Changes made to Welcome to the NHK: Collection Part Two
Revision 1
Created on Friday, 1st October 2010, 14:55
Change Submitted by Jitendar Canth
List of Changes:
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[imgmr=0000208615.jpg|0000112797]It s - Change #3 - ure. <newline> <newline>[url="http://www.myreviewer.com/default.asp?a=0000135377"][imgmc=0000226666.jpg][/url] <newline>Funimati
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imgml=0000208611.jpg|0000112793]And so the downward spiral of setbacks and despair continues, as hopes are cruelly snatched away, false dreams exposed, and character introspection begins to overwhelm. There comes a tipping point of course, a realisation for the characters that their lives have to change, and only they can change them. It comes at different points for different characters, often at a point of utter crisis, but the changes aren’t necessarily dramatic or particularly grandiose. One by one lives begin to change and change for the better. Except that it doesn’t work that way for everyone, as the tipping point maybe too far down for it to make a difference, or for some people there is no point of self-realisation at all. It turns out in the end that Misaki, Sato’s guardian angel, the altruistic innocent girl who single-handedly decided to rescue Sato, is the most damaged, vulnerable and needy of them all. That understanding comes to Sato almost too late, and sets up the series’ brilliant climax. <newline> <newline>Everything I said about the first half holds true here. It’s a show about people, just like you and me, trying to live mundane lives, and whether through no fault of their own, random circumstance, or their own negative character traits, wind up having to deal with adversity that will be familiar to anyone who’s had a ‘rough patch’ As I said before, it holds up a brutal mirror to society at times, but manages to entertain and put a smile on your face while doing it. It can also bring a tear to the eye, as some of the trials and agonies that the characters face are truly heartrending, simply because it’s likely that you will have experienced something similar, or know someone who has. You don’t have to be physically locked away in a room to have felt isolated, and at our lowest points, who hasn’t felt that they’re fighting the whole world? Welcome to the NHK reflects all that, yet somehow manages to make you feel good about yourself in the process. It’s brilliantly observed, it’s sharp, it’s witty, it’s moving, it can be bleak and then darkly comic, it’s relevant and it’s a damned shame that it hasn’t been released in the UK yet.url="http://www.myreviewer.com/default.asp?a=0000135397"][imgmc=0000226686.jpg][/url] <newline>And so the downward spiral of setbacks and despair continues, as hopes are cruelly snatched away, false dreams exposed, and character introspection begins to overwhelm. There comes a tipping point of course, a realisation for the characters that their lives have to change, and only they can change them. It comes at different points for different characters, often at a point of utter crisis, but the changes aren’t necessarily dramatic or particularly grandiose. One by one lives begin to change and change for the better. Except that it doesn’t work that way for everyone, as the tipping point maybe too far down for it to make a difference, or for some people there is no point of self-realisation at all. It turns out in the end that Misaki, Sato’s guardian angel, the altruistic innocent girl who single-handedly decided to rescue Sato, is the most damaged, vulnerable and needy of them all. That understanding comes to Sato almost too late, and sets up the series’ brilliant climax. <newline> <newline>[url="http://www.myreviewer.com/default.asp?a=0000135404"][imgmc=0000226693.jpg][/url] <newline>Everything I said about the first half holds true here. It’s a show about people, just like you and me, trying to live mundane lives, and whether through no fault of their own, random circumstance, or their own negative character traits, wind up having to deal with adversity that will be familiar to anyone who’s had a ‘rough patch’ As I said before, it holds up a brutal mirror to society at times, but manages to entertain and put a smile on your face while doing it. It can also bring a tear to the eye, as some of the trials and agonies that the characters face are truly heartrending, simply because it’s likely that you will have experienced something similar, or know someone who has. You don’t have to be physically locked away in a room to have felt isolated, and at our lowest points, who hasn’t felt that they’re fighting the whole world? Welcome to the NHK reflects all that, yet somehow manages to make you feel good about yourself in the process. It’s brilliantly observed, it’s sharp, it’s witty, it’s moving, it can be bleak and then darkly comic, it’s relevant and it’s a damned shame that it hasn’t been released in the UK yet. <newline> <newline>[url="http://www.myreviewer.com/default.asp?a=0000135395"][imgmc=0000226684.jpg][/url] <newline> <newline>
Initial Version
Created on Friday, 20th February 2009, 17:15
First Submitted by Jitendar Canth