Excellent, detailed commentary.
Thank you!
Notes:
a. "Combining Intensity/Effects could be a good idea"
Definitely possible, depending on the whole mix of categories.
b. "Upbeat/Genki should be brought back"
Again, it's fun to mix things up over the years; we have done UPBEAT
before and it's a workable category. Editors know what to aim for.
c. "'Not What This Anime Is About' proved to be too difficult to judge"
We may need to look at tuning the definitiion of this category and
also renaming it. this thread is a good place to examine and hammer out
what worked and what didn't.
d. "A divide seems to have formed between the interests of the average
con-goer and the judges: 'strong concept' AMVs vs 'high resolution,
well-executed'"
This is a profound observation and I will be talking with Kumoricon
members and staff who are familiar with this past year's contest
and other recent contests, to assess a general opinion. Some of this
may be changing the way I select judges, so that we get a mix of
screeners who can select for overall entertainment, rather than
technical crispness.
Another way to do the 'cherry picking' might be to run 6 audience
entertainment focused categories, and emphasize that high resolution
and exactitude in lip flaps, music synch, etc should take a backseat
to the effectiveness of story being told.
THEN run 4, 5, or 6 AMVs in a 'Technical Quality' category which is
not directly open to submission, but is selected by the judges. These
entries would highlight editing skills and be selected from entries
already sent to the categories, but which had not enough IMPACT in
the category itself but were still VERY GORGEOUS to look at. Let the
audience vote that one. The 'Technical Quality' award might actually
take the place of the Judges' Choice award, in that if next year's
group of judges seems too focussed on technical prowess, we have them
pull a sub-set set of their faves and let the audience crown it.
But one drawback there is that the audience tends to vote for popular
characters rather than technical excellence and that a well-made AMV
can get eclipsed by Naruto Shippuden, One Piece, etc. Could you image
if an AMV had made a visual reference to some Homestuck characters,
or a bucket joke? Sure we would have fired up the crowd, but I would
have felt that for a non-anime based joke to 'steal' from the other
'real anime' works would have been unfortunate - especially if the
other contender are more beautifully drawn than Homestuck.
One last thought - this effect could be a backlash from the time a few
years back that the parody Twilight movie review ran off with its category
prize while technically the AMV was very little more that switching back
between 3 or 4 talking heads. I heard a lot of grumbling from the EDITORS
about that...
e." It would be good to move away from internet memes being the crux of
our Comedy; each year meme AMVs seem to be more and more poorly received."
I change up my mix of judges over each year, but THIS time a plurality of
them picked the 3 meme-based submissions and said "let's throw them ALL
at the audience!!" This will make it more likely that next year's group
may more biased AGAINST internet jokes, especially when I can remind them
that 'guys, LAST YEAR wat the Year of the Internet Meme; the joke has been
beaten to death already. Oh, and please no CHAIR AMVs either, OK?"
So this is unlikely to be repeated in any case.
My other comments:
f. 'Instrumental' comes and goes and I may run it one more time before
giving it a rest. This one puts English-speaking and other foreign language
editors on a more level playing field, which is kinda fair because it's
difficult for a non-English speaker to make a Trailer AMV for our audience.
Either you are working with a second language and you are not EXACTLY sure
whether your commentary will strike home, or you try a foreign language
trailer, and then almost no one at the Kumoricon audience will understand
it and most of them cannot be bothered to read English subtitles.
- G