And liches are composite characters, based on numerous sorceror tropes from all sorts of short stories, some being from Weird Tales.
I think "Liche" was some sort of old timey english for corpse. Also "Wight" i believe.And liches are composite characters, based on numerous sorceror tropes from all sorts of short stories, some being from Weird Tales.
Lich, without the e. Just meant "dead human body"; contrast to "carcass" for a dead animal. Been pretty much replaced with "corpse". "lich" was the German-based word (lijk in Duthc etc), "corpse" is from the Latin ground (corps in French, corpus in Latin).I think "Liche" was some sort of old timey english for corpse. Also "Wight" i believe.
I imagine it was more about the physical appearance of the monster over anything. The Lich in a traditional sense isn't always a skeleton, but still a walking corpse. The difference between them and other Undead being they remain (and become) highly intelligent, nearly impossible to kill, and gain massive spellcasting capabilities.Lich, without the e. Just meant "dead human body"; contrast to "carcass" for a dead animal. Been pretty much replaced with "corpse". "lich" was the German-based word (lijk in Duthc etc), "corpse" is from the Latin ground (corps in French, corpus in Latin).
The "intelligent spellcaster" connection I have no idea where it came from
I'm excited. It looks pretty great, I hope it finds its way onto Crunchyroll or Hulu.New Lupin the Third Series!
Animator Kazuhide Tomonaga, who did key animation on The Castle of Cagliostro and worked on the original TV series, is overseeing the project, while Kanichi Kurita will be voicing Lupin, Kiyoshi Kobayashi is Daisuke Jigen, Daisuke Namikawa is Goemon, Miyuki Sawashiro is Fujiko, and Koichi Yamadera is Zenigata.
I could see it maybe turning up on Hulu. After all, Hulu did have Lupin the 3rd: The Woman Called Fujiko Mine.I'm excited. It looks pretty great, I hope it finds its way onto Crunchyroll or Hulu.
That's what I'm thinking. Hulu currently still has parts 1-3 as well.I could see it maybe turning up on Hulu. After all, Hulu did have Lupin the 3rd: The Woman Called Fujiko Mine.
Series are always planned ahead in terms of episode numbers, but I do get what you mean. Unfortunately novel adaptations tend to have this issue, where they don't plan the story pacing correctly and end up having to smash a lot of plot into about two episodes in order to reach the ending.Did it feel to anyone else that the ending of Toradora was written hastily, like they weren't told the series was ending until the very last minute? Yes, I saw the post-credits scene. Still felt rushed.
Yeah, it was having good character development, it depicted the thought processes behind teenagers being awkward idiots fairly well too I thought. It's just you get to the last episode andSeries are always planned ahead in terms of episode numbers, but I do get what you mean. Unfortunately novel adaptations tend to have this issue, where they don't plan the story pacing correctly and end up having to smash a lot of plot into about two episodes in order to reach the ending.
Still though, Toradora! is one of the overall better romantic comedies out there.
Yeah, and while I don't know for sure I'd bet the anime left outsome of what happens over the course of that year as well as Taiga's thoughts on why she suddenly needed to go see her mom.
The last movie to feature traditional zombies was Weekend at Bernie's 2.I was waiting for it, as @Null can probably tell you, since I just posted about ghoul v zombie on facebook yesterday. Yes, but the modern zombie is based on the ghoul, not the traditional zombie. Romero even called his creatures ghouls in the script for NotLD.
Get on up!The last movie to feature traditional zombies was Weekend at Bernie's 2.
Actually... I think it was Blues Brothers 2000. They get turned into Zombies by a Voodoo queen when she demands a Caribbean beat and they refuse.The last movie to feature traditional zombies was Weekend at Bernie's 2.
You have my attention.I'm a huge fan of stories that warp traditional roles of good and evil, and this anime does it to the point you're not sure who to root for--if anyone. Everyone has good and evil sides. You manage to feel hatred and sympathy for each character.
Just binged on this over the last couple of days. Swung back and forth between laughing like crazy and going "WTF did I just watch?" Can't wait for the next episode.Shimoneta: A Boring World Where the Concept of Dirty Jokes Doesn't Exist
This was a surprise find for me, and I've been enjoying it. Set in a Japan where censorship laws and personal control devices have banned anything indecent (meaning not only porn but even stuff like saying medical terms of genitalia), it follows a high school student who joined one the country's most moral schools because of his love for a girl, only to get roped into a revolutionary group fighting for the right to lewdness. The show does a good presentation of its lewdness, actually, generally using its erotic element more for character development or progressing the story rather than just as fanservice (though it also does a solid job with its dirty humor). It also does a good job telling a tale of the damage that can come from trying to control people and keep them ignorant for the sake of morality.
Watching Anna turn from a polite and pure (if ignorant) girl to a (still ignorant) yandere who's dripping like a leaky faucet has been one hell of a sight.
Yeah the Japanese are kind-of addicted to the word Esper for some reason, no matter how innacurately they use it.Tokyo ESP
It's safe to say that the writer is a fan of American pop culture. Let's see... in the first few episodes, we have the X-Men led by a professor (plot twist, they're evil), Wolverine (the protagonist's father--he even wears the jacket from the first X-Men movie and holds three extendable batons between his knuckles briefly), the Ghostbusters (evil again), one of the protagonists says "with great power comes great responsibility", etc.
Anyway, the brief synopsis is that lots of people suddenly get superpowers in Tokyo, and it seems like the aforementioned professor is doing it in some bid for world domination or something. Haven't watched enough yet. They call the superpowers "ESP" for some reason, even though only a few characters have what you might actually call ESP.
It drives me up the wall when it gets put in the english dubs for shows, too. The localization process should include fixing that, IMO.Yeah the Japanese are kind-of addicted to the word Esper for some reason, no matter how innacurately they use it.
Sub hards get angry over anything. If they want subs, let em watch subs. The English dubs need to be properly localized. Shin Chan, for example, wouldn't have been a quarter as good as it was if not for the amazing localization that incorporated American political/pop culture references.Agreed, sure the sub-hards would get angry-BUT IT WOULD BE WORTH THE RISK!
Shin Chan is almost entirely a straight up Gag Dub. Like they threw out a ton of script and did their own stuff just to be funny. It only follows the plot of the show on a very shallow level.Sub hards get angry over anything. If they want subs, let em watch subs. The English dubs need to be properly localized. Shin Chan, for example, wouldn't have been a quarter as good as it was if not for the amazing localization that incorporated American political/pop culture references.
Shimoneta is amazing, I'm really glad I gave it a chance after all (first impression was terrible, what with seeing the uncensored version of the episode 4 hijinks). I don't think I've heard my SO laugh that hard at a show before.Just binged on this over the last couple of days. Swung back and forth between laughing like crazy and going "WTF did I just watch?" Can't wait for the next episode.
Dirty jokes and sex ed aside, Ayame still seems a bit of a prude when confronted with the real thing.
What about foreign nationals from countries that don't have such laws? Specifically embassies, consulates and military installations? What sort of goodies could be stashed away in, say, the Danish embassy that's just ripe for the taking?