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Jun 5, 2013 7:40 AM

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Sep 2011
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Darklight0303 said:
Chamber is the final boss and he will rule all.


oh lordy. if Chamber is the final boss then i would feel sorry for him if Gargantia makes it into Super Robot Wars

Jun 5, 2013 10:55 AM
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Jan 2012
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I'm only half surprised, but I'm happy to get this kind of reveal. It only furthers this story to go in a more gray Nausicaa-ish direction.

I was horrified to see more white squid bits and pieces floating around in the water. To hear the baby squids crying out in pain was super sad. Then, the final blow with Elena(?) being squished by Chamber was heart-breaking.

I have no comment about the squids in space, since they evolved far beyond the ones on Earth. I just hope that there's some kind co-existence resolution for everyone on Earth. The people on the ships need to be made aware of all this data asap.

As much as I now want to throttle Chambers, I would rather reprogram him so he stops following "protocol".... *imitates Lost in Space A.I. personality input*

Can't wait to see Red's reaction when he sees Amy's face again. I can't pass off little Elena resembling Amy as a simple mere coincidence. :D (Not saying they're blood related or anything though. I think this will affect Red's psyche as a whole.)
Jun 5, 2013 2:29 PM

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Jul 2011
202
They pulled the exact same plot twist of Shinsekai Yori. Didn't find it so surprising for that reason.
Jun 5, 2013 2:30 PM

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Jul 2010
2835
Well, what a twist! It seems that Ledo has been killing 'evolved' humans all this time. He's really starting to change his opinion on the Hideauze because of this. He must be part of the group that opposed these Evolvers and didn't know any better.

Jun 3, 2013 1:04 PM

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Jun 2012
353
...
All hail the Nutcracker Queen!
Jun 3, 2013 1:07 PM

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Feb 2012
178
Zyrusticae said:
The only time they reference the human genome is during a straight-up propaganda piece, so I'm not going to put much stock in that.
Oh so we're in that boat, now.


Their use of the term evolution is so loose that you really can't get anything out of it other than "we are overcoming our limitations as a species", whether that is through bionic fusion or what-have-you.


They are freaking scientists.

I was using that specifically to explain the humanoid-looking squid girl as an alternative to them somehow modifying her existing body. Of course there is no evidence of that, but then there is also no evidence that they actually transformed her old body to create her.


It's not up to the audience to cover the faults of the writers.

It doesn't matter. The context is clear and obvious. There is nothing to argue about here because they are obviously referring to evolution in a general sense and not the biological "gradual change over hundreds of generations" definition.
Arguing semantics like this is a sign of a small mind. I really suggest you drop the subject.


But that's exactly what evolution means when you talk about biological change (e.g. not something like "the evolution of democracy"), even in the general sense.

Anyways, it's not the semantics here, what they are doing is simple not possible. You could, for example, create gills and graft them onto a human being if you could

a) figure out some way to not make the human body reject it
b) make it possible for the host body to repair it without tumoring out.

But you cannot change the overall big structure of an adult human being. It just doesn't work. The human genes don't code for that. One way this kinda thing would be possible, would be if you recoded the DNA, basically REGREW the whole freaking body and just transplanted the brain into the new body (and this is freaking far-fetched enough), but it's been shown that that this clearly isn't the case. You cannot alter the biological structure of an adult human organism to this degree.
Kellhus said:

GuusWayne said:
there is a limit to the suspension of disbelief

And it's the fan that did it. Not the smoking porn reading rubik cube genius rape ape with a magic boat.
Jun 5, 2013 3:26 PM

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Jun 2010
3696
Well, that twist is unexpected. Never even considered that.

Urobutcherrerererererrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Jun 5, 2013 3:34 PM

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16085
Zeally said:
lol @ people bashing science fiction genre by comparing it to real life scientific paradigms
They're supposed to. That's why it's science fiction.
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Jun 5, 2013 4:17 PM

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Jul 2007
23708
katsucats said:
Zeally said:
lol @ people bashing science fiction genre by comparing it to real life scientific paradigms
They're supposed to. That's why it's science fiction.


You do realize that by that logic every single work by Asimov or Clarke is a trash?
Jun 5, 2013 4:29 PM

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Fai said:
katsucats said:
Zeally said:
lol @ people bashing science fiction genre by comparing it to real life scientific paradigms
They're supposed to. That's why it's science fiction.
You do realize that by that logic every single work by Asimov or Clarke is a trash?
I'll let you make that judgment, but the whole point of science fiction is fiction that take place in a world with similar elements to ours, with laws of physics similar to ours. Fiction that make no attempts to establish this connection is not science fiction.

Dictionary.com Unabridged said:
a form of fiction that draws imaginatively on scientific knowledge and speculation in its plot, setting, theme, etc.
World English Dictionary said:
— n
a. a literary genre that makes imaginative use of scientific knowledge or conjecture
Merriam-Webster said:
fiction dealing principally with the impact of actual or imagined science on society or individuals or having a scientific factor as an essential orienting component
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Jun 5, 2013 4:54 PM

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EdenBaggins said:
They pulled the exact same plot twist of Shinsekai Yori. Didn't find it so surprising for that reason.

SSY weren't first with this.
Jun 5, 2013 5:44 PM

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23708
katsucats said:
Fai said:
katsucats said:
Zeally said:
lol @ people bashing science fiction genre by comparing it to real life scientific paradigms
They're supposed to. That's why it's science fiction.
You do realize that by that logic every single work by Asimov or Clarke is a trash?
I'll let you make that judgment, but the whole point of science fiction is fiction that take place in a world with similar elements to ours, with laws of physics similar to ours. Fiction that make no attempts to establish this connection is not science fiction.

Dictionary.com Unabridged said:
a form of fiction that draws imaginatively on scientific knowledge and speculation in its plot, setting, theme, etc.
World English Dictionary said:
— n
a. a literary genre that makes imaginative use of scientific knowledge or conjecture
Merriam-Webster said:
fiction dealing principally with the impact of actual or imagined science on society or individuals or having a scientific factor as an essential orienting component


Thanks for proving my point with definitions from dictionaries.

You DO realize that they go AGAINST your argument, right, since most of them define scifi as story that focuses on effect fictional or real science has on characters and that NONE of those descriptions say it requires science to be accurate?

SCIFI does not require science accuracy. Hard Scifi usually has it, but its not required, or otherwise Clarke's transhumanic ideas and floating black obelisks would be counted as trash, yet they are not(since Clarke is one of the definite SCIFI authors to ever live)

Suspension of disbelief NEVER applies to technobabble. The term mainly is used to define the immersion and logic-breaking moments in character reactions(character reactions have to fit the character development and character psychological profile) or ground-rules of real life logic, unless the very point of the fictional work is to showcase why it goes against them.

So If Ledo suddenly started break-dancing, that would be OOC and beyond suspension of disbelief. If Chamber morphed into pikachu, that would require even bigger level of suspension of disbelief. Fictional parts of lore usually have absolutely no effect onto immersion, since reader has to accept it as part of worldbuilding(otherwise we should have just walked away from Space Odyssey, the moment a giant stone obelisk appeared?). The "Science changed in thousands of years" is a feasible explanation for all of this whinery that is going on.
AhenshihaelJun 5, 2013 5:50 PM
Jun 5, 2013 6:03 PM

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Sep 2012
445
wow, during the end , when chamber crushed that female Hideauze,
was kinda emotional,
looks like ill be watching "Shinsekai Yori" after this, from reading the comments.
Jun 5, 2013 6:13 PM

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Sep 2011
369
XartaX said:
But you cannot change the overall big structure of an adult human being. It just doesn't work. The human genes don't code for that. One way this kinda thing would be possible, would be if you recoded the DNA, basically REGREW the whole freaking body and just transplanted the brain into the new body (and this is freaking far-fetched enough), but it's been shown that that this clearly isn't the case. You cannot alter the biological structure of an adult human organism to this degree.


Actually you can. It just requires that you manipulate gene expression during embryo development. There are an awful lot of genes that are NEVER expressed in humans, as well as numerous interactions between genes and even within genes. Alot of people overestimate the difference between organisms genomes.
Jun 5, 2013 6:57 PM

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16085
Fai said:
Thanks for proving my point with definitions from dictionaries.

You DO realize that they go AGAINST your argument, right, since most of them define scifi as story that focuses on effect fictional or real science has on characters and that NONE of those descriptions say it requires science to be accurate?

SCIFI does not require science accuracy. Hard Scifi usually has it, but its not required, or otherwise Clarke's transhumanic ideas and floating black obelisks would be counted as trash, yet they are not(since Clarke is one of the definite SCIFI authors to ever live)
God damn it, do you really enjoy making specious arguments in attempts to bait people into these ridiculous arguments? I never said science-fiction requires science to be accurate (i.e. derived conclusions become applicable to the real world), but I did say science-fiction requires the story to be built atop the foundations of scientific thinking. Science, contrary to beliefs, is not a list of facts about our empirical world, but a process by which we observe them. Obviously, since science-fiction usually take place in alternate, fictional universes these observations will be different, leading to different laws that are permissible, as long as they are derived through the same scientific paradigms albeit with different premisses. A work of science fiction must be logical, its events and characters' actions must be reasonably in line with the premiss of the working world that's presented to us.

What becomes problematic is not when the fictional science doesn't vibe with scientific facts in the real world, but when the fictional science contradicts other facets of fictional science when we apply scientific thinking and deduct from them facts. A genre that is based in science should especially take great lengths to avoid presenting world-breaking "facts" that could be criticized as logically contradictory.

Fai said:
Suspension of disbelief NEVER applies to technobabble. The term mainly is used to define the immersion and logic-breaking moments in character reactions(character reactions have to fit the character development and character psychological profile) or ground-rules of real life logic, unless the very point of the fictional work is to showcase why it goes against them.
Suspension of disbelief applies across all aspects of a work (it is irrational to arbitrarily expect the audience to suspend their rational judgment while you ramble on in a contradictory manner). The skill lies in a author that properly disperses his technobabble in places that can be related to the events of the story. When the audience becomes aware of contradictions within technobabble, obviously the author has failed to capture the immersion of his audience. The "logic" that you point out in your post is indistinguishable from drawing scientific conclusions from the premisses. The character reactions must not only fit the psychological profile of the character, but also the physical profile of the world.

Fai said:
So If Ledo suddenly started break-dancing, that would be OOC and beyond suspension of disbelief. If Chamber morphed into pikachu, that would require even bigger level of suspension of disbelief. Fictional parts of lore usually have absolutely no effect onto immersion, since reader has to accept it as part of worldbuilding(otherwise we should have just walked away from Space Odyssey, the moment a giant stone obelisk appeared?). The "Science changed in thousands of years" is a feasible explanation for all of this whinery that is going on.
The audience for Space Odyssey has obviously accepted the possibility of a floating, intelligent obelisk, because it is self-evident that all parts of fiction has effect on immersion -- if it had been a floating penis that has the voice of Betty Boop, you can bet more people would have walked out.

What you refer to as "whinery" is really just critical thinking skills that you don't want to apply, which is fine except when you expect other people not to watch science-fiction critically, and use science to discuss science-fiction...
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Jun 5, 2013 7:15 PM
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scruffykiwi said:
XartaX said:
But you cannot change the overall big structure of an adult human being. It just doesn't work. The human genes don't code for that. One way this kinda thing would be possible, would be if you recoded the DNA, basically REGREW the whole freaking body and just transplanted the brain into the new body (and this is freaking far-fetched enough), but it's been shown that that this clearly isn't the case. You cannot alter the biological structure of an adult human organism to this degree.

Actually you can. It just requires that you manipulate gene expression during embryo development. There are an awful lot of genes that are NEVER expressed in humans, as well as numerous interactions between genes and even within genes. Alot of people overestimate the difference between organisms genomes.

I can already see you getting chewed up due to the fact that he is talking about modifying fully grown humans.

Which I wouldn't say is impossible, but by principle it cannot be done with embryonic gene manipulation.

Personally, I prefer thinking something is possible until proven impossible. Other people seem to go with considering everything impossible until proven possible. I would advise to leave it at that.
"Against stupidity the gods themselves contend in vain"
Friedrich Schiller
Jun 5, 2013 7:54 PM

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Sep 2011
369
Ajunky said:
scruffykiwi said:
XartaX said:
But you cannot change the overall big structure of an adult human being. It just doesn't work. The human genes don't code for that. One way this kinda thing would be possible, would be if you recoded the DNA, basically REGREW the whole freaking body and just transplanted the brain into the new body (and this is freaking far-fetched enough), but it's been shown that that this clearly isn't the case. You cannot alter the biological structure of an adult human organism to this degree.

Actually you can. It just requires that you manipulate gene expression during embryo development. There are an awful lot of genes that are NEVER expressed in humans, as well as numerous interactions between genes and even within genes. Alot of people overestimate the difference between organisms genomes.

I can already see you getting chewed up due to the fact that he is talking about modifying fully grown humans.

Which I wouldn't say is impossible, but by principle it cannot be done with embryonic gene manipulation.

Personally, I prefer thinking something is possible until proven impossible. Other people seem to go with considering everything impossible until proven possible. I would advise to leave it at that.


True, although it appeared that initially the symoiant was like an external biomass that the adult wore. A scientifically plausible route would be to do this to adults and then more permanent and more importantly heritable changes on embryos. There have already been suggestions in the scientific community of using artificial chromosomes for this purpose.

Anyway, even with the current state of knowledge it's plausible. And when you consider that the paper that detailed the structure of DNA only came out in 1953 who knows what is possible!
Jun 5, 2013 8:12 PM

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Mar 2012
1575
katsucats said:
[Did you miss the part in the story where the Hideauze have been waging war with the humans for presumably hundreds of years?

Did you miss the part in the story where the humans instigated the war and are very likely continuing to instigate the war? I won't blame a species for acting in self-defense.

I ask again: What is the relevance of sentience to the situation?

The genocide of sentient beings is abhorrent behavior...

What is the relevance?

The unconditional slaughter of a sentient species for reasons unknown is wrong. That is the point.

katsucats said:
That sentience is irrelevant is the argument, your moral inconsistency is the conclusion.

And this is a non-sequitor as I've pointed out. Even if sentience were irrelevant (and that has not been established), this would not somehow make my morals inconsistent.

But in space, we know that they are mortal enemies of humankind.

We do not know this. The only scenes that we've been given thus far are of the Alliance leading an attack upon the Hideauze.

No, I bet most people are not so easily manipulated by cheap, propagandist infomercials.

http://iconicphotos.wordpress.com/2009/08/12/vulture-stalking-a-child/

That is one of the most famous pictures ever taken, and has been responsible for the gathering of millions of dollars in charitable donations. Just because you are not moved by the plight of a starving child doesn't mean the rest of the world shares that rather disgusting viewpoint.

Using the "little girl" symbolism evokes a disgusted laugh out of anyone with even a yellow belt in drama and storytelling. Such cliches are so obvious that it's borderline offensive.

Oh shit, we got a badass here! Watch out everyone! Badass coming through!
Let's go bowling.
Jun 5, 2013 8:48 PM

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16085
StopDropAndBowl said:
No, I bet most people are not so easily manipulated by cheap, propagandist infomercials.

http://iconicphotos.wordpress.com/2009/08/12/vulture-stalking-a-child/

That is one of the most famous pictures ever taken, and has been responsible for the gathering of millions of dollars in charitable donations. Just because you are not moved by the plight of a starving child doesn't mean the rest of the world shares that rather disgusting viewpoint.
There's a difference between being apathetic to starving children and being apathetic to pictures of starving children, which are undoubtedly taken specifically to evoke this response and garner attention and donations. Is it disgusting to resist such exploitation? Get off your moral high horse. Only a fool is compelled to feel whatever someone else tells him to.
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Jun 5, 2013 9:40 PM

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katsucats said:
StopDropAndBowl said:
No, I bet most people are not so easily manipulated by cheap, propagandist infomercials.

http://iconicphotos.wordpress.com/2009/08/12/vulture-stalking-a-child/

That is one of the most famous pictures ever taken, and has been responsible for the gathering of millions of dollars in charitable donations. Just because you are not moved by the plight of a starving child doesn't mean the rest of the world shares that rather disgusting viewpoint.
There's a difference between being apathetic to starving children and being apathetic to pictures of starving children, which are undoubtedly taken specifically to evoke this response and garner attention and donations. Is it disgusting to resist such exploitation? Get off your moral high horse. Only a fool is compelled to feel whatever someone else tells him to.

Well if you're asking if I feel empathy toward the picture... no obviously not. The child in the picture? Oh course. Besides there is a clear difference between being told by someone: "Children are starving in Africa." and seeing a bloated mass of flesh with a fucking vulture sitting right next to it. People, for better or worse, connect with things visually. If they can't see the starving children it is easy for them to put it out of mind. Once they SEE the effects, they find it much harder to put it out of mind.

Being moved emotionally by things that are meant to move you emotionally isn't foolish, it's the cornerstone of art. If I refuse to be moved by the plight of the character, than I cannot enjoy the story. Now, sometimes the story is portrayed in such a way that I don't care about enjoying the story (I think it's useless, or bad, or disagree with it on some fundamental level), but that is all still my choice. If I refuse to connect emotionally with the character, than I can't blame the author. If I refuse to be moved by the horror Ledo would feel at being responsible for the death of a child, than that isn't the fault of the story-teller.

You can call it cheap manipulation all you want but then what are you doing watching any drama at all? Drama is emotional manipulation. If you go into a production of Julius Caesar with the prior thought that you won't be moved by emotional manipulation than of course you won't empathize with Brutus or Caesar. Instead of being incredibly poignant, the words "Et tu, Brute?" will be either forgettable or possibly even trite. I don't know Caesar. I don't know Brutus. I am over 2,000 years removed from either. Why should I care about their tragedy? The story-teller creates the scenario and attempts to force catharsis out of the audience through the manipulation of emotions. I don't weep for Caesar because I loved Caesar, I weep for Caesar because I have been betrayed. I can feel Caesar's pain.

Now, you can go ahead and say that Gargantia hasn't done a good job at setting up the emotional manipulation; but that is a personal opinion, and most watchers disagree. Most found the scene to be both disturbing and tragic. The method is commonplace, sure, but then, betrayal and loss are perfectly commonplace methods also. That doesn't then mean that Shakespeare is terrible at manipulating our emotions.
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Jun 5, 2013 9:51 PM

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Jan 2013
1355
No, I bet most people are not so easily manipulated by cheap, propagandist infomercials.


Sadly, they are.

Saigon Execution Eddie Adams, 1968
http://i2.wp.com/listverse.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/saigon-execution_1968.jpeg.jpg?resize=600%2C379
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Jun 5, 2013 11:00 PM

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Apr 2009
1107
wow at this anime i was interested by the story but never got round to watching it after watching all 9 episodes in a row its easily as good as attack of the titans
Jun 5, 2013 11:08 PM

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16085
StopDropAndBowl said:
Now, you can go ahead and say that Gargantia hasn't done a good job at setting up the emotional manipulation; but that is a personal opinion, and most watchers disagree. Most found the scene to be both disturbing and tragic.
I do speak for myself when I say Gargantia has done a horrid job so far at setting up emotional manipulation; it's quite sad that you feel compelled to validate your opinion with an appeal to popularity, as if you are somehow privy to the emotional involvement of the entire Gargantia audience, and they've set you up as the symbolic spokesperson. It's just another case of "You're entitled to your own opinions as long as you don't fight my opinions facts."

Drama is emotionally manipulative, but the point of good drama is, oddly enough, to manipulate the audience without letting them be aware that they are being manipulated. Gargantia has as much subtlety as a flaming homosexual stereotype at religious camp.
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Jun 5, 2013 11:13 PM
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its a bit similar to Psycho Pass. The way they manipulate viewer emotion and suddently showing that "Hey audience, you are being manipulated, here's the proof".

psycho pass - Sybil - known to Akane and an antagonist (forgot his name).
gargantia - human evol - known to LED.
Jun 6, 2013 12:29 AM

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Feb 2013
138
Crazy stuff this episode, reminded me of the ending of Shinsekai Yori, what will Ledo do now. Also I like Chambers analysis of the video, its a lie manipulated by the enemy lol
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Jun 6, 2013 5:50 AM

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Mar 2012
94
Spoiler spoiler spoiler!!

Jun 6, 2013 5:56 AM

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Jan 2013
1355
Smoofie said:
Spoiler spoiler spoiler!!



meh... I may not like the upcoming episodes...
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Jun 6, 2013 9:12 AM
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katsucats said:
Drama is emotionally manipulative, but the point of good drama is, oddly enough, to manipulate the audience without letting them be aware that they are being manipulated. Gargantia has as much subtlety as a flaming homosexual stereotype at religious camp.


Agreed, it is very similar to fanservice. It's pandering, but as long as they do a good job at sliding it into a series you can just enjoy it and if really skillful it adds to the experience, but when they shove it down your face it is difficult not to feel that you are being treated condescendingly.

It isn't just the drama that has lacked subtlety, the fanservice and even the humor has been a tad obvious.



Crap I should have put a spoiler tag on my last comment could people quoting me please add them for me. My apologies.
Takuan_SohoJun 6, 2013 12:52 PM
Jun 6, 2013 10:21 AM

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Feb 2012
468
Kyube said:
Why do I get the feeling that this anime exceeds my worst expectations?


+100000000000000000
Jun 6, 2013 12:32 PM

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Mar 2012
94
Takuan_Soho said:
katsucats said:
Drama is emotionally manipulative, but the point of good drama is, oddly enough, to manipulate the audience without letting them be aware that they are being manipulated. Gargantia has as much subtlety as a flaming homosexual stereotype at religious camp.


Agreed, it is very similar to fanservice. It's pandering, but as long as they do a good job at sliding it into a series you can just enjoy it and if really skillful it adds to the experience, but when they shove it down your face it is difficult not to feel that you are being treated condescendingly.

It isn't just the drama that has lacked subtlety, the fanservice and even the humor has been a tad obvious.

As for the spoiler wth? Samurai Chamber?


Jun 6, 2013 12:47 PM

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Apr 2008
11325
Smoofie said:
Takuan_Soho said:
katsucats said:
Drama is emotionally manipulative, but the point of good drama is, oddly enough, to manipulate the audience without letting them be aware that they are being manipulated. Gargantia has as much subtlety as a flaming homosexual stereotype at religious camp.


Agreed, it is very similar to fanservice. It's pandering, but as long as they do a good job at sliding it into a series you can just enjoy it and if really skillful it adds to the experience, but when they shove it down your face it is difficult not to feel that you are being treated condescendingly.

It isn't just the drama that has lacked subtlety, the fanservice and even the humor has been a tad obvious.

As for the spoiler wth? Samurai Chamber?




He looks evil. Wonder if the Hideauze converted him
Jun 6, 2013 2:57 PM

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Oct 2010
588
I felt quite bad towards the end. Really sad. :/
Jun 6, 2013 4:18 PM
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203
skudoops said:
Baconzombie said:
Too much info dumping into one episode. The plot twist was nice, but nothing groundbreaking. They really didn't have to waste the previous 8 episodes of absolutely nothing for this to happen -.-


I don't think you realize what they were going for if you think they wasted the previous 8.


They were trying to make Ledo more human by exposing him to the culture of Gargantia so that his reaction in this episode would be believable. Additionally, they tried to clear up things about the situation he was in while trying to expand on the setting.

Problem is that a lot of that time was spent on useless almost slice of life-like episodes, and the fact that they turned it serious so suddenly is classic Urobuchi plot twist. That isn't a sign of "OMG IMPECCABLE WRITING 10/10"; it's a sign of "I have no idea how to properly plan a show, so let's just dump all of the info we need to in one episode so that the shock factor can 'surprise' everyone"

That was what I was getting towards. Please inform me if you think otherwise and that Urobuchi's works are obviously 2deep4me to comprehend.
Jun 6, 2013 4:31 PM

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Nov 2011
457
Baconzombie said:
skudoops said:
Baconzombie said:
Too much info dumping into one episode. The plot twist was nice, but nothing groundbreaking. They really didn't have to waste the previous 8 episodes of absolutely nothing for this to happen -.-


I don't think you realize what they were going for if you think they wasted the previous 8.


They were trying to make Ledo more human by exposing him to the culture of Gargantia so that his reaction in this episode would be believable. Additionally, they tried to clear up things about the situation he was in while trying to expand on the setting.

Problem is that a lot of that time was spent on useless almost slice of life-like episodes, and the fact that they turned it serious so suddenly is classic Urobuchi plot twist. That isn't a sign of "OMG IMPECCABLE WRITING 10/10"; it's a sign of "I have no idea how to properly plan a show, so let's just dump all of the info we need to in one episode so that the shock factor can 'surprise' everyone"

That was what I was getting towards. Please inform me if you think otherwise and that Urobuchi's works are obviously 2deep4me to comprehend.

I've got nothing to add. I agree with you completely. Are you a writer? If not you definitely should be! You'd show them how it's done PROPERLY.

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Jun 6, 2013 5:03 PM

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Ajunky said:
I can already see you getting chewed up due to the fact that he is talking about modifying fully grown humans.

Which I wouldn't say is impossible, but by principle it cannot be done with embryonic gene manipulation.

Personally, I prefer thinking something is possible until proven impossible. Other people seem to go with considering everything impossible until proven possible. I would advise to leave it at that.


I also think that almost everything is possible at some point unless proven impossible. Altering the biological structure of a grown organism (well, the human organism at least) IS pretty much proven impossible, though. You'd need to somehow regrow the body for that to work (e.g. keep the brain alive and transplant it into another body after "growing" it).

The symbiotic relationship with another organism engineered with the purpose of making the human body not reject it could be plausible (we can't do it now, obviously, but at least we can't say it'll never be doable), but I see a host (pun intended) of other problems coming with this.

And seriously, if their tech is advanced enough to accomplish such a massive feat, why don't they just make themselves immune to cold. Well technically they did when they can survive in deep space, but without turning into squid-monsters, I mean. Oh, and that brings me to another point: Since Hideauze are pretty much immune to cold, why would they abandon Earth in the first place, considering its abundance of resources? Ugh, screw this plot.
Kellhus said:

GuusWayne said:
there is a limit to the suspension of disbelief

And it's the fan that did it. Not the smoking porn reading rubik cube genius rape ape with a magic boat.
Jun 6, 2013 6:47 PM
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linchpin said:
Baconzombie said:
skudoops said:
Baconzombie said:
Too much info dumping into one episode. The plot twist was nice, but nothing groundbreaking. They really didn't have to waste the previous 8 episodes of absolutely nothing for this to happen -.-


I don't think you realize what they were going for if you think they wasted the previous 8.


They were trying to make Ledo more human by exposing him to the culture of Gargantia so that his reaction in this episode would be believable. Additionally, they tried to clear up things about the situation he was in while trying to expand on the setting.

Problem is that a lot of that time was spent on useless almost slice of life-like episodes, and the fact that they turned it serious so suddenly is classic Urobuchi plot twist. That isn't a sign of "OMG IMPECCABLE WRITING 10/10"; it's a sign of "I have no idea how to properly plan a show, so let's just dump all of the info we need to in one episode so that the shock factor can 'surprise' everyone"

That was what I was getting towards. Please inform me if you think otherwise and that Urobuchi's works are obviously 2deep4me to comprehend.

I've got nothing to add. I agree with you completely. Are you a writer? If not you definitely should be! You'd show them how it's done PROPERLY.


haha, thanks man. I'm just a kid fresh out of high school though. Just had the privilege to go to a school with a great english department XD
Jun 7, 2013 4:42 AM

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katsucats said:
I do speak for myself when I say Gargantia has done a horrid job so far at setting up emotional manipulation; it's quite sad that you feel compelled to validate your opinion with an appeal to popularity

Learn the fallacy before you try identifying it. If I has said: "You are wrong. It is a good story because everyone thinks so" then I would be using the appeal to popularity. I did nothing of the sort. I didn't say you were wrong at all. I said that if you find the emotional manipulation to be cheap or badly set up, than that is a personal opinion, not a fact. And then I added that most people who have watched the episode disagree. At no point have I made any objective statement to it's quality, and at no point have I justified my arguments with an appeal to popularity.

as if you are somehow privy to the emotional involvement of the entire Gargantia audience, and they've set you up as the symbolic spokesperson.

The fact that 86.45% of the people on this site who rated the episode clicked: "Loved it" is a hint that the majority saw that scene as poignant. Further, the fact that the show is rated relatively highly (over 60% giving it a score of 8 or higher) means that the majority who have watched it appear to think that it has done a good job so far...

It's just another case of "You're entitled to your own opinions as long as you don't fight my opinions facts."

You're perfectly entitled to your own opinions, just as I am perfectly entitled to think those opinions are crazy.

Drama is emotionally manipulative, but the point of good drama is, oddly enough, to manipulate the audience without letting them be aware that they are being manipulated. Gargantia has as much subtlety as a flaming homosexual stereotype at religious camp.
We disagree fundamentally with the purpose of drama then. At no point am I unaware of the emotional manipulation that occurs in any drama or comedy. When I watch Shakespeare or hear Beethoven I am well aware of the fact that they are trying to manipulate my emotions, and am well aware of how and when it's occurring.

Subtlety is fine, but it is not the end all be all. There is little that is subtle about the opening fanfare of the 5th symphony, but it is still one of the (if not the) most recognizable pieces of music in existence. There is great subtlety in some parts of the Ninth symphony, to it's credit. Subtlety, just as boldness, has it's place and time and is effective when used only at those specific times. Emily Dickinson's poetry is often very subtle, and she is widely considered to have been a great poet. The poetry of Walt Whitman is often anything but subtle; it is full of glaring, broad strokes, vigorously slashed across the page. He is also considered to be a great poet.

Gargantia has had some subtle moments. In fact, it sometimes seems as if the real subtleties are being missed by it's most vocal critics.
Let's go bowling.
Jun 7, 2013 4:48 AM

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11325
StopDropAndBowl said:
katsucats said:
I do speak for myself when I say Gargantia has done a horrid job so far at setting up emotional manipulation; it's quite sad that you feel compelled to validate your opinion with an appeal to popularity

Learn the fallacy before you try identifying it. If I has said: "You are wrong. It is a good story because everyone thinks so" then I would be using the appeal to popularity. I did nothing of the sort. I didn't say you were wrong at all. I said that if you find the emotional manipulation to be cheap or badly set up, than that is a personal opinion, not a fact. And then I added that most people who have watched the episode disagree. At no point have I made any objective statement to it's quality, and at no point have I justified my arguments with an appeal to popularity.

as if you are somehow privy to the emotional involvement of the entire Gargantia audience, and they've set you up as the symbolic spokesperson.

The fact that 86.45% of the people on this site who rated the episode clicked: "Loved it" is a hint that the majority saw that scene as poignant. Further, the fact that the show is rated relatively highly (over 60% giving it a score of 8 or higher) means that the majority who have watched it appear to think that it has done a good job so far...

It's just another case of "You're entitled to your own opinions as long as you don't fight my opinions facts."

You're perfectly entitled to your own opinions, just as I am perfectly entitled to think those opinions are crazy.

Drama is emotionally manipulative, but the point of good drama is, oddly enough, to manipulate the audience without letting them be aware that they are being manipulated. Gargantia has as much subtlety as a flaming homosexual stereotype at religious camp.
We disagree fundamentally with the purpose of drama then. At no point am I unaware of the emotional manipulation that occurs in any drama or comedy. When I watch Shakespeare or hear Beethoven I am well aware of the fact that they are trying to manipulate my emotions, and am well aware of how and when it's occurring.

Subtlety is fine, but it is not the end all be all. There is little that is subtle about the opening fanfare of the 5th symphony, but it is still one of the (if not the) most recognizable pieces of music in existence. There is great subtlety in some parts of the Ninth symphony, to it's credit. Subtlety, just as boldness, has it's place and time and is effective when used only at those specific times. Emily Dickinson's poetry is often very subtle, and she is widely considered to have been a great poet. The poetry of Walt Whitman is often anything but subtle; it is full of glaring, broad strokes, vigorously slashed across the page. He is also considered to be a great poet.

Gargantia has had some subtle moments. In fact, it sometimes seems as if the real subtleties are being missed by it's most vocal critics.


I clicked loved it cause the plot showed up and there was violence that was long overdue. Emotions had jack shit to do with it and I am sure I wasn't the only one.
Jun 7, 2013 4:51 AM

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1575
Darklight0303 said:

I clicked loved it cause the plot showed up and there was violence that was long overdue. Emotions had jack shit to do with it and I am sure I wasn't the only one.

Okay, but do you honestly think you are in the majority, or the minority, in seeing that scene as cheap and overblown? I think it would be quite a stretch to say that the majority saw it the way katsucats saw it.
Let's go bowling.
Jun 7, 2013 4:53 AM

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11325
StopDropAndBowl said:
Darklight0303 said:

I clicked loved it cause the plot showed up and there was violence that was long overdue. Emotions had jack shit to do with it and I am sure I wasn't the only one.

Okay, but do you honestly think you are in the majority, or the minority, in seeing that scene as cheap and overblown? I think it would be quite a stretch to say that the majority saw it the way katsucats saw it.


Maybe not but we can definitely put a dent in that over 80% figure you were touting as an argument.
Jun 7, 2013 4:57 AM

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Baconzombie said:

That was what I was getting towards. Please inform me if you think otherwise and that Urobuchi's works are obviously 2deep4me to comprehend.

I think otherwise, simply because without the "useless almost slice of life-like episodes" there would be no basis for his transformation. You've basically said: "They were using the slice of life episodes to show his transformation, but they wasted all that time on slice of life episodes so there was no time for a transformation." It can either be one or the other. Either Ledo learns the meaning and value of a peaceful, non-eventful life through living it, or he learns it just through osmosis.

The tone of the show was never very light. In the back-round there was always the looming threat of Ledo's war. However, his personal involvement in the war was on hold, so there was no point in breaking tone and showing the war while that was happening. The show didn't suddenly turn serious, it has always been serious, it just went back to being dark and brooding after a time of breaking out of that. In a way the tone has followed Ledo's inner being: in the beginning he was dark and brooding, so the show was dark and brooding. The he lightened up and began relaxing, so the show relaxed. Now he is back on a path to darkness so the show has appropriately changed it's tone again.
Let's go bowling.
Jun 7, 2013 5:02 AM

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Darklight0303 said:
StopDropAndBowl said:
Darklight0303 said:

I clicked loved it cause the plot showed up and there was violence that was long overdue. Emotions had jack shit to do with it and I am sure I wasn't the only one.

Okay, but do you honestly think you are in the majority, or the minority, in seeing that scene as cheap and overblown? I think it would be quite a stretch to say that the majority saw it the way katsucats saw it.


Maybe not but we can definitely put a dent in that over 80% figure you were touting as an argument.
Okay, but less than 2% of viewers who rated this episode picked the options "Didn't like it" or "Hated it." Those are pretty good indications that my statement is not far off (that the majority saw the scene as poignant). The specific numbers are irrelevant. Most people like the show, most people loved the episode, most posts about both have been positive. The people who don't like the show are in the minority, the people who didn't like the episode are a tiny fraction, almost statistically irrelevant (out of 488 people, only 9 did not like it). That doesn't mean that it is an objectively good show, or that the episode is objectively good, only that the majority is enjoying it and the majority enjoyed this episode.

I think if most people saw the scene as contrived it would be reflected a lot more in the rating.
Let's go bowling.
Jun 7, 2013 5:35 AM

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May 2013
1491
My mind was blown.

But before that, Chamber and Ledo could actually kill a lot of whalesquids if they tried, but then again, Chamber does lose a lot of energy.

Ledo is a baby murderer! Or should I say Chamber...
When Ledo said "No, don't kill her" and then Chamber was like "Too bad", but I was like "No, Chamber!!"

Who would have thought Hideauze WERE human?
I’m always searching for something, for someone. This feeling has possessed me I think, from that day… That day when the stars came falling.
Jun 7, 2013 5:39 AM

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11325
StopDropAndBowl said:
Darklight0303 said:
StopDropAndBowl said:
Darklight0303 said:

I clicked loved it cause the plot showed up and there was violence that was long overdue. Emotions had jack shit to do with it and I am sure I wasn't the only one.

Okay, but do you honestly think you are in the majority, or the minority, in seeing that scene as cheap and overblown? I think it would be quite a stretch to say that the majority saw it the way katsucats saw it.


Maybe not but we can definitely put a dent in that over 80% figure you were touting as an argument.
Okay, but less than 2% of viewers who rated this episode picked the options "Didn't like it" or "Hated it." Those are pretty good indications that my statement is not far off (that the majority saw the scene as poignant). The specific numbers are irrelevant. Most people like the show, most people loved the episode, most posts about both have been positive. The people who don't like the show are in the minority, the people who didn't like the episode are a tiny fraction, almost statistically irrelevant (out of 488 people, only 9 did not like it). That doesn't mean that it is an objectively good show, or that the episode is objectively good, only that the majority is enjoying it and the majority enjoyed this episode.

I think if most people saw the scene as contrived it would be reflected a lot more in the rating.


But the point is I am not questioning if people enjoyed it. I am questioning if they enjoyed it for the reasons you used as an argument. The emotional aspect.
Jun 7, 2013 5:40 AM

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God i hate MAL's redirecting bug...
日本人はイッちゃってるよ
あいつら未来に生きてんな
Jun 7, 2013 5:57 AM

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1575
Darklight0303 said:

But the point is I am not questioning if people enjoyed it. I am questioning if they enjoyed it for the reasons you used as an argument. The emotional aspect.
Obviously there is no way of telling for sure without polling everyone. I think it is a reasonable assumption that if most people are enjoying a story, they are enjoying the emotional elements of the story. There hasn't been much mecha or action in the show thus far, and the romance has been pretty light. It's had some funny moments, but it's very far from a comedy. The emotional aspect has been the main focus of the show. Usually if people aren't connecting with the main focus of a story, it shows up in the rating: they rate it poorly.

It would be a bigger stretch to say that most people saw that scene as contrived and cliche and not poignant at all, but still rated the episode highly, than it would to say that most people liked the episode therefore most people saw the scene as appropriately tragic and effective. (Especially since that scene was the climax of the episode and what the entire show has been building up to)
Let's go bowling.
Jun 7, 2013 6:00 AM

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11325
StopDropAndBowl said:
Darklight0303 said:

But the point is I am not questioning if people enjoyed it. I am questioning if they enjoyed it for the reasons you used as an argument. The emotional aspect.
Obviously there is no way of telling for sure without polling everyone. I think it is a reasonable assumption that if most people are enjoying a story, they are enjoying the emotional elements of the story. There hasn't been much mecha or action in the show thus far, and the romance has been pretty light. It's had some funny moments, but it's very far from a comedy. The emotional aspect has been the main focus of the show. Usually if people aren't connecting with the main focus of a story, it shows up in the rating: they rate it poorly.

It would be a bigger stretch to say that most people saw that scene as contrived and cliche and not poignant at all, but still rated the episode highly, than it would to say that most people liked the episode therefore most people saw the scene as appropriately tragic and effective. (Especially since that scene was the climax of the episode and what the entire show has been building up to)


But those same people have expressed how they don't really like that it has gone away from the slice of life feel the episodes after the pirate raid had.
Jun 7, 2013 6:25 AM

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1079
Finally caught up. Well, it was quite the twist. I would be confused if I was in Ledo's position as well, everything he has ever known has been a lie. I'm just glad the plot has finally picked up and I can only wonder how this is all going to play out now.
Jun 7, 2013 7:45 AM
☆A-Qing's hair☆

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1569
Gah

There better be a season 2 otherwise the ending is going to be seriously rushed at this rate.

Jun 7, 2013 10:43 AM

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Oct 2012
5844
So everything is revealed. I kinda expected this but I have never thought that Hideaze were human and now even Ledo realizes they are not some lesser species. I wouldn't be surprised if this episode was written by Urobuchi.
So this really is, environmental anime.

And when he started killing spawnlings - I got shivers. And that closing scene when chamber crushed that Evolve woman was.. very heartbreaking.

Hell, this was the best episode of the show.

Also, nice ending card this week:
Mich666Jun 7, 2013 10:47 AM
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