Welp I just binge watched it after hearing people tell me to watch it for years and now I'm sad because I'm pretty sure nothing will ever top itand because I will never have the talent to make anything like ithow can something so beautiful make me feel so bad?
Why did you watch it so late
>>85424450
It's a thing that I do sometimes
It's called stupidity
>>85424450
To make something so perfect is almost cruel, how am I supposed to move on knowing someone who made this exists
I'm miserable, my life is a lie
Only complaint is that Woodsman's daughter being alive was convenient as fuck, that aside enjoyed it all the way through.
Got the vinyl too. Pretty fun, has some songs that weren't in the series.
>>85424345
/co/ doesn't talk about good stuff, because there's nothing to talk about
>"That was good"
>"Yeah, that sure was"
>>85424345
>for years
didn't it just come out last year?
>>85424345
wtf is this?
>>85424796
Nah, it was October of 2014. I remember, because I brought it out again the Halloween of the next year.
>>85424819
Over the Garden Wall
it was a cartoon network miniseries that aired like two years ago. It's good.
>>85424819
Steven Universe
>>85424780
Why did the beast want to grab the lantern if he needed others to burn the trees?
What's the relation between him and the turtles why are some things imaginative by unknown characters?
>>85424850
>>85424796
>two years ago
What.. I didn't think it was that long ago. I had to look it's up and it's true. Jesus Christ.
>>85424345
It was ok, but Daniel Radcliffe's voice acting was a bit flat. That kid was a bit annoying too.
>>85424755
What do you mean it was convenient?
The Woodsman was a paranoid and easily influenced type of guy and The Beast was a trickster.
beatrice is the best character
>>85424755
One theme of the whole show is that often what people think are their biggest problems don't need to be problems at all. Like how the beast seemed to be some big threat but all Wirt had to do to "defeat" him was not fall for his lies and just put the lantern down and walk away. And a bunch of other examples.
So the end of the Woodsman's arc fit perfectly. The Woodsman was convinced that his daughter was lost in the woods because she didn't come home timely enough one night, so he went out looking for her and unfortunately fell into the beast's ruse. But all along all he needed to do was wait for her a little longer, or go back to his house to check to see if she came back. He was just too afraid to see an empty house. His problem was just another not-problem that he'd built up to be more than it was and had the simplest solution, like nearly every conflict in the show. It wasn't much more "convenient" than any other resolution.
>>85424819
/co/ had massive threads when this aired, discussing the symbolism and americana influences. They were great.
You can probably dig them up on am archive.