Forum - View topicEP. REVIEW: Asobi Asobase -workshop of fun-
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Yune Amagiri
Posts: 936 Location: France |
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This anime also hit close to home for me for similar reason than the reviewer's and not only but i'm not siding with the reviewer's thought about Aozora, you are really overreacting. Ultimately it's simply a fictional humorous work, sometimes even black humor which the serie isn't even trying to hide, that turn everything into a comical scene, even a stupid armpit scent. This work is by no means trying to promote any hate or whatever about certain persons so there are no reasons to think that way, on the contrary, there are no better way to end up hating a comical anime ( or even the animation in the whole ) than taking it way too seriously and comparing it to real problems.
It's simply my thought but reviewers should show more impartiality, there are naive peoples that might unfairly blacklist a serie just because they read a negative thing that have nothing to do with the serie itself. |
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casenumber00
Posts: 155 |
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Yeah, I also think the author is making a bigger deal out of episode 10. Of course some of things mentioned are a real problem out in the real world but, that is there, these actions are happening in an animated series. For better or for worse, not everything that happens in fiction will not have a consequence in real life so try not to let it get to you. The problem, and where vigilance should come in, is when people use that fiction as an example to do unjust or harm others. That is highly unlikely to happen at this point in the show since it doesnt try to instigate any of that and even, in subtle ways, tell viewers that its a stupid thing to do. I know it may be uncomfortable to watch, I do have similar feelings about the ease and lack of emotion murder and death in media, due to personal reasons, and it sometimes plagues me but I have remind myself that the vast vast majority all of it does not lead to causation to actual event.
Also, middle schools girls from public schools are somewhat similar to these girls. I am not talking about the gender identities or what not, but being mean, gross, cunning, manipulative, monsters with each other but in some charming way as oppose to high school girls. I thought the show did a kinda good job portraying middle school girls like that but, of course, a lot of it is exaggerated for comedy. Last edited by casenumber00 on Tue Sep 11, 2018 4:07 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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MasterGhost
Posts: 125 |
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Pro-tip to any people reading the reviews: I would suggest ignoring the ratings and focus instead on the meat of the articles themselves. The reviewer herself (I assume her because she mentioned she's a lesbian herself) already mentioned that humor can be "super subjective" and some people may find the contents of the episode extremely offensive, while others may find it to be the pinnacle of comedy. While I find it to be the latter, mostly because I do not belong to the LGBT community, nor find it necessary to carry my personal bias into everything I see, I respect the reviewer for feeling uncomfortable and applaud for acknowledging the differences in the ways people would see this episode.
The ratings themselves, being "ratings", carry the implication of some kind of personal bias from the reviewer. It's rather annoying to see some people just clicking into the article for an episode they like, see a negative rating, then go on a rant about how the reviewer is biased. Ratings are not everything. Read the articles themselves. |
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Zhou-BR
Posts: 1425 |
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Whether that makes it more problematic or not, one curious thing about Aozora is that she's a parody of Hibari Aozora from Stop! Hibari-kun.
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reaslin
Posts: 42 Location: Europe |
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Not only that. A lot of the fun of this show comes from taking existing tropes and running with them in an unexpected direction. Making fun of existing stereotypes may not be the same thing as subverting them, but it makes it difficult to say that the creators of Asobi Asobase "stand" anywhere in particular when it comes to, for example, trans issues. Obviously, something can be problematic quite regardless of the intentions of the creators. As a side note I felt that Aozora came across as a slightly nicer person this time. Doesn't their crush on Kasumi seem to be kind of genuine? |
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purplepolecat
Posts: 130 |
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The weird costumes in the interrogation scene are a reference to Monty Python's "Spanish Inquisition" sketch - for a Japanese show, that's really obscure!
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consignia
Posts: 392 |
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I thought it was more Witchfinder General: |
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purplepolecat
Posts: 130 |
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Olivia is wearing the antique pilot hat and goggles, like Cardinal Biggles on the left:
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Northlander
Posts: 901 |
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The Girls und Panzer OAV series references the Spam skit in the... fourth episode, I think? Have a look-see. (Also, why is the Japanese version censoring the word "spam"? Well... the letter 'S' in the word Spam, that is.) |
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vonPeterhof
Posts: 729 |
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purplepolecat
Posts: 130 |
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Wow, complete with Vikings! Amazing. |
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consignia
Posts: 392 |
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Fair enough, my memory clearly was banking too much the colours used. |
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reaslin
Posts: 42 Location: Europe |
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How do I cover up this murder that my vice president has committed in my absence? "Is there a lake nearby?" I know the basic joke (inappropriate pragmatism) is old as dust, but it still makes me laugh when done right. Then, we are talking about a person who keeps a ski mask with her in case her duties as student council president require it.
And of course the Pastimers are happy to forget all about the (supposedly) dead body as long as they get to show their movie. |
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#HayamiLover
Posts: 798 Location: Eastern Europe |
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If Aozora is really a boy, then this is not unusual, since the motif "I'm afraid of men, so I fell in love with a feminine guy" is quite common in anime and manga, for example in "Bokura no Hentai", where this theme was one of the plotlines. If "she" really is a very thin girl-troll, then this is also normal. It may just be gay-joke's segment or the beginning of their mutual love, I don't know, but I think that one scene is too small to call it offensive and ambiguous. @casenumber00 I also do not belong to the LGBT community (at least, I think so), but in my opinion, it is strange to blame intentionally "scandalous" show that it is trying to be scandalous. Not to mention the fact that the situation itself is unrealistic enough to not associate it with some consequences in real life. |
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RealMTL
Posts: 178 |
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Besides what the reviewer thought about episode 10 I think the show as a whole was pretty funny. I would never expect a show like this to be a leading example of political correctness so for me it's best just to take the comedy for what it is... a joke.
Though some of those skits did get pretty raunchy and it definitely offended at least one person. 7/10 for me. |
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