Frysende wrote: ↑Tue Jun 07, 2022 10:18 ammy question here is how do you find them, the series themselves? I don't have a lot of patience and I certainly have a very hard to please palatte when it comes to anime, but I want to know where y'all come up with your obscure favorites.
As an earlier post by Vapalla notes, some of it was word of mouth. One collector absolutely excited about a certain series and having really nice art from it tends to spread the news in a friendly way. Yeah, Vapalla was maybe happier when no one else was excited by
A Tree of Palme but in truth we never got in each others' way. And she was great about letting me know about really exciting new series like
Princess Tutu, Asatte no Houkou and
Mushishi, for which she loaned me fansubs before any of these was commercially available. I eventually got art from all of these, but not in any competitive way with Vapalla. We helped each other far more than we jousted over available lots.
In truth, though, a lot of times it was just random, a brilliant lightning bolt streaking across or through the computer screen during an otherwise random and predictable trawl through YHJ or Mandarake. My singleton cel from the
Yousei-ou OVA was one such:
Oh, holy shuusei, I thought when I saw that, I've
got to have that. And the research and education on what it was that I had came later. A number of other series that I collect began the same way: an OMG response to something that I saw and
knew was something good.
I'm gonna go out on a limb and say it's possibly a generational thing (please don't hunt me down, I'm not calling anyone here old)
Well, I was already verifiably old when anime was the hot new thing, so be it. I'm just happy that I was still flexible enough between the ears to be able to relate to an emerging art form rather than stay in my stultifying age-group mindset and consider Popeye the apex of animation achievement. You are right, though: when word was leaking out rather than being reliably circulated on the internet, there was a sense of adventure and achievement in learning about anime. Now that the market has matured and is both more immediately available to North American audiences and also less "exotic" or convention-bending, by the same token it doesn't generate the same excitement. The last series that genuinely intrigued me was
Snow White with the Red Hair (mostly as a fairy-tale-based plot with absolutely no supernatural elements) and so now I'm probably just as nostalgic as people of much younger age looking back at the time when DBZ and CCS were bold new creations.
Was this a little off topic? Probably, and for that I apologize!
No apologies needed. The forum has been too quiet, and so revivals of old topics with new questions are most welcome!
(I still miss Cloud....)