Showing posts with label Disney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Disney. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 15, 2017

LucasFilm Trolls Everyone With Image of Empty Toy Box



LucasFilm has done the impossible and gotten an empty cardboard box to go viral. The pure stroke of marketing genius came earlier this week in the form of a press release announcing a new line of Star Wars toys. Accompanying the release was an image of an empty toy box, which still became newsworthy thanks to an image of the three main characters plastered across the top. Poe Dameron is decked out in his Resistance pilot gear. Finn is still wearing Poe’s jacket, spawning a million fan-fics on tumblr, I’m sure. And Rey has traded in her trademark buns for a new, longer hairdo. Speculation on the significance of the new style has already skyrocketed, with many a fanboy wondering if or how it will factor into her Jedi training under Luke. Star Wars Episode VIII: The Last Jedi will force its way into theaters on December 15, 2017.

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Star Wars Episode VIII Title Revealed

Read it and weep tears of joy.

This week, Disney/Lucasfilm has revealed the title of the next installment in the Star Wars sequel trilogy. This December, everyone and their momma is going to see Star Wars Episode VIII: The Last Jedi. Approximately five microseconds after images of the title hit the internet, the rumor mills were already up and running, speculating on the meaning of the title. Who is this titular “Last Jedi”? Luke Skywalker, or Rey? If it is one of them, does that mean the other will die, or worse, fall to the Dark Side? Will they throw us a curveball and let Finn swing around a lightsaber this time (please, after Mace, I just really want a black Jedi again)? Some astute fans on the internet have already pointed out that Jedi can be singular or plural, in which case this may refer to more than one force-wielder, but the fact remains that this sets an ominous tone for the sequel. The answers to all these burning questions are still a few months off; Star Wars Episode VIII: The Last Jedi hyperdrives into theaters December 15, 2017.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Names You Should Know: Hiroyuki Imaishi

This is part of a new series I've wanted to do about some of the less-well known names in anime. I'm not sure how it is in other countries, but there isn't much familiarity with the anime industry in America. Sure, any self-respecting convention-goer may be able to rattle off a whole string of names, but the average American would be hard-pressed to name one...and that one name would probably be Hayao Miyazaki (thanks, Disney). Fortunately, just as there is more than one great director running around Hollywood, there are plenty more great anime directors in the Land of the Rising Sun. Here's one:

Hiroyuki Imaishi. This name probably means nothing to you now, but you've definitely heard of him. He got his start doing key animation on projects like Diebuster, Kare Kano, and FLCL (he directed the manga scenes), but his big break came when he made his debut as series director for one of the greatest mecha of all time: Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann. The show went on to win the Excellence Prize at the Japan Media Arts Festival (think Anime Oscars) and developed a devoted fan base.
Perhaps too devoted.

But before he was the man behind TTGL, Imaishi directed a short feature-length film about a man with a TV for a head and a woman with a panda-esque mark on her eye who are sent to a maximum-security prison on the moon (seriously. I'm not making this up). The film only gets weirder from there and it's absolutely wonderful, a bizarre, action-packed fever dream of drill penises, cyborg wardens, Uzi-touting babies, and copious amounts of explosions. It may lack the polish of TTGL, but Dead Leaves is a perfect display of Imaishi's vintage style. The heady blend of energetic, exaggerated animation, over-the-top action and unbridled, almost recklessly creative art design have since come to define his unique work.

The influences behind Imaishi's rise to prominence are as colorful and varied as the work itself. Imaishi started off at Gainax, working on the projects I mentioned above under the great Hideaki Anno, who is himself a protege of Miyazki. He also cites his main influence as the late Yoshinori Kanada, a frequent Miyazaki collaborator whose animation style has inspired an entire generation of animators.
You will never be as cool as this picture.

In spite of, or perhaps because of, his star-studded past, things don't appear to be slowing down for Imaishi any time soon. Following his success with the epic TTGL and the epically silly Panty and Stocking with Garterbelt, he has left Gainax to form his own studio, Trigger. They've hit the ground running, premiering a ridiculously, hilariously low-budget ONA called Inferno Cop (think Japanese Newgrounds cartoon in terms of quality), and following it up with the more traditionally animated Little Witch Academia. The former tickled reviewers' funny bones and the latter spawned a follow-up Kickstarter which reached its goal in just three hours. And it seems Imaishi-san and co. aren't stopping there, as work on his newest series, Kill La Kill, has already gotten underway.


With so many links to the past, it should be no surprise that Hiroyuki Imaishi is anime's future.