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Found through MangaBlog, an interview with Hayao Miyazaki, most notable for him mentioning that Lauren Bacall brought something to Howl's Moving Castle in her voicing of the Witch of the West that they couldn't get from Japanese actresses.* And then points out that you're going to be missing as many nuances in subtitles as you are with dubs, if you're not fluent in the original language.
* No comments on why Japanese voice actresses are like this, of course - wonder if it's due to older actresses not working in voice-overs?
* No comments on why Japanese voice actresses are like this, of course - wonder if it's due to older actresses not working in voice-overs?

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http://film.guardian.co.uk/interview/interviewpages/0,6737,1569689,00.html
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"Rhymes with witch," he said.
Sometimes it works.
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But I *really* don't like the English dub of Rurouni Kenshin because in the original version, the VA for Kenshin (a 28-year-old man) is a woman, who pitches her voice low and gives a unique and really nice effect for him - it speaks a lot for his pacifist, calm character. The English VA is just a random guy, and the character loses a lot.
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In practice, the Japanese VAs seem to be much better, because the industry supports it better. Miyazaki's films have been a shining exception, and a lot of this is due to the kind of talent he or his English-language adaptors have been able to attract: Gillian Anderson, Lauren Bacall, Christian Bale, etc.
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I'm also not under the impression that the Japanese VAs are necessarily better than the English ones since I can't actually understand them, but if I read the subtitles I can at least pretend. (I was at a con listening to a producer who'd worked in Japan who assured people that Japanese VAs were often just as bad. :)
From what I understand, the Japanese VA industry in general does the voiceovers after the animation is done, while in the US the voicing tends to be done before the animation is started, which helps because the actors can act and the lip flap can be timed to match the words. Mind you, from looking at a lot of cheap cartoons, it doesn't help a bit. :)
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I have to agree with you on that one.
When I was regularly renting my anime, and thus only had it for a day or so, I would mostly watch English dubs with the subtitles on so I could kind of...catch both sides of the material. (I don't know if that's a good way to phrase it.) But there were certain shows that I learned very quickly that I could NOT listen to dubbed. Kenshin was one and Saiyuki another (oh the paaaain!), I could probably make a list but it would get old really quickly.
If I get a chance, I'll usually try to watch both versions and what I see on repeated viewings will depend on which I prefer. There are some shows, where I watch dub and sub interchangeably, depending on how much attention I want to pay to the screen at any given time (Witch Hunter Robin and Bebop come to mind here).
None of this had any point whatsoever...but I felt like making a nuisance of myself.
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you're going to be missing as many nuances in subtitles as you are with dubs, if you're not fluent in the original language
This is interesting and a little intimidating because I'll be analyzing nuances in anime soon for my thesis and my God, how much am I going to be missing? How much in conscience go "This is what's happening in this scene" versus "This is what I think is happening based on its pseudo-European-fairytale context and on my interpretation on the translation and on my extremely limited knowledge of Japanese language and voice inflection"? How much can I do that with any translated material, including books? (I remember writing a paper on a Jorge Luis Borges story and analyzing his word choice blah blah blah and only after did I realize it had been translated from Spanish.) Must try to work it into the paper somehow, make the "lost in translation" thing work with me and not against me. Hmm.
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Is there a way you can try to get hold of the translator and ask them for examples of things they couldn't translate well, or found English/US equivalents for? The anime of Utena's been out for so long the translator's probably forgotten, but the manga was translated at least a bit more recently. If you can't get hold of those particular translators, you can find others -
It'd probably be interesting, although not strictly germane to your thesis, to compare the translations of the attacks in Naruto between the TW scanlators, Viz's translators, and the anime's translators - I have a theory as to why Neji's Byakugen [spelled wrong, I expect] was done as "Evil Eye" instead of "White Eye" or whatever the literal translation is, in Shonen Jump, which is that the translators (or the English writers, who may not be the same as the translators) were told as a corporate policy to pick English phrases that would would be familiar to the target audience, instead of relying on direct translation.
I know someone who did the English writing of one episode of Kodocha for FUNimation, if you want to talk to him about his experience and how much it relates to the original Japanese version.
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Wolfwood in trigun is supposed to speak in an Osaka dialect, from what I udnerstand, which is apparently a country-type accent, but I don't think they did anything about that in either the manga or anime.