Welcome to Cozy Anime Corner , your go-to place for finding the perfect anime to brighten your day! Every month I’ll highlight a comfy series with low stakes, calm vibes and heroes I wish I knew in real life. Chill out and treat yourself with this month’s pick: Do It Yourself!! Yua Serufu is an absent-minded but friendly high school student. She’s extremely clumsy and accident prone, thanks in no small part to her tendency to daydream. When she meets the president – and only member – of her school’s DIY Club, Serufu starts to imagine all the amazing things she could build…. Related: Cozy Anime Corner: Tsurune Aims for the Heart Do It Yourself!! is a slice-of-life comedy about friendship, persistence and doing your best with what you’ve got. It’s also about learning how to use power tools. What else could you want in an anime?...
- 5/10/2024
- by Kelly Knox
- Crunchyroll
Purin Pictures Cash
Purin Pictures, a non-profit Asian film financier, is to give grants to two Burmese, two Cambodian, two Thai, and one Indonesian project in its latest funding round. “We are excited to support multiple projects from Myanmar and Cambodia, two countries that have less developed film industries than their Southeast Asian neighbors,” said Purin Pictures co-director Anocha Suwichakornpong. Production grants worth 30,000 each go to “The Beer Girl in Yangon,” by Sein Lyan Tun, “Fruit Gathering,” by Aung Phyoe, both debut featuring new voices in Burmese cinema, and “9 Temples to Heaven,” the debut fiction feature of Sompot Chidgasornpongse.
Post-production grants of 35,000 each go to documentaries “Tongue of Water,” by Polen Ly and “Double Jeopardy,” by Phally Ngoeum, both shining a light on the struggle of Cambodian individuals against the larger forces of the state, and documentaries “Monisme ,”by Riar Rizaldi and “Breaking the Cycle,” by Akeaphong Saransate and Thanakrit Duangmaneeporn.
Purin Pictures, a non-profit Asian film financier, is to give grants to two Burmese, two Cambodian, two Thai, and one Indonesian project in its latest funding round. “We are excited to support multiple projects from Myanmar and Cambodia, two countries that have less developed film industries than their Southeast Asian neighbors,” said Purin Pictures co-director Anocha Suwichakornpong. Production grants worth 30,000 each go to “The Beer Girl in Yangon,” by Sein Lyan Tun, “Fruit Gathering,” by Aung Phyoe, both debut featuring new voices in Burmese cinema, and “9 Temples to Heaven,” the debut fiction feature of Sompot Chidgasornpongse.
Post-production grants of 35,000 each go to documentaries “Tongue of Water,” by Polen Ly and “Double Jeopardy,” by Phally Ngoeum, both shining a light on the struggle of Cambodian individuals against the larger forces of the state, and documentaries “Monisme ,”by Riar Rizaldi and “Breaking the Cycle,” by Akeaphong Saransate and Thanakrit Duangmaneeporn.
- 11/1/2022
- by Patrick Frater
- Variety Film + TV
Considering how bad the first season was, the only question regarding the second one was if it would continue in the dumped-down, blind-action oriented style of the first one, or if a space for improvement actually existed in the last installment of the iconic franchise. The answer is that the new season is better, but not better enough. Let us take things from the beginning though.
PSS9 hears of a Russian cyberbrain engineer named Kukushkin claiming to have knowledge about the Posthumans’ code while seeking asylum in India. Kukushkin is poisoned with polonium by a Russian assassin before the group can save him, but the autopsy shows the corpse was a robotic body double. Motoko tasks Batou and Purin with finding the real Kukushkin. As the two search his room, they stumble upon a Posthuman woman named Suzuka Mizukane, who becomes one of the main villains in this season. A bit later,...
PSS9 hears of a Russian cyberbrain engineer named Kukushkin claiming to have knowledge about the Posthumans’ code while seeking asylum in India. Kukushkin is poisoned with polonium by a Russian assassin before the group can save him, but the autopsy shows the corpse was a robotic body double. Motoko tasks Batou and Purin with finding the real Kukushkin. As the two search his room, they stumble upon a Posthuman woman named Suzuka Mizukane, who becomes one of the main villains in this season. A bit later,...
- 6/26/2022
- by Panos Kotzathanasis
- AsianMoviePulse
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