- Joined
- Jan 12, 2017
Kiznaiver felt like a two-cour series that got slashed during production, kinda like what happened with Angel Beats!. It sucks 'cause I was enjoying it immensely until those last few episodes slowed things down, though I didn't feel like I wasted my time watching it every week. This is a huge problem across the board not just with Trigger, there's still original IPs being made, it's just unfortunately they only ever get 12/13 episodes, and for some odd reason they're not tightly written because there's too many ideas being tossed around at once. I like to point to Comet Lucifer as an example because it had an interesting premise and mecha idea, it just squandered it due to not having the space needed (and possibly relying too heavily on Ghibli-esque elements, from what I've read from others). Meanwhile, Endride was a two-cour, and yet it felt like it didn't accomplish a thing due to some poor execution with the pacing and character development. Someone on those projects did not have full faith in them to let them breathe on their own.
On the other side of the coin, something like Paranoia Agent could've easily been a two-cour series and maybe that was considered, yet Satoshi Kon was talented enough as a writer to condense it, helped that he had that skill because his movies were only like 90 minutes long, so he had the restraint to not go nuts with the extra duration a 13-episode series gave him. He also made sure his episode directors knew what they were doing, because a good director knows how to guide other visionaries without overwriting them.
Actually scratch that, Satoshi Kon may have been a main storyboarder and the director, but that was Seishi Minakami who wrote all but two episodes himself--maybe with direction from Kon, but I would say that was Minakami's baby and he trusted Kon to take care of it. Still, the show had a lot of talent working on it, and they all were on the same page.
Anyhoo, I think what's going on is we have too many people in the industry treating these shows like a check and not as a passion project like what Gainax did back in the day. There's nothing wrong with this, people gotta make a living somehow, but the final product will always show signs of tampering or a struggle if someone in charge doesn't care enough to step in and clean things up or bother to team up with their peers. For instance, this is likely why Yutaka Yamamoto got replaced by Yasuhiro Takemoto during Lucky Star's production, the man is just too up-tight for something like Lucky Star and was holding it back, and he also has "I'm better than you" vibes going on, too. Wake Up, Girls! and Fractale are all you need to know when it comes to how he treats his projects. Much lulz.
On the other side of the coin, something like Paranoia Agent could've easily been a two-cour series and maybe that was considered, yet Satoshi Kon was talented enough as a writer to condense it, helped that he had that skill because his movies were only like 90 minutes long, so he had the restraint to not go nuts with the extra duration a 13-episode series gave him. He also made sure his episode directors knew what they were doing, because a good director knows how to guide other visionaries without overwriting them.
Actually scratch that, Satoshi Kon may have been a main storyboarder and the director, but that was Seishi Minakami who wrote all but two episodes himself--maybe with direction from Kon, but I would say that was Minakami's baby and he trusted Kon to take care of it. Still, the show had a lot of talent working on it, and they all were on the same page.
Anyhoo, I think what's going on is we have too many people in the industry treating these shows like a check and not as a passion project like what Gainax did back in the day. There's nothing wrong with this, people gotta make a living somehow, but the final product will always show signs of tampering or a struggle if someone in charge doesn't care enough to step in and clean things up or bother to team up with their peers. For instance, this is likely why Yutaka Yamamoto got replaced by Yasuhiro Takemoto during Lucky Star's production, the man is just too up-tight for something like Lucky Star and was holding it back, and he also has "I'm better than you" vibes going on, too. Wake Up, Girls! and Fractale are all you need to know when it comes to how he treats his projects. Much lulz.