Is cartoonish stylization a detriment when depicting drama and violence in animation or comics, or can a well-crafted story be effective regardless of art style?
Is cartoonish stylization a detriment when depicting drama and violence in animation or comics, or can a well-crafted story be effective regardless of art style?
>can a well-crafted story be effective regardless of art style
You already know the answer, the obvious fricking answer so what exactly are you fishing for here?
If you care about the characters enough nothing else applies or matters. How it always should be.
Dumb b***h shoulda stayed dead
wut
sure
https://desuarchive.org/co/search/filename/marcystabbed/type/op/
I'm not going to say these are all the same anon but there is a theme of someone with this image and filename being outraged by this one scene. I get it. A girl gets stabbed with a beam sword on a Disney show and should've died. People reacted and then moved on. So should OP.
Sure, why not.
Not inherently but beanmouth slop certainly is.
https://desuarchive.org/co/search/image/vcK1JMTaF4qnsxGxyu77cw/
Frick you, spamming/spoiling c**t.
>Is cartoonish stylization a detriment when depicting drama and violence in animation or comic
Yes, a lot of people will find it hard to take something seriously with cartoony expressions. That goes doubly so for violence. That doesn't mean you can't pull it off, but it's harder. Obviously there's also the idea of contrasting the cutesy artstyle with tragic plot, but it's so crude and overplayed I don't know if it's effective at this point.
NO
Should've died
>Spinal Column, Esophagus, Lungs, Ribs and Diaphragm absolutely obliterated by gigantic laser sword being thrust at probably 100 mph
>She somehow survived this
The rejuvenation tank she was placed in fixed all the damage.
What show?
The owl house
The nut shack