Next Club Meeting:September 20, 2025,at the Fountaindale Public Library in Bolingbrook from 11:00 am - 5:00 pm
The Animatrix Network is an anime & manga fan club located in the Southwest suburbs of Chicago, Illinois. We usually meet on the third Saturday of each month (except when holidays or conventions coincide). The meetings are free and open to the public. Join us for a day filled with anime.
This site provides news, reviews, commentaries, and previews of the world of anime and everything it inspires, such as live-action films, comics, music, art, and other weird things to enjoy and contemplate.
The creator of the Japanese anime manga Love Hina has some concerns over the future of his industry! He calls out Tokyo, Japan and their progressive new policy!
Clone High (occasionally referred to in the U.S. as Clone High U.S.A.) is a Canadian–American adult animated series created by Phil Lord, Christopher Miller and Bill Lawrence. The show centers on a high school populated by the clones of famous historical figures. The central cast includes adolescent depictions of Abe Lincoln, Joan of Arc, Gandhi, Cleopatra, and JFK. The series also serves as a parody of teen dramas such as Dawson's Creek and Beverly Hills, 90210; every episode is introduced as a "very special episode".
Lord and Miller first developed the series' concept while at Dartmouth College in the 1990s, later pitching it to executives at American network Fox Broadcasting Company, who ultimately decided to pass on the program. It was later purchased by cable channel MTV,
and was produced between 2002 and 2003. The show's design is heavily
stylized and its animation style limited, emphasizing humor and story
over visuals. The Clone High theme song was written by Tommy Walter and performed by his alternative rock band Abandoned Pools, who also provided much of the series' background music.
Clone High first aired in its entirety on Canadian cable network Teletoon
between 2002 and 2003, later debuting on MTV. It became embroiled in a
controversy regarding its depiction of Gandhi soon afterward, which
prompted hundreds in India to mount a hunger strike in response. Shortly after, MTV pulled the series, which had been receiving low ratings. Clone High attracted mixed reviews from television critics upon its premiere, but it has since received critical acclaim and a cult following. In July 2020, it was announced that a reboot of the series is in the works at MTV Studios with the original creators Lord, Miller, and Lawrence returning. In February 2021, it was announced that HBO Max had ordered 2 seasons of the reboot.
Clone High is set in a high school in the fictional town of Exclamation, USA, that is secretly being run as an elaborate military experiment orchestrated by a government office called the Secret Board of Shadowy Figures. The school is entirely populated by the clones
of famous historical figures that were created in the 1980s and raised
with the intent of having their various strengths and abilities
harnessed by the United States military. The principal
of the high school, Cinnamon J. Scudworth, has his own plans for the
clones, and secretly tries to undermine the wishes of the Board
(Scudworth wants to use the clones to create a clone-themed amusement
park, dubbed "Cloney Island", a decidedly less evil intention than that
of the Board). He is assisted by his robot butler/vice principal/dehumidifier, Mr. Butlertron (a parody of Mr. Belvedere), who is programmed to call everyone "Wesley" and speak in two distinct intonations.
The main protagonists of Clone High are the clones of Abe Lincoln, Joan of Arc, and Gandhi. Much of the plot of the show revolves around the attempts of Abe to woo the vain and promiscuous clone of Cleopatra, while being oblivious to the fact that his friend Joan of Arc is attracted to him. Meanwhile, JFK's clone, a macho, narcissistic womanizer, is also attempting to win over Cleopatra and has a long-standing rivalry with Abe. Gandhi acts in many of the episodes as the comic relief. Also on a few occasions, the characters that we see learn most of "Life's Lessons" the hard way
an animated project focusing on North Korea's prison camps.
"North Korea - The Worst Human Rights Crisis in the World Today." - Human Rights Watch
A
group of animators and human right activists from Japan are determined
to produce an animation film to inform, inspire, and empower others to
raise a voice against heinous human rights violations inside North
Korea's notorious concentration camps, where over 200,000 "violators"
are overworked, tortured, raped or publicly executed today.
"In the repatriation program in the 60's, more than 93,000 Japanese
Koreans left Japan to head to North Korea, which was promised by North
Korea leaders to be "Heaven on Earth." The main character's family was
one of the families who took the voyage to this "Heaven on Earth", to
dedicate their lives and wealth for the construction of what was meant
to be the greatest nation, and that would promote communist idealism.
Relatively
peaceful days in Pyongyang enjoyed by the family abruptly ended with
the disappearance of the grandfather, and the main character's forced
transfer to Yudok concentration camp. Suffering through years of forced
labor, violence, and the loss of loved ones, the main character grows to
become a man from inside the concentration camp...."
The DPJ’s only addition to the critical
portion of the law was a short rider which requests “prudent application
of the law in light of any artistic, social, scientific or satirical
merits the work might express” – it does not however add any legal
obligation to consider these, or establish any clear or indepdently
enforced criteria for judging whether a work can be declared “harmful”
or not.