February 28, 2008 at 5:53 pm (Blogroll, Uncategorized)
Tags: american culture, animatin, anime, entertainment, fantasy stories, film producers, language, movies, television
America is being introduced to a relatively new form of art characterized by exquisite animation, interesting story lines, and fantasy stories alien to mainstream American culture. In case you have heard of it, it’s called anime, and it has a language of its own. Children love it, so much so that its techniques have been copied by American animated film producers, with culturally adjusted themes that have been deemed to make anime more acceptable to parents. Anime has both a light side and a dark side, although we generally consider cartoons to be a free harmless, mindless babysitter for our kids. Which explains something about some of the television and cable shows and themes inundating our living rooms, not mention our kid’s rooms, today. Anime is a great form of entertainment, and will only get better in the coming years.
Here’s an article that will tell you a little bit more about Anime and Manga, two terms that have made their way into our language in the past decade or so. You might learn something interesting if you read it.
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February 27, 2008 at 6:22 pm (Blogroll, romance, romantic dates, romantic dating)
Tags: broke back, BrokeBack, movies, passion, relationships, romance, romantic, survival
This year’s awards have been completely in line with the great movies of the past. No Country for Old Men isn’t exactly what you might consider romantic, although the trailer park relationship between the characters left me wondering about abuse and loyalty to your captor. Unexplored and unexpressed fully, the movie treated the characters more as heroes vs. heroes without any clear cut noble quest beyond greed and survival. Perhaps romance didn’t have a place in this movie, one that is sure to become a classic exploration of our times. Unlike BrokeBack Mountain, the story moves us to detest the weakness of our protectors and applaud the raw violence that we must sometimes participate in when fighting for our very own survival. The romance and the passion were there, but the fire was definitely not fueled by love.
Here’s an article exploring how Romantic Movies can be about passion. You might want to compare themes. No Country calls for some different ideas about ourselves, and that is what makes romantic movies so great.
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