Postby Fish and Chips » Mon Apr 27, 2009 2:17 am
Let me think. Back in high school I was actually pretty dismissive of Anime and Manga in general. Not because I was particularly convinced it was Ultra Violent Rape Porno Cartoons like millions (or at least a couple) of Americans did, but more because I saw a lot of it as formulamatic and overdone - in a way this hasn't really changed. The only Anime I was really familiar with was Pokemon, but that's only because I played the game, and if you didn't play Pokemon in California Middle School just what kind of social outcast were you. Pokemon the game quickly burnt out on me, so did the show (and the trading cards, oh dear). I guess I also watched a couple episodes of Sailor Moon in there somewhere, and like all of five minutes of Gundam Wing, and in some haze of my youth I knew what Speed Racer was.
I suppose I also watched Samurai Pizza Cats for a bit, mainly with my neighbors. We thought it was a pretty cool show at the time, but moved on not too much later.
Then some time near the end of my high school years, we were cleaning out one of the transitory computer labs that doubled as an art room and just a generally unfurnished blandly-painted patch of ugliness. A friend of mine, Ryan, had decided to bring a DVD player, where he was watching Cowboy Bebop. Earlier that same year I'd spied another friend watching clips of Princess Mononoke between what he was supposed to be working on, and was interested on some tangible if vaguely established level. So I sat down with Ryan for a couple episodes, those being Pierrot le Fou and (after cleaning) Boogie Woogie Feng Shui. So basically my first exposure to contemporary Anime was space bounty hunters tracking down a murderous cross between the Joker and the Penguin; which Mad Pierrot technically was. Since I had always fostered a closet fascination with Batman (and my association, the bad guys he generally faced), I was intrigued enough to decide to pursue Anime. However, I don't consider Cowboy Bebop my fabled First Anime. It was what caught my attention, but it wasn't what hooked me.
That would be FullMetal Alchemist. A couple of friends of mine on a board (this was long before CAA) had name dropped it a couple times, specifically citing various elements of the show that unconsciously clicked a lot of my buttons. I quickly decided to take the plunge and cautiously picked up the first volume of the Manga at a local bookshop; mind you this was when FullMetal Alchemist was still new and kind of a big deal in the states, so only the first two volumes had been published here. I left the second volume on the shelf, figuring if I cared for it I'd come back later.
Later ended up being that afternoon. A few hours at most. And I still consider FMA vol. 2 to be one of the finest volumes of any Manga I have ever read. I also ended up catching the show (which another friend, David, graciously taped for me), and FMA became my Exception Anime, which just about everyone has unless they loved the idea of Anime from the start.
Granted, eventually I'd become incredibly disenchanted with the Anime, but I won't deny it kept me up nights, sneaking out of bed to watch Adult Swim when the rest of my family was asleep. I'm fairly certain I still have stacks of tapes (yeah, VCR tapes) in my closet of nothing but FMA episodes. And of course the Manga is still a masterpiece of Shounen.
Shortly after I started branching out. I believe my second might have been Hellsing, but I'm not positive; the third was most certainly Death Note (which, hilariously, I dislike now), and somewhere in there it snowballed until I was reading ten or twenty different series, many of which my younger self wouldn't believe you if you told him (some of which even I don't believe now).
So that's it, though I seriously doubt most of you will bother to read this. Long post is long.