*AKIRA* was breathtaking (First time watching reaction)

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🎙️ WATCH AFTER THE REACTION: • Akira - After the Reac...
The future is not a straight line. It is filled with many crossroads. There must be a future that we can choose for ourselves.
Hello, nice dudes! For today's reaction, Chris and Altaf watch Akira for the first time! Directed by Katsuhiro Otomo, this is an animated classic we've been wanting to watch for a long time and our amazing patrons voted for it in our latest poll!
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Пікірлер: 545

  • @NiceDudeMovieNight
    @NiceDudeMovieNight5 ай бұрын

    By clicking our link piavpn.com/nicedude you’ll get an 83% discount on Private Internet Access! That’s just $2.03 a month, AND you’ll also get 4 extra months completely for free!

  • @TheBunnyodeath

    @TheBunnyodeath

    5 ай бұрын

    I had a meistro. Taught me opera. . . I used to sing rote. Sounds. Other than knowlqdge. He said how can you sing it you don't know what your singing. He's was right. Now I learned 5 languages passably well. Nut since I'm Danish ans I speak English sorta well and French cause lived in Canada German cause had a good teacher it a itallian cause opera

  • @hulkhatepunybanner

    @hulkhatepunybanner

    5 ай бұрын

    *A tisk-tisk for whoever told you two to view the subtitled version.* This movie has so much going on in it, that you -literally- need to listen to the dialogue. Now you're talking and looking at the grand visuals and... _reading._

  • @tahnadana5435

    @tahnadana5435

    5 ай бұрын

    youll be more confuse when you read the manga

  • @hulkhatepunybanner

    @hulkhatepunybanner

    5 ай бұрын

    @@tahnadana5435 *Of course, it's in Japanese.*

  • @tahnadana5435

    @tahnadana5435

    5 ай бұрын

    dudes, watch Children of Men please, thanks

  • @royfugate
    @royfugate5 ай бұрын

    the saddest part for me is when Kaori gets crushed, and Tetsuo screams out her name in pain because he cant save her, even though he wants to.

  • @deezmusic2062

    @deezmusic2062

    5 ай бұрын

    Very sad for Kaori. Not so sad for Tetsuo in the Manga where he absolutely abuses the hell out her. Saying her name in the last minutes before he kills her is such and F you moment.

  • @Mayorofsexytown1303

    @Mayorofsexytown1303

    4 ай бұрын

    For me its around that same part when he bloating up and he says "kaneda...help me"

  • @l0sts0ul89

    @l0sts0ul89

    4 ай бұрын

    @@deezmusic2062 wow glad the movie changed it

  • @besupaaa
    @besupaaa5 ай бұрын

    My uncle sat me in front of the TV to watch this when I was A KID, and I assure you that the last moment of the movie is carved in my brain.

  • @NiceDudeMovieNight

    @NiceDudeMovieNight

    5 ай бұрын

    It's definitely one of those that sticks with you. Especially if you're just a kid!

  • @carbonscythe

    @carbonscythe

    5 ай бұрын

    Ey! I had the same experience with my uncle when I was a kid! We watched a new movie every day for a month and this was one of them

  • @Nebuloid1

    @Nebuloid1

    5 ай бұрын

    My uncle did the same ! In about 1991 and I had recurring nightmares for years. Years later I forgot where those images were coming from. Only with the dawn of dvd's did I find out it was a movie ! Absolutely love it now, have a whole Akira collection in the toy room.

  • @TizzmantineUK

    @TizzmantineUK

    Ай бұрын

    My stepdad showed me ninja scroll at like age 8, no idea wtf he was thinking, I wouldn't even show ninja scroll to my girlfriend 😂

  • @TomVCunningham
    @TomVCunningham5 ай бұрын

    Akira, Ghost In The Shell and Ninja Scroll were like the R-rated anime film starter-pack back in the 90s.

  • @jayconant3816

    @jayconant3816

    5 ай бұрын

    Yes I think they would love ninja scroll, would love for them to watch vampire hunter d 1 and 2 also

  • @MegazoneMusic23

    @MegazoneMusic23

    5 ай бұрын

    All movies I saw and owned back in the Late 80's EARLY 90's when Anime was still "Underground" except those who were in the know. All Classics. Its another reason why Traditional animation is still the best for me. CG is ok for technical stuff but nothing can replace cel -drawn perfection and movements like Akira, and early Disney. Not CG movies (THere are some that I do like, but I dont consider them animation) please dont throw stones.. just my humble opinion ;)

  • @Kasperoner444

    @Kasperoner444

    5 ай бұрын

    Came here to say this. The Holy Trinity of Anime films.

  • @marasmusine

    @marasmusine

    4 ай бұрын

    Akira and GiTS (both the mangas and anime) ruined me for any other serious anime and manga in the 90s. The only other thing that's come close for me in scope is I Am A Hero.

  • @Darnozz

    @Darnozz

    2 ай бұрын

    I remember when I was a kid. The cartoon I was watching always played the following animes during the holidays : Macross Plus the 4 episodes, ninja scrolls, The wings of horigami and another that I have forgotten the title. I had a blast watching those and it was my favourite part of the year because of that.

  • @thinkbeyond3457
    @thinkbeyond34575 ай бұрын

    When watching this movie you can see all the other properties that have taken direct inspiration (if not just copied) many of the scenes or concepts. Akira is historical.

  • @NiceDudeMovieNight

    @NiceDudeMovieNight

    5 ай бұрын

    I'm sure there are plenty of videos that break down all the influences that came from this movie!

  • @thinkbeyond3457

    @thinkbeyond3457

    5 ай бұрын

    @NiceDudeMovieNight For sure. Glad you nice dudes enjoyed it! Always a mind blowing watch.

  • @sentenced03

    @sentenced03

    5 ай бұрын

    There's a video on KZread of all the different media that has recreated the famous slide. it's hilarious.

  • @V.Perez1985

    @V.Perez1985

    5 ай бұрын

    The latest reference i can think of is the space laser in Invincible.

  • @Corn_Pone_Flicks
    @Corn_Pone_Flicks5 ай бұрын

    One thing that's basically lost on American viewers is that Akira is the most common male name in Japan, so rather than sounding ominous, it's about the most innocuous name they could have used...think a shot of a giant crater with the name "Billy" or something similarly common over it; once upon a time, Akira was just a normal kid before he was turned into a weapon (Akira caused the explosion seen at the start-the date, by the way, was the date the film first premiered in Japan-and it was believed to be an attack, so World War III was started basically over a misunderstanding, hence the Colonel's terror at the thought of Akira coming back). And yes, Stranger Things took a huge amount of inspiration from this film.

  • @TomVCunningham

    @TomVCunningham

    5 ай бұрын

    Uh, I think Stranger Things was more influenced by Stephen King joints like Carrie, Firestarter and The Mist. Psychic and Telekinetic powers are pretty common in fiction.

  • @gerrya2133

    @gerrya2133

    5 ай бұрын

    ​​@@TomVCunninghamStranger things very clearly takes inspiration from all kinds of media around a specific time period. Not just Stephen King properties. Akira came out in the west during that era.

  • @Dell-ol6hb

    @Dell-ol6hb

    5 ай бұрын

    @@TomVCunningham I think it's impossible that Stranger Things didn't take from Akira as well, it's one of the most influential pieces of media made in the last century especially since Stranger Things takes heavily from the 80s

  • @Corn_Pone_Flicks

    @Corn_Pone_Flicks

    4 ай бұрын

    @@TomVCunningham Telekinesis, yes, but something as specific as a bunch of kids with psychic powers resulting from government experiments with numbers tattooed on their wrists/hands isn't likely to be a coincidence.

  • @tallyp.7643
    @tallyp.76435 ай бұрын

    Katsuhiro Otomo is the freaking GOAT. Anything made by him is just a feast for the eyes. If you get the chance, go read the 6 volume graphic novel. 2000+ pages, but so many side stories and little things you guys were wondering about get much deeper play in the story. I still pull it out once in a while and just look at the panels that have no dialogue, in awe of the detail of what's being presented. AKIRA definitely changed things in animation, especially around character movement and directing decisions (no more "speed racer" mouth movements, for one). It was also made while the manga was still going, so if some things seem a bit rushed or confusing, the manga fills it in nicely (like those side-characters you wondered about). Still a wild ride regardless. Dunno how many full-feature anime you've indulged in, but I gotta recommend Osamu Tezuka's "Metropolis" from 2000 and "Steamboy" (by Katsuhiro Otomo as well). The action is amazing in both (and of course the destruction--hee hee).

  • @Johannicus

    @Johannicus

    5 ай бұрын

    Agree on Steamboy!

  • @PhattyBolger
    @PhattyBolger5 ай бұрын

    From what I understand, Tetsuo became so powerful that he became a new universe. Which is absolutely insane.

  • @3DJapan
    @3DJapan5 ай бұрын

    Animator here: Typically animation is shot on the 2s, meaning the motion happens every 2 frames. Akira was shot on the 1s, so every single frame is hand drawn. That gives everything a really smooth look but it's double the work.

  • @iansanford6544

    @iansanford6544

    5 ай бұрын

    Not just that, but some parts were animated on 2's but off by 1 frame, look at the iconic bike light trails in Kaneda's gang's first ride, half the bikes are on one 2-beat the other bikes are on a different 2

  • @erik6114

    @erik6114

    5 ай бұрын

    This is a complete myth. Akira has a lot of shots on 1's, but only a portion of the movie. Animating on 1's, 2's, or 3's is not respective of time or budget or effort but a technique used to convey motion differently in different situations. You can prove this easily by looking at any given scene from the movie and counting the frames, but there's also a great video on youtube breaking down why this is untrue. kzread.info/dash/bejne/i6iN0sufXceymqw.html

  • @MrVvulf

    @MrVvulf

    5 ай бұрын

    I wonder how much a cell from "the slide" would sell for?

  • @Retrovorious
    @Retrovorious5 ай бұрын

    19:10 Stranger Things actually took a lot from other things, for example, FireStarter (1984) based on a Stephen King book. If you watch that movie, the similarities are undeniable. Akira does influence countless other things like Matrix though.

  • @Kainlarsen

    @Kainlarsen

    5 ай бұрын

    Stranger Things doesn't have an original bone in its derivative body. It stole everything it was from greater works, which is why it sucks ass.

  • @user-su8wo4cc4u

    @user-su8wo4cc4u

    5 ай бұрын

    isn't that the case with literally every fucking thing ever written?​@@Kainlarsen

  • @saccitysav6912

    @saccitysav6912

    5 ай бұрын

    Can’t wait until you guys check out Ghost in the shell

  • @damnhatesyou
    @damnhatesyou5 ай бұрын

    I love how this movie doesn’t hold your hand. we need more of this type of thing where you have to work out what’s going on.

  • @enloopious
    @enloopious5 ай бұрын

    It was amazing in the theater. I saw it on opening day in Hollywood and the intro was unreal. There had never been anything like it up to that point. This movie opened the doors for all of the rest of them.

  • @notreallydaedalus

    @notreallydaedalus

    5 ай бұрын

    I can only imagine... I got a bootleg VHS from a friend in middle school... this basically defined 8th grade for me and my friends.

  • @multeyemeteor
    @multeyemeteor5 ай бұрын

    An interesting take, that I read back in my college days, was that Akira is one of many pieces of Japanese art that tries to tackle the idea of having been victims of a nuclear strike. There is something existentially frightening and almost religious about having experienced being so close (both in terms of vicinity and time) to a destructive force of that magnitude that you start thinking about existence in a very different way. It has been theorized that this is why so much manga/anime and Japanese games are about these world defining and cataclysmic events, and trying to save a world on the verge of destruction. The word/name "Akira", which (as someone else in the comments pointed out) is predominately a very common male name (although it can be unisex), means "light, "brightness", "prosper", "morning" (and a number of other things), and it almost shows that this concept of this incredible force is not just seen as immense or powerful and destructive, but also as a beacon of hope for the future, and that's why the military and the scientists so eagerly seeks to control it. You could say that Tetsuo (meaning "iron") represents Japan's poor self-esteem in the context of geopolitics, where the country has in recent history been bossed around by the US and China, as opposed to in the past where it was a fiercely dominant aggressor and force to be recogned with. After WWII Japan has been constitutionally bound to only being allowed to have a defensive army, and it's almost like Japan - much like Tetsuo - wish for the ability to break the shackles and be able to be recognized for its own strength and agency. An interesting sidenote is that the name "Kaneda" is a surname means something along the lines of "money/gold + field", which could be the name of a well off family of farmers. Likely, a family of some stature in the area back in feudal Japan. A different way of looking at the name would be as someone who is well off, as in he is established, well-esteemed, and has a high status within the group (he is the leader of the gang and is the movie's protagonist). There's so much to unpack in Akira, and I feel like my viewings of the movie as a young teen to the times I've seen it as an adult (both at home and in movie theatres) always leave me with more questions. The story is relatively simple, but the devil's in the details. And if anything, it offers a tale of a very advanced nation with an existential crisis, more than some deep and intricate self-contained action plot.

  • @0PsychosisMedia0
    @0PsychosisMedia05 ай бұрын

    Another piece of influential anime is Macross: Do you remember Love. It is based on the show Super Dimensional Fortress Macross. Also known as Robotech here in the states. The movie is all hand drawn and incredibly detailed. When it premiered in japan it had longer lines than Empire Strikes Back. It takes place about after the 3rd-4th episode of the show. If you watch it you will understand the influence on scifi and pop cultural. Make sure you watch the original Japanese subtitled cut. It makes more sense and the Japanese voice actors are top notch.

  • @Bobbias

    @Bobbias

    5 ай бұрын

    DYRL is a good film, but nowhere near as good as the actual series it condenses and retells. There are some pretty significant differences between the story the series tells and DYRL. Also, you could have mentioned that Robotech is a heavily bastardized version similar to how power rangers recut a bunch of different shows into something different than the source material.

  • @0PsychosisMedia0

    @0PsychosisMedia0

    5 ай бұрын

    @Bobbias Bastardized? Are you talking about the difference between Robotech series and Macross series.? I recently went through the Macross series, and there is not a difference in the main story arch and personal stories comparison to Robotech. The Robotech has awful delivery and has voice acting that as an adult makes my skin craw. But the stories are a match beat for beat. As for the movie DYRL it's a great movie with spectacular and detailed animation. That rivals Akira. For the time frame, it's mind-boggling. Nothing really wrong with it being condensed...just need to watch the first 3 episodes of Macross. That's all is really needed.

  • @sek0ne01
    @sek0ne015 ай бұрын

    theres 6 books of Akira manga, and anime is just took place in 1-3. so its not the end

  • @AndreaBlythe

    @AndreaBlythe

    5 ай бұрын

    The manga is fantastic.

  • @ThomasStClair-zr2lb
    @ThomasStClair-zr2lb5 ай бұрын

    One thing about this movie i love is how smooth the animation is, most animation is 12 frames a second but the creator wanted it to be more like a movie so they drew 24 frames per second. So they basically did twice the work of any other animated movie.

  • @chappie_nottherobot

    @chappie_nottherobot

    5 ай бұрын

    Paid off in spades.

  • @reddhairs

    @reddhairs

    5 ай бұрын

    This one aspect I found so amazing myself. So smooth so well done

  • @Corn_Pone_Flicks

    @Corn_Pone_Flicks

    5 ай бұрын

    SOME scenes are at 24 fps, but not all of them by any means...go through it frame-by-frame and you'll see plenty of repeated ones.

  • @Dell-ol6hb

    @Dell-ol6hb

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Corn_Pone_Flicks they animate on 1s for the action scenes or important scenes but for stuff like backgrounds or panning shots they animate on 2s or 3s (12 and 8 fps) because obviously there's no reason to animate those things at such a high framerate. It's impressive because of just how much they animate on 1s in comparison to other animated works from the time period and today

  • @Iyalo-cw7eb
    @Iyalo-cw7eb2 ай бұрын

    them saying it looks like something, when most of these are direct inspirations or literal copies of this is so interesting

  • @benthomson1132
    @benthomson11325 ай бұрын

    My dudes... My Nice Dudes... You have GOT to read the manga! It's absolutely incredible, and while I 100% love the anime for everything that it is, once you read the manga it'll make you wish that they would go back and make a full-on series that covers the entire manga, which is MUCH better at answering the questions and fleshing out the story, world, and characters. In fact it's practically a different story altogether! Anyway, great video as always, nice to see a film that's so close to my heart.

  • @highimpact1
    @highimpact15 ай бұрын

    I like how they spent half the movie trying to figure out who the antagonist is.

  • @PierceArner
    @PierceArner5 ай бұрын

    So, one of the important things contextually is that this film builds really heavily off of the era of the global Vietnam War protests and the sociopolitical environment in Japan at the time. At the core of America's involvement in Japan and early intense antagonism with Russia was how America was involved with pardoning Japanese warcrimes involving human experimentation during WWII in exchange for information, followed by the Japanese feeling as though they had become America's test subjects in the wake of the atomic bombings, but were now under the purview of a foreign power that they couldn't resist. Post-WWII, the sudden Reverse Course Policy by America allowed a lot of the old Imperial Japanese infrastructure to remain because that right wing militaristic government was more advantageous for the US in opposing Communism and incentivizing military action in south east Asia. What this meant is that the anti-war left wing got heavily persecuted and pushed underground by the government during Red Scare. This is how they radicalized and ended up joining forces with the Yakuza against the police & establishment which caused a LOT of open violent conflict. This was true even before the college age demographic globally started heavily protesting America's war in Vietnam and made this sentiment more of a global event, Japan still struggled with anti-war, anti-government radicalism. This is why the main setting features so many student protesters, biker gangs of school-age kids getting busted by the cops, overly controlling and incompetent government, hardline military officers intervening, a deeply organized underground resistance group, and sealed off secrets about human experimentation in a former Tokyo - as those were all big components of Japan historically and this was a VERY believably apocalyptic future setting.

  • @0PsychosisMedia0

    @0PsychosisMedia0

    5 ай бұрын

    This movie was made in 1988. Communism was all but collapsed. The wall had fallen, and the Soviet Union disintegrated. Vietnam protests ended in the early 70s. Japan was heading straight into a recession, buy the early 90s it was waist deep in it. A new generation was emerging and new tech/sciences along with it. This caused concerns of the older generation and political players. I'm not sure where you got your facts. But they are drastically different than what was happening at the time.

  • @PierceArner

    @PierceArner

    5 ай бұрын

    @@0PsychosisMedia0 …I'm aware that it was made in 1988, which is why I talked about the previous historical context that influenced _the FICTIONAL SETTING OF THE FILM,_ *which is not the same as contemporary events happening at that time in Japan when the film was made.* (Exercise reading comprehension before attempting to make a counter argument next time). That long historical background that I broke down primarily covers the immediate post-war period into the Vietnam era, because those elements are what most significantly shape Japan's post-apocalyptic megacity settings in ways that make them notably different from Western or American ones like *Escape from New York* or *Escape from LA* especially with the details about the particular sociopolitical groups and how they're alignments weave into one another. This history is deeply embedded in TONS of Japanese fiction and you can see elements of that influence in other works around the same time as *_AKIRA_* like throughout Mamoru Oshii's *_Kerberos_* saga which started in 1987. This is because the authors often grew up in the midst of those events coming to a head with their college-age generation, and thus they heavily influenced how they did their fictional world-building. Even if you jump a full decade later to 1997 when *_Final Fantasy VII_* was made, it still features an extremist left wing terrorist underground resistance movement against a militarized authoritarian corporate government that's involved in human experimentation, and its main character is showcased fighting on a motorcycles. So, even though those events had long passed, and Japan was within the middle of the Lost Decade triggered by the asset price collapse and the economic stagnation - it didn't stop those previous historical elements from being pivotal components of the story decades later. This is also because those earlier works like *AKIRA* continue to influence titles that came after, just as they were influenced by earlier post-apocalyptic Japanese societal collapse manga like *Devilman* & *Violence Jack* that were released in the early 1970s. Fiction is a continuum of influence that stacks upon itself across various works that become a part of the cultural landscape. Once again, just because something has already happened in the real world doesn't mean that fictional settings made later suddenly stop utilizing those influences. Case in point: the thirty different *_Godzilla_* films made across the last 70 years still contain a focus on the effects of the atomic bombings & nuclear testing even though those things weren't still ongoing the entire time. The fears associated with that event are just as present in *AKIRA* in 1988 as they were in *Godzilla* in 1954 or *Godzilla Minus One* in 2023. If you're still skeptical about any of the facts I've listed, go ahead and name something specific you think requires a verified source that isn't just basic history knowledge or media plot summary. - If you're gonna do that though, make sure you think through your argument why that matters this time, and don't go attacking a strawman again, so that maybe you'll have something of value to contribute.

  • @0PsychosisMedia0

    @0PsychosisMedia0

    5 ай бұрын

    @PierceArner yeah..you seem to be a fan fiction person. Putting your ideas/feels into a movie compared to what it really is and what's happening.

  • @0PsychosisMedia0

    @0PsychosisMedia0

    5 ай бұрын

    @cosesu8929 And so was I. Reality is the Manga and Anime was never based on the subject matter that was assumed and fan fiction in the post here. More importantly 0 relation to the Vietnam War and protests...that was specifically in the States. Nice try but you may need to sit back on the bench...

  • @Micah_S_0x4D

    @Micah_S_0x4D

    5 ай бұрын

    @@0PsychosisMedia0 My guy, if you're going to be Mr. Correcty-Corrector, use facts. The wall (as in Berlin) came down in 1989. The USSR dissolved in 1991. And as others have pointed out, the manga predates the anime. Lastly, the OP was writing about tone which was influenced by a period of time in history, not necessarily contemporary time (though it was pretty close).

  • @lady_draguliana784
    @lady_draguliana7845 ай бұрын

    Keep an eye on your local theaters, every couple years, you'll see screenings of Akira pop up and it's SO worth it to see it as it was intended!

  • @AtlasBlizzard
    @AtlasBlizzard3 ай бұрын

    This movie was an absolute gamechanger in animation, for sure. It opened the eyes of the rest of the world to anime. The level of detail in everything is borderline masochistic to behold.

  • @Hravokh
    @Hravokh5 ай бұрын

    80's / 90's anime simply hit different. i like to recommend Ghost in the Shell and Jin Ro :)

  • @mariogranollersmesa
    @mariogranollersmesa5 ай бұрын

    I was lucky enough to see Akira in the cinema, the year it was released in Spain (1992). I still remember the moment: I went with a friend to the 10pm session in the town where we spent the summer holidays and we went out together. two of us hallucinating with the images and knowing that we had understood the entire movie.

  • @eclat4641

    @eclat4641

    5 ай бұрын

    Awesome!!

  • @The3rdGunman
    @The3rdGunman5 ай бұрын

    Spring of 92 had just got off the bus and was walking home from high school...My 1/2 Japanese 1/2 German friend from the neighborhood and another friend pulled into my driveway like dude get in...We got back to his place he breaks out this VHS...and I was blown away! His dad would get a lot of imports etc from Japan and I have never been moved by animation like when I saw this the first time.

  • @watsup47able
    @watsup47able5 ай бұрын

    As much as I can appreciate how influential and gorgeous this film is now, I first saw Akira when I was 12. Not a good idea. I had no idea what was going on, didn't help I was watching the infamous original English dub. The ending still freaks me the heck out!

  • @Aeroldoth3

    @Aeroldoth3

    5 ай бұрын

    How ws the english dub infamous? That's the only one I've seen.

  • @fenixdown22

    @fenixdown22

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Aeroldoth3 the Japanese character names are pronounced incorrectly and some of the exposition scenes don't explain things very well due to translation issues

  • @Aeroldoth3

    @Aeroldoth3

    5 ай бұрын

    @@fenixdown22Ok thanks.

  • @notreallydaedalus

    @notreallydaedalus

    5 ай бұрын

    Inflection and rhythm was ridiculous too. I was so psyched to get it on DVD in the 2000s until I discovered it was re-dubbed. Absolutely ruined it for me!

  • @heavycritic9554
    @heavycritic95545 ай бұрын

    About that 25-year-old cop: People in general nowadays both look and act younger than they used to. Things like healthcare, diet, exercise and so on, have all gotten better, and society's expectations about what you should be doing are shifting. It takes longer for young people to become adults nowadays, both physically and mentally (as in "before the cares of the world break you", so enjoy the hell out of your youth!).

  • @isitafox
    @isitafox5 ай бұрын

    I'm so glad you guys watched it with the 'proper' soundtrack 😍

  • @MrVvulf

    @MrVvulf

    5 ай бұрын

    I was a bit surprised they didn't comment on the soundtrack. It's legitimately worth listening to on its own merits.

  • @bensbeats
    @bensbeats5 ай бұрын

    I saw AKIRA in IMAX at BFI Waterloo a couple of years ago which is the biggest screen in the uk. I’d seen it many times before and it was already one of my favourite pieces of media (combining the manga and anime) but that experience was one of the greatest cinema moments of my life so far. I had goosebumps during the whole intro with the bike gangs riding through the city and the music going. I’ll never forget it!

  • @Phlogiston2312
    @Phlogiston23125 ай бұрын

    This movie was well known for the crazy amount of detail, it's so amazing still

  • @letsgoracing78
    @letsgoracing785 ай бұрын

    Yeah imagine seeing this at 12 or 13 years old absolutely blew my mind I've watched it so many times and love it every time.

  • @lady_draguliana784
    @lady_draguliana7845 ай бұрын

    "The Hallway Scene" is so infamous and Iconic that it's been spoofed in several shows

  • @pricemoore2022
    @pricemoore20225 ай бұрын

    Awesome reaction of my favorite superhero movie!!!!😊😊😊😊

  • @willwilliamson9580
    @willwilliamson95805 ай бұрын

    the end is basically the half way point in the manga. there are a few other main characters that are teased here that play a major roll in the manga. its less confusing but it loses something of the mystery in my opinion. both are amazing works of art.

  • @danielbloomquist9810

    @danielbloomquist9810

    5 ай бұрын

    And the latter three volumes are each practically as long as the entire former half, all the while the artwork of Otomo grew ever more impossibly meticulous in its breathtaking detail. Impressive don't cut it. In terms of artistic craft, one would be hard pressed to argue that Akira is anything less than an unequivocal masterpiece.

  • @tbone9474
    @tbone94745 ай бұрын

    Basically the ending shows Tetsuo becoming a god of a new universe. The 3 children took him away to stop him from destroying our own. That's my theory anyway after like... 8 watches over the years

  • @drachior

    @drachior

    5 ай бұрын

    did you ever read the original manga btw? they tried to condense a ton of stuff to a short movie there

  • @tbone9474

    @tbone9474

    5 ай бұрын

    @drachior I know but I didn't read no

  • @ESUTERURE
    @ESUTERURE5 ай бұрын

    Akira was originally a comic made in 1982 if I'm correct. Akira is one of my favorite animated films. Tetsuo isn't dead but in a new universe. The film to this day still wows me. I would say more but there's too many things to add on.

  • @MrTuubster

    @MrTuubster

    5 ай бұрын

    It is, more than a thousand pages collected in 6 volumes. A great read and not as confusing as the movie, as all 6 volumes are crammed into the movie.

  • @ESUTERURE

    @ESUTERURE

    5 ай бұрын

    @@MrTuubster yup. My local comic book shop sold the original sealed copies. Last I checked just one book was over $50.

  • @Dell-ol6hb

    @Dell-ol6hb

    5 ай бұрын

    @@MrTuubster it's like 2000 pages or something iirc

  • @MrTuubster

    @MrTuubster

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Dell-ol6hb Well... That appears to be "more" than a thousand 😑

  • @ChibiHelloween
    @ChibiHelloween5 ай бұрын

    "KANEEEEDAAAAAAA!!!!!!" Akira is very famous for being one of the first movies to prove that animation can also be for adult audiences because at the time, an animated movie would´ve been automatically classified as a "Kid´s movie" It was also so boundary pushing with it´s use of colors, lighting and cel animation that other animated movies can´t afford to replicate it on that same scale. What is not necessarily clear on the first time watch is that Akira actually caused the big explosion in the beginning due to him losing control of his powers because of the many tests that were run on him and because he didn´t wanted to be used as a weapon, Akira fled from the physical realm by becoming a being of pure energy And for your question how much has been copied from this movie over the years: one famous example is that whenever a character is sliding away on a bike from under the camera, it is called an "Akira slide" and the third act of the movie "Chronicle" from 2012 was heavily inspired by it

  • @Corn_Pone_Flicks

    @Corn_Pone_Flicks

    5 ай бұрын

    Well, one of the first animated movies seen in the US that wasn't for kids. There were plenty of others in Japan before that. "Nope" did that slide, as well...its influence extends to the present day.

  • @fishblades

    @fishblades

    5 ай бұрын

    TEETTTTSUOOOOOOOOO

  • @MrVvulf

    @MrVvulf

    5 ай бұрын

    "Heavy Metal" came out almost a decade before "Akira" and was clearly intended (and marketed) for adults. Many of the stories told would be classified in the same genre as "Akira" (cyberpunk, psychological horror, body horror, etc.).

  • @ozzythecats
    @ozzythecats5 ай бұрын

    I'm not an anime fan but Akira and Fist of the North Star are both great films

  • @MasticinaAkicta
    @MasticinaAkicta5 ай бұрын

    Fun thing about bladerunner, akira and so on. yeah there was a lot of influence going round. A lot of "that is cool we can do too." Anime and Manga was influenced by the west equally as the west was influenced by some of the movies, like Akira.

  • @mutazoia
    @mutazoia4 ай бұрын

    "Man, this movie is no-holds-barred violence" Me: Oh my sweet summer child...just wait....

  • @ARL2D2
    @ARL2D25 ай бұрын

    bro sat there calling the the protagonist Akira like links zelda

  • @Gantros
    @Gantros5 ай бұрын

    I just realized that the pig portrait on your wall is the exact same as one that is in the lobby of the pediatric office I work at!

  • @NiceDudeMovieNight

    @NiceDudeMovieNight

    5 ай бұрын

    We're gonna need to talk to that office and have them sued 😂

  • @jboyler1
    @jboyler15 ай бұрын

    First time I saw this, I caught the last fifteen minutes of this movie and had to stay up till 1AM to watch the whole thing.

  • @19terracottapie
    @19terracottapie5 ай бұрын

    I looooove your reactions but i was surprised you did not react to Evolution (2001, with David Duchovny) yet. I think you'll love that one!

  • @jpofgwynedd3878
    @jpofgwynedd38785 ай бұрын

    The first few times I watched Akira back in the early 90s I only just got a bit of the story, but mostly sat there tripped out - on the movie, that is: nothing recreational was used! Then came the early internet, and I managed over the years to get to know the story, and the one thing I can assure you of is that you'll never put this movie on just as moving wallpaper - and the more times you see it, the better it gets!

  • @poasttoasties6655
    @poasttoasties66555 ай бұрын

    finally i get to find out if you guys are subbed or dubbed. good choice, a lot of early anime is dubbed with less vocal seriousness than its characters are clearly portraying.

  • @gamemasternintendoo
    @gamemasternintendoo2 күн бұрын

    And this movie was made during the time when animated movies were hand drawn. Each frame was drawn by hand, on paper, then copied to a transparent piece of acetate called a cel, which was then painted, dried and photographed against a background - also painted by hand. This was the case for all animation at the time - but “Akira” stood out in both quality and quantity. 😊

  • @alicestevens8291
    @alicestevens82915 ай бұрын

    This was my second anime ever aside stock stuff shown on American tv. After Robot Carnival. A friend insisted. Oh I was blown away. It would be almost impossible to summarize both every thing happen in the film and it's outward inspiration on anime, but animation and cinema itself period. I had at some point read all of the manga volumes. I'm not normally the one that says "Oh you need to read/see this" and I probably have not seen much more of anything popular than yourselves, I missed a lot working and travelling. But that if you loved this I absolutely suggest. If they could have animated the rest of the story just like this it would have been epic.

  • @derekstein6193

    @derekstein6193

    5 ай бұрын

    Robot Carnival is a gem. I even managed to find a DVD copy of it at a convention a couple years back.

  • @chocobosage

    @chocobosage

    5 ай бұрын

    This was my 2nd anime and watched it when I was 10. The first was Patlabor, which is completely different in every way. I love both though

  • @denolaj
    @denolaj5 ай бұрын

    This is basically the first volume (and a bit) of the (I think) 6 part manga. There is more! And all the confusing faction stuff is because he could only do one movie, so he had to cram as much in as he could. Also, if you like this, perhaps check out the original Ghost in the Shell.

  • @arcann_de
    @arcann_de3 ай бұрын

    06:14 fun fact: the sound that came with the titlecard and the audio from the english syncro from this part: "you know, we aren´t meant to exist in the outside world" has been sampled and appeared in the 1994 trance/dance hymn "sunbeam - outside world"

  • @MrROTD
    @MrROTD4 ай бұрын

    I'm Canadian and I saw this when it first came out, never saw a Japanese full length film, blew my mind. Still a notable film years later it seems.

  • @JebJebJebbers
    @JebJebJebbers5 ай бұрын

    Akira is amazing as a movie but the manga is a masterpiece. Everything that is so condensed and confusing in the film is given space to breathe. Things that are only touched on in the movie end up being very important plot points in the manga. Read the manga while listening to the soundtrack.

  • @tonykittykilla28
    @tonykittykilla285 ай бұрын

    so here's one thing about this movie: when the author of manga (Otomo) got to make this movie, he wasn't really done writing it so as crazy and trippy and dense as this is, this is only like 35% of what he actually wrote

  • @LanceCorporalHawk30
    @LanceCorporalHawk305 ай бұрын

    A lot of the art design was inspired by French artist Jean Giraud, professionally known as Moebius, who may well have been the artistic inception for what we perceive the cyberpunk genre to look like

  • @fenixdown22
    @fenixdown225 ай бұрын

    I saw this movie on sci-fi channel when I was 12 and it absolutely blew my mind. still one of my favorite movies ever

  • @jaranth
    @jaranth5 ай бұрын

    OH COOL! One of my favorite movies of all time reviewed by the Dudes! Great New Year's prezzie!

  • @ericbishop1409
    @ericbishop14095 ай бұрын

    Okay, now that you've seen Akira, you have to start watching the amazing Studio Ghibli films. I recommend starting with My Neighbor Totoro, which is a film of pure joy, innocence, and beauty. Then Spirited Away, Princess Mononoke, Howl's Moving Castle, Castle in the Sky, and The Castle of Cagliostro. They are all absolute masterpieces of anime filmmaking. Then you can move on to other non-Ghibli films like Paprika, Ghost in the Shell, Perfect Blue, and Tokyo Godfathers. There are many wonderful anime films that no one knows about. Just some friendly suggestions. Cheers mates.

  • @benmuench5926
    @benmuench59265 ай бұрын

    I adore this film and really enjoyed you watching this going in blind. Great video.

  • @nickcopeland6915
    @nickcopeland691523 күн бұрын

    Tetsuo's voice in the first English dub was a friend of mine, the late Jan Rabson, who also did a lot of additional voices in Pixar films, like the sushi chef from Monster's Inc. and Spark the robot from Toy Story 3.

  • @MrCrazyGameGuy
    @MrCrazyGameGuy5 ай бұрын

    Akira had hundreds of animators drawing it, and was the most detailed animation ever released. The guy who made it actually had like 2 dozen sketch books he filled with ideas and the majority of them weren't even used in the final movie. Stephen Spielberg said that the movie was "unmarketable in the west" but it went on to be the most critically acclaimed animation ever made globally. Funnily enough it only cost them $15 million to make it which would be $40 million today. Which is about a quarter to a sixth of the budget that Disney spends on it's animated films :D

  • @prpfunk
    @prpfunk4 ай бұрын

    Somehow my older brother convinced our father to take us to see this when it came out. My father fell asleep in the theater while the movie blew my 9-year-old brain to shreds.

  • @RoarTheRapper
    @RoarTheRapper5 ай бұрын

    It’s still held in high regard for a REASON

  • @Darthpathfinder
    @Darthpathfinder5 ай бұрын

    Man films like this are always a blast to watch. I hope you have more of the same type of films. Fist Of The North Star would be a fun one to see you two watch.

  • @scottneil1187

    @scottneil1187

    5 ай бұрын

    Fist of the North Star is great however it is just a collection of scenes from the massive, long running series stitched together, done well though but the series is much better.

  • @sasquatchincognito6048
    @sasquatchincognito60485 ай бұрын

    Props for watching the subtitled version

  • @abucket14
    @abucket145 ай бұрын

    Akira is a masterpiece, it deserves one of the top 3 spots for best animated films of all time.

  • @purpleprinc3
    @purpleprinc35 ай бұрын

    I remember watching this movie as a child and having the most horrific nightmare whereby all my family members were being eaten up by that huge ball of flesh (Tetsuo turns into) at the end, I vividly remember seeing my brothers hand disappearance into the massy flesh. The teddy scene...Absolutely shat myself. It was freakin' awesome!! Hands down one of my favourite movies. Check out Ninja Scroll (1993). Cheers for the video lads! 🙏

  • @NiceDudeMovieNight

    @NiceDudeMovieNight

    5 ай бұрын

    Yeah some of the scenes in this movie are definitely made for nightmares 😂

  • @MrDeefleparde

    @MrDeefleparde

    5 ай бұрын

    +1 for Ninja Scroll - its the natural evolution

  • @Holgast

    @Holgast

    5 ай бұрын

    Ninja Scroll is great but nooooooooooo way could they do it on KZread

  • @purpleprinc3

    @purpleprinc3

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Holgast Oh yes I forgot about the 'spice' scene... 😂🤣🤔🤫

  • @floppsymoppsy5969

    @floppsymoppsy5969

    5 ай бұрын

    I agree maybe on your own or a patreon exclusive cuz I can't see KZread allowing much of ninja scroll to be aired

  • @Wired4Life2
    @Wired4Life25 ай бұрын

    1988 anime gave us this, _My Neighbor Totoro,_ and _Grave of the Fireflies._

  • @asageaspa
    @asageaspa5 ай бұрын

    OMG Fricking love you guys on this one! Akira! One of the greatest movies ever let alone animated!

  • @noahhallman9174
    @noahhallman91745 ай бұрын

    Y'all should watch Wizards from Ralph Bakshi. It is one of my favorite animated movies and is a good post apocalyptic fantasy movie with extremely unique animation. Came out around the same time as Star Wars from Fox as well and Ralph and Lucas worked together a little to help each other out so Mark Hamill appears in the film as a favor from Lucas to Ralph for Ralph changing the title of his film for Lucas.

  • @shawngaskin19
    @shawngaskin1914 күн бұрын

    Akira and Vampire Hunter D were the first two anime movies I ever saw when I was a kid. They started my love of anime.

  • @DavidJohnson-mv2cy
    @DavidJohnson-mv2cy5 ай бұрын

    I also just watched it for the first time and "happy confused" is how I feel as well

  • @santaonthecross
    @santaonthecross5 ай бұрын

    I saw this in a little theater, I guess, around 1990. It was in Japanese with subtitles. It was weird, confusing, and awesome at the same time.

  • @NiceDudeMovieNight

    @NiceDudeMovieNight

    5 ай бұрын

    We'd love to see it in a theater if they do an anniversary screening or something

  • @deerslayer1234
    @deerslayer12345 ай бұрын

    You really should do more anime, perhaps Ghost in the Shell next?

  • @Ashurman666
    @Ashurman6665 ай бұрын

    12:55 THERE IT IS! IT'S THE MEME!

  • @ericb.4313
    @ericb.43135 ай бұрын

    I still have to talk to my friend, but I thought it's be cool to get matching Akira tattoos of his different organs, but lo and behold, he now lives in a different county. Maybe if I go to Japan and extend an invite to him...

  • @TregMediaHD
    @TregMediaHD5 ай бұрын

    Your reaction was the same as my first time watching, Great job nice dudes 😂❤

  • @pikaporeon
    @pikaporeon4 ай бұрын

    Keep your eye out on local independant theatres, I was very lucky to be able to catch Akira in one near me last year, and even a movie I already loved it was something special

  • @carlstodgel8680
    @carlstodgel86805 ай бұрын

    This is literally my favorite anime of all time it was great watching it with you nice dudes!

  • @nathanclarke2777

    @nathanclarke2777

    5 ай бұрын

    I barely think of it as anime! It is way too good and cinematic. It is just beyond awesome!

  • @carlstodgel8680

    @carlstodgel8680

    5 ай бұрын

    @@nathanclarke2777 I did a book report on the Manga. My teacher was hesitant at first. But then he read it and was hooked as well! Lol

  • @RmonteiroHQ
    @RmonteiroHQ5 ай бұрын

    Cyberpunk started in the 80's basicly out of two books, "Neuromancer" (by William Gibbs) and "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?" (by Phillip K. Dick). Also lots of other short stories like "Monalisa Overdrive".

  • @Nebuloid1
    @Nebuloid15 ай бұрын

    "don't know what else could be happening now... yeah what else is left !?" Hah, haha, ahahah. Yes.

  • @ogopogoagogo
    @ogopogoagogo5 ай бұрын

    Honestly if you guys are looking for more dystopian films to check out, I heavily recommend checking out Brazil (1985). Its basically 1984 but put through the lens of a Monty Python skit, with many of the same people behind Monty Python also writing and directing Brazil.

  • @ArcturusMinsk
    @ArcturusMinsk5 ай бұрын

    love the commentary "that's the weirdest thing I ever saw, no that's the weirdest thing I ever saw, no that's the weirdest thing I ever saw ..."

  • @freddyfleal
    @freddyfleal5 ай бұрын

    First time I saw Akira was around 1995, I was probably 8 years old.. and it was in Japanese without subtitles. I watched like this a couple of times more and for years I had no idea of what was going on.

  • @Bitoy004
    @Bitoy0045 ай бұрын

    A lot of good anime around this era of Manga Entertainment. Battle angel alita, Wicked city, Doom metropolis, Vampire D, The Professional, Ninja scroll. and so many more to mention.

  • @chocobosage
    @chocobosage5 ай бұрын

    Loved how you huys said it looked like Fifth Element, Stranger Things and CyberPunk. Akira influenced damn near every film maker and artist ever since. I was lucky to see this movie in a cinema a few years ago. In a double feature with Ghost in the Shell. (Another fantastic anime that heavily Inflluenced The Matrix)

  • @chocobosage

    @chocobosage

    5 ай бұрын

    Though the end to Akira is influenced by The Quatermass Experiment for sure, which is a great watch. Old British sci-fi, there's a few Quatermass movies. (Professor Quatermass is the protagonist)

  • @AdamMalone33
    @AdamMalone335 ай бұрын

    I'm pretty sure that this is only half the story, I've been told that the manga it's based on goes much further into what Akira is and theres a whole aftermath of Tetsuo's actions.

  • @alanthomas7219
    @alanthomas72195 ай бұрын

    I first saw Akira around 30 years ago, and was also lucky enough to see it at an art house cinema years after that. I’ve owned different versions of it over the years, where either the sub or dub has been improved….. and I still struggle to understand what’s going on, because the movie is taken from a much larger manga. I must’ve been very good as this Christmas I got the complete collectors edition manga comic boxed set 🥳 so finally I will be able to fully understand just what on earth Akira is all about, and it only took 3 decades!!

  • @ExUSSailor
    @ExUSSailor4 ай бұрын

    I watched this once when I was really, really ill, with a high fever. It was an almost inexplicably weird experience.

  • @sunkhunt9748
    @sunkhunt97485 ай бұрын

    Banger. Love you fellas. Gonna grab one of those sweaters at the end of the month, too. 👌

  • @NiceDudeMovieNight

    @NiceDudeMovieNight

    5 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much! This is the last month to grab them too 😊

  • @sunkhunt9748

    @sunkhunt9748

    5 ай бұрын

    @@NiceDudeMovieNight I think that's called a deadline ex machina. 😄 No, good to know. Thank you.

  • @RastaBot
    @RastaBot5 ай бұрын

    One of the best movies in the cyberpunk genre!

  • @takutubepalms
    @takutubepalms4 ай бұрын

    The story is amazing, but what's surprising is that it's all made with 150,000 hand-drawn cels.

  • @utility63
    @utility635 ай бұрын

    "Now I'm just wondering how much Stranger Things took from Akira." All of it. Lol. Filmmakers have been "borrowing" from it since the second it premiered.

  • @ganymeade275
    @ganymeade2755 ай бұрын

    Behold its majesty. idk if you guys ever played Overwatch, but several of the sprays are based on scenes from this movie, particularly Moira's.

  • @ChefSmith82
    @ChefSmith824 ай бұрын

    I had to buy it on DVD. It was the first anime I’ve ever seen. It’s a masterpiece.

  • @vyse102
    @vyse1025 ай бұрын

    28:57 - "I had no idea it was gonna go the direction it went." ...hold tight, bud. It's about to get bumpy.

  • @gamemasternintendoo
    @gamemasternintendoo2 күн бұрын

    8:17 Considering the world this guy lives in, I’m surprised that the stress of his job and everything doesn’t have him looking like Professor Dumbledore. 😏

  • @thedragon133
    @thedragon1335 ай бұрын

    If you liked this movie, you should definitely check the anime "Jin-Ro - The Wolf Brigade" from 1999.

  • @RawenWarCrow

    @RawenWarCrow

    5 ай бұрын

    This!

  • @mikejackson2228
    @mikejackson22285 ай бұрын

    Ya'll should watch the anime BLAME! and I always recommend Raze and Everly.

  • @gigi-ij1hk
    @gigi-ij1hk5 ай бұрын

    I could not tell you how many times I watched that opening sequence with the bikes when I was in high school. I didn't even have subtitles because the film wasn't yet available - legally - in the US, so I was watching a VHS copy of a Japanese laserdisk (!!!) that I bought for $20.

  • @Infamous6091
    @Infamous60913 ай бұрын

    Fun fact: Kanye west’s song “stronger” music video is heavily influenced by this movie and you’ll see a lot of scenes from the movie used in the video :)

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