I get the impression that it had a following more because of its unusual premise and look. Adding a live-action image to an animated series, I find it off-putting.
A furry with eclectic tastes who loves the 80s and 90s. Mostly 1984-1992.
</div>Arthouse/indie/"award season" movies have been a VERY mixed bag in my life, ranging from very disappointing but trying to convince myself I "liked it" (Mirrormask) to I got it later in life (Napoleon Dynamite, Office Space) to simple yet breathtakingly lovely (Pan's Labyrinth) to "Ohhhh I REALLY like this, and I liked it from the start" (Akeelah and the Bee, Little Miss Sunshine, Speak) to "ugggh, this feels uWu "quirky" yet also somehow PRETENTIOUS" (Juno) to "Ummm, I think I liked it?" (There Will Be Blood)
I get the impression that it had a following more because of its unusual premise and look. Adding a live-action image to an animated series, I find it off-putting.
Me too, in general I don't really care for the whole live-action-background-mixed-with-animation thing. Sometimes I can tolerate it like with Archer and Pacific Heat but other times I just can't get past it(I.E. Gumball, Sit Down Shut Up).
Post by purplemermaid on Oct 29, 2024 20:49:16 GMT
I actually enjoyed Evangelion. But I don't often understand the religious themes and psychology. I had to look up on the fan wiki to get a gist of the meanings.
I actually enjoyed Evangelion. But I don't often understand the religious themes and psychology. I had to look up on the fan wiki to get a gist of the meanings.
The original ending to that show was incomprehensible nonsense that pissed me off, so I was glad when the films gave us a real conclusion to the series.