

SiNK
Sink is set in Tomioka's brightly coloured yet worn and grubby surreal world, where on this occasion we see commuter trains packed with deep sea divers reading pornography. Sealed off behind their protective shells from any real human contact, the commuters are clearly inspired by Tomioka's experiences on Tokyo's underground but perhaps represent everyone who shuts themselves away behind iPods, computers and books, afraid of real face-to-face human interaction. (Source: Letterboxd)
Sink is set in Tomioka's brightly coloured yet worn and grubby surreal world, where on this occasion we see commuter trains packed with deep sea divers reading pornography. Sealed off behind their protective shells from any real human contact, the commuters are clearly inspired by Tomioka's experiences on Tokyo's underground but perhaps represent everyone who shuts themselves away behind iPods, computers and books, afraid of real face-to-face human interaction. (Source: Letterboxd)
MyOpinionMatters
July 22, 2024
What an actual hidden masterpiece. While scrolling through the very bottom of MAL, I found SiNK. SiNK is not an anime. It is an artistic masterpiece. It's the essence of humanity and life as we know it. I don't quite understand what it wants to display to the viewer (maybe something like Wall-E), but even with no facial expressions, the divers have so much character in their every move. Their humanity is portrayed and animated beautifully. It's quite nostalgic, giving vibes of early 2000s Toonami. And if you haven't read it, guess what is actually crazy? THIS WAS MADE IN 1999. Take 3 minutes out of your day, go onYouTube, and watch this literal artistic masterpiece. You will not regret it. Strong 10/10 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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