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Forums - General - Dai Sato, Writer of Cowboy Bebop:Anime will die out in Japan in few decades

Cowboy Bebop Anime Writer Expresses Frustrations With Industry

By Ishaan . July 24, 2010 . 5:16pm

At a conference titled “Cultural Typhoon” held at Komazawa University in July 2010, story writer for anime series such as Cowboy Bebop and Samurai Champloo, Dai Sato, expressed some of his concerns regarding the medium.

 

Issues with sub-contracting

 

One of the practices Sato takes issue with is outsourcing work for “in-between” frames of animation to smaller external contractors (often in China and Korea). Outsourcing and contracting work to external studios, Sato feels, leads to a loss in consistency, as sub-contractors are often unaware of the projects they are working on. He uses Macross as an example, where the “continuity between images was awful” and laments that, despite this, the industry has been following the same practice ever since.

 

For anyone that’s curious, this is a common practice in the games industry, too. Very often, smaller outsource studios are contracted to develop artwork or environments for games without majority of the staff ever being aware of the product they’re working on until it ships.

 

An extension of this problem, in Sato’s views, is that sub-contractors aren’t invested in their work at all, which he sees as the single largest problem plaguing the anime industry today. At the same time, however, he feels Japan can no longer claim anime as their own creation either. He accuses the anime industry of refusing to teach these Asian sub-contractors the skills required to craft their own stories because it could potentially damage the position of Japan in anime production.

 

No respect for stories

 

Switching gears, Sato also felt that the Japanese audience lacks a certain respect for storytelling. He laments the lack of an Ergo Proxy (for which he penned the story) DVD boxset in Japan, whereas the series received boxsets in other nations around the world. He went on to mention that Eureka Seven was dismissed in Japan as a clone of Neon Genesis Evangelion based on certain similarities in character designs (referring specifically to Rei Ayanami and Eureka).

 

Sato questions whether the audience is even interested in taking a deeper look into stories that creators put out. He feels the general audience is losing its ability to understand the meaning behind narratives that they experience. That works with a focus on plot and narrative are passed up in favour of those with an emphasis on cute characters and no real plot progression. As a result, he says, writers such as himself are finding it harder to find work, even as “Hollywood rips off our ideas.”

 

Anime is overly focused on materialistic escapism in his views, and no effort is being made to draw parallels with real-world problems and issues.

 

The future of anime

 

At a time like this, Sato says, the doujinshi (indie) scene is a source of inspiration. Since manga requires less staff to create something original than anime, he feels it is the last bastion of creativity within the industry. “Manga is the last hold out,” he said to his audience. “If that is lost, there will be no more anime.”

 

Personally, he feels that anime will die out in Japan in a few decades, but he wishes to continue working on it to prevent this outcome. He added that he has never had the freedom to work on something he wanted to. All the series he has written were shaped by commercial and professional restraints, and that he had to work to make them interesting within those constraints.



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I wish there were some historical fiction anime =/

I'll love to see an anime series about Hannibal Barca, with the same excitement and dramatic battle scenes as Code Geass.



I kinda agree with guy anime is not what it used to be, and from my take its because of the mass succcess of DBZ* which i love* pioneered stupid shows like bleach and naruto and alot of others. thers just somwthing about those shows that are just stale...like DBZ ripp offs but in there own mythos

 



For some reason, I can't post anything



stuff like Evangelion, Cowboy Bebop, Monster, Claymore, and Berserk is becoming fewer and fewer these days. Seriously, let's step away from companies cracking down on fansubbers or scanlators (and before anyone starts something about that I have two words for you: SHUT UP) and focus on the actual quality of the work coming out of Japan.

To be frank, anime is in a rut right. The only series I've gotten into in the past few years is Guin Saga because I couldn't stomach all the godawful, uninspired, and outright boring crap clogging up the airwaves. Even a lot of manga right now kinda sucks. Stuff like Death Note (an insecure, juvenile attempt at a psychological thriller) and Naruto (lost direction a LOOOOOONG time ago) is just outright boring or frustrating to read due to awful, pretentious writing and clunky plot progression and devices. I don't even know whether I should blame the editors or the writers as the manga industry is infamous for editors basically forcing writers to do things they never intended to. I can see where Sato is coming from in saying that anime could die out if the industry keeps up these cannibalistic trends that aren't working and the fandoms who keep buying lowest common denominator junk like moe harem crap based on light novels.



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It feels like Anime is been writin for 14 year old kids who love to see whiny teenagers with big ass weapons and lots of transformation



Aiddon said:

stuff like Evangelion, Cowboy Bebop, Monster, Claymore, and Berserk is becoming fewer and fewer these days. Seriously, let's step away from companies cracking down on fansubbers or scanlators (and before anyone starts something about that I have two words for you: SHUT UP) and focus on the actual quality of the work coming out of Japan.

To be frank, anime is in a rut right. The only series I've gotten into in the past few years is Guin Saga because I couldn't stomach all the godawful, uninspired, and outright boring crap clogging up the airwaves. Even a lot of manga right now kinda sucks. Stuff like Death Note (an insecure, juvenile attempt at a psychological thriller) and Naruto (lost direction a LOOOOOONG time ago) is just outright boring or frustrating to read due to awful, pretentious writing and clunky plot progression and devices. I don't even know whether I should blame the editors or the writers as the manga industry is infamous for editors basically forcing writers to do things they never intended to. I can see where Sato is coming from in saying that anime could die out if the industry keeps up these cannibalistic trends that aren't working and the fandoms who keep buying lowest common denominator junk like moe harem crap based on light novels.

This could be temporary just like the ruts Western Animation has gone through.  Atleast we have an Animation Age Ghetto to back up those ruts, anime doesn't.



really, I don't know what's recent for sure besides what I just checked because, I don't really care when it's made. But most of the anime I like is from 2000-2007 ish and a few from earlier? plus miyazaki from forever ago as well as macross. Hell, I don't enjoy many anime "classics"

But my favorites are
Planetes
Ghost in The Shell 2nd Gig. SAC  The 3 movies.
Totoro
Haibane Renmei
Paranoia Agent
Full Metal Alchemist
Nana
Macross

And a proably like 10 more, but the first 4 are my favorite favorite.

That said, I don't like Cowboy Bebop besides the music, or Samurai Champloo or Ergo Proxy. So I probably don't share his point of views.

Also, I don't know if any of those I listed are from the past two years. But I guess I don't really remember anything from the past 2 years very well if that = rut, then it = rut I guess.



Eh, Western Animation is on its last legs too. Anytime anyone even bothers to make a new animated series anymore, its always CG or some crap.

 

Though honestly i think he's just looking at an industry that's changed since he was really involved. Outsourcing is only a tiny problem. Anime's main problem is that of any major creative medium: stagnation of ideas, but no medium is devoid of that.

 

Anime will be fine.



Monster Hunter: pissing me off since 2010.

As long as there are animes like Code Geass, Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann and Clannad around, anime will be just fine.