rocklobster wrote:What do you predict for anime in 2006? Here are my predictions:
- Miyazaki will win another Oscar. Maybe not for best animated feature, but I'm sure he'll win something.
- Naruto will replace DBZ as Cartoon Network's premiere anime.
- More retro anime. Look for lots of old school stuff, maybe even on TV! Just because it's old, doesn't mean it won't gain an interest.
- Manga will be on Banned Book lists (it's inevitable. Deal with it.). It'll be the fundamentalists' next Harry Potter.
Whether or not Miyazaki does depends on the competition, which is stronger this year.
Spirited Away was critically acclaimed in America and ran against Treasure Planet.
Howl's Moving Castle caught much less media attention
Most "Retro" anime had a big following before it came to TV.
Urusei Yatsura is arguably the most successful anime franchise ever (they stil make merchandise and doujinshi for that one almost 15 years after the final movie and 18 years after the manga ended. Most people who know anime know who this girl is:
yet, the franchise moulders away with the anime in the incompetent hands of Animeigo and the manga in the hands of Viz. Yet when people think Rumilo Takahashi they mostly think
Inu Yasha,
Ranma 1/2 or maybe some more obscure things like Rumic Theater or Mermaid's Saga. Not the series that made her famous
So I don't think Retro matters unless it's immensely demanded in the first place.
Manga is not going to be banned, though I know some titles will be used as examples of "how perverse it is." First of all it isn't as well known as anime, second it isn't broadcast and third a volume can only be read by one person at a time. All of which limits the spread of availability. Bookstores put warning labels on stuff saying "Hey! Some of this isn't for minors!" and nowadays volumes have warnings and age ratings. Any protesting parent would probably be mocked for allowing their kid to read it.
Lady Macbeth wrote:(I think the "Banned Books list" refers to the annual list put out by the American Library Association: Challenged and Banned Books )
Ah the Good old annual ALA rant. Noticed the most banned books of 1990-2004 were all written in the 80's or earlier.
In the Night Kitchen, Judy Blume books, etc. It's the usual suspects and almost always for content deemed innapropriate for the target age (in the 70's/80's, Judy Blume books were marketed to children and pre-teens). Almost none on the list were books written for adults.