Mayu's Metal Upa

Bernard 2022-12-08 05:27:49

I don't watch much anime, and this one is enough for me to regard it as a masterpiece (limited to anime, of course).
The previous part originally gave me a very general impression. The setting of the sword was slanted, especially reminding me of the bad butterfly effect. I was worried that the work would collapse in the logic of the story and lose the focus of the narrative. The anime is as mindless and obscenity, and it is directly finished. Fortunately, the narrative began to be formalized in the mid-term, and the climax ending was the core of the masterpiece of the film. There were basically no flaws in both character characterization and emotional rendering. More importantly, the emphasis on plot processing was possible. Wonderful and clear to tell such a complex story, in the next admiration.
However, if you watch the anime in multiple episodes, there are many intermittent intervals, which should have a great impact on the appreciation of the work.
ps: I have heard Coriander's Divine Comedy Metal Upa before, and I like Mayuri so much that I don't like Hong Lixi _(:з"∠)_ But as the plot progresses, I can gradually accept it. Sure enough, the biggest advantage of anime is that the shaping of characters can be achieved through pictures to achieve effects that movies cannot achieve (that is, to satisfy or even exaggerate all the imagination of the two-dimensional girl paper), no wonder it is deep like the sea when you enter station B

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Steins;Gate quotes

  • Moeka Kiryuu: People need to be needed by someone in order to live. If a person isn't needed, they're worthless!

  • Itaru Hashida: There are two types of lies: Lies that hurt, and lies that don't hurt.

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