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Now that I have your attention, did anyone else start rewatching it after the thread about what version to watch the other day? I vaguely remember watching the old dub when it was first airing in the US back in the 90s, and watching the remastered dub now I'm surprised at how well it holds up, all things considered. Except for the heavy overuse of flashing lights as a cheap to animate special effect, that part fucking sucks since I have to either physically cover my eyes or alt-tab until it's through with it.

I also keep getting distracted trying to pick out all the little labor saving animation tricks they used and trying to figure out how they managed to make such janky animations actually look decent, as well as wondering why modern low-budget animation can't manage the same effect even though modern tools should make it even easier and faster to use the old stylistic tricks. Is it just a matter of janky cell animation needing a very specific set of skills that no one today cultivates in order to look good?

I've just gotten through the tree arc. Weirdly, despite being 46 episodes long the first season felt like it was fairly well paced for the content it had; there were definitely filler episodes but it didn't really drag all that much, and the in-episode pacing got better the further into it it got. In comparison the first arc of the second season felt like an absolute slog, despite being much shorter - most episodes felt like nothing really happened and the action scenes getting taken over by increasingly long reused move sequences got old fast. While that particular labor saving trick is understandable in context - you make one intricately animated sequence and then use it over and over and over indefinitely instead of spending more on bespoke animations - goddamn if it doesn't get tiring to watch.

There's also the issue that while overall it seems much better than one would expect something from the early 90s to be, there's some creepy shit with a central conceit of the story being that the 14 year old main character is the fated soulmate of a guy who seems to be in his early 20s because the moon despot did a Third Impact after some guys with swords ran to the moon on a cloud, and that their relationship is portrayed 100% positively with him being a moral compass who's helpful but never oversteps the main character's personal agency. I can't decide if it gets some credit for making him an impossibly perfect passive wish fulfilment object for the main character (and thus does better than the typical anime things where he would be the viewer insert and Usagi would be the viewer wish-fulfilment prize) or if that just makes it worse by narratively contriving to make a relationship that would be extremely creepy and predatory IRL ontologically ok.

Overall though, it's a decent nostalgia trip that's making me realize just how formative it was on my imagination as a kid, and even now is making me think a lot about the technical and structural parts. But if the pacing doesn't get better in the second arc of season two I don't know if I'll manage to get through it, and I might just stop and go watch the much shorter reboot instead.

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[-] geikei@hexbear.net 1 points 1 year ago

I also keep getting distracted trying to pick out all the little labor saving animation tricks they used and trying to figure out how they managed to make such janky animations actually look decent, as well as wondering why modern low-budget animation can't manage the same effect even though modern tools should make it even easier and faster to use the old stylistic tricks. Is it just a matter of janky cell animation needing a very specific set of skills that no one today cultivates in order to look good?

A major point to consider is that Sailor Moon was a long running weekly show that went on without breaks for years. Shows like that, no matter the era, require more limited animation tricks in order to deliver an interesting visual product because they will have less movement than 10-20 episode seasonal shows . Also idk what you mean by "janky animations" but Sailor Moon actually moves more and has better, less janky animation than most modern shows of similar length and production.

There is truth that some of the techniques used have faded out and that makes it harder for limited or long productions to deliver a pleasing show visually. Stuff like stylized still frames, color swaps, pans, triple takes and more limited comedic acting with great expressions are somewhat of a lost art form. Either because a some were achieved by analog cel photography and their aesthetic doesn't go well with digital colors and computer compositing but mostly because there is market demand to storyboard shows in a flashier way "like other big hits" and bad productions have lost the ability and realism to try and work around their limitations . Also younger generation of artists simply didn't grow up with those aesthetics so they won't try to reproduce it

Another thing to note is that it was simpler to make a competent looking show back then because simple cel photography of hand painted backgrounds its hard to fuck up aestheticaly. Computer compositing gives people way too many tools to fuck up the aesthetic with filters, digital effects, 3d assets etc being heavily used and usually in a bad or rushed ways due to production issues usually since compositing is also the last thing done. That's why there are 10 isekai every season that look like bland ass aestheticaly . They would be equally crap story wise in the 90s and they wouldn't move more but the art direction, backgrounds etc would have looked at worst cool. Same with sailor Moon. It relies on great backgrounds and color design but in a modern paradigm for a long running show that aspect would look worse and blander

Lastly anime productions are in their worst state ever. Its horrid really. 2-3 great looking shows each season hide the fact that the rest are completely broken, taped together in the last minute and rely on armies of inexperienced animators to patch them up. The production process hasn't been simplified by became more and more complex and fragmentated and without a system of mentorship in place the talent required isn't replaced in good rates despite the fact that many people world wide work o anime nowadays.

[-] KobaCumTribute@hexbear.net 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Also idk what you mean by "janky animations" but Sailor Moon actually moves more and has better, less janky animation than most modern shows of similar length and production.

I'm thinking mainly of how many scenes are just completely dead still except for a few small moving bits and how often animations end up being like one static image that just gets moved through the shot. Or how sometimes the individual drawn figures are clearly flawed in ways I associate with modern amateur-mistakes-to-avoid examples I've seen in art tutorials. I'm struck by the fact that it still looks good despite those rough edges.

I'm not just thinking about professional published materials here, but also short animations done by single people or small teams. Like even where what seem to be the same tricks are getting used, and there's more detail or whatever, it just doesn't make it work. So that's the point I keep distracted by and realizing several minutes later I'd completely tuned out what was going on thinking about the animation, trying to divine what it is that divides sort of rough, stylized animation that looks amazing from rough, stylized animation that looks bad, even when the latter has more things that should be going for it.

Computer compositing gives people way too many tools to fuck up the aesthetic with filters, digital effects, 3d assets etc being heavily used and usually in a bad or rushed ways

Yeah, what really got me started down this rabbit hole was seeing a video a month or so ago from an artist trying to work out a labor efficient way to rotoscope CGI to make it look good instead of horribly jarring and out of place. It left me wondering if modern tools can be synthesized with older techniques to create something that's less labor intensive than the old methods but still looks good in a way that the results of the modern tools generally don't.

[-] screwthisdumbcrap@hexbear.net 1 points 1 year ago

Wait, Tuxedo Mask was in his twenties?

[-] KobaCumTribute@hexbear.net 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I'm not sure. Apparently in the manga he was 16, and someone put him at 18 in the anime, but then his friend/classmate was dating a grad student (at least I think she was? she was doing research work instead of only being in classes) which makes me think they weren't freshmen and were probably 20-22. His backstory also puts him as just sort of incarnating as a 6 year old orphan with no earlier memories, and one might guess that all the characters were reincarnated at roughly the same time which would make him 6 years older, or 20 as of the show.

[-] CascadeOfLight@hexbear.net 1 points 1 year ago

Ah! But in Sailor Moon R: Promise of the Rose, in a flashback to when he was in hospital after the car crash, he meets a young Usagi who is there because her mother is in labor with Shingo, her younger brother, who is no less than three years younger than her based on their respective grades at school! Therefore, Mamoru can be at most 17 while she's 14.

berdly-actually speech-l

[-] abc@hexbear.net 0 points 1 year ago

i haven't seen crystal or the dub since childhood but I am just posting to let you know the 90s dub of sailor moon was the very first anime I ever saw as a kid (thanks Viz!). I was obsessed to the point where I would wake up at 6:30am on Saturdays to catch it and begged my grandmother to buy me the Sailor Moon action figure doll at wal-mart, which she did (thanks grandma!) and my dad got so mad at this (my mom remembers it as him literally being like 'frothingfash 'my son is not going to play with a doll') that he literally wrenched all the limbs off it and buried it in a hole in the backyard.

che-smile his plan didn't really pan out because I still turned out to be a homosexual communist

anyways to this day I know the lyrics to the 90s dub opening by heart

[-] wopazoo@hexbear.net 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

begged my grandmother to buy me the Sailor Moon action figure doll at wal-mart, which she did (thanks grandma!) and my dad got so mad at this (my mom remembers it as him literally being like ' 'my son is not going to play with a doll') that he literally wrenched all the limbs off it and buried it in a hole in the backyard.

What the hell??? What makes an action figure "gay"? Is an action figure depicting a woman automatically gay???

I stg heteronormativity (homophobia?) is like a straightjacket that cishet people wear. Must not be perceived as gay!! Must always display gender stereotype!! I can't do that, that's gay!!

[-] wombat@hexbear.net 0 points 1 year ago

sailor moon "filler" episodes are the best part of the show. The moon princess/whatever lore is the boring part.

[-] SoylentSnake@hexbear.net 1 points 1 year ago

Ya my ex was a huge Sailor Moon head and honestly the slice of life stuff was super fun and charming. the fights and lore I always checked out and started twiddling with my phone. (fun transformation dance sequences though but lose their luster after you see them copy pasted every episode)

[-] TawnyFroggy@hexbear.net 0 points 1 year ago

I've been meaning to do a Sailor Moon rewatch blog that literally no one will read for years now. Mayyybe I finally should.

[-] LaGG_3@hexbear.net 1 points 1 year ago

You'll have like at least 5-10 people read it if you post it here (⁠・⁠∀⁠・⁠)

[-] TawnyFroggy@hexbear.net 1 points 1 year ago

I'm completely happy to have 5-10 people so maybe I will soon!

[-] CriticalOtaku@hexbear.net 0 points 1 year ago

Is it just a matter of janky cell animation needing a very specific set of skills that no one today cultivates in order to look good?

Many things were lost in the move from cell to digital. Background painting, some of the weird composition effects you can get by over laying cells on top of each other, things like that.

Mostly due to the sweatshop like conditions they have to churn out new shows. Although, if you watch a modern show by an old school director they'll use the same tricks: compare Ikuhara's work in Sailor moon and Utena to his newer stuff like Penguindrum and Yuri Kuma Arashi, and they compare favourably.

[-] LaGG_3@hexbear.net 1 points 1 year ago

Yuri Kuma Arashi

Is this any good? I've only seen the OP and it looked incredibly horny.

[-] CriticalOtaku@hexbear.net 1 points 1 year ago

It's not bad, but it's incredibly horny. Literal translation is 'Lesbian Bear Storm', and you kinda get what it says on the tin.

It's not my favourite Ikuhara work (for me it's Penguindrum, sorry Utena fans) because it's kinda 12 episodes of him hitting you over the head with the most explicit metaphors for how much being gay in Japanese society sucks, but admittedly I'm cis so the show will probably hit a lot different to a queer audience. Show's got this gorgeous water-colour/pastel artstyle tho.

[-] barrbaric@hexbear.net 0 points 1 year ago

I can't decide if it gets some credit for making him an impossibly perfect passive wish fulfilment object for the main character (and thus does better than the typical anime things where he would be the viewer insert and Usagi would be the viewer wish-fulfilment prize) or if that just makes it worse by narratively contriving to make a relationship that would be extremely creepy and predatory IRL ontologically ok.

Sailor Moon is a shoujo (aka written for/targeted at girls), so it's basically just the standard anime relationship with the genders swapped, thus making it creepy.

Also I thought he went to her school lmao shows how well I remember the show.

[-] KobaCumTribute@hexbear.net 1 points 1 year ago

Also I thought he went to her school lmao shows how well I remember the show.

The weird thing is that's what I remembered too, but it's actually mentioned several times that he's in college. Since his friend was dating a grad student (I think?) that to me implies that he and the other guy Usagi was crushing on were both like early twenties at the least.

Maybe the original English dub changed some of these details too?

[-] LaGG_3@hexbear.net 0 points 1 year ago

In comparison the first arc of the second season felt like an absolute slog, despite being much shorter - most episodes felt like nothing really happened and the action scenes getting taken over by increasingly long reused move sequences got old fast.

The tree and aliens arc in R was made up for the anime. If I remember right, they had burnt through the content in the comic at that point and had to keep the show going.

[-] CarmineCatboy@hexbear.net 0 points 1 year ago

of all the anime i watched as a kid, sailor moon is the strangest. it's all a big dream sequence of nothing and the weirdest thing of all is that the giant alien tree is the only thing i truly remember about it.

[-] LaGG_3@hexbear.net 1 points 1 year ago

it's all a big dream sequence of nothing

You should watch Revolutionary Girl Utena if you haven't already. It shares many of the creative leads and is weird dream logic cranked up to max.

this post was submitted on 01 Jul 2023
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