I've never seen the movie, but that hasn't stopped the videos from effecting me one little bit. I haven't seen 4/5 of the anime used in videos I watch - or heard the songs before in most case.Corran Productions wrote:Also having seen the anime used is a big background factor. Did a Grave of the Fireflies video impact you more before or after watching the Movie?
Maybe that's the problem - I base videos off what they hold rather than what they add to an anime. Sure, I've watched enough Hellsing videos to have built the plot of the anime from those videos - but I'm still judging the videos themselves rather than the anime. Because I don't know the anime. Same for Eva, Akira, Ah My Goddess, Akira, FLCL, Love Hina, Bebop, Trigun, Naruto, Voice of a Distant Star, and most of the other popular non-overused anime that I only know about from the dozens of vids I've watched.
I know some things require background information - after all, you won't understand some stories unless you're aware of the gimics used and played upon - but that doesn't make knowing the person made the video for a loved one affect me more. It's still just a video of a romance that either works to inspire an emotion in me or doesn't. Knowing the inspiration ahead of time tells me why the video was made, but it doesn't effect the way I see the video - as a successful piece inspiring an emotional impact or something done only for the creator which can only be appreciated by him and his loved one.
I guess I can blame peer-to-peer networks for this way of looking at amvs. If you get a vid off kaaza, you aren't going to know the motivations, the explanations, the story behind the story - the video either stands on it's own or doesn't. Once it's separated from the author, it becomes the viewer's property per-say - it either affects him on its own, or remains misunderstood because the viewer isn't the 'informed' audience.




