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thuvia ptarth ([personal profile] thuviaptarth) wrote2004-08-02 12:29 am
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Two X vids

Ermac Studios, Lord's Prayer (X OVA/TV)

This vid is set to "Vater Unser (Psalm 23 Club Mix)" by E Nomine, which is a German techno remix of the 23rd Psalm. This strikes me as just right for a series with more crucifixion imagery than the average Gothic cathedral. X is about an apocalyptic battle for the fate of the world, and this vid makes a good introduction, despite the use of potentially spoilery clips.  The most spoilery are from the OVA, which is included as "Episode 0" in the collected episodes, the producers apparently being of the opinion that if you can't make a character development psychologically plausible, at least you can put in lots of foreshadowing.  In addition to this, you will be spoiled for the death of a character who practically has "Sacrificial Lamb" tattooed on their forehead from their very first appearance.

I do particularly like this as an introduction to X because it uses visually/technically striking means to convey key aspects of the series: the repetition of distinctive imagery, the opposition of paired characters, a sense of urgency and threat, a sense of peace and hope. The first section starts with a pulsating set of clips that fade to black almost before they're visible--boys raising swords, swords wrapped in ribbons, wheels turning--giving the sense of some great epic being set in motion.  The second and longest section flashes transparencies of character shots over long tracking background shots of opposed pairs of characters, interspersed with enough action clips to show that the opposed characters will end up fighting each other; the transparencies repeat in the same order (different shots, same characters) over each different background, which is a neat visual encoding of the idea that all the struggles replicate the same larger battle in microcosm.  The different sets of images are also linked by similar internal imagery: circles and globes (stars in circles, moons, rings of dragons swallowing each other's tails, a girl's face caught in a circular rifle scope) and hands reaching or clasping.  We end, finally, with a series of longer clips which offer a coherent narrative--or at least a particular and comprehensible longer action--for the first time: a winged girl slowly letting go of a man's hands as she rises into the air, beating her wings; feathers drifting down as deep bells toll and a man recites the Lord's Prayer in German.  It is, finally, the change from the first two sections' rapid alteration of clips to the slower, more meditative ending that makes this linger for me.

Bits I particularly liked: The transparent overlay of Kamui's face in the curve of the moon as he looks down from Tokyo Tower; the moon caught in a ring of dragons as wolves bay in the background.

Katherine Montgomery, Anthem X (X TV)

This is spoilerish for the same things as "Lord's Prayer."

I found this while spelunking at AnimeMusicVideos.  I thought, frankly, it would be a trainwreck; I can't think of many songs less reminiscent of X than the knowing old-fashioned tart-sweetness of Rufus Wainwright's "Cigarettes and Chocolate Milk" with its comic oompaloompah rhythm.  I started watching it with great skepticism, thinking, "This shouldn't work at all," and then thinking, "And yet, strangely, it does." By the end, I had been thoroughly brainwashed: "Cigarettes and chocolate milk! Yes! That explains the weird Gothic noir sweetness of X perfectly!"  I wouldn't have thought this suited to an audience unfamiliar with the source, but it seemed to work for [livejournal.com profile] geekturnedvamp.

I'm not sure how describe this.  It starts off as light-hearted and comic, and it never does lose its sense of humor, but it does get darker and sadder and in some ways sweeter as it goes on.  I showed it to [livejournal.com profile] geekturnedvamp because she mentioned one of the things she liked about anime vids was the reliance on symbolic objects rather than just people and actions, and this one has some very nice use of objects -- from the opening traffic light and heartbeat monitor to the eponymous cigarettes to all the sweets that stand in for chocolate milk, sugar buns and candy sticks and the face of the sweetest girl in the world.  By the end, chocolate milk is associated with metaphorical sweetness, and cigarettes with pain and sadness, and this sounds very by the numbers, but it works.


Things I particularly liked:

0:50-1:00 And then there's those other things/Which for several reasons we won't mention- The golems forming out of shadow and mud/Kamui fighting the spirit-men, both because the change of action matches the change in music, and because these battles are the things Kamui is not mentioning to Kotori and Fuma at this point

1:55 Thinking about places While Kamui is looking down from Tokyo Tower (the boy clearly has a tropism for heights during times of stress, which alas will go tragically awry).

The scrappy boys' faces bit is slightly too arch for me, but the vidder's got me again by the clip of Yuto pulling red cord on Playing with prodigal sons

2:23 You gotta keep in the game  The clip of basketball here would be too literal and too forced, if it weren't backed by the meaning of the clip in the series -- Fuma trying to keep Kamui "in the game"/emotionally connected in a way that actually pulls Kamui deeper into "the game"/the events leading up to the end of the world.

The intercutting of the Tokiko/Saya stories is nicely done.  The closing clips of various bloody messes (cigarettes) interspersed with Kamui embracing Kotori (chocolate milk) are very effective, sort of sadly sweet, and ending with the broken doll as emblematic of all the broken people (and all the imaginative ways CLAMP breaks them) is strangely but perfectly right.

[identity profile] rushthatspeaks.livejournal.com 2004-08-01 10:15 pm (UTC)(link)
'Anthem X' was entered in the Otakon AMV contest this year, but sadly didn't make the finals (I say sadly because many of the things that did were not very good). I saw it in the 'also ran' screening room with a crowd of about five hundred people, and have never seen audience reaction to a vid change that dramatically-- there were actual groans when the title came up, and boos, and loud 'WRONG song' complaining, but by the two-minute mark the applause was fairly steady, and it seems to have made the word-of-mouth why-wasn't-that-in-the-finals list fairly readily. I liked it, but want to view it again in a less crowded space so I can have a chance to think about it and hear all of the lyrics.

'Lord's Prayer' is actually the video I show people who want to decide whether or not to watch X, because I find that whether or not they care for the video, it communicates the imagery of the series so well that it will tell people whether they will find the show interesting.

How do you find your vids, by the way? You've run across several that sound interesting to me, and I keep meaning to give you a few recs, because we seem to locate different yet overlapping sets of videos, which seems odd.
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[identity profile] thuviaptarth.livejournal.com 2004-08-02 05:43 am (UTC)(link)
I'm really glad to hear that the vid won over the audience at Otakon; I was planning to send the author feedback because it was the only vid she had listed, it didn't seem to have much commentary down, and I was afraid she might give up -- and that would be a real shame.

I'd love recs -- I'm having a really hard time finding vids, particularly for fandoms I know. I've gotten a lot of recs from [livejournal.com profile] boniblithe, pimp to the stars; WickedAmp I knew from her Angel vids, and her page led me to the Yuricon vids; the rest come from skimming AMV, sometimes by looking at their recommended vids or contest winners or the vids recommended by vidders whose work I like, and sometimes by struggling with their horrible search interface.

[identity profile] rushthatspeaks.livejournal.com 2004-08-03 06:40 pm (UTC)(link)
Rec-wise, I can't do much for you by way of actual links right now, but there are some titles and studios I'm quite fond of.

Studio-wise, More Than Toast productions are generally very good on a technical level and worth watching, thought their videos range wildly as to whether or not they have points. They did a revamp of the trailer to the movie The Comedian to Cowboy Bebop that is truly hilarious. Hsien Lee's studio, Kusoyaro Productions, is always technically brilliant and generally symbolically and textually magnificent; he did quite simply the Best Utena Movie Video Ever Made, to Bjork's 'Bachelorette', and it's worth watching whether or not you've seen the movie for the staggering timing, the internal structure, and the sheer prettiness of it all. Other highlights of Hsien's include 'With Every Light', a sweet little various-footage valentine to fandom and to life that never fails to cheer me up yet never lapses into saccharine; his Fushigi Yuugi trilogy, made across five years, which is a fascinating way to track both the evolution of technology and his own evolution as an artist (in chronological order, it runs 'Tribute', 'Dreams Come True', and 'The Ballad of Yui Hongo'; in my opinion the first two are good and the last one great); and "Miyazaki's Heaven', in which Miyazaki and the Smashing Pumpkins' cover of 'My Blue Heaven' demonstrate that they were meant to be.

My nomination for best dance video ever goes to Aokekasu's 'Mamboleo', which uses more than seventy-five anime to knit together a seamless fictional concert performance that is infectious and actually caused me to like the song it is set to. Try to find the older version as he reedited to put in yet more series and consequently removed much of the joy of it.

There is also a video of Yami no Matsuei to the theme from Ghostbusters out there somewhere which is just as funny as you'd expect it to be.

I could probably go on, but I'm not quite sure what fandoms you follow-- if there are any specific fandoms you're looking for, let me know.
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[identity profile] thuviaptarth.livejournal.com 2004-08-04 08:17 am (UTC)(link)
I have both Bachelorette and YaoiBusters (which is another Starherd vid), actually.

There are fandoms I've just started where I'd love to see stuff but am terribly afraid of being spoiled for later events -- Witch Hunter Robin (although I should have seen the whole thing in a month or so), Wolf's Rain, Revolutionary Girl Utena (though I think I've been spoiled for most of it), Read or Die TV, Saiyuki, Trigun, most of Yu Watase (though for the last three I've been reading the manga and don't know if the anime diverges from them).

Things I know well enough: Princess Mononoke, Spirited Away, Gravitation, X (I *really* want good X vids), Angel Sanctuary (though the OAV was so bad I was surprised to find even a semi-decent vid for this), Yami no Matsuei, Read or Die OVA.

I really do feel desperate for good X vids, I think because it's so gorgeous and I've had such a hard time finding them.
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P.S.

[identity profile] coffeeandink.livejournal.com 2004-08-04 08:19 am (UTC)(link)
Recruiter vid suggestions for anime I haven't seen would also be welcome. I am entirely willing to be converted.

[identity profile] rushthatspeaks.livejournal.com 2004-08-03 06:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Have been reading back through the earlier stuff to this journal. Hate to tell you this, but have a brilliant, brilliant Utena vid to 'Bring Me to Life', by Evanescence. Sorry. Vid is called 'Roseate Nocturne'. Had to be hit over head and forced into watching it, but it is now one of my favorite videos.