Anime on Animation
Chris Howell-Little
chl
Tue Jul 9 10:35:07 EDT 2002
I think the best bet for finding out the production/airing dates for
American animated TV shows would be the Internet Movie Database
http://www.imdb.com . This may seem like an obvious answer to some, but
not everyone know that they give listings for many TV shows and even video
games. (TV show titles are listed in quotation marks.) Unfortunately, the
aspect that makes IMDb quite useful is also it's biggest hindrance... the
data is user-submitted, so, it occasionally contains errors or major gaps
in information (especially for anything that is not commercially available
in the US, which doesn't sound like it will be an issue in this case).
-Chris
On Tue, 9 Jul 2002, kiseko minaguchi wrote:
> Concerning anime, I was rather interested in such conservative(?)American
> cartoons like Uchu kazoku Jetsons,Samurai Jack, and the King of the hill. So
> far I thought they supposedly offer a nice time out to highschool and
> college kids who are learning English on basic level.I tried Edo Edd Eddy
> (misspelled?) in class but didn't really impress our noisy boys there.
> Little Lulu and Angela Anaconda (misspelled?) , how old are they, I mean
> when were they made? Unlike cinema, we are never given the time the cartoons
> were originated, which is funny. Aside from the perceptiion of
> representations, I want to know some of the views of what's going on today's
> Cartoon Network. Who is selecting them on what basis ?I'd be grateful to get
> some orientation in selecting what I show to my students on the elementary
> level of English communication. Would anybody provide me with some guidance,
> please?
> Minaguchi
>
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> ??? : "Aaron Gerow" <gerow at ynu.ac.jp>
> ?? : "KineJapan" <KineJapan at lists.acs.ohio-state.edu>
> ???? : 2002?7?8? 15:21
> ?? : Anime on Animation
>
>
> > My son was flipping through the channels on Saturday morning and came
> > across a TV animation show called Totally Spies aired on TV Tokyo. What
> > was interesting about this Charlie's Angels for teens show was the fact
> > that, while it was made in France (TV1) for the French and
> > English-language--and ultimately Japanese--markets, it clearly showed the
> > influence of Japanese animation in character design, bodily and facial
> > movement, and even in some of the conventional "signs" of anime. Yet it
> > was not quite like anime.
> >
> > Perhaps this style was selected in part to aim for the Japanese market
> > (the story I saw in fact took part in part in Tokyo, though the spies
> > live in California), but I was intrigued about how extensive the
> > influence of Japanese anime is having on the visual style of non-Japanese
> > animation. We hear a lot about animators being fans of Miyazaki, et al.,
> > but how much of this is changing the way non-Japanese made animation is
> > being made? One could divide this answer into geographical centers (Asia,
> > the US, Europe, etc.), but I was interested in what people outside of
> > Japan have been noticing in all sorts of animation.
> >
> > Aaron Gerow
> > Associate Professor
> > International Student Center
> > Yokohama National University
> > 79-1 Tokiwadai
> > Hodogaya-ku, Yokohama 240-8501
> > JAPAN
> > E-mail: gerow at ynu.ac.jp
> > Phone: 81-45-339-3170
> > Fax: 81-45-339-3171
> >
>
>
>
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