's the exact thing you tell a doctor after such a circumstance.
7:42  Finally, the opening theme.  It's exactly the kind of thing to expect.  A sickeningly sweet j-pop song.
9:16  Good it's over, and now it's sunset.
9:36  So, the mother is driving her home, and apparently she's about to run off as well.  What a setup to a wacky romantic comedy about technically-not-incest!  To be fair, Oreimo is also a wacky romantic comedy about incest, but it's a good comedic show which uses the incest as a subtext for social commentary.
9:55  And immediately she runs into her room.
10:40  She overhears the two talking about how they're going to both be leaving the house for a bit.
10:45  "Why did I do that?"  GOOD QUESTION!  So, apparently she also thinks that she was possessed or something.
11:15  WTF.
11:30  So, the reason she fell off the stairs is because some girl in a pink dress with angel wings suddenly appears, said she needed her to disappear, and flew into her.  I'm pretty sure that would cause anyone to fall off a flight of stairs.
12:00  So she wakes up to discover she's wearing bondage gear underneith her skirt.  She suddenly starts panicking.
12:05  Thank you censorship.  And I say that with no sarcasm whatsoever.
12:11  Hello magic floating pink dress angel girl.  Oh, she's a ghost.
12:20  I think screaming is the only right thing to do in this scenario.
12:40  And the ghost starts raping her or something.
12:55  Oh, the ghost was merely stealing her body.  But did they really have to animate it so that it looked bad?
13:20  Okay, yeah, smut 100% confirmed.  The first thing the ghost does now that she has a real body is masturbate.  Thank you censorship, but seriously?!

Okay, yeah, this is smut, just like I feared.  I'm done.  Such a shame too, because the rest of the show looks like it could have been good.  There's decent humor, the plot summaries I've read sound insane in a good way, and if not for the outright smut this would be an entertaining show.  Unfortunately, it crosses the line in my opinion, so I can not recommend it.

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Anime Review: Sword Art Online EXTRA EDITION

The long awaited movie sequel to Sword Art Online is finally out and available for streaming on Crunchyroll, and the fans are going insane.  Personally, I could almost care less.  Even at the time, I thought Sword Art Online was really dumb, and the second half of the show had almost no narrative strength to it.  It was good to watch, but now that I've watched it, I'm not going to look back to it.  As far as wanting a second season, I'd probably watch it, but have no excitement for it.  These feelings were greatly amplified by watching Log Horizon, which takes the same concept of being trapped in an MMORPG video game and does just about everything better than Sword Art Online.  As a result, I wasn't too excited to watch EXTRA EDITION, but I figured that I'd give it a very fair shot, while keeping in mind that Log Horizon is biasing me against it.

To the best of my ability, I'm not going to lie about what I think about Sword Art Online EXTRA EDITION.  I'm not going to exaggerate how good or bad I think it is if I can help it; I'm going to be telling you exactly what I saw, what I was thinking then, and what I think now.  And it is going to upset a lot of people, because my opinion is significantly less than favorable to put it gently.  If you're the kind of person offended by disagreement, you may want to stop reading right now.

The movie starts off by playing the show's original opening theme, which brought back pleasant memories.  In the background are opening credits interspersed with main character Kirito and his sister Sugu riding to school on a motorcycle.  Once the credits are over, Kirito and Sugu arrive.  As it turns out, they were meeting with three of their friends, all girls Kirito met in the games, to have a pool party at the school, but Kirito instead has to deal with emergency counseling in the school building instead.  During this scene, Asuna, the female lead of the show and far left in the picture below, says something very, very wrong:


The problem with this line is that during the ALfheim Online arc, part two of the show, SHE WAS LOCKED IN A CAGE THE ENTIRE TIME.  She has no way of knowing that.  I'm sure the fanboys and fangirls will tell me that I'm wrong here and come up with some explanation, but this line is what tipped me off that EXTRA EDITION was going to be EXTRA bad.  Okay, well, maybe not EXTRA bad, but this was not a good sign.

So, Kirito heads off to the counseling office, and hello, nurse!  And then the "real" councilor turns around in his chair.  Kirito recognizes him as, "an elite member of the Virtual Division of the Ministry of Internal Affairs."  That a long enough title there?  It seems this federal agent wants to question Kirito about what happened in the games yet again.  Kirito is initially uncooperative, but after being bribed with candy and implicitly threatened with suddenly gaining media attention, he starts talking.

Before Kirito has a chance to say a single word, the scene cuts to the girls, who are now changing in the locker room.  When a movie has shameless fanservice in the first five minutes, that is a guarantee of the show sucking.  Fortunately for EXTRA EDITION, the shameless fanservice starts at five minutes and thirty-five seconds, passing the guarantee limit by less than a minute.  Also in this scene is lame comedy which was old before the first time someone ever attempted to make the event a joke.  In less than a minute, I was begging for the scene to change back to the interrogation.

Ten seconds later, my wish was granted.  Kirito finally starts talking to the fed, and we cut to the show, the scene which establishes the central conflict of the show.  You know, the same central conflict which I wrote a prior blog post pointing out how it's flat-out stupid.  And the best part is that the scene isn't even edited down in any way.  After three minutes, I realized that it's just going to be copying and pasting segments from the show.  After a 25 second break from flashbacks where Kirito and the agent exchange a few words, we see another flashback.

This flashback ends with Kirito yelling so loud the scene changes to the pool.  And at the pool, we learn that Sugu apparently can't swim and has a bit of a fear of water.  As a result, she gets teased for it by one of the other girls, to the point that the other girl starts sexually assaulting her, all for the laughs of the audience.  I shouldn't need to say this, but there is absolutely nothing funny about sexual assault.  At this point, I decided I would be skipping the remaining pool scenes, because this is just outright wrong.  I wanted to turn the movie off right at this point, only thirteen minutes in.

But I persisted anyway, and the reward for my persistence was nothing more than more flashbacks straight from the show.  I got so tired that I decided to start skipping in five minute intervals until the flashbacks finally stopped.  Here's an excerpt from the notes I was taking.
20:38  Recap.
25:49  More recap.
29:52  EVEN MORE recap.
34:54  re-
40:31  cap
45:30  And we're not even done with the first half of the show.
50:20  Now they are.
55:11  And now we're recapping part 2.
59:45  Yep.
65:55  YEP.
70:29  YAPPERS!
75:12  It's seriously a movie-length recap episode.
79:25  FANSERVICE!
79:45  DONE RECAPPING PART 2!
So, for the first hour and twenty minutes of EXTRA EDITION, all I have gotten is flashbacks to the original show mixed with incredibly lame fanservice and failed attempts at comedy which have served only to piss me off.  Only twenty minutes remain, but despite what I already failed to endure I remained optimistic that the remaining twenty minutes of material would still be worth watching.

The remaining twenty minutes takes place on a beach inside one of the virtual video game worlds, where all of the characters from earlier as well as two others are vacationing to.  During this scene something actually entertaining happens.  After the stupidest water-fight ever between the girls which is only there for the alleged fanservice appeal of seeing girls splash each other with water, we get the only genuinely funny moment in the show.  Kirito announces that it's time for their mission to start.  So the girls all start walking out of the water in slow motion, parodying baywatch.  One of the other guys, Klein, watches this, and is about to explode from the amount of sexy he's seeing.  Just before this happens, the girls press a floating button, and all of their clothes comes back on.  Cue Klein falling on his knees, crying tears of disappointment.

Aside from this joke, the rest of the twenty minutes is either boring or stupid.  The quest is one in which they have to dive deep underwater - good thing Sugu was taught how to swim earlier - to perform a quest where a whale then appears.  Yes, their goal is to go whale-watching while inside a video game.  The quest somehow involves them breaking into an underwater temple, stealing a pearl, discovering it's really an egg, getting their butts kicked by kraken, and then getting rescued by a stand-in for Poseidon and sent back to the beach riding on a whale.  If that sounds exciting, it's because I removed all of the cringeworthy fluff from that summary, including the part where the single best player of all VRMMORPGs falls into the most obvious pitfall trap ever.  Had the other characters not made fun of Kirito for this, I would have turned it off right then and there.

Somehow, I made it through to the end without having to skip through the final twenty minutes.  And when it ended, I was laughing. No, it wasn't because the ending was funny; I was laughing because I couldn't believe just how bad this whole thing was.  The twenty minutes of original material contained only one thing of any entertainment value whatsoever, and the plot of it is completely irrelevant.  Reading back through my notes only minutes later, I realized just how bad EXTRA EDITION was.

If I had any interest in watching a second season of Sword Art Online, EXTRA EDITION just completely killed it.  The short version is that EXTRA EDITION is to Sword Art Online as the Star Wars Holiday Special is to Star Wars.  The first eighty minutes of this movie are nothing more than recap, consisting of scenes copy-and-pasted straight from the show, mixed in with the tiniest amount of dialog between the main character and a federal agent trying to figure out what happened, alongside some of the most lame excuses for fanservice and comedy I've ever seen, all of it so bad I had to skip through it.  The remaining twenty minutes are worse than any other twenty minute segment in the show.  It contained no character development, nor did it advance the plot in any way.  If anything happened regarding characterization, either one's characterization was completely destroyed for the sake of lame comedy, or my memory of the character is really bad.  As for the plot, it contributes nothing to the overall story and can be completely ignored with no loss whatsoever.  There wasn't even any extra details of the setting given out for the fans as far as I could tell.  Seeing as how this movie is nothing but things I've aready seen or things which are just cringeworthy, there is literally no point to watching this movie, even if you're a fan of the series, and especially if you're not.  Just watch the show. Or better yet, don't;  Watch Log Horizon instead.  It's the same concept, but done so much better!

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Sword Art Online - Seriously?

Sword Art Online is an anime that started simulcasting on Crunchyroll during Summer 2012.  It's an anime about an MMORPG named Sword Art Online.  That's just my first problem with the show.

An MMORPG is the type of game where thousands of people join a single server and run around doing random quests to level up for bragging rights.  I can't stand this style of video game for numerous reasons.  South Park did an excellent job of mocking the entire concept already, so I'll just link that episode here.  Keep in mind that it's South Park, so it's not exactly family friendly.

What makes Sword Art Online [the in-universe game] unique is that it's the first Virtual Reality MMORPG to ever be created.  The main character, Kirito, was a Beta Tester for the game, so now that it's officially released he already knows everything.  Naturally this makes him a boring character, since he's going to be grinding through everything and not learning any new stuff on his journey.  To solve this problem, they give Kirito a friend who just picked up the game who he has to teach everything to.  Just when his friend has to go, they discover the first part of the central conflict of the show: nobody can log out of the game.

Just moments later, the lead developer of the game appears in a highly over-dramatic fashion and announces that this is a feature, not a bug.  You see, he has a god complex, and created the game to become its god.  Also, if anyone dies in the game, the VR device is rigged to fry their brains.  The same thing happens if anyone in the real world tampers with the VR device.  In fact, 213 people have already died because of this. and here are the news articles to prove it.  The only way out is for the players to beat the game, and considering that this is an MMORPG, that's going to take years.  Mwuhahahaha!

Ignoring how the idea of dieing in virtual reality killing you in real life has already been done to death, tell me I'm not the only one who sees the problem with this maniac's plan.  213 people have been killed, meaning that at the very least the lead developer is facing 213 counts of gross negligence manslaughter, with that number rising by the minute.  WHERE THE #%$# IS THE POLICE!?

Okay, let's be fair here; this isn't exactly the kind of problem the police would be trained to deal with.  This is probably a nation-wide disaster, so perhaps the government has a federal law enforcement agency, you know, the NPA.  If it's too much for them to handle, they also have a counter-terrorism unit called the Special Assault Team.  Okay, maybe the disaster goes beyond even their abilities, so it's time to call in the military, or in the case of Japan, the Self Defense Forces and their Special Forces Group.  But perhaps even the Japanese can't handle it on their own.  Fortunately for them, America has a large number of military bases in Japan, including Kadena Air Base where multiple United States Air Force Combat Control Teams are stationed.  And in less than 24 hours, Delta Force, Navy Seals, Army Rangers, Marine Force Recon, Green Berets, and many more special operations units can arrive to assist the Japanese government in bringing the evil video game developers to justice.  Realistically speaking, the 9787 people still trapped in the game are going to be rescued within a few days, and the lead developer will soon be found guilty of 213 counts of premeditated murder, with 9787 first-hand witnesses to his confession, not counting any other members of the dev team who may agree to testify against him.

The second episode takes place one month later, and everyone is still trapped.  Screw this show.


 
In all seriousness, I don't think Sword Art Online is a bad show.  It's still enjoyable to watch if you ignore how stupid this aspect of it is, and I'm going to continue to watch new episodes as they come out.  I'm not a real fan of the show, but it's better than most TV shows out there.  Of course this is just a preliminary judgment based on the first two episodes, so my mind could still change.

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All text (unless otherwise attributed) is copyright (C) 2011-2014 Joel "iLag" Hammond and licensed under the CC BY-SA 3.0 License.
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