For some inexplicable reason, Japan produces a lot of anti-war art. It seems the trend started sometime around the mid-20th century. Even one of Japan’s biggest war franchises, Gundam, features a surprising number of anti-war themes. No explanation has been provided to date to explain why.
- Philomena Cunk, probably
Perhaps it coincides with the Hall of Records being mysteriously blown away in a firestorm… however, without a Hall of Records, we’ll sadly never know.
Care to explain ?
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Thank you for the explanation. I think I watches some episode when I was a kid but I don’t remember a thing about it.
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Astro Boy / Mighty Atom is a manga series drawn by Osamu Tezuka in the 1950s and 60s. It was popular among young boys (both in Japan and outside) due to its action sequences, but has complex themes such as consciousness, human-robot conflict, war and the morality of violence.
How much of that bizarre nostalgia comes down to the show having been originally aired brutally re-cut, mistranslated, and basically rewritten so that it would fit “American sensibilities”? Censorship in “the freest nation that invented freedom, football, and guns for all amen!!!” is wild, yall.
And then there’s Pluto, by Naoki Urasawa, which is what would happen if Philip K. Dick decided to write an Astro Boy story.
(It’s a reinterpretation of “The Greatest Robot on Earth”, and was supervised by Tezuka’s son, 100% worth a read)
Cartoons are wild as an adult
man I thought I clicked on a different post and was so confused by the comments
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History shows, again and again, how nature points out the folly of men
Feels the same about Naruto