| Kenryoku_Maxis |
03-05-2007 08:42 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Aerozord
I will be happy if they are realistic looking. I am sick of Japan being full of 15 year olds that are 6ft tall and have large breasts. One or two in the series is ok, like in Bleach (characters clearly note Orihime as an exception), or better yet a more average looking lead female like Samurai Champloo.
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Otohime as an execption? She's hardly any exception. A 5' 4", 'cute', super skinny anime girl with large boobs, long hair and happens to be in a Shonen? She's pretty much the epitome of an Anime Girl. And I wouldn't say the girl in Samurai Champloo looks realistic, but then I wouldn't say anyone in that style (or Anime) looks realistic.
Pretty much if you want to see an Anime girl that would be different from other anime girls, you'd have to make her have realistic proportions to her height (not super skinny around the mid-section no matter what her hips, bust and legs are which all anime girls are), change their personality from the same 5 personalities it seems all Anime girls have now adays and pretty much just doing those two things would make any female Anime character seem totally different. Throw her into a show where she's not being groped every episode or playing second fiddle to some 'bad-ass' whos saving her with a sword 3 times his size and 100x his weight or maybe into a show where she's *shock* not somewhere between the ages of 14-17 and worrying daily if some guy who barely says 3 words an episode to her likes her by the end of the season...then you'd have an actual Anime Girl of 'Tomorrow'.
But then, would it sell? I think Slayers and Full Metal Panic showed us that its more profitable to have characters who do these things, but still poke fun at the old concepts while 'playing along' with them to get the other audiance and as a result, rake in the dough.
If you didn't get it, I don't think the last Decade (the 2000-2007 anime period) has seen the Anime 'Girl of Tomorrow'. I think we've seen things going backwards. And more stereotyping.
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