Winter 2011: wrap-up

Merry from Yumekui Merry
Yumekui Merry
Hourou Musuko (Wandering Son): The episode count signalled the end. It certainly wasn’t a strong wrap-up ending! Beautifully made and sensitively scripted, with several interesting characters, it sometimes felt like a kind of gender sci-fi.

Fractale: The final episode was stupid and annoying – no surprise there. Candidate for the best animated series with the worst script.

Yumekui Merry (Dream Eater Merry): I really liked this series and its main characters, despite its increasingly complicated conceptual underpinnings. The “final battle” sequence was a bit drawn-out and predictable though.

Mahou Shoujo Madoka Magica: Still waiting for last 2 episodes because of problems in Japan, but I thought this was the hit of the season. Deceptively cute at first, then becoming shockingly dark and powerful. Magical Girl anime will never seem the same again. Apr 22nd: Episode 11 maintains the standard. Episode 12 finale is a fumbling anti-climax, but not to the point of ruining the series.

Kore wa Zombie desu ka? (Is this a Zombie?): Loved this for its warmth and crazy humour, and its original characters. Less successful when trying for drama, but overall well worth watching.

Gothic: A 26-episode series, still running.
Level E: I got fed up with the focus on the schoolboys and dropped it.

Spring 2011 anime- first looks

Robots
Fireball Charming

This post will be updated as new shows arrive.
Dog days: Junior high school gymnastics jock is whisked away to fantasy land where Dog People are battling Cat People in some kind of battle tournament. The Dog Republic is governed by a hereditary nobility :-(. Unoriginal, and not my kind of thing.
Hanasaku Iroha (Personal Growth ABC): 16 year old Ohana, abandoned by her feckless mother, goes to live with her grandmother, who runs a hot-spring hotel. The welcome isn’t as warm as she expected. This has a strong script, adequate art, and interesting characters. Promising. Ep. #2 excellent. [Streamed on Crunchyroll]
Nichijou (My Ordinary Life): Farcial gag comedy with schoolgirls. Amusing but frequently baffling; maybe it’s funnier in Japanese. Ep.#2 equally strange. [Streamed on Crunchyroll]
Steins; gate: Mysterious events occur around a time-travel theory seminar. A group of misfits meddle. A murdered woman. Intriguing time-travel sci-fi. [Streamed on Crunchyroll –not UK]
Oretachi wa Tsubasa wa nai (Without Wings – Under the Innocent Sky): Adapted from an ero-game. Lots of fanservice and sexy talk, multiple story threads. I didn’t care for the scene where an under-age girl shows her sexy undies and talks dirty. [Streamed on Crunchyroll]
Fireball Charming: 2-minute episode set on mecha planet. Great mecha animation, otherwise trivial.
Sengoku Otome – Momoiro Paradox (Battle Girls -Time Paradox): An average schoolgirl is transported to the Japanese Warring States period while praying for exam success at a shrine. However all the famous warlords, e.g. Oda Nobunaga, are women. One has a sinking feeling about this even before the opening credits are finished; it’s the usual magical rubbish with busty babes in skimpy armour. And why does Oda have only one attendant? The cute-but-dim heroine is the only good thing in it. Ep. #2: totally lame. [Streamed on Crunchyroll]
Tiger and Bunny: American-style superheroes work in a heavily sponsored reality TV show, where they get points for their success in catching villains. Hero “Tiger” isn’t doing well. Why watch? Don’t ask me. [Streamed on ANN, including UK]
Tono to Issho Gantai no Yabo: 3 minute episodes set in the Sengoku historical period. Slightly anachronistic and very funny. [Streamed on Crunchyroll]
SKET Dance: Transfer student encounters a strange club whose oddball members are dedicated to offering help and encouragement to other students. Ep #1 failed to arouse my enthusiasm. [Streamed on Crunchyroll]
Toriko: Shounen fantasy adventure about Toriko, who hunts down exotic ingredients for gourmet restaurants. Set on a fantasy world. (The first episode is a 50-minute Toriko x One Piece special. One Piece fans should enjoy it.) In Ep.#2, Toriko meets the timid chef Komatsu, hunts down the monstrous 8-legged Galala Crocodile, and eats it. If totally over the top manly fantasy adventure is your thing, you’ll like this.
Sekai Ichi Hatsukoi – World’s Greatest First Love: Funny and interesting story set in world of shoujo manga publishing. I liked it despite the few seconds of icky guy-guy kissing. Not for gay-haters, I think. #2nd episode lame, dropped. [Streamed on Crunchyroll]
A-Channel: Tiny Tooru is a bit too fond of her school friend, the dangerously scatty Ran, who since entering high school has acquired two female friends and several male acquaintances. Much comedy action ensues. I doubt if I’ll be watching much more of this, having taken a strong dislike to the near-psychotic Tooru.
Dororon Enma-kun Meeramera: Enma, nephew of the prince of Hell, and his associates, ice-wielding Princess Yukiko and the kappa Kappaeru, and Enma’s talking hat Chapeau, are sorting out the human world’s demons. Harumi, a schoolgirl, gets mixed up in their activities. All good fun, with slick modern designs, a little fan-service, and plenty of humour. {The original 1973 Go Nagai anime is pretty good too – though it looks its age it has more demon-battling action and less messing about in ep.#1}
30-sai no Hoken Taiiku (A Thirty-Year Old’s Health and Physical Education): Japan is said to have many 30 year-old virgins – this is a (censored) guide for them on how to date and have sex with women. Ep. #1 was so dire that watching 25 mins of it was like hard work. Don’t go there.
Happy Kappi: harmless stuff for kids.
Sofuteni: Soft tennis, played with a larger soft ball, is a popular game in Asia. This is another school comedy, with a group of cute girls doing cute things. It’s enlivened by fan-service, which includes some of the girls’ lurid imaginings. Not so bad, but not original enough to make it a must-see.
Hen Zemi (Strange Seminar): Nanako is a normal university student who happens to enroll in an Abnormal Physiology seminar. The lecturer and the other students are sexual deviants who persistently harass and embarrass Nanako. This show reveals the Japanese taste for body function humour. It’s ecchi, rude, abusive, and disgusting, but also rather smart and funny.
Showa Monogatari (Post-war Story): A story about daily life in the early 1960’s and supposedly aimed at older folks who remember those times. No fansub yet, which makes it hard to review, but it’s a reminder of what interested folks at that time.
Hyouge Mono: Historical drama. The story is set during Japan’s Warring States era and centers on Furuta Sasuke, a vassal of the great warlord Oda Nobunaga. He is obsessed with tea ceremony and material elegance, rather than with war. The art is interesting, and it’s clearly meant to be funny. I’ll continue to watch this. [There’s an online translated manga available. The anime follows the manga closely.]
Astarotte no Omocha (Astarotte’s Toy): Astarotte is a 10 year old succubus princess, and has to acquire a male harem, so that she can, er, suck their male essence. The animation style suggests that it’s for 10 year olds, and the first episode treads a fine line between moe cuteness and kiddy porn. However the late-night broadcast time implied that it’s really intended for adult pervs, not kids. Crunchyroll managed to “lose” my negative comment on this show! [Streamed on Crunchyroll].
Yondemasu yo, Azazel-san: About a private detective who has control of a demon used for dirty work. The demon, Azazel, is an unscary-looking sex fiend. The detective’s temporary worker, Sakuma is introduced to the demon. Contains some raunchy adult humour, and a bit repetitive, but at 12 minutes at least it’s short.
Gyakkyō Burai Kaiji: Hakairoku-hen (Kaiji 2): sequel to harsh adult gambling comedy drama. Lowlife Kaiji, deep in debt to the Yakuza because of gambling, is kidnapped and put to work in a forced labour mine. Might not be everybody’s taste, but well-done.
Maria-holic Alive: Sequel to “Maria Holic”, in which lesbian Kanako was persecuted by her pretty boarding school room-mate who was really a boy in drag. In the first episode of the new series, Kanako is induced to undergo some fantastical trials in a supposedly disused wing of the school. Looks like the same stuff as before. Slickly done, but I’m not over keen on this comedy of bullying. [Licenced by Sentai – to be streamed in US & Canada]
Hoshizora e Kakaru Hashi (Bridge to the Stars): Kazuma’s younger brother has to move to the country for his health, and Kazuma accompanies him. Kazuma meets several girls, in variously embarrassing circumstances. A pretty if anodyne harem comedy, with mild fan-service. [Streamed on Crunchyroll]
The World God Only Knows 2: Like last year, the game master hero, aided by little demon Elsie is sending bad souls back to Hell by winning the hearts of real girls. No development from last year, but that could still mean it’s very good. [Streamed on Crunchyroll]
Ano Hi Mita Hana no Namae o Bokutachi wa Mada Shiranai (That day we saw a flower whose name we do not yet know): The hero is being bothered by a very annoying younger girl. Gradually we discover that nobody else can see her, and that he’s a recluse alienated from his former friends. There’s a situation he needs to fix. Tolerably well-scripted but gloomy scenario.
Hidan no Aria (a.k.a. Aria of the Scarlet Ammo): Harem comedy with guns, set around a high school for young bounty hunters. Average stuff.
C – The Money of Soul and Possibility Control: Japan has been bailed ouit from a financial crisis, but citizens are struggling to survive. A student is offered a large sum of money, simply on the condition that he pay it back. He is then introduced to the mysterious Financial District. Bizarre supernatural comedy-thriller. I’ll definitely be watching the next episode. Streamed on Funimation (not UK), ANN’s Anime on Demand (UK)
Denpa Onna to Seishun Otoko (radio wave woman and laidback man): High school boy goes to live with his single aunt, only to discover that he has a cousin who claims to be an alien and goes around wrapped in a futon. Totally bizarre. I’ll definitely be watching the next episode.
Deadman Wonderland: A 14 year old high school boy sees his class massacred by a red figure with supernatural powers. Subsequently he is accused of the crime, and despite his protests convicted on the evidence of a taped confession in which he boasts of the crime. He is sent to a private prison/theme park called “Deadman Wonderland”. A strange girl in a white bodysuit jumps down from the roof to talk to him. Around mid-episode the hero says “This can’t be happening..” which prompted this viewer to think “You’re right, it can’t”. I wasn’t impressed by this horror/conspiracy show.
Ao no Exorcist (Blue Exorcist): Orphan in care of exorcism- performing religious order discovers that he can “see things” and that he possesses a strange power. Fairly well-scripted and looks promising. Steamed on Crunchyroll (not UK).
Moshidora (Drucker in the Dugout): Full Japanese title is: Moshi Kōkō YakyÅ« no Joshi Manager ga Drucker no Management o Yondara (“What If the Female Manager of a High School Baseball Team Had Read Drucker’s ‘Management’?”). It’s about a high school girl who is “manager” of the school baseball team, and who while looking for a baseball manager’s book, picks up Peter Drucker’s business management classic, and tries to use it to help her manage the team and aim for the Koshien. The ideas are interesting, the characters and the play less so. Will watch some more episodes. [This show was originally scheduled for March, but is now being shown daily in April/May]

UK Anime release schedule courtesy of http://www.uk-anime.net.

Shonen Sarutobi Sasuke (Magic Boy) movie

Sasuke and animalsI recently tracked down a copy of the Magic Boy (Shonen Sarutobi Sasuke) movie [a.k.a. “The Little Samurai”] made in 1959. This is very early anime, and was the first Japanese anime to get a theatrical release in the USA. Even today, the quality of the animation is quite good, and it’s well worth a look. Bear in mind that in 1959, colour TV anime was still several years in the future!

The story is set in an alternate mediaeval Japan. Young Sasuke plays with his animal friends, till an encounter with a witch, who kills one of the animals and attacks Sasuke.  Sasuke goes off to learn to be a great magician, so that he can defeat the witch. Add some bandits and a local lord, and you have the story.

The movie came with three soundtracks (Jap, Eng, Spanish), and an Italian .srt file, but no English subs.  There’s a  Japanese-only DVD available if you feel like aiding Japan right now. In fact this isn’t a movie that depends heavily on dialogue, and there are passages several minutes long without any. One of the animals is killed in an incident rather reminiscent of the death of Bambi’s mother 🙂

After struggling with the .srt file, I made my own English subs .srt file, which you can find in the Manga Translations part of this site (at the bottom of the M.T. page).  I recommend using it with VLC Media Player.

Japan Earthquake Comments

I expect that the death toll will rise considerably from the current tally of a thousand. It’s clear that scores of square kilometers of built-up area along the coast were totally trashed by the tsunami, and anyone caught in those areas would probably die.  Evacuation orders were given, but if less than 100% effective, that would leave large numbers at risk.  On the news aerial pictures, one can see that some people were caught and washed away in their vehicles.

We haven’t heard if the wrecked train seen in the news was one of the two “not accounted for”.   As for the lengthy stoppage of train services in the wider area, one can understand that they’d need to have every metre of track, bridge, overhead wire and tunnel checked by engineers just in case the earthquake had damaged something.

The explosion at the nuclear power plant will not be a surprise to those who have for years been warning about just this disaster scenario.

If some of the new season anime is a few days late, it’ll be because the producers are lacking electricity, or transportation, or generally have more pressing things on their minds.

Site upgrade

I’ve given the Anime & Manga Database part of the site a refresh to make searching and navigating a little easier, and to highlight the World Masterpiece Theater and Shoujo Anime lists. Also added an option to display anime by date, oldest first.

Also tidied the Ryouko Ikeda feature pages (in Old Features).

More old anime available

Here’s a list of older (i.e. possibly older than you, dear visitor) anime that I note has become available on Animesuki and/or Nyaatorrents.

Marvelous Melmo #01
Angie Girl #01
Homeless Child Remy #01,02,03. (Ie naki ko Remi) [The WMT “homeless girl” version]
Tokimeki Tonight #01-07
Aim for the Ace #22 [tennis]
NG Knight Lamune & 40 #01-06
Kimagure Orange Road TV #15 [US licence expired]
Little Princess Sara #01-46 [“A Little Princess” novel]
Heavy Metal L-Gaim #40
Gear Fighter Dendoh #12
Genshi Shonen Ryuu #16
Kinnikuman #13
Babel II #9
Ginguiser #1
Kindaichi Shounen no Jikenbo #14-17
Iga no Kabamaru #5
Goldfish Warning #34
Mikan Enikki #0-3

Here are some fansub groups that appear to specialise in older anime:
Saitei, Takara, mSubs, Anime_Daisuki, KiteSeekers, ARR, Live-evil, The Skaro Hunting Society, Hokuto no Gun, Bluefixer, Honobono, Fuko Ibuki Fansubs.

There are rather more of these than I imagined when I started this post. The quality of these old shows varies (depending on your tastes). Some are well worth preserving. Others cause me to react with a “Why?”
Several are detailed in my database; here’s one to start you off:
Remi

Old Anime

Collection of anime on VHS tape

Picture of tape boxes
Tape boxes and other junk

Over the past year I have been working intermittently on ‘sorting out’ a large collection of anime on VHS tape. The collection, of about 400 tapes -that equals 400 shelf-inches – of tapes very rarely played, was of un-manageable size.

Some of these titles could not be replaced if I were to dump the tapes.  But a high proportion can be sourced as digital fansubs or as retail DVDs (hopefully not both!)

This winter it’s the turn of the NTSC tapes.  I sorted out a pile that were already transferred to digital, but found the greatest difficulty in even giving them away to somebody who might enjoy viewing them.  Clearly in the UK, old anime + VHS + NTSC is a no-go, particularly with people whose brains stop working after they’ve read the words “free animation”.

Now somebody is going to point out that most fans don’t use VHS any more and the young ones never saw a NTSC tape: right.

Winter 2011 Anime review

Madoka and Kyubei
Madoka Magica

With two of the more interesting series taking a week’s break,  and the season well under way, it seems a good time to look at what’s good and what’s not.  Confounding one’s fears last year that decent anime was about to be history, a number of the latest series have great artwork, interesting characters, and well-crafted scripts with an ongoing storyline. In general they are far more sophisticated than say the anime of the 1960’s and 1970’s.

Mahou Shoujo Madoka Magica is the hit of the season. Many thought this was going to be just an updated magical-girl series, with added magical-trip effects, till in episode 3 the story takes a markedly darker turn. To underline this, #1 and #2 had action playing under the end credits, while #3 onwards have the pounding and distinctly doom-laden ending song. (Those given to re-running episodes will note that it’s previewed at a lower volume during the fight in #2.)  Episode #3 reveals to general shock that being a magical girl can be fatal, and the nightmare continues in episodes #4-6 as further shocking events and revelations continue.  These girls evidently get a huge ‘high’ from the exercise of their powers, and their motivation is not necessarily directed towards the common good.  The cute-faced familiar, Kyubei , urges Madoka and her friend to contract as magical girls with an eagerness more usually met with in drug pushers.  Al in all, a series that leaves the viewer in mild shock at the end of each episode isn’t updating the magical-girl genre so much as demolishing it.
Each episode has a hallucinogenic magical-combat sequence, and each one is totally different. Some think it’s worth watching for these alone.
Halfway through, the eponymous Madoka still hasn’t become a magical girl. Will she? and what will happen when she does?  Is Kyubei evil? What ghastly thing will happen next? We want to know!

Yumekui Merry (Dream Eater Merry) : When the real world and the world of dreams intersect, strange things happen.  Yumeji Fujiwara has always been sensitive to other people’s dreams, even before a strange girl falls on top of him. Merry Nightmare has come from the dream world, and she wants to go back there.  Fujiwara has a nightmare of being in the dream world,  chased by cats.  The dream-world intrudes into Reality.  Fujiwara, a kind-hearted youth, decides to help Merry.  The dream demons want Yumeji’s body as a vessel to access Reality.  Initially, Fujiwara and Merry seek out dream-demons and battle them as a means of finding an exit for her to the Dream World, but the perspective changes.

This series has a warmth to it derived from the characters’ feeling for each other, and the storyline has developing twists and clues that require the viewer to pay attention and remember what happened in past episodes.  There is also some fine artwork in the dream scenes.

Kore wa Zombie desu ka? (Is this a Zombie?) : Daft and hilarious comedy about a schoolboy who is already a zombie as the series starts.  Errm, there’s a Wiki on this series so I don’t have to explain what it’s about… By episode 5 he has a magically powered girl, a necromancer girl, and a vampire ninja girl living at his house, somewhat against his wishes. He does his best to hold his own.

This is very funny, and the girls all have quite distinct and unique personalities. It’s the inventiveness that makes it worth watching. Why does the rather jail-bait Haruna insist on making Ayumu delicious fried egg lunches – with no rice? Why does Yu wear armour and never speak? Will the ninja-girl’s ample bosom poke Ayumu in the eye?

Gothic (ゴシック): Set in an imaginary European country, in 1924. Token Japanese schoolboy meets a tiny, brilliant and bossy blonde girl who solves gothic mysteries.  Not amazing, but can be quite a gripping watch. The setup is an excuse to pose and solve some Sherlock-Holmes style mysteries, invariably solved with brilliant deductions by Veronique. After an awkward start,  Kazuya and Veronique come to care about each other.  The story arcs, involving a death ship and a thief and a missing heiress, are rather fun.

Fractale: sci-fi anime, containing obvious homages to Miyazaki movies and Nadia TV series. Much discussed, much anticipated, but proving somewhat of a disappointment. It fails to convince the viewer that its world is internally consistent, and none of the characters are really likeable or admirable.  Some people are continuing to watch just so they can chuck rocks at it.

Hourou Musuko (Wandering Son) : This was widely anticipated as the “quality” anime of the season – another adaptation of a Shimura Takako manga – the other being the delicate drama “Aoi Hana”.  Not for everyone, perhaps, but HM has outstanding artwork, a solid script and tactful storytelling about gender identity, which affects several of the characters in different ways. Can be quite spellbinding in its quiet way.

Level E: Earth is infested with aliens, all here for their different reasons, and the humans are the only ones who don’t know. This is having some good fun with “the aliens are among us” storylines.

Kimi ni Todoke 2 (Reaching You 2) : Eagerly awaited by those who loved the first series of this shoujo romantic comedy. 2011 episode #0 was a recap. In ep #1, it’s chocolate-giving day, and Sawako can’t quite screw up courage to give lovingly-made chocolates to Kazehaya, who hangs about in increasing disappointment.  Give him the chocs already, girl! The characters have moved up one school year but their relationship hasn’t.  Nice, but no need to watch unless you liked the first series so much you want to watch another 12 or 13 episodes of the same.

The rest? Dragon Crisis isn’t bad, and I didn’t pursue the others.

Really Old Anime – available

Robin abd Bell in PegasusFansubbing group the Skaro Hunting Society are providing digisubs of a number of really old anime series from the 1960’s and 1970’s, plus a short movie from 1947.  They are giving us the first few episodes from each, rather than doing one or two series in depth.  This is great if your main interest is to see what these old series actually looked and sounded like, and to compare them with the 2011 output.

Titles are:
Cyborg 009 (1968)
Dororon Enma-kun (1973)
GeGeGe no Kitaro (1968)
Koutetsu Jeeg (1975)
Mahou Tsukai Sally (1966)
Rainbow Sentai Robin (1966)
Shinzou Ningen Casshan (1973)
Suteneko Tora-chan (1947)
Wonder 3 (1965)
Yusei Shonen Papi (1965)

All are in good (digital) quality and available from the usual sources 🙂

I have detailed write-ups and clips in my Anime database- see the menu bar above. You can use the “romaji” option when you get there. There is a matching “Japanese” search. Old Anime