
I'm useing Firefox 2.0
I don't see how, as that doesn't match up with the definition given:Streicher wrote:@Doki
In "Types of MAD Movies":
I'm pretty sure it is suppposed to say: Anison not Unison. It's short for Animation Song.
Anisons were common standard until the anime companys decided to maximize their profit by pushing a J-Pop song in the charts. The song does not even have to have anything to do with the anime. Anisons on the other hand are made especially for a certain anime and often contain the title of the series in it's lyrics.
The only recent anime I can think of that still got an anison opening is "Break Out" by JAM Project (Japanese Anison Makers Project) for SRW:OG Divine Wars.
Hey! I forgot that one, vaulted.Qyot27 wrote:I don't see how, as that doesn't match up with the definition given:Streicher wrote:@Doki
In "Types of MAD Movies":
I'm pretty sure it is suppposed to say: Anison not Unison. It's short for Animation Song.
Anisons were common standard until the anime companys decided to maximize their profit by pushing a J-Pop song in the charts. The song does not even have to have anything to do with the anime. Anisons on the other hand are made especially for a certain anime and often contain the title of the series in it's lyrics.
The only recent anime I can think of that still got an anison opening is "Break Out" by JAM Project (Japanese Anison Makers Project) for SRW:OG Divine Wars.
"These MADs take the opening sequence from an anime and recreate it using a different video source."
In essence, stuff like Eva Bebop (although it's an AMV; same premise, though - there's also a School Rumble/Cowboy Bebop one floating around out there too).