Art Shift: Difference between revisions

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** Having a [[Non Standard Character Design]], Anisawa Meito from the same series is more or less a walking, talking art shift straight out of a [[Shounen]] fighting show.
* Nagasumi of ''[[Seto no Hanayome]]'' is especially fond of doing this, turning from [[Ordinary High School Student]] to musclebound icon of manliness whenever his fighting spirit kicks in (see page picture above).
** This is most likely a visual [[Shout-Out]] to ''[[Jo JoJoJo's Bizarre Adventure|Jo Jos Bizarre Adventure]]''.
** Hell, ''everybody'' in this show does this, all the time. It's rare to go more than a few minutes without a completely different animation style popping up.
* Sakura in ''[[Bludgeoning Angel Dokuro-chan|Bludgeoning Angel Dokurochan]]'' occasionally does this whenever he is expressing extreme emotion or is in a harrowing situation.
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* The first ''[[Dragon Ball]] Z'' movie, ''[[Non-Serial Movie|The Dead Zone]]''. There's an abrupt art shift in flashbacks that's used to [[Nightmare Fuel|unbelievably creepy effect.]]
* ''[[K-On!]]'''s manga had [http://www.mangafox.com/manga/k_on/v02/c006/7.html one] made out of [[Nightmare Fuel]] -- a [[Shout-Out]] to legendary horror mangaka Kazuo Umezu's characteristic style.
* In the anime of ''[[Axis Powers Hetalia]]'', the anime once has England shift out of the default [[Moe]] style to the serious style of ''[[Jo JoJoJo's Bizarre Adventure|Jo Jos Bizarre Adventure]]'' as he plans to get back at Germany.
** The manga and anime both have France occasionally shifting to a 1970s shojo look. While in the comic itself, America was once shown in New York-style doodles. And that's not counting the chibis...
* The opening scene of ''[[Project A-ko]] 3: Cinderella Rhapsody'', which showed the three main characters playing pool, had less-cartoonish character designs, dimmer colors, and higher-framerate animation than the usual art style of ''[[Project A-ko]]''. {{spoiler|This is because the scene is C-ko's [[All Just a Dream|dream]].}}
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* In ''[[Warrior Cats]]'': ''The Rise of Scourge'', the art changes during Tiny's made up story about how he defeated a dog.
* ''[[Macademi Wasshoi]]'' parodies ''[[Kaiji]]'' at one point, and the art style momentarily changes to emphasize this.
* In ''[[The Idolmaster (anime)|THE iDOLM@STER]]'', whenever Kotori gets into an [[Imagine Spot]], this happens. Thus far, the art sometimes shifted into [[Shojo]] style, or ''[[Jo JoJoJo's Bizarre Adventure|Jo Jos Bizarre Adventure]]'' style.
* In ''[[Tsuritama]]'', the first episode's introduction and the ending credits use a computer-generated artstyle based around clusters of circles.
* Frequently used as a visual gag in ''Lotte no Omocha'', as well as when Naoya tries to draw, or when Asuha is being particularly crafty.
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== Films -- Animation ==
* In the CGI ''[[Horton Hears a Who!]]'' an entire sequence narrated by Horton is done in the style of a colorful anime. The producers explain that this was simply for the entertainment of the children watching.
* [[El Arca]] has this, though whether or not it's intentional is debatable- The art noticeably shifts depending on how many characters are in a scene. In a scene with only one or two, or even a small handful, the art is of quality comparable to Disney. However, in scenes with many characters present, like when Kairel is trying to get everyone organized right after they get on the Ark, and Xiro completely ruins her efforts, the designs quickly become comparable to a toddler's scribbling.
** An example that was clearly on purpose would be when the Villain describes his future plan for the prey animals, and visualizes what it will be like.