2020-10-27, 15:55 | Link #61 |
Kana Hanazawa ♥
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: France
Age: 37
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Ended up watching it. I'll address the elephant in the room right away, the show looks terrible (character models and animations seriously look like they're from the PS2 era), but if you can get past that, it's actually a pretty good show in line with the previous entries. I think the fact the old cast came back helps A LOT with the immersion. My main complaint would be that they dropped the "SAC aspect". There's only one stand alone story, which incidentally happens to be the best episode of the season.
The first few episodes weren't very good, but it gets a lot better once Togusa comes back and we're introduced to the post-humans. I'm not sure where they're going with that storyline, but they've got my attention.
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2021-03-15, 14:30 | Link #64 | |
Detective
Join Date: Aug 2010
Age: 36
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Quote:
Their own cartoon series got divided into "parts" (See Paradise PD, disenchantment) for a while now.
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2022-02-24, 02:13 | Link #67 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2009
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Season 2 will be released on May 2022.
Teaser trailer here: https://twitter.com/NetflixAnime/sta...66191745720320 |
2022-02-24, 14:56 | Link #69 | |
Catholic = Cat addiction?
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: MURICA!!
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This is a very welcoming announcement. SAC had always been superior in my mind, and I couldn't bring myself to like Arise.
Hell, Final Gear's current GiTS 2045 event probably did not start today by accident. Quote:
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2022-05-15, 17:06 | Link #74 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
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I just watched the Sustainable War compilation movie that recaps the first season, and it actually includes a new scene at the end revealing what happened to Togusa after his disappearance, plus a preview of the second season that includes some footage that's not present in Netflix's trailer. Well worth watching if you want a refresher on what happened in season 1 without rewatching all 12 episodes.
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2022-05-24, 17:01 | Link #78 |
Kana Hanazawa ♥
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: France
Age: 37
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I watched the first two episodes of S2, did the fps always drop drastically when they fire their guns? It looks like stop-motion at times. Other than that, the action has been pretty damn great.
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2022-05-25, 15:04 | Link #79 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2006
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Pretty good.
Just like SAC 2nd GIG , SAC 2045 is rich in political commentary. Kenji Kamiyama has always been pretty critical of US' aggressive foreign politics and profit-based culture in his works, and SAC 2045 is not different. If you don't like that sort of thing SAC 2045 will probably just make you roll your eyes. But if you don't mind or if you actually agree with Kamiyama's point of view, then SAC 2045 can be pretty interesting and maybe even kind of thought-provoking. My only criticism is that we don't get to see what choice Kusanagi made at the end. The posthumans basically put the weight of the world on her shoulders and I wanted to see what choice she would make. But other than that, it was good. Much better than Arise for sure. It was much closer to how Ghost in the Shell should be in my mind. Not just philosophical but also very political.
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Last edited by Kazu-kun; 2022-05-25 at 22:59. |
2022-05-26, 19:08 | Link #80 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2008
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'Big Bad America' perhaps isn't much of a political commentary. If 'nothing has changed since the end of WWII', a significant line from Old Monkeyface, why hasn't it? The US is condemned without its internal politics being explored at all. More to the point, which country's crimes were a major cause of US heavy-handedness towards Japan, including the use of nuclear weapons? America isn't blameless, but I'm just as annoyed when their TV shows, films or politicians cast themselves as such.
Japan and its situation certainly have changed since the 1940s, but the idea that this means repealing Article 9 is a step backwards to WWII, such as the antagonists in Eden of the East and GITS SAC2 plot towards. The idea that this means that America isn't going to do anything to Japan that it can get away with is moonshine. American global power, and the nature of power, haven't significantly changed. Being pushed around by America doesn't make Japan uniquely victimised in the modern world; it's even nothing that Japan wouldn't do in America's place. Cultural chauvinism, corruption and profit-seeking aren't American monopolies. GITS Japan certainly is an incredibly corrupt nation riddled with corporate and political conspiracies, where security services can spy on or assassinate practically anyone. While I think post nuclear war 'American Empire' power is rather reduced in the GITS universe, and Japanese power increased, the gap is clearly wide enough that this makes no real difference. 2045 does truthfully reflect that the classic cyberpunk dream of Japanese global dominance is a dead duck. The message of GITS at its best has always been about seeking a new plane of existence beyond the present system of selfish force and corruption; a sensible message for Japan and every other country to move beyond war and profiteering. It's really GITS that hasn't changed since the 80s, certainly not in its knee-jerk superficial anti-Americanism. Though previous iterations didn't go so far as to feature a minstrel show, in the incredibly degraded person of Clown. Or a barrage of meaningless 1984 references. The theme of nostalgic desire for the certainties of continuing war, and a strong pseudo-familial authority figure, actually had a faint connection to 1984, but alas this theme was undeveloped and everything else was buzzwords thematically unrelated to anything in either 1984 or this series. It may not be coincidence that the recent bestselling Murakami novel 1Q84 was also a pretentious and superficial distortion of themes from what wasn't actually an especially good novel in the first place, albeit Murakami's fundamental prose writing skills are much better than his material. To be really controversial, I thought this anime much better than most of the shows we get nowadays; it seems I find racist tropes more tolerable than sexist ones. Strong ops and eds as always, the nostalgia value of our old friends from Section 9, a decent new girl in Purin. A plot that never stops moving with a gravitas and significance that you just don't see every day, to a very respectable ending. More than the situation of America and Japan, it's GITS that never changes; far more powerful, deep, influential and relevant than Lupin III, the Major is truly the Japanese James Bond. Whether she pulled or left the wires in the end, we know her Japan is going to stay the same the more it changes, perhaps until we really all upload ourselves. I'd say she pulled the wires, though; Mokoto has always been about the search for higher, enlightened understanding. Even if section 9's job is to conceal the truth from the majority, lost in suffering and illusion, who can't handle it, she's not going to like anything imposed on humanity that makes seeking the truth even harder for the few with the strength to look Last edited by Ghostfriendly; 2022-05-27 at 19:08. |
Tags |
action, ghost in the shell, new anime, sci-fi, shiro masamune |
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