When asking the students of the university about an old manga program like Looney Toons or X-men, there may be a reaction like "I have seen that program". Since most American animation is targeting children, children in America grew up in cartoons today. If you are still watching anime program for those who said you saw the manga, you might say that you saw the manga long ago. Japanese animation programs are for children of all ages, not just children.
Animation This word occasionally confuses them that are not familiar with vibrant styles. To be exact, what is making animation cartoons? Is not this just about manga of high school students' group in a supernatural situation? Why are they always crying, are they perverted, or are they a strange small cute version of themselves? And I have heard a lot about the tentacles ... is it safe for my children? These are all effective questions and criticisms of various animation's metaphor, but please avoid high quality characters, stories, styles that animation will miss for decades. So, in order to better guide you to the wonderful world of animation, we have created a selection of TV programs and movies for beginners. Since animation spans a wide range of age groups, after all, I do not want children to see Ninja Scroll.
On Wednesday, your friends and enemies at EW.com will announce the 25 most vibrant series we've ever had. This list includes the early classics of TV animation, sincere children's cartoons teaching important lessons of life, surreal children's cartoons that parents can not understand, animated satire, animated music space western movies, animated fantasy, aquatic There are power of hunger and others. But here is the turning point: we will not rank these shows, but ask the reader to vote to decide which animation series is the best. You will tackle some major contradictions in the anime TV history. Beavis & Butthead or Ren & Stimpy? Aquatine Hanger Force or Venture Brothers? Modern primitive person or Jason? (just kidding
Anime fans are most concentrated in people who became children during the animation boom of the 1990s. In the 1990's, children saw an explosion of animation. Programs like Pokemon, Dragon Ball Z, Sailor Moon are the main contents of the morning TV. Children of these animation in the 1990s are now approaching their thirties, and as our culture and media are trapped by the nostalgia of marketing childhood, many of them return to animation for nostalgia . The exposure animation received in the 1990s is essential to today's success, but it is also a barrier to the art form. When Pokemon becomes synonymous with animation, it reinforces the Western concept that animation is the medium of children. Like many children's TV programs, the main purpose of Pokemon is marketing and commercialization (I also warned that I can commercialize to Japanese as well). This is based on the budget of the program, and the producers and viewers are more interested in the product than the story or the content itself.