I always forget that most of the noteworthy titles in 2014 thus far are sequels, thank you for reminding me again lol. 2012 on the other hand, while made up of a few great sequels and remakes, still has more noteworthy new titles than any other year in recent memory. Even if you're not a big fan of the storytelling in Fate/Zero and Psycho-Pass, they were at least the type of anime willing to take risks and push the industry forward instead of backward. When you take into account Psycho-Pass, Shinsekai Yori, Kids on the Slope, and JoJo's (which I will consider mostly a new creation due to the old anime being so short and so forgotten) plus the Fate/Zero sequel, Lupin spin-off, and Yamato Remake, 2012 was one hell of a year for anime. Every other year since 2010 has had about half as many noteworthy titles I would say. Actually, sorting through my list by date, it's much more clear to me now that things took a sharp turn for the worse in 2010. 2007, 2008, and 2009 appear to all have been great years for anime.
I forgot about all these great directors the industry has been losing lately, it really is a shame. Satoshi Kon, Miyazaki, and Ryuutarou Nakamura. Plus Mamoru Oshii hasn't directed any major anime since 2008. Somebody surely needs to step up and fill the void. Gainax being inactive won't even be noticed if you ask me. They haven't produced many shows to begin with, and the ones they have produced are usually for a very niche audience. Eh, I'm kind of a Gainax hater, what can I say.
The most consistently good directors that are still active in my opinion are Shinichiro Watanabe, Yuasa Masaaki, Kenji Kamiyama (GITS SAC/2nd GIG, Moribito), and Hiroshi Hamasaki (Texhnolyze, Steins;Gate, Shigurui). Space Dandy may have been slight misstep for Watanabe, but certainly one weak anime isn't enough to change his amazing track record. Most directors have more than one poor anime under their belt after all. There are also a few up and coming directors that seem to gravitate towards working on more creative projects. Hiroshi Nagahama (Mushishi, Detroit Metal City), Kenji Nakamura (Mononoke, Kuuchuu Buranko), and Sayo Yamamoto (Michiko to Hatchin, Lupin III Mine Fujiko). I think the talent is still there, but that they just need to give them the right projects to work on in order for them to shine. |