Twelve-year-old Molly gets stuck in Sweet Jazz Museum after dark with warring groups of odd thieves who have unique powers like her called epithets attempting to steal an amulet rumored to h... Read allTwelve-year-old Molly gets stuck in Sweet Jazz Museum after dark with warring groups of odd thieves who have unique powers like her called epithets attempting to steal an amulet rumored to have the ability to take a person's epithet.Twelve-year-old Molly gets stuck in Sweet Jazz Museum after dark with warring groups of odd thieves who have unique powers like her called epithets attempting to steal an amulet rumored to have the ability to take a person's epithet.
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Everyone will first notice the limited animation, which determines right out the gate who this series appeals to, and I happen to be one of those. I never watched the table top RPG streams the creator played with his friends that it is based on, but I enjoyed the humorous take downs of popular video games and anime on his YouTube channel done in same style. He takes that to the next level with his first full fledge series.
The voice acting carries a lot of the humorous and dramatic weight of the show to great effect. The limited movement along with the exaggerated poses and facial expressions at key moments sell what happens, but it is really the performances that bring any investment to the action, and the cast does a fantastic job of pulling that off.
It took me a little while to get into the story, but it surprised me that there was genuine heart behind the proceedings instead of nonstop antics. Apart from Molly as the grounded, audience POV, everyone is some manner of oddball meant to befuddle her. However, they begin peel back layers as unexpected dynamics develop between the various factions vying for the amulet. Those surprise insights and heartfelt moments keep me hooked to happens next.
Give Epithet Erased a watch for its unexpected style and more three dimensional characters than their appearance would have you believe.
The voice acting carries a lot of the humorous and dramatic weight of the show to great effect. The limited movement along with the exaggerated poses and facial expressions at key moments sell what happens, but it is really the performances that bring any investment to the action, and the cast does a fantastic job of pulling that off.
It took me a little while to get into the story, but it surprised me that there was genuine heart behind the proceedings instead of nonstop antics. Apart from Molly as the grounded, audience POV, everyone is some manner of oddball meant to befuddle her. However, they begin peel back layers as unexpected dynamics develop between the various factions vying for the amulet. Those surprise insights and heartfelt moments keep me hooked to happens next.
Give Epithet Erased a watch for its unexpected style and more three dimensional characters than their appearance would have you believe.
I've watched several animated series, either through Newgrounds or YouTube, and the results have been varying in terms of quality and production ease. Generally speaking, the quality of the content and the hiatuses between episodes were intertwined, with well animated shows and fan-projects having years between even Episode 1 and Episode 2, making them ultimately forgettable when competing with network shows that simply have the resources to produce more content far quicker.
And then came along Epithet Erased; a remarkably well-written show with regular weekly installments so far. Some may scoff at the animation style(not the art style, though, which is pleasant to the eyes and makes every character distinct). However, through expressive designs, expertly choreographed direction, and solid effects, the computer puppetering of models goes from being one of the shows most glaring shortcomings into one of its most unexpected strengths. Even when the perspective is shifted to a bird's eye view of just the character's profiles, it manages to be expressive and well-timed.
The narrative of the show is also rather compelling, especially in regards to the cast of characters, who's expressive designs, superb vocal direction, and lovable writing makes each of them a wonderful surprise. The biggest downside to the plot, however, is that it lacks a clear focus for the overall narrative. It has a power-stealing Maguffin for the cast to chase, but after the first few episodes, it becomes more of an afterthought. While none of the roughly half-hour episodes feel like a drag, there seems to be little plot progression after the first arc. Only 6 episodes are available on VRV, and even less so on YouTube, so this might be a temporary problem, but it does have me slightly concerned about the possible longevity of the show if it cannot find a clear narrative to follow.
None the less, the shear fun of the show ranks it above most web shows, and certainly above most web shows of purely original content. Thus, I give it a solid 9/10.
And then came along Epithet Erased; a remarkably well-written show with regular weekly installments so far. Some may scoff at the animation style(not the art style, though, which is pleasant to the eyes and makes every character distinct). However, through expressive designs, expertly choreographed direction, and solid effects, the computer puppetering of models goes from being one of the shows most glaring shortcomings into one of its most unexpected strengths. Even when the perspective is shifted to a bird's eye view of just the character's profiles, it manages to be expressive and well-timed.
The narrative of the show is also rather compelling, especially in regards to the cast of characters, who's expressive designs, superb vocal direction, and lovable writing makes each of them a wonderful surprise. The biggest downside to the plot, however, is that it lacks a clear focus for the overall narrative. It has a power-stealing Maguffin for the cast to chase, but after the first few episodes, it becomes more of an afterthought. While none of the roughly half-hour episodes feel like a drag, there seems to be little plot progression after the first arc. Only 6 episodes are available on VRV, and even less so on YouTube, so this might be a temporary problem, but it does have me slightly concerned about the possible longevity of the show if it cannot find a clear narrative to follow.
None the less, the shear fun of the show ranks it above most web shows, and certainly above most web shows of purely original content. Thus, I give it a solid 9/10.
I like this animation, it mix tradition puppet show with paper mario and anime in one, but i sorry for this watch, it has mixed bags like dialogue was not jokes at all but there jokes from other media (Film, games, etc.) I feel on YouTube has mislabeled thumbnail i guess, furthermore, i like this style, but think people are anime, yeah, it's anime paper mario style. If you want, watch on vrv or YouTube.
I'll be forever impressed with what Epithet Erased manages to accomplish on it's small budget. Despite having limited animation it's writing, art, music and voice acting are all absolutely stellar in a way that more than makes up for it. As a creative myself I find it extremely inspiring. Highly recommend giving this one a shot.
I loved this show!!!!
Molly? YES!
GIOVANNI? DEFINITELY!!
THE BIG DUDE WHO I FORGOT THE NAME OF? ABSOLUTELY!!!
Please consume this show and all of it's merchandise please I would give this show a 10/10 but unfortunately my 0 button isn't working :(
Molly? YES!
GIOVANNI? DEFINITELY!!
THE BIG DUDE WHO I FORGOT THE NAME OF? ABSOLUTELY!!!
Please consume this show and all of it's merchandise please I would give this show a 10/10 but unfortunately my 0 button isn't working :(
- How many seasons does Epithet Erased have?Powered by Alexa
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