thecursor wrote:I'm kind of a xenophobe, I admit that, and I know that this shouldn't worry me. But have you ever gone to a Borders, looked for the graphic novel section and seen the teeny tiny area for American comics (David Clowes to Superman) and the massive section for Japanese imports. I some times worry that America is playing catch up in the graphic art form in it's own country. The most popular children's cartoons are now strictly asian (as opposed to just animated in asian like the eighties) a lot of those shows don't feature complex story lines or moral themes like they did when I was a kind (hell, I still remember that time Charbroil from GI Joe told me about fire safety). Yeah, I admit that children's entertainment has always been a marketing ploy to sell dvds and toys but at least American cartoons TRY to hide it, Children focused anime doesn't even bother hiding it.
I wouldn't say that anime/manga is SO superior. The market has become so
over saturated with, quite frankly,
garbage, that the genre has lost a lot of its credibility, particularly here in the United States. In the past five years alone several distributing companies have gone out of business because of over saturation (and to an extent piracy). I could name ten good manga/anime series with plot and substance and someone will bring up
Pokemon or
Digimon and how oh so
speshul! they are and there goes the conversation. Likewise with the stuff that tries to be SO edgy and SO sophisticated when its all just bullshit. Series like the aforementioned
Elfen Leid come to mind where its all about gratuitous violence, nudity and shock value but
its oh so deep! and again credibility down the drain.
I'm a comic book geek, but the appeal of manga to me some twelve years ago began with a lot of disillusionment I had with several American comic books I was reading at the time. Marvel was going through a virtual mid-life crisis where they were killing off characters and canceling titles like crazy. Or there were MULTIPLE titles of the same super hero/mutant group. Then the Marvel movies started coming out enforce and the comic-verse began to reflect the movie-verse when it should rightfully be the other way around... it just started getting ridiculous. DC was never as bad, and I have always preferred DC to Marvel in their range of characters and titles, but what manga offered, unlike American comic books, was a story with a
beginning, middle and end.
It literally was a
graphic novel, a story in pictures. Manga offered continuity and progression and, most important to me, closure. I guess my age was starting to show at the time. Open ended things made me crazy. So it was no coincidence that I discovered DC's Vertigo line and other Western graphic novels. All this time there were books that offered what manga offered right under my nose! Who knew there were all these compelling and complex and
sophisticated visual stories out there. My current crack is
Fables. The big book chains aren't marketing them and that's just sad, but that's why I still do my pulp shopping at the good ol whole in the wall comic book shop, NOT GameStop.
I, too, miss old school Saturday morning cartoons. I lived for School House Rock and the Summer Cartoon Preview on TV Guide. Every summer I knew exactly what I wanted to watch and on what station. Now it's all shitty kiddy anime and Disney and what corresponding toy Burger King or McDonald's will offer in their kids meal.
