You are the end result of a “would you push the button” prompt where the prompt was “you have unlimited godlike powers but you appear to all and sundry to be an impetuous child” – Zero, 2022
Captain Picard gets a pass just for Sir Patrick Stewart being totally awesome, though
He controls his accent in the same way Patrick Stewart does with his insane Yorkshire dialect, I assume. English is already sort of a universal pidgin in this world and era; keeping it clear and comprehensible regardless of where you're from seems sensible in Picard's position.
Interesting fact: In Harry Potter and the Goblet Of Fire, the actress who plays Fleur Delacour is French, but had to put on a fake French accent because her natural accent wasn't pronounced enough.
Reminds me of an odd fact about the Japanese dub of Trigun: Vash's voice actor naturally has a very thick Osaka accent, which he had to downplay significantly to make the character's voice more "neutral," while Wolfwood's character was written with a heavy Osaka/Kansai accent... but was played by a guy from a completely different part of Japan, essentially copping his co-star's accent.
Incidentally, while this accent was meant to parallel an American Southwest sort of accent—western Texas, say—the English has him speaking with a curious quasi-accent that sounds like no particular real world American accent, but perfectly mimics the colour and cadences of Kansai Japanese.
You are the end result of a “would you push the button” prompt where the prompt was “you have unlimited godlike powers but you appear to all and sundry to be an impetuous child” – Zero, 2022
I once saw a movie where Liam Neeson played a Kentucky hillbilly, and it was pretty funny seeing his native Irish accent struggle for dominance against the Kentucky accent he was trying to do.
You are the end result of a “would you push the button” prompt where the prompt was “you have unlimited godlike powers but you appear to all and sundry to be an impetuous child” – Zero, 2022
See, I couldn't remember if he was Scottish or English so I looked at the Wikipedia article and the lead sentence described him as "English". That's what I get for trusting the Internet, I suppose. :P
Reminds me of an odd fact about the Japanese dub of Trigun: Vash's voice actor naturally has a very thick Osaka accent, which he had to downplay significantly to make the character's voice more "neutral," while Wolfwood's character was written with a heavy Osaka/Kansai accent... but was played by a guy from a completely different part of Japan, essentially copping his co-star's accent.
Incidentally, while this accent was meant to parallel an American Southwest sort of accent—western Texas, say—the English has him speaking with a curious quasi-accent that sounds like no particular real world American accent, but perfectly mimics the colour and cadences of Kansai Japanese.
I still think Osakan dialect dubbed as Houston drawl is the best thing about Azumanga Daioh's dub, on a tangentially related note.
Reminds me of an odd fact about the Japanese dub of Trigun: Vash's voice actor naturally has a very thick Osaka accent, which he had to downplay significantly to make the character's voice more "neutral," while Wolfwood's character was written with a heavy Osaka/Kansai accent... but was played by a guy from a completely different part of Japan, essentially copping his co-star's accent.
Incidentally, while this accent was meant to parallel an American Southwest sort of accent—western Texas, say—the English has him speaking with a curious quasi-accent that sounds like no particular real world American accent, but perfectly mimics the colour and cadences of Kansai Japanese.
I did not know that about the Japanese dub. That's pretty cool. But yeah, the english dub is awesome and I love Jeff Nimoy as Wolfwood.
Incidental note about Kansai in anime: The author of the novels upon which The Eccentric Family and The Tatami Galaxy are based is from Kyoto and sets most of his work there; thus, they are among the few anime I can think of where *everyone* has some form of Kansai accent.
I remember someone remarking that they had a friend from Japan who had the Kansai regional accent and got very irritated every time it was translated into English as a southern accent.
While we're on that subject, can I reiterate how irritated I am that the Assassin/Templar theme of the the AC series effectively lets them avoid ever saying anything about any historical event they portray?
There's an all-consuming conspiracy behind all of history in the AC games, so they can just talk about that magic stuff instead of the actual historical event and its actual motivations. Probably.
I looked through the AC wiki at some point and there are super-secret letters to unlock about how the Templars kill Turing to avoid him pioneering workplace automation. That (a) makes no sense since he didn't work on that, and (b) ignores all the... you know... gay security clearance... suicide... stuff.
I haven't played it though, maybe I'm being too negative.
but anyways could you explain to me what the games are about, and how they can avoid talking about the historical events they portray?
All of history is just an extended war between two secret societies, the Assassins and the Templars who have no actual ideology beyond vague adherence to freedom vs authoritarianism, and any historical figure can be reinterpreted as either a pawn of the Templars or a Templar themselves, thus avoiding any need to deal with yucky actual motivations like religion or politics.
There also tend to be Templars on both sides of any given conflict playing some long game to get magic mcguffins, as in the first game where both the Saracens and the Crusaders had Templars.
Illuminatus! is a book series cowritten by a guy named Robert Anton Wilson, who Baldanders doesn't like for more or less reasonable reasons, like espousing epistemological theories loved by weirdos. It's still good though.
AC is, as far as I can tell, sort of based on it, since it's also based on an age-old conflict between "lawful" sorts of templars and "anarchic" sorts of other people. But Illuminatus is better, because the ancient Atlantean aliens were actually apes.
Illuminatus! is a book series cowritten by a guy named Robert Anton Wilson, who Baldanders doesn't like for more or less reasonable reasons, like espousing epistemological theories loved by weirdos. It's still good though.
Comments
In the future.
except when he deigns to be
I haven't played it though, maybe I'm being too negative.
There also tend to be Templars on both sides of any given conflict playing some long game to get magic mcguffins, as in the first game where both the Saracens and the Crusaders had Templars.
AC is, as far as I can tell, sort of based on it, since it's also based on an age-old conflict between "lawful" sorts of templars and "anarchic" sorts of other people. But Illuminatus is better, because the ancient Atlantean aliens were actually apes.