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Mugen undertale character
Mugen undertale character






mugen undertale character

But it says something to me that "Promise" - maybe his best work yet - was released as a music video rather than a new TV series. Ken Yamamoto’s a bit more mainstream than Mariyasu - just last year he contributed some face-melting action sequences to Fate/Grand Order Absolute Demonic Front: Babylonia. When his friend reaches in and pulls him out of that water, that’s real joy rising like bubbles through your veins. When the protagonist folds over himself in anguish, you feel it in your gut. When he steps deep into the water and the entire world around him is shredded into pieces, anyone who’s ever been a teenager knows exactly how that feels. There’s a real visceral punch to it that beats out even its excellent predecessors. Directed by Ken Yamamoto and produced at Cloverworks, it plays as another greatest hits compilation of Eve’s works - broken promises, collapsing cityscapes, creatures powered by feeling that shake the earth with their footsteps. But "Promise," released at the end of this October, threatens to outdo them all. It’s an excellent piece that stands tall among the work collected under Eve’s banner, many of which are stone-cold classics themselves. This May saw the release of "How to Eat Life," a video by indie animator Mariyasu which repurposes Eve’s unique symbology of surly adolescents and freaky puppet monsters into a stylish and spooky carnival of carnivorism. Meanwhile, the Japanese vocalist Eve continues to commission new and excellent animated work based on his songs. "Gotcha!" may have broken out as a celebration of a popular game series, but its predecessor - a Lotte chocolate commercial produced by much of the same staff - is just as good!

mugen undertale character

Talk about the newest music videos online is a lot rarer. But on websites and in magazines, I see stories about Netflix’s aggressive production of new TV series, the renaissance of Japanese anime films after Your Name, and bemused reactions to the shocking popularity of Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba.

mugen undertale character

There are viral successes like "Gotcha!" and the inevitable crossover that happens when an artist doing the theme song for an anime leads others to check out their back catalog of past videos. (That’s music videos that are animated, not AMVs! You could write an entirely separate article on those.) I need to qualify “slept on,” since hardcore animation nerds like Yuyucow and Catsuka have been stumping for these works over the past several years. The animated music videos being made right now represent the most slept-on creative success in modern anime production among English language fans.








Mugen undertale character