CloudStrife911 (post: 1472826) wrote:Awww man you can't give up it's such a great series! I really suggest catching up. It's really great especially right now. It makes me sad because I don't know anyone else who is as far as I am right now. It's so crazy not being able to tell anyone.
R86 (post: 1472828) wrote:Might as well keep your options open, especially since both the original and the Shippuuden series seem available at the moment. Think of it this way, you are probably no worse off in Naruto than I am in Bleach, having not too long ago watched episode 100!
Sai has not made a big impression on me either way so far, apart from his jutsu, which is made of win. I will say that I miss Shikamaru lately, as he's my favorite male character. Though I guess he played a major role in a recent arc, but I can hardly remember as it was about 2-3 years ago when I saw it. I've seen a fair bit of Ino lately -- she was my favorite female character, but Hinata is threatening to take over that position.
At least I still remember all the characters. Watching Bleach after such a long hiatus is, shall we say, educational. So many shinigami! So many captains! So many other weird uncategorized people! And they all have this annoying habit of acting like I should know them!
R86 (post: 1472784) wrote:Episodes 119-120 are about a young Kakashi when he had just made jounin. I figured it would just be two episodes of mindless filler, and I'd maybe get to find out what was under his mask for real this time. I was wrong on both counts. I will stop here as I don't want to spoil anything, but I thought the two episodes were compelling and extremely well done.
TopazRaven (post: 1472789) wrote:Oh man, I'm not even caught up on the first Naruto. I'm so far behind I've considered just giving up on it. I have seen one or two Shippuden episodes though. So far I really like Sai. xD
Atria35 (post: 1472827) wrote:You can totally give it up because it's not a great series. Seriously, they could just blow up the world right now, they're so powerful. And yet there's still more powerups.
Mr. Hat'n'Clogs (post: 1473031) wrote:Naruto isn't worth it. I still have some nostalgia for the first two arcs, and it has some genuinely good moments after that, but it basically goes like this:
Opening Arc/Land of Waves arc - 8/10
Chunin Exams arc - 7/10
Search for Tsunade arc - 6/10
Hunt for Sasuke arc - 5/10
Opening of Shippuden/Rescue of Gaara arc - 6/10
Sai arc - 2/10
Hidan and Kakuzu - 7/10
And then the next arc goes on to actually lower the quality of the past good arcs to the point where you wish it had been tragically cancelled at four volumes. After that is gets even worse.
Selenite (post: 1473138) wrote:I love Shippuden. I'm on the 208th episode now.
aliveinHim (post: 1473249) wrote:I'm a huge Narutard. I liked Part 1 more than Shippuden because I think that it was funnier. Idk why I'm not as big into it as I should be.
Maokun (post: 1473417) wrote:My main gripe with Shippuuden, when comparing it to the first series is that Naruto, as he grew up, actually lost depth of character. 14 year old naruto had a lot more of spunk, which was contrasted to his underdog status. Being a reckless moron with a feeble grasp on the fighting arts that almost everyone else dominated, forced him to push through by innovative mixing of the few things he could do well, and tons of guts and emotion (which were rewarded occasionally with the deus ex machine device of the "demon inside".) At the end, he really managed to sell you on his stupid philosophy.
17 year old Naruto is a caricature of the spunky, stupid kid without retaining the good qualities that made it work, now just looking awkward for his age. He no longer is creative with his techniques or surprise people with his insight, he simply gets more powerful. However, much of that was fixed in the Pain arc, with the good character development he experienced after the death of certain other character and the fight with Pain himself resembled much more the good fights of his younger self than all the others before. It really restored my faith on the series.
As I write this I wonder if it was all intentional. After all, most other characters of his age matured more appropriately both in mind and fighting technique while naruto remained awkwardly childlike, except more prompt to angst and anger. After all, he spent those three years traveling with the father figure he never had, regaining a bit of his lost childhood. Only after being confronted with loss and facing the responsibilities and realities of becoming an adult, his stunted character was forced to grow.
This post, oh so much. Madara may be the main villain as of now, but that doesn't necessarily make good writing. Heck, we could be going along for a while and have Kakashi kill Madara only to reveal he's been manipulating them all the entire time. It would be stupid but it could happen and you could say we have now learned that Kakashi was always the true villain.Atria35 (post: 1473694) wrote:^ THe problem is that they keep on bringing new and more dangerous villians- but can't be bothered to make us care about them or the threat they represent other than the 'he can destroy the village!' threat. There's nothing else there.
Even if we haven't seen the last of Oorochimaru or Kabuto, for those two the backstory and history were powerful and dangerous.
The rest? No different from any other villian that Naruto has come across. They were just more powerful. They failed to distinguish themselves in backstory, and I couldn't have cared less. It was moving the first time, not the fifth.
And yet, that's who we were supposed to hate and fear during the Shuppuden arcs. Pain may have been Naruto's Oorochimaru, but it failed to be compelling on any level.
I'd actually suggest reading FMA, because Brotherhood has a really weak start and the first anime is much worse than the manga.Maokun (post: 1474124) wrote:I have to say I didn't have much of a problem with Pain's redemption. All the characters he killed, actually died and while they were dead, the emotional impact was tremendous]That's what makes it even cheaper, previously, it took the death of a great master to bring back a single person. Now, though, this guy can bring back hundreds of people *after* having fought and killed a ton of people and having a huge battle against several of the most powerful people in the world. While I don't think it was as bad, it's like how the Sasuke Retrieval arc had these dramatic, excellent death scenes only to miraculously have the people come back. Chouji and Neji's fights during that had a lot more of an impact when they were about the sacrifice they were making. Then, to just bring them back really weakens the scene because it means they have no consequences for what they do. The pill will cost them their lives, only it doesn't.I will conceed that Deidara may have been good, as I never actually got that far before giving up on the manga. I've read enough of the Pain arc to know what I'm talking about, but I gave up following it by the arc about Sasuke.As for Deidara, I have to say that you seem to think that the depth of a villain character can only be measured by the emotional impact caused by their deeds in other characters, hence your appreciation for Hidan (and here I wonder, why not for Pain as well? Jiraiya's death was much more dramatic Nd affected more people than Asuma's.) Deidara might have not had such impact -and I'm with you in your disregard for Sasuke- but he was much more fleshed out than most other members of the akatsuki. We saw him in good and bad spirits, saw him triumph and be defeated, saw him be a subordinate and be a leader, saw his motivations, learned of his philosophy and observed him throwing his life away wastefully for it. In some ways, he was even better fleshed out than Orochimaru.Actually, this is kind of where you begin to lose the argument. The Sennin are established from the beginning to at least be on par with the Kage, as seen where the Third isn't able to kill Orochimaru and they search for Tsunade after Jiraiya refuses the position. They are all shown to be the strongest people alive for many, many chapters until recently they were bumped way down in favor of new villains. Why shouldn't Orochimaru set the bar for the strength of his generation? The theme of Naruto from the beginning has been that the newer generation builds upon the accomplishments of the old and in turn is built upon by the new. By having Orochimaru set the bar for elder generation, Naruto can finally achieve his goal of becoming Hokage by surpassing what was once the highest tier of warrior. Heck, it's even showing hints of the next generation surpassing Naruto's, with Konohamaru showing even more skill than Naruto at Konohamaru's age.As for Orochimaru and the legendary sennin, you cannot have really expect the series to end when their pupils overpassed them, when from the very beginning the goal was set much higher: reaching Kage level.
Also, Orochimaru represents the opposite of the Will of Fire. Rather than allowing himself to become part of the process, he wishes to never die and allow the bar to grow simply by himself. He rejects the very principles Naruto stands for moreso than Madara, Danzo, or Pain ever did.(I'm sorry I skipped the FMA analogy because I actually haven't seen it, but I intend to and don't want to get spoiled )
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