[Brenda] Song plays 13-year-old Anne Boonchuy, an independent and fearless teen who is magically transported to the fantastical world of Amphibia, a rural marshland full of frog-people.
If the style looks similar to "Gravity Falls", it's because the show's creator worked on the show.
Personally, this looks neat. I'm gonna watch the first episode at least when it comes out.
Not that bad. The only gripe I have is that the frogs look very Simpson-y in a very strange way and I'm afraid that some characters might become grating over time.
"The knack of flying is learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss." - Douglas Adams
So it looks like they're gonna air the show semi-daily, with new episodes every Monday thru Thursday. The entire season will be burned through in 5 weeks.
I guess Disney learned their lesson from the "Gravity Falls" airing schedule
this seems like the other extreme though, something CN also did for that Summer Camp Island show, which meant it had barely any footprint in the general media conciousness whatsoever and didn't get nearly enough attention
A new episode every day worked for the Disney Afternoon, but each of those shows also had a full 65-episode run completed before it even hit the air as per syndication requirements. (Which must have been hell for everyone involved.)
Every jumbled pile of person has a thinking part that wonders what the part that isn't thinking isn't thinking of...
this seems like the other extreme though, something CN also did for that Summer Camp Island show, which meant it had barely any footprint in the general media conciousness whatsoever and didn't get nearly enough attention
so lets make sure we keep up word of mouth
I never even heard of "Summer Camp Island" until you mentioned it so...yeah, point taken.
Another problem with abbreviated airing schedule is that it means Season 2 is gonna take longer to come out.
A new episode every day worked for the Disney Afternoon, but each of those shows also had a full 65-episode run completed before it even hit the air as per syndication requirements. (Which must have been hell for everyone involved.)
I remember listening to a podcast interview with an animation artist who worked on a 65-episode season cartoon and he said that, yeah, working on those shows were rough. The story editors would get through the scripts quickly by making a checklist of things to avoid/they personally dislike and just skim through the scripts looking for those things.
The series grows on me.
After 5 episodes, on a personal level, I cannot look away from the twig and the leaves in Anne's hair. How can she ignore these?
"The knack of flying is learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss." - Douglas Adams
Oh wonder. Sprig doesn't annoy me as he used to in the first episodes. His antics were dialed back a lot, especially in the latest episode "Toad Tax" he earned more of my respect.
I can't wait to see Sasha meeting Anne or the other girl. It'll be interesting.
"The knack of flying is learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss." - Douglas Adams
I should probably watch the new episode but I'm only now getting around to watching season two of Kipo so this is invariably gonna be one of those I'll do it eventually things
I'm smiling so fucking hard at this crossover episode. If only Disney had let good enough be and not spoiled it all over social media and the press, it would've been the surprise of the year seeing frog Stan
I was completely unaware of this crossover before watching the episode.
I really appreciate how raunchy, dirty, and brutal Amphibia is.
The episode before the crossover episode was equally as weird, especially the rich frog activities. *shudder*
"The knack of flying is learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss." - Douglas Adams
I was completely unaware of this crossover before watching the episode.
I really appreciate how raunchy, dirty, and brutal Amphibia is.
The episode before the crossover episode was equally as weird, especially the rich frog activities. *shudder*
It really is. They push the boundary when you least expect it just for a joke and in that sense it's definitely earned its Gravity Falls crossover, because that's exactly the kind of humor GF liked doing - the "I can't believe this airs on Disney!" moments and subversions on top of subversions. Like the scene with the "wax" blood followed by "everyone's okay except him, he's dead" bit.
In that regard it's interesting to compare and contrast this to The Owl House, which wears its earnestness and seriousness on its sleeve but (at least for me) fails to leave much of an impression because the characters are vague, their motivations are illogical and the stories it tells just aren't anywhere near as good or amusing. Amphibia goes fucking wild with its characters and posing and animation and just has so much fun reveling in its setting that it's impossible to not get sucked in and enjoy the ride. And even then they can be serious and earnest when they want to be and absolutely totally sell it! It's good television.