
Ha ha… remember? Hint: Steel###, one airplane, one sports car, one speedboat… for the author to forget these three such distinctive characters is really fz啊… @@
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UNIC
2007-06-09 21:42:26 Anonymous 222.82.77.107 [Reply]
I have never seen them before.
the left one is the most handsome one…
Gu Chu
2007-06-10 00:26:45 http://epr.ycool.com/ [Reply]
Hehe~ You really are young; it’s understandable that you don’t have a deep impression of the early part of this cartoon. But you must have seen at least some of the later parts, right? If this cartoon weren’t known to every man, woman, and child, I wouldn’t need to make such a fuss over a guessing game.
Now that I’m looking at this early segment again, I find it really rather chaotic; at first the author seems not to have found a definite style and formula, and it feels rather odd to watch.
So nostalgic~~
Gu Chu
2007-06-10 00:42:15 http://epr.ycool.com/ [Reply]
Even if you can’t remember, you can still guess it (basically, it’s more or less the Japanese cartoon that had the greatest influence in China). Once you know which cartoon it is, take another look at these three people—don’t they bring back memories?
If you really can’t guess, look at this picture: http://foto.yculblog.com/epr/snapshot20070610003717.jpg ^_*
UNIC
2007-06-10 01:20:23 Anonymous 222.82.77.107 [Reply]
I almost blurted it out in the nostalgic post I wrote last time—
When I was little, in the afternoon I’d watch the community cable TV station as soon as I got home. First I watched Princess Lily of the Valley (I was too young then; from the plot all I knew was that there was a girl, a cat, and a seven-colored wish-granting flower…), and then I watched Benben. It was just a little yellow car looking for its mother. Then at some point, all of a sudden, they started airing Saint Seiya! I liked watching it then (to be honest, at the beginning I thought the opening theme was too noisy and didn’t like it from the very start. The plot was too complicated! I was only four or five years old…)
I watched Saint Seiya in middle school, during a period when everyone suddenly got nostalgic. I only saw fewer than three episodes…
To put it bluntly, I really didn’t watch it much.
What else I watched I can’t remember right now; we can talk about it another time… Oh, and Transformers. My attitude toward it back then was the same as toward Saint Seiya. (I was so mad! Such a great Benben!…)
UNIC
2007-06-10 01:22:01 Anonymous 222.82.77.107 [Reply]
all of a sudden, they started airing Saint Seiya! I didn’t like watching it then
Gu Chu
2007-06-10 09:58:58 http://epr.ycool.com/ [Reply]
Wow… The plot is too complicated… Actually, starting from the Twelve Temples of the Zodiac, the plot becomes very simple; there are only a few main characters: the Five Bronze Saints + Athena, and the pattern is more or less the same: can’t win – gets beaten badly (head stepped on) – cosmos explodes – wah-yah-yah…
If you want to talk about a more monotonous plot, one must mention Ultraman, where it’s one repetitive routine after another with absolutely no variation. I actually used to love watching it when I was little…
There must definitely be gender differences in cartoon preferences. The ones I remember most clearly from childhood are: Ultraman, Saint Seiya, Yoroiden Samurai Troopers, The Wonderful Adventures of Nils, Ninja Turtles, Calabash Brothers, The Smart Little Teacher, Afanti, and, mainly watched on videotapes: Tom and Jerry and BraveStarr.
Gu Chu
2007-06-10 13:21:47 http://epr.ycool.com/ [Reply]
I forgot—there were also Fist of the North Star, Be Forever Yamato, and The Three-Eyed Boy, and so on~ The Famicom game for The Three-Eyed Boy was quite fun~ I’ve always wondered why such an ultra-violent anime as Fist of the North Star could be brought in so smoothly…
UNIC
2007-06-10 18:41:53 Anonymous 222.82.69.54 [Reply]
Hey hey~~~ For a four-year-old girl, if you don’t watch those films from the beginning, they’re probably hard to understand. Besides, all that fighting and shouting isn’t very interesting either…..
I watched The Three-Eyed Boy too; I played its game version, the kind for learning machines.
But come to think of it, if I’ve got time on my hands, it’s actually pretty fun to watch Saint Seiya and the like again now….. Of course, that’s only if you’re going along with certain people (most boys going silly over nostalgia….)
Gu Chu
2007-06-10 18:51:21 http://epr.ycool.com/ [Reply]
Things like Saint Seiya, as a kind of “cultural common knowledge,” are still worth taking a look at to understand them. Of course, that’s a different matter for girls.
If you want to watch Saint Seiya, it’s better to skip the early part and go straight to the Twelve Temples of the Zodiac arc, because the earlier plot simply doesn’t matter; apparently even the author forgot it! — I posted these three supporting characters precisely to say this: the author has abandoned them……..
Personally, I feel only so-so about Saint Seiya; I wasn’t that enthusiastic about it at the time either. Back then I still preferred reading Doraemon and Dragon Ball comics; although Saint Seiya comics were everywhere, I didn’t buy a single volume.
Gu Chu
2007-06-10 18:59:09 http://epr.ycool.com/ [Reply]
By the way, do you know who appears first in Saint Seiya? — Jabu of the Unicorn constellation.
This person is also one of those pitiful supporting characters. Unlike the supporting characters from the constellations of Bear, Serpent, and so on who were defeated in the Galactic Wars, Jabu actually won his first match beautifully, and he never lost afterward either. And he liked Ms. Saori so much too (he even let her ride him like a horse), so how did he end up disappearing somewhere later on? Failing to squeeze into the Five Bronze Saints is one thing, but he couldn’t even compare with a side clown like Tatsumi—what a failure…
UNIC
2007-06-10 19:08:19 Anonymous 222.82.69.54 [Reply]
You mean the Unicorn constellation, right? Hehe!…. Of course, it’s also called “du.” Was it MONOKEROS or MONOCEROS? I forgot.
I watched Dragon Ball after I was 10. Doraemon was much earlier~ first or second grade, maybe. Earlier still was Ikyu-san, around age 5. I liked those two very much.
Gu Chu
2007-06-10 19:57:07 http://epr.ycool.com/ [Reply]
Mm, I watched Ikkyu-san with my grandmother; that one was fit for both young and old~
Translated from the Chinese original with AI assistance. The original text is authoritative.
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