eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
So, last night I finished watching Fullmetal Alchemist, which I had started watching in 2004 and didn't see any more of after that time due to Netflix not having been invented yet. (Watched the rest of it in dub, unfortunately, because Netflix is not yet perfected).

24 hours later, I still can't figure out if the end was the best thing ever or turned to yogurt instead. Or if maybe it has bits of both, like tapioca.

Your thoughts, for those of you who have seen the series?
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)


Laughter & Grief by the White Sea [Russian, w/English subtitles]

Animated film based on collected folklore of the Pomors of Northern Russia, plus a final true story from 1857. Make sure to watch the bit about the frozen songs, and collecting the northern lights. Beautiful.

To turn the English subtitles on, press the CC button. I think a little bit of this may be in a N. Russian dialect or possibly the Even language, so you may want to turn subtitles on even if you know Russian.
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
Here is the creator of the new and much-talked-about MLP series standing up against misogyny, against all kinds of sexism, against ageism, against systems of disempowerment, and for good animation that fans of all ages can enjoy. Class and style, just like Rarity!
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
I am slowly beginning to start reading my lj friends list again, for those of you who were wondering when/if I would start to do this again. It's more of an experiment as to "do I really want to spend time on this?" than anything else, but since it's also one of the main ways my friends and I keep up with each other, keeping up with that is important to me. I just need to get better at skimming, I think.

In other news, I'm sick. I woke up at 6 am today after getting 6 hours of sleep, and then slept until 4 pm with no break. This usually means I'm really sick. I've also been having absolutely horrible headaches, but have remembered to take ibuprofen and they mostly seem to be gone now, as does the ear infection I was working on on Saturday. I *hate* getting my period, which also explains why I cried randomly on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, and had trouble sleeping Wednesday evening, without knowing why.

rant on reproductive health )

For my birthday, I treated myself to a movie Saturday afternoon, Rango [edit: Rango is rated PG], and realized two things:
- I didn't really like Rango. I thought the character design was interesting, and the commentary on water supply and control in urban desert areas was interesting (groundwater policy), and the end-credits had a fun design, but it had a lot of really problematic stereotypes (hicks, Native Americans) which it bought into because it was a movie in the mold of a traditional American Western, and that made the whole movie not really worth it.
- Lots of children's movies that are made with anthro animal characters now are the same movies that would have been made (or were made) with live human actors in the past, and if they were made with live human actors today, they would not get a G rating (I dunno if they'd get a PG rating, either, but in any case Rango was obviously aimed at children). Computer-generated animals can get hurt and have the bad guy fire at them and be trapped in a cell slowly filling with water and almost drown, and computer-generated animal women can be assaulted and threatened by the bad guys with sexual undertones, and computer-generated animals can be stereotypically wise Native Americans or stereotypically uneducated hicks, and it can be funny, and or/dramatic and full of action and shootouts, etc. Whereas if this same movie had been made with human live actors, people would have been more clearly able to see the problematic stereotypes and the violence for what they were, and this movie would have been rated PG-13 at the least. It's really interesting, actually--I found the movie to be a really compelling example of a genre that usually has to be marketed to adult viewers when human actors are used, but can be easily shown to children if all the problematic issues of having humans shoot and assault each other are glossed over by having geckos and snakes and rabbits replace human actors. I realized for the first time that the movie studios are able to market adult plots to children in the guise of anthromoporphic CGI, so they're able to tell stories that they couldn't with human actors in the same roles. (This realization was the reason I kept watching this movie after being disappointed in the stereotyping; indeed it was the stereotyping that led me to this realization). This is good, on one level--kids' movies can have humorous, complicated plots with a lot of drama and quick wit. But on the other hand, why is it so easy for adults and children alike to overlook stereotyping when the actors are groundhogs, as opposed to humans? Then I realized that almost *all* the children's movies I see are about anthro characters. Part of this is the CGI uncanny valley and the long tradition of anthro animals in childrens' fare and the expense of live actors vs CGI, of course, but I think the studios are telling stories with animals in place of humans partly because they can get away with doing things with animals they could never in a million years do with human characters, and still get that G rating and do a lot of merchandising besides.
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
So...I just started watching the new MLP series. (Thanks,[livejournal.com profile] rax.) And...well, honestly, this episode is basically Moonwise, summer solstice celebration, evil moon-based sister avatar...um, yeah. It's great.