>I also met Mr. Hayao Miyazaki around this time and he really loved animation and how to approach mecha type stories. Until then I had never thought about playwriting for animation. It was a really great period of study for me.
>These things as well as everything I learned from Mr. Miyazaki in terms of characterisation and how to build characters, not to mention the various other theatrical and dramatic elements that I learned from Mr. Takahata. If I hadn't met these two individuals and learned all these elements from them, then it's very likely that Mobile Suit Gundam would not have turned out in the same way.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/olliebarder/2017/03/13/yoshiyuki-tomino-on-gundam-newtypes-and-the-perilous-future-facing-humanity/#891be124b8af
How will Gundumbfags ever recover?
>>161907607
What is there to recover from? He's saying that he learned from Miyazaki. That doesn't make Gundam any less Tomino's work.
>>161907607
This is so funny since so many anons on /a/ are always questioning what Miyazaki has done for the industry.
Ah, so that explains why Tomino's work is all shit.
>>161907607
What does /a/ think of these guys?
>>161907607
I don't think you know what the word inspiration means.
>>161907607
Recover from what?
That's like saying Eva is a lesser work because 0079 is one of Anno's favourite anime.
>inspired by miyazaki when he was actually making decent anime
>yet still cursed with autism
What a sad story
>>161907843
it's funny because Tezuka is the one guy who was already dead before chan culture and the internet otherwise he'd probably be bigger than Miyazaki here
>>161907768
Stick to A/Z
>>161907607
This was like in 1978, when nobody liked Gundam and some dude wanted anime to be an industry.