Quote from: Anime News NetworkThe 28th issue (released on June 11) of Shogakukan's Weekly Shonen Sunday magazine has confirmed that the next issue (on sale on June 18) will feature the final chapter of Rumiko Takahashi's Inuyasha time-traveling fantasy manga. Takahashi has been working on Inuyasha over the course of 11 years and seven months, more than 54 volumes, and 558 magazine installments. Inuyasha will be Takahashi's longest regularly serialized work — topping Urusei Yatsura (over eight years), Maison Ikkoku (seven years), and Ranma 1/2 (over eight years). (One-Pound Gospel, the Mermaid series, and Rumic Theater have all been running for more years, but were all also irregularly serialized and shorter in page count.)
Viz Media has been releasing the manga in North America, and it has also released the 2000-2004 television anime adaptation.
I always thought that Inuyasha was anime's version of disco. It loops indefinitely and will never die. I'm glad I'm wrong.
Quote from: Valynth on June 11, 2008, 11:48:02 AMI always thought that Inuyasha was anime's version of disco. It loops indefinitely and will never die. I'm glad I'm wrong.
doesn't that title belong to pokémon?
Quote from: Jack McSlay on June 11, 2008, 11:52:57 AM
Quote from: Valynth on June 11, 2008, 11:48:02 AMI always thought that Inuyasha was anime's version of disco. It loops indefinitely and will never die. I'm glad I'm wrong.
doesn't that title belong to pokémon?
Nah, Pokemon is a sub-power of Nintendo and as such it is an emissary of gaming disco. Thus it can't hold titles on it's own.
Huh, almost sad to hear. Inuyasha was one of my favorite animes to follow, even though I hear that the final episode was a big disappointment (unfortunately or fortunately, I've never seen it). Wouldn't mind reading the manga if it were in English either.
Quote from: Aisha deCabre on June 11, 2008, 04:35:11 PM
Huh, almost sad to hear. Inuyasha was one of my favorite animes to follow, even though I hear that the final episode was a big disappointment (unfortunately or fortunately, I've never seen it). Wouldn't mind reading the manga if it were in English either.
i saw some of the series, and for the first dozen episodes i loved it- but for me i dont need to see the last episode to be disappointed, it took no time at all for them to completely forget they were hunting shards and instead focus on pointles drama seasoned with repeative fights leaving comedy behind in the dirt.
also, one night i turned adult swim on and they had some kind of movie cycle going, the movie in question was inuyasha, and in the first 3 minutes they kill the big baddie that they were chasing the entire series..... i don't know if thats a copout or if its more of a fanfic kinda plothole.
QuoteThis requires fire, and lots of it.
I couldn't get all the way through it. After awhile it seemed the same. But I guess it wasn't as bad as DBZ which 15 minutes of each episode was spent powering up, monologing (sp?), doing nothing, and such other silliness. For a martial arts fighting series there wasn't that much fighting. The manga was much better because you could go at your own pace, that way if you wanted a long drawn out power up you can do that. But if you want to move quickly like in a real battle (or as quick as it gets) you could. I found Inu Yasha mostly the same way.
All I have to say is, DBZ for girls
I actually really liked the early volumes of the Inu-Yasha manga, particularly when Sango showed up. Her backstory was terrific. Oh, and the Thunder Brothers? I loved them. To pieces. Too bad nobody remembers them.
*nerd nerd* :B
But I still prefer One Piece and Ruroni Kenshin. :boogie
~Keaton the Black Jackal
I'll have to say that Ranma 1/2 is Rumiko's biggest masterpiece. The randomness makes it far less repetitive than any other anime of about the same length I've so far, it's quite a disappointment that it wasn't carried over to Inu-Yasha.
And the fact she reused some stereotypes doesn't help much either, the Inu-Yasha/Agome/Kouga relationship really screams Ranma/Akane/Ryoga
Quote from: Keaton the Black Jackal on June 12, 2008, 11:59:54 AM
I actually really liked the early volumes of the Inu-Yasha manga, particularly when Sango showed up. Her backstory was terrific. Oh, and the Thunder Brothers? I loved them. To pieces. Too bad nobody remembers them.
*nerd nerd* :B
But I still prefer One Piece and Ruroni Kenshin. :boogie
~Keaton the Black Jackal
I think that's another downside of the series. too many awesome characters show up just to be killed shortly afterwards.
I remembers the thunder brothers. :B
probably 'cause I never got too far into the anime due to... frankly, due to my sister buying the later DvDs out of order and then us not watching them 'cause we hadn't seen earlier disks.
Also, stopped reading the manga because she stopped working in the bookstore, so I stopped coming in regularly and seeing that the next book was out.
I stopped watching because of this:
Inuyasha: "LOL! I kill 10000011000 demons !n 1 hts!"
baddies: "INVULN SHELID"
Inu: "WTF!!?!!?!1"
At that point it pretty much turns into a DBZ/RPG-esc gather crap as baddies gather more crap to counter the crap you just got.
I was nice... but too repetetive by the later eps.
at least Ranma had the whole sitcom vibe to it that it dispels any such feeling.
I stopped watching after they started focusing on the relationship between Kagome and Inuyasha, rather then focusing on an actual story.
Quote from: Brunhidden on June 12, 2008, 12:50:41 AM
Quote from: Aisha deCabre on June 11, 2008, 04:35:11 PM
Huh, almost sad to hear. Inuyasha was one of my favorite animes to follow, even though I hear that the final episode was a big disappointment (unfortunately or fortunately, I've never seen it). Wouldn't mind reading the manga if it were in English either.
i saw some of the series, and for the first dozen episodes i loved it- but for me i dont need to see the last episode to be disappointed, it took no time at all for them to completely forget they were hunting shards and instead focus on pointles drama seasoned with repeative fights leaving comedy behind in the dirt.
also, one night i turned adult swim on and they had some kind of movie cycle going, the movie in question was inuyasha, and in the first 3 minutes they kill the big baddie that they were chasing the entire series..... i don't know if thats a copout or if its more of a fanfic kinda plothole.
QuoteThis requires fire, and lots of it.
From what I understand, Rumiko Takahashi borrowed many elements and ideas of the show from Fushigi Yugi, and the show took a decline in quality once all of the elements of the show were introduced and she ran out of stuff to "Borrow"
Whether it's true or not, it's pretty clear that the show took itself far too seriously further down the line, and the only comedy elements to it (Which were better integrated in the earlier episodes) became exclusive to the horrible filler episodes that were completely unfunny and had no purpose in the series other than to stretch out plot-based content.
The finale episode, as I understand it, didn't resolve anything. It simply left off with a brief summary on how the story would continue on, and on and on. Ugh.
Rumiko Takahashi is a complete hack of a writer, who's only talent is for designing interesting characters.
ill just stick to outlaw star.... or at least i would if there were anywhere that sold or rented anime around here
now i feel old....
Quote from: Brunhidden on June 13, 2008, 06:49:56 AM
ill just stick to outlaw star.... or at least i would if there were anywhere that sold or rented anime around here
now i feel old....
You and me both, brother. The only anime I've found that stuck with me as well as Outlaw Star was the 12-episode-long Grenadier anime, which itself is marvelous. Limitless optimism hidden in a gun girl with a big chest.
Anyway, relevance. I never got too far into Inuyasha anime, and I honestly can't place the random later episodes I've caught into any sort of timeline: they all seem to be of the gang either fighting Naraku or traveling somewhere to boost the sword enough so they can fight Naraku. I really hope an 11-year manga is different, because that formula repeated for years would just be torture.
I have Outlaw Star, Trigun, and Escaflowne.
I've also watched TONS of series.
Recently: Mokke, Mushishi, Darker Than Black, Black Blood Brothers, Hellsing Ultimate 1st OVA, New Evangelion OVA, D Gray Man (ongoing) , Reborn (ongoing), Soul Eater (new series)
Regular TV is just too stupid anymore, save for a few educational programs and Law & Order.
...
Now I feel really old liking show like, the Slayers, Crest of the Stars, Super Atragon, and Star Blazers.
It seems like most anime (that is actually good enough to get translated) these days follows a pattern:
Good beginning
Peters out in the middle
Last episode hits you like a train wreck, making you realized how much of your life was wasted on this show.
I think no anime should not get past 50 episodes unless they ACTUALLY have a plot large enought to fill such. Because it may end up with three outcomes:
- All episodes become about the same, except for a thing or another, such as Pokémon and Inu-Yasha
- The anime spends whole episodes with pure stalling (Dragon Ball, Naruto)
- Run out of plot, making chars appear and disappear, and/or wasting whole eps on flashbacks (Saint Seiya)
So far, only a few long-running animes fully satisfied me - Yuu Yuu Hakusho and Ranma1/2. still, on both cases I found the first half much better than the second
Quote from: ShadesFox on June 13, 2008, 03:45:51 PM
...
Now I feel really old liking show like, the Slayers
Erstwhile reminder: Incoming, fourth season!
and then what is almost as annoying as an anime falling to cheezy cleches is when a very good and promising anime suddenly STOPS even though theres enough story and plot to make it three times as long yet just as good.
examples
outlaw star- it practically ended with the beginning of a whole new batch of adventures set for season 2, as though it were a normal series, and yet somehow 'season 2' never happened
trigun- yeah, theres plenty they could have done. you have dynamic characters and entire decades of their lives that just don't appear in the series. come on, everyone in this series has a life that even them going to the barbershop is worth watching because you know something will happen.
tenchi muyo- the first series was great, and ended with potential for a lot more, but for some reason the creators thought 'lets make a redo, or an alternate universe, or something, just so we can do the whole thing over differently for no real reason". on this note tenchi muyo was the first anime i really watched, and i like, but tenchi universe was only okay and tenchi in tokyo was painful.
gokudo- you probably never heard of it, but like outlaw star the last episode is practically an intro for continued shenanigans.
Quote from: Janus Whitefurr on June 13, 2008, 07:47:47 PM
Quote from: ShadesFox on June 13, 2008, 03:45:51 PM
...
Now I feel really old liking show like, the Slayers
Erstwhile reminder: Incoming, fourth season!
Wait, fourth season of Slayers? If so, holycrapholycrapholycrapholycrapholycrap, HYOOOGE HAPPY FACE :eager
By the way, anyone know where to find a copy of the SRD for the Slayers d20 BESM supplement? The makers of it, Guardians or Order usually have it free to download on their site, but the site has been down for some time.
Quote from: Janus Whitefurr on June 13, 2008, 07:47:47 PM
Quote from: ShadesFox on June 13, 2008, 03:45:51 PM
...
Now I feel really old liking show like, the Slayers
Erstwhile reminder: Incoming, fourth season!
*strangles the ferret*
I'm so happy! Can't you feel the love! Another chance to ruin a perfectly solid ending! Who wouldn't love that! Why aren't you dead yet? I've been strangling you for minutes.
Quote from: ShadesFox on June 14, 2008, 03:06:07 AM
Quote from: Janus Whitefurr on June 13, 2008, 07:47:47 PM
Quote from: ShadesFox on June 13, 2008, 03:45:51 PM
...
Now I feel really old liking show like, the Slayers
Erstwhile reminder: Incoming, fourth season!
*strangles the ferret*
I'm so happy! Can't you feel the love! Another chance to ruin a perfectly solid ending! Who wouldn't love that! Why aren't you dead yet? I've been strangling you for minutes.
All three seasons had perfectly solid endings, and you're complaining about the fourth season (http://www.starchild.co.jp/special/slayers_revolution/)? Bad fox! No cookie for you! Also, I don't need to breath.
Rumiko should stick to two things...
comedy and horror.
Quote from: Janus Whitefurr on June 14, 2008, 04:46:39 AM
All three seasons had perfectly solid endings, and you're complaining about the fourth season (http://www.starchild.co.jp/special/slayers_revolution/)? Bad fox! No cookie for you! Also, I don't need to breath.
You don't need to breath? That ruins the mood.
*keeps strangling anyways*
Still, I've become more and more impressed with industry's ability to ruin the past. It has been over 10 years sense the last season. Still, the dice have been cast, the new season should start next month in Japan. We shall see what happens sir ferret.
Geez, Shades thinks he is old...
Actually, I thought "Trigun" ended well for the series, though I wish they'd kept it going so the manga's whole story would be animated.
"Ghost Hunt" was another that was getting more and more interesting, then just sorta stopped.
Worse than "Outlaw Star's" teasing ending are the endings to series that start out good, go into a whole bunch of episodes that really don't have anything to do with the central story, and then rush through a crappy ending the last two episodes.
"Black Cat" was a perfect example. There are many other series that have done that, but I've forgotten them all as the ending ruined them so badly I banished them from memory. :P
Quote from: Azlan on June 14, 2008, 04:39:50 PM
Geez, Shades thinks he is old...
Indeed. Why, I still remember when I was watching shows like Captain Harlock, and Robotech, and oh right, Battle of the Planets
Quote from: Teroniss on June 15, 2008, 12:50:27 AM
Quote from: Azlan on June 14, 2008, 04:39:50 PM
Geez, Shades thinks he is old...
Indeed. Why, I still remember when I was watching shows like Captain Harlock, and Robotech, and oh right, Battle of the Planets
I really don't want to be that old mind, I'm still looking for Harlock and Robotech. I remember the names, but the pirate VHS tapes were so degraded that they were unwatchable.
Trigun was awesome...didn't have enough episodes in my opinion.
I've probably watched 13 or 14 episodes of Inuyasha and the movie where they killed Naraku...but he came back to life in the last five minutes.
in all honesty Inuyasha is a boob. I don't know if it was the episodes I was watching, but Kagome comes off as a little slow. I did like Haji, he was funny. Shippo acts like a girl, looks like a girl, and is arguably the most intelligent character in the episodes I watched. Miroku... I'm not impressed, is he the comic relief? Sango... reminds me of fannon Akane always beating miroku over the head with her boomerang the way Akane beats Ranma over the head with the mallet.
Inuyasha reminds me of Ranma for reasons I cannot place my finger on...the episode with the wolf boy and his finance was one that particularly reminded me of Ranma.
Quote from: GabrielsThoughts on June 15, 2008, 11:36:15 AM
Trigun was awesome...didn't have enough episodes in my opinion.
I've probably watched 13 or 14 episodes of Inuyasha and the movie where they killed Naraku...but he came back to life in the last five minutes.
in all honesty Inuyasha is a boob. I don't know if it was the episodes I was watching, but Kagome comes off as a little slow. I did like Haji, he was funny. Shippo acts like a girl, looks like a girl, and is arguably the most intelligent character in the episodes I watched. Miroku... I'm not impressed, is he the comic relief? Sango... reminds me of fannon Akane always beating miroku over the head with her boomerang the way Akane beats Ranma over the head with the mallet.
Inuyasha reminds me of Ranma for reasons I cannot place my finger on...the episode with the wolf boy and his finance was one that particularly reminded me of Ranma.
Maybe because both are done by the same person ;p
Quote from: Brunhidden on June 12, 2008, 12:50:41 AM
also, one night i turned adult swim on and they had some kind of movie cycle going, the movie in question was inuyasha, and in the first 3 minutes they kill the big baddie that they were chasing the entire series..... i don't know if thats a copout or if its more of a fanfic kinda plothole.
Well actually...*insert movie spoiler here :/*
why is it that so many anime just decide 24 or 26 episodes is all it can ever have, as though the thought of a second season is foreign to them.
Quote from: Brunhidden on June 17, 2008, 01:33:27 AM
why is it that so many anime just decide 24 or 26 episodes is all it can ever have, as though the thought of a second season is foreign to them.
It's probably due to the very high production costs. It takes time to draw that much detail and time is money. This was especially true when Japan first started making cartoons. Even with a low frame-rate and other short-cutting techniques it still costed more per-episode than most seasons of western style toons.
It's probably more about tradition now though. And the fact that most series that extend for several seasons tend to degrade in plot quality as they go on. There are exceptions to this rule mind you, but only because they tend to have writers that plan beyond the first season with a plot that can't be covered in the time of one season.
Mwahahaha, finally over! :mwaha And none too soon. As much I liked Ranma, this series was way too hokey for me.(Though the ending was just about as open ended as Ranma)
let's see...they can make a final movie or...six final movies.
Quote from: GabrielsThoughts on June 18, 2008, 11:08:59 AM
let's see...they can make a final movie or...six final movies.
*Stabs Gabriel* Hush you, no jinxing the moment! :kruger