Technically, this is actually my third week without JAFWA (which is a little abnormal, but hardly a record). The first of those, however, was
seventeen‘s birthday, and the second a non-screening weekend; making this the first week in which I have missed a screening entirely voluntarily in something of the vicinity of five years.
That is a hell of a lot of Saturday nights spent in one place. Even allowing for end of year breaks and non-screening weekends, that is a hell of a lot of Saturday nights spent in one place. We're dealing with something like the end of an era over here.
JAFWA has long been the only (and still remains the largest) anime club in the state, and I have it to thank for any number of titles I might never have seen otherwise (Rurouni Kenshin, Trigun, Cowboy Bebop, Slayers, Inu Yasha, Card Captor Sakura, Kodacha, Samurai Champloo, the list goes on). Even the items no-one liked much used to count for something, because they gave you a chance to head outside and chat to people for a while. Half the fun of being in fandom is getting to hang out with other fans - and at our peak, even our own little group filled three rows. It wasn’t just a chance to watch anime, it was our regular social get together. And it was a *lot of fun*.
Times, however, as they are wont to do, have changed. This started back in the days when indulging in our anime interest meant taking the bus into town and sticking twenty cent coins into a Dragonball card machine until we ran out of change. Now, what I can’t rent out at the DVD hire place down the road I can usually find online. And while it really is great that anime has become so much more easily available, it’s making gatherings like JAFWA sorta obsolete. I wouldn’t be surprised if we’ve more than doubled the number of anime fans in Perth in the last few years, but membership at JAFWA just keeps going down.
These days, there are exactly four of us on an average night (maybe six in event of a miracle); and often just me and my sister. There’s no-one to talk to anymore. But the real clincher in our parts is that what is on at JAFWA just doesn’t interest us these days. They’re only showing about a quarter as many shows as they used to - same program every night, and a lot of items are doubled up. Naruto is the only item I’m really into, and I’ve seen the episodes they’re showing already. There hasn’t been anything to get really excited about since Full Metal Alchemist started heading downhill and we ran out of Samurai Champloo.
And, well, yeah, that’s pretty much it. No arguments with the organisers, no transport issues or work commitments; just not much reason to go anymore, which is a shame. There’s every chance we’ll go back from time to time or if the program improves, but the days of spending every Saturday night there truly look to be over.
Actually, there hasn’t been much new stuff out in a while that has really grabbed my interest, period. I’m having to accept it’s possible I’ve grown out of anime to some degree, or at least have become more selective than I used to be.
I am definitely overdue for a something new to obsess over, anime or otherwise. Recs anyone?
That is a hell of a lot of Saturday nights spent in one place. Even allowing for end of year breaks and non-screening weekends, that is a hell of a lot of Saturday nights spent in one place. We're dealing with something like the end of an era over here.
JAFWA has long been the only (and still remains the largest) anime club in the state, and I have it to thank for any number of titles I might never have seen otherwise (Rurouni Kenshin, Trigun, Cowboy Bebop, Slayers, Inu Yasha, Card Captor Sakura, Kodacha, Samurai Champloo, the list goes on). Even the items no-one liked much used to count for something, because they gave you a chance to head outside and chat to people for a while. Half the fun of being in fandom is getting to hang out with other fans - and at our peak, even our own little group filled three rows. It wasn’t just a chance to watch anime, it was our regular social get together. And it was a *lot of fun*.
Times, however, as they are wont to do, have changed. This started back in the days when indulging in our anime interest meant taking the bus into town and sticking twenty cent coins into a Dragonball card machine until we ran out of change. Now, what I can’t rent out at the DVD hire place down the road I can usually find online. And while it really is great that anime has become so much more easily available, it’s making gatherings like JAFWA sorta obsolete. I wouldn’t be surprised if we’ve more than doubled the number of anime fans in Perth in the last few years, but membership at JAFWA just keeps going down.
These days, there are exactly four of us on an average night (maybe six in event of a miracle); and often just me and my sister. There’s no-one to talk to anymore. But the real clincher in our parts is that what is on at JAFWA just doesn’t interest us these days. They’re only showing about a quarter as many shows as they used to - same program every night, and a lot of items are doubled up. Naruto is the only item I’m really into, and I’ve seen the episodes they’re showing already. There hasn’t been anything to get really excited about since Full Metal Alchemist started heading downhill and we ran out of Samurai Champloo.
And, well, yeah, that’s pretty much it. No arguments with the organisers, no transport issues or work commitments; just not much reason to go anymore, which is a shame. There’s every chance we’ll go back from time to time or if the program improves, but the days of spending every Saturday night there truly look to be over.
Actually, there hasn’t been much new stuff out in a while that has really grabbed my interest, period. I’m having to accept it’s possible I’ve grown out of anime to some degree, or at least have become more selective than I used to be.
I am definitely overdue for a something new to obsess over, anime or otherwise. Recs anyone?
Re: Two steps ahead of you
Date: 2005-06-20 02:27 pm (UTC)He'd damn well better be!My main issue with Alien 3 was that after all the work they went to to save the little girl's life in the second movie, they kill her off in her sleep before the third movie even starts. It's like, before anything's even happened, they've made the events of the previous movie pointless. I can imagine a better cut would have helped, but not really fixed the premise.
Re: Two steps ahead of you
Date: 2005-06-20 02:32 pm (UTC)I think it was meant to be completely alientating, although to tell the truth, I was more irritated about the cute male lead :P I really liked the funeral scene, and the scene right at the end, especially when they integrated Ripley's radio transmission from the first movie into it (read: I bawled ;_;)