{"id":1987,"date":"2010-01-13T13:11:13","date_gmt":"2010-01-13T13:11:13","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/danielprimed.com\/?p=1987"},"modified":"2012-03-11T09:49:53","modified_gmt":"2012-03-11T09:49:53","slug":"a-quick-dissection-of-hellsing-original-series","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/danielprimed.com\/2010\/01\/a-quick-dissection-of-hellsing-original-series\/","title":{"rendered":"A Quick Dissection of Hellsing (Original Series)"},"content":{"rendered":"

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A lot of anime fans love Hellsing<\/em> and at one stage so did I, then I saw past the pretension and became a hater. Don’t get me wrong, Hellsing<\/em> has all the trappings to be the poster-child of stylised animated violence (no easy feat in this industry, mind you), yet it severely underperforms on execution.<\/p>\n

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From reading the manga, there’s no doubt about the gratuitousness and stylisation of the violence. The anime, in which case, simply doesn’t fully capitalise on the source material. Personally I think the problems lie in two areas: Pretension alluding to awesome gunplay and fight scenes and a major lack of animation to evidence not just the character’s colourful dialogue, but the pretension in general. Hellsing<\/em> falls victim to the same characteristic flaws of Dragon Ball Z<\/em> with camera panning, wind blowing and banter exchanging taking up the bulk of the action sequences.<\/p>\n

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Most of Hellsing<\/em>‘s confrontations begin with a few exchanges of bombastic dialogue (diluted from the manga, but sufficient enough to be deemed offensive) interwoven among brief scenes of gunplay. The action is far too brief and usually relies on transitions of stills or other commonly used cost-cutting techniques to reduce the number of cells in the production. The handful of frames used are often copied and pasted to reverberate the action. The style is all in the right place\u2014character design and colouring is brilliant and captures the gothic atmosphere wonderfully, however, with little animation to back it up, Hellsing<\/em> is all talk and little action. No wonder the animated series has gone back to the drawing board for a second, more authentic adaption of the manga.<\/p>\n