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You're right, watching this movie today is not the same as watching it twenty or thirty years ago. In my case, I'm not that old, but I never had the chance to see it when I was young. However, when I watched it for the second time recently to talk about it in a previous review, I noticed the differences it has with anime from today or from a decade or two ago. Still, its audiovisual quality was far ahead of its time. Now we understand why it is said that Akira revolutionized cinema and the anime industry as such at that time. A priceless gem of the science fiction genre, without a doubt.
Good review.
Akira is incredible, I find it hard to believe that such animation was made even before the 90s. It's a must see classic, I watched it recently (last year) and when you watch it as an adult you understand it much more because it touches on very common and dense society issues, the story is not only about speed.
It is when we watch that anime that we really get what it is about and fully do understand instead of someone telling you about it
Your review makes Akira so unforgettable, not only animation or technique, but also its feeling. "Watching a breakdown and a prophecy at the same time” That line really stuck with me. It is wild how something has been made in '88, even today can feel more chaotic than most of others. Beautifully written.
That muchachona you encouraged to see a pretty strong classic, I saw it as a child on a channel called locomotion, I did not understand anything haha but I was impacted by what ceia
This reminds me that I have to watch it again to understand it now as an adult 😃
Eso muchachona te animaste a ver un clasico bastante fuerte, yo lo vi de pequeño en un canal llamado locomotion, no entendi nada jaja pero me impacto lo que ceia
Esto me recuerda que tengo que volver a verla para ahora ya como adulto entenderla 😃
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Absolutely! You've put into words what so many of us felt the first time we saw it. You're drawn to Kaneda's motorcycle fame and stay for Tetsuo's existential collapse. It's brutal. What you mentioned about the colors and sound are key, which is why it feels so alive and hasn't aged at all. It's one of those works that, the more you know about how it was made, the more you're blown away.
It’s about what happens when systems fail and people get lost inside the mess.
That. That is the biggest horror "ordinary" people face every single day. Customer service interactions. Stores not having stock, or sending the wrong things. At least, in the first world.
Or, a Crowdstrike issue making BSODs on Windows Operating systems, globally. The tighter and tighter systems get integrated, the more they will fail, and the harder, and more complicated those "times" will be.
Anarchy can bloom like a flower in those moments, but "systems" are just that.
I need to get my wife to watch this (and I need to rewatch it, too, as its been more than a decade since I've seen it) - to experience for myself how it stacks up today against technological process and my own development over time.