Destroyer2000 wrote:Hm...I'm going on a trip with the yearbook committee in a week or so, and none of them are anime fans, as fatr as I know. Would this be good to show there? I've never seen it, but I would like to know how depressing it really is. Considering it is a 4 day trip, and there are 2 guys and 13 girls...lots of crying? Maybe I'm just morbid.
Destroyer2000 wrote:How graphic is the violence and gore in it, and the type of langauge? I'm not concerned about any of that myself, but for the others that will be watching it for me. And while we are on a side note, I ask the same about "Voices of a Distant Star"
Destroyer2000 wrote:How graphic is the violence and gore in it, and the type of langauge? I'm not concerned about any of that myself, but for the others that will be watching it for me. And while we are on a side note, I ask the same about "Voices of a Distant Star"
tictac wrote:GFF is one of those shows I think that you only have to watch once and hope you never see it again.
" wrote:RustyClaymore 11:27 - Ah yes, Socks is the single raindrop responsible for the flood. XD
yukinon wrote:I enjoyed seeing the other side of the story. Even now, when it comes to World War II era Japan (and Germany) it is very easy for Americans to villianize the entire country. This movie lets us know that there were innocents involved, something we often conveniently ignore.
soul alive wrote:Though it is a very depressing film, it is for a reason. Japan at the end of WWII was not a happy place. The film is a social commentary on that. The stark reality in the movie has a purpose. We [as a world] must not forget the atrocities that have been committed, whether they may be direct or indirect, like the apathy shown in the movie. We have to remember them as they happened and strive our utmost to prevent them from happening again.
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