Postby DanekJovax » Thu Oct 16, 2003 9:09 pm
Wow... The responses to the question "Why do you watch anime?" in here have been really eye-opening for me. Mainly because a little of each reply I've read thus far is part of the reason I've chosen anime as the preferred medium for my entertainment.
Anyways, as I get a little typographically expressive (read: really wordy), what follows below is my answer. Please bear with me, or at least read the next statement and move on:
- I watch anime mainly because of what it is and how it express itself. -
Let me digress and explain this 'esoter-ism'.
Yes, I've watched probably more anime titles than most of you would want to admit to, and like Technomancer said, I think a vast majority of the anime is basically "ok but not a classic". But this isn't why I watch anime...
I have an artist for a father and have been raised to appreciate things that are of fine art quality. To be truly a "Fine Artwork," the item must not only be pleasing to look at, but also something that expresses itself in a unique way (not cliched or redundant with other things of its class) and also can project a characteristic or quality of being "more than a thing". Look at the fine classics of art today and you'll sense that the work embodies *more* than what it appears to be. To behold a beauty of art that transcends the artwork itself through its expression/media/theme makes it something that stands the test of time and may ultimately award it the "priceless" status.
Getting back to anime, I see animation as a medium - a form of artistic expression. Now I know that some animation production companies don't really treat their animation titles as really 'art' but a 'way to make more money from <fill in your favorite age bracket>.'
Of all the animation I have watched, I find myself enjoying the japanese forms of it the most (hence the popular term 'anime') because the japanese anime creators tend to treat the medium as a true form of expression of their ideas, stories, and thoughts, not (usually) binding themselves to the limitations that many western animation studios (I will not name names here) tend to put themselves under.
Here's a good way of explaining this: If you eat a burger, how many different ways can you picture that burger being dressed with various toppings and condiments, but yet it's still a burger? This is basically what I've found with western TV and animation... lots of different dressings, but at its core, it's still the same old hum-drum burger. Now, every so often I like a good burger, but only SOME of the time.
Now, picture a buffet decked out with the most tasty, exotic, spicy, and delicately spiced foods known to man, all garnished to look like works of art, and all served on crystal and silver, to be eaten with the finest of drink. This food is treated as more than just food, but given special treatment and presented in a way that makes it *more* than just food... to be appreciated more than just as something to eat... but something to enjoy seeing... smelling... and then the taste is well above anything you've eaten in a long time, if ever.
...that's anime to me. :2)
Yes, anime has its good sides and bad sides, but all-in-all, anime has something that makes it more than a plain animated cartoon, and something that many people may never come to appreciate (like not everyone likes sushi, but those who do enjoy it very passionately - like me :2) because of different mindsets, life priorities, etc. It is this extra treatment that anime enjoys so much of my free time, that I seek to enjoy yet another 'flavor'... another fine 'aroma'... another exotic 'dish'...
Like any other hobby, 'anime-optera' is a pursuit that only certain people will come to appreciate, and the rest may like only a few shows here and there. Understanding this will help keep one from being frustrated as to why their friend can't appreciate anime like he or she does. As for myself, I have enjoyed the exploration and discovery of watching anime new and old, and found some rather surprising and wonderous discoveries along the way, and greatly desire to share all the best that I have found with others - you - whenever I can. But... I know that this level of passion is not shared by many... not even my wife (though she's slowly coming around to the 'light' :2).
Anyways, I hope this helps you see what I like with anime, and why I so passionately seek it.
that's my 3 yen... ja ne. ;2)
PS: Hey, I think there are still visionaries in anime that are akin to Kurosawa.... I think of Katsuhiro Otomo, Hayao Miyazaki, Isao Takahata, and I'm even placing early bets on Makoto Shinkai (creator of Hoshi no Koe - Voices of a Distant Star).
<>< DanekJovax :2) ><>