de Tetho le Mer 31 Déc 2014, 13:21
Interview intéréssante. Les questions sont parfois un peu
mais il en sort de bonnes réponses.
Isayama: That’s how I felt when I was starting out — I was scared of being a run-of-the-mill tree with run-of-the-mill leaves that’ll blend right into the forest. [u]Better to have memorable art, even memorably bad art, and stand out.
[...]
I take it that the idea is it’s better to leave some space in the manga for the reader to fill by herself, right? With Attack on Titan, the poor art quality is where that space is left open. The characters and universe are all already there, but there’s room for the reader to participate in a positive way by drawing it better.
Hahaha, j'aime sa façon de voir les choses positivement et de penser à ce qui est la critique principale faite à l'encontre de son manga comme d'une qualité
–Do you feel moé toward characters? Or are you more the type who immerses himself fully in works of fiction? One might say Mikasa occupies a position similar to that of Rei Ayanami.
Isayama: If anything, I feel moé toward kaiju like Mothra and Godzilla, or the Giant God Warriors in Nausicaa. I’ve been fixated on ugly monsters since I was little — not just kaiju, but giant things in general. You know, Tokyo Skytree, stuff like that.
My earliest inspiration was the adult game Muv-Luv Alternative, in which aliens invade and humankind is on the brink of annihilation, and yet people are still at each other’s throats.
Bro ? Bro !
Isayama: Right now I’m at the part in the story that I have the least confidence in. It was a part that I couldn’t simply skip past, but I just don’t feel sure that it’s entertaining.
Si il savait...