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Anime Spring 2018

by Rindis on July 19, 2018 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Anime

It’s been another light season of anime watching for me, mostly because of FF XIV, but I’ve managed to stabilize the schedule so that I am keeping up with a few things:

Cardcaptor Sakura — The new series is walking a fine line between being a sequel, and reworking ideas and plots from the original for people who haven’t seen it. Overall, it’s successful, and easily made the top of the ‘to watch’ list. Now, when’s the rest already?

My Hero Academia — Another very strong season. I wasn’t entirely happy with the school camp bit (I felt it dragged out a bit, and they didn’t do a good job of juggling all the different moving parts), but the follow up from that was very good. Oh, another weak part: not enough Uraraka and Froppy.

Pokemon Sun & Moon Ultra Adventures — The best thing here may be the new Roku app for the Pokemon Channel, since the listings are better, and the previews are finally showing up. But, really, the series is continuing to be very good, and I definitely liked the adventures with Nebby. The fight in Ultra Space, not as much, but at least it wasn’t dragged out.

Food Wars — Another surprisingly good season. I was merely okay with the Hokkaido tournament stuff for most of the season, but the ending parts helped pull it together, though it ended kind of in the middle of things. I am really liking the development on Erina, which has been one of the stronger parts of the last two seasons.

And that’s everything I’ve actually kept up with. The next two series are also of interest to Baron and Dave, but tying them down long enough to watch can be a problem…

Yamato 2202 — Unlike 2199, I’m not familiar with the plot of this one at all, so it’s being a real voyage. The quality is just as good, and this is my highest recommendation, even if we’re still at the point where the real plot is about to get going. There’s already been a lot of adventure, and some interesting revelations about the last three years….

Full Metal Panic: Invisible Victory — The fourth series has been another quality production. I really liked the mix of humor and serious military in the first series, so it always gives me a little disappointment to see it (understandably) moving more to the latter at the expense of the former, but I’m really liking the fact that the main characters have recognized the problem, and want to try and preserve their more ‘ordinary’ lives in the face of all this.

And then what I’ve seen just a bit more of:

March Comes in Like a Lion — Continuing to be a well-produced series, and I think I saw just about all of the third (production) season during this period. Smudge is saying that this is about where it gets really good….

Black Clover — Only saw a few episodes of this. I was recently commenting to AJ that it had villains I could generally respect (a bit rare in shonen fight-anime), but then the next arc has a crazy, ranting, trope-arrific villain. Argh. There’s a reason why this is nearly the bottom of the ‘to watch’ pile.

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Anime Winter 2018

by Rindis on April 18, 2018 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Anime

Smudge ended up getting us both involved in Final Fantasy XIV right as the current anime season started, and that’s been taking up much of our free time, so we only saw a few series this time:

A Place Further Than the Universe — The initial description for this series was completely incoherent, but this turned out to the the hit of the season. Four high-school age girls end up as part of an expedition to Antarctica. As usual with Japanese series of this type, it shows some real research and care with the subject, and the characterization is great, with everyone having good reasons for getting involved. The four primary characters grow, and are very good for each other. Highly recommended.

Last Man — Finally just saw the end of the series a few days ago. It comes to a very well done ending, but I hope we get a ‘part 2’ or something. So far as I know, we’re still not at where the graphic novels pick up.

Yamato 2199 — I wasn’t entirely sure on the dub at first, but it’s gotten good. The series itself, is of course, excellent. We really need more remakes like this.

The Ancient Magus’ Bride — This is continuing with a few different story arcs, and overall, I’m liking it better than the first season. It’s been well-produced all along, but the writing seems to have settled into its groove now.

Pokemon Sun and Moon — The current Pokemon series has continued to be a lot of fun. Unfortunately, the streaming service of them reset to the beginning after the two Kanto episodes. So it’s going to be a while before I get to see more.

Garo: Vanishing Line — The second half of the series was largely ‘on the road’ and built up to a good climax sequence. Overall, a good story that hangs together all the way through. The mood and style are very good along with the characters, and the plot is solid if not exceptional.

Black Clover — The other continuing series from the previous season, we’re well behind on it now, having only taken the time for a few episodes. While it is in many ways a bog-standard fight-anime (and surprisingly low-budget at times), I’m enjoying it at the moment. The current plot lines have been much more interesting than the beginning (expanding the cast didn’t hurt), and as long as it can avoid dragging things out, I’ll continue to watch it.

Darling in the Franxx — I’ve only seen the first two episodes. Smudge had some problems with the… controls for the mechs, though coming from the people who did Kill la Kill…. We’ll probably give this more of a try, but feelings are decidedly mixed.

Also, Smudge started me on one continuing series:

March Comes in Like a Lion — Pure character drama centered around Shogi. I’ve only gotten through the initial (13-episode) season, and partway through the second (together being the first series), and am liking it quite a bit. The creator definitely gets people and animals, and the art style is nicely done in the series.

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Anime Fall 2017

by Rindis on January 9, 2018 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Anime

And this was another season where I ended up watching a lot of current series. I was out a week and a half on vacation, and then Smudge came down ill around Christmas, so I’m running a bit late on seeing the end of most shows. Nothing truly outstanding this time, though there’s a lot of good ones. As usual, this in rough order of my preference, though the bulk of it is really close together for me this time.

The Ancient Magus’ Bride — This is the big one getting a big budget, and all the push this season, and deservedly so. I’d have to say that I like the prequel OAVs better than the series, but I’m still enjoying this quite a lot.

Last Man — This has continued to be good, and really well written. The rabbit hole is still going down, and I’ve been wondering just how long this complicated prequel can go, though it’s showing signs of going for an ending.

Recovery of an MMO Junkie — It’s a small world, but I wouldn’t want to have to paint it. The members of a MMO guild are all relatively close to each other in real life but don’t realize it (which is a lot easier in Japan than in the US…). It’s a romance between the main pair, and not only did well with the MMO side, but had a good story. Also, my favorite opening of the season.

Voltron: Legendary Defender — And fourth season was short again. I’m certain they’re doing just enough episodes to get to another point where you yell ‘noooo!’ at the fact that you’ve hit the end.

Garo: Vanishing Line — This is the lastest in a series of stories all set in the same world; Smudge has seen a couple of earlier Garo series, but this is my first one. And it’s surprisingly good. The world’s a bit odd, as you have what’s obviously a successful American city as the start point, and then you go off into a mid-west and Rockies that have been abandoned to the Horrors, so it’s not actually Earth, despite a lot of US signage….

Food Wars — The season started out with a standard story, with a big public fair/contest, but then went off the rails with a hostile management takeover, which surprisingly is tying directly into the backgrounds and attitudes of some of the secondary characters. It’s been a very effective changeup.

Pokemon Sun and Moon — Continuing to be a good series. I sometimes wonder if the new style for the show is just so they can do some Tex Avery takes.

Blend S — Okay, a show about a fetish cafe shouldn’t really be my thing… but it’s hilarious. It helps that all the characters are characters away from their ‘on the job’ personas, and the chemistry between them is surprisingly good.

Kino’s Journey: The Beautiful World — With how great of a show the original series was, this was promising for a top spot in the season. However, a decent number of stories were re-cycled from the original (admittedly, it’s been so long, I only recognized one of them, but Smudge noted others), making me wonder just what’s going on. Smudge was also unhappy with Kino’s design here compared to the original, and I think I agree, though not as ardently. At any rate, it never seemed to really recapture the surreal feeling of the original for me, which it really needs to to make a world full of isolated ‘countries’ work.

Two Car — Girl’s sports anime. I didn’t really expect a lot out of it… but it was actually solidly written, and had a good overall arc as well as solid individual episodes. Probably the best ‘overlooked’ anime of the season.

Blood Blockade Battlefront & Beyond — Four-word title lotto bonus! This was a good follow-up to the original series, and maintained all the crazyness of it, while, I think, having better stories. I certainly hope that we get another season of this; though I hope they don’t feel a need to add another ‘B’ each time.

Konohana Kitan — Okay, this is cute, and fluffy, and awesomely cute. An inn between the worlds with kitsune staff. Really charming, but not necessarily very deep, so I have a hard time truly recommending it, even though I do.

Infini-T Force — Tatsunoko does a crossover fanfic of several of their properties. Somewhat surprising is the decision to do it in CG, and I felt the animation was a bit weak in places, but it held up pretty well, especially for a TV budget. The story itself was pretty good, and and Smudge especially enjoyed it, possibly because she knows the properties better than I do (I’m aware of two of the four used, but have never seen them). The last couple minutes sets up for the movie sequel, which hopefully I’ll get a chance to see too.

Elegant Yokai Apartment Life —The current season of this has been interesting, with a fair amount of focus on Inaba finding his place in the world, and a decent amount of moralizing on the various ills of today’s youth.

Black Clover — The real big shonen push of the season was extremely underwhelming, and I was more than ready to drop it after a couple episodes. However, I did end up sticking with it, and the writing has gotten a lot better. Yelling as a substitute for characterization is wearing, but as long as it doesn’t draw out plotlines (ha!) it’s good.

Code: Realize — League of Extraordinary Bishies. The general ideas here were good, but poorly handled. Poorly-done steampunk (just stick a random gear on it!), with period literary characters… that are way off concept. If it was done on purpose, it doesn’t show, and just looks like the creator stuck known names on characters ‘because’, since nothing matches but the general role, and everything else is wildly off.

Sengoku Night Blood — Okay… alternate world that name-drops all sorts of Warring States people, but they’re pretty-boy vampires and werewolves. And a modern-day girl gets dropped into this. The plot is all over the place, and while there’s hints of an overall situation behind the scenes, what’s presented is fairly directionless.

I managed to find time to see a couple of older things this season:

Girls und Panzer: The Real Anzio Battle! — The ‘missing episode’ of the series, it actually features the series opening and closing. I have some problems with the main fight as several tanks probably really should have thrown tracks. But it was well done, and there’s some good bridging with the surrounding episodes in the series as well as a good overall story.

Girls und Panzer der Film — Finally got to see the (first!) Girls und Panzer movie recently. Definitely meant for the fans, as they don’t give a lot of re-introduction to Sensha-do, but the setup is fairly solid. The school isn’t as saved as it seemed from the series, and gets closed down, with the solution being more tanks! Or at least a Tankery fight against impossible odds, with even wilder vehicles than the Maus, a 1941 reference… needless to say, it’s packed, and probably could have used a few more minutes even when you know what’s going on.

Patema Inverted — Okay, playing around with the camera angles to drive home the opposite gravity problems felt heavy-handed at first, but does work, and I came out of the movie with a couple, ‘no you’ll fall!’ moments. As with a lot of movies with a bit of gimmick, there was an extra layer of twists, and I managed to spot a couple of them a bit before the big reveal. Solid writing, and I’d like to see more. Recommended.

Tokyo Godfathers — Smudge has been wanting the rest of us to see this as a Christmas movie, and managed to round us all up this year. Another really solid movie, that manages to present a sympathetic, but not romanticized, look at homeless people in Tokyo.

Fairy Tail — VRV doesn’t have the ‘hole’ in the series that is a problem with the Funimation streaming service, so I finally saw the rest of this. Tartaros Chapter was in many ways about what I expected… too big, too drawn out, and too ‘the stakes must be higher!’ to be a really good story. Not bad, but overwrought. Fairy Tale Zero was a good prequel story that I enjoyed a lot more.

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Anime Summer 2017

by Rindis on October 23, 2017 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Anime

I went into this season thinking there wouldn’t much I’d watch. But after rejecting one or two shows, and then nearly rejecting two more, the list really filled out, and the viewing schedule’s been very full for the last three months.

Little Witch Academia — So, Netflix finally got this over here. My coworker AJ and I are a bit concerned that by that point they released it, all the hype was over. But, as I expected from the short and OAV, the series was very good, and they came up with a good full-season story arc. It… gets a bit odd towards the end, and the last third rates a “Trigger warning” for going off into their tropes unexpectedly.

Last Man — A French production that’s just coming over here on VRV, it’s apparently the prequel to a graphic novel series (with the same name) that I’m going to have to look up. The characters are all great, and the writing is extremely tight and snappy. A real joy to watch, and very highly recommended.

My Hero Academia — Mostly actual ‘superheroing’ this season, with a big, well-handled fight that also is leading to further plots, and shows the aftereffects of the previous season. The fact that all the major arcs are having an impact on the series as a whole really helps keep this one together. I still can’t help but be concerned that it’ll dissolve into the usual Marvel soap-opera mess of unresolved plotlines in the long run, but so far, so good.

Restaurant to Another World — The foodie show of the season. It maintains a manga translation format of two stories per episode, but was very sweetly done. A (Japanese) Western Cuisine restaurant is mysteriously connected to a fantasy world every “Day of Satur”, and the stories are all about the patrons who come through the door—and the delicious food they eat. There’s an interesting mix of stories, like the one about the lizardman tribe picking their champion to visit the restaurant done as something of a documentary.

Knight’s and Magic — Apparently this is based off a series of stories on the web (i.e., fanficish). And I assume that’s why we have the Engrish title (which they really should have cleaned up). Gundam-loving otaku dies and is reborn in a fantasy world where magical giant robots are used to fight demon beasts (with spillover into regular wars). Horrible, horrible premise that should be a mess of a series. But it works, and it’s actually a very good series. There’s some problems (especially later) with things coming too easily and working right the first time, but that’s not entirely true, and overall the writing is pretty good.

Voltron: Legendary Defender — With only seven episodes, one has to wonder just what happened with season three. Still, the writing is very good, and Prince Lotar is being a very competent villain (as opposed to the goofball of the original).

The Ancient Magus’ Bride — This has been a very charming OAV series, in which the third one just came out. It’s a prequel to the main story, and apparently that’s about to start in a regular anime series, which I’ll be more than happy to watch after this.

18if — This was a strange one. Apparently, most episodes were farmed out to different studios, and the art styles can be very different. Which works, since almost everything is happening in various dream worlds. From the start, its obvious that there should be an overarching plot as while the main character is helping various ‘witches’ who are girls effectively stuck in comas, he isn’t ever awake either, and there’s no explanation as to why he’s stuck in the dream world. However, this doesn’t get any real acknowledgement at all until the final four episodes, when it’s suddenly time to tie everything off. Other than that problem, it’s a good series worth watching, and I really appreciate that the end involves more discussion than fighting.

Elegant Yokai Apartment Life — Standard Japanese contemporary fantasy: young man stumbles into the world of spirits and the occult. In this case, after the dorm for the high school he was about to attend burns down, Yushi ends up at an apartment were most of the tenants are in the spirit world. It manages to be be very charming (and the building itself is beautiful), with a large cast, and the main character grows nicely, and goes through different struggles, both internal and external. It seems to be continuing straight into a second season, which I’m happy to see.

Katsugeki/Touken Ranbu — Heard about the recent genre of anthropomorphizing just about anything (like warships) as young girls? I understand I’m not missing anything by skipping it. This, however, is anthropomorphizing famous Japanese swords as pretty-boys. I was pretty much giving up on this series at first, as it was just a bunch of fighting against enemies who didn’t have any real motivations given (though they’re nicely creepy). But, as the series goes on it turns into a ‘man [sword] vs self’ story, which gets pretty good. It turns out this is the second anime done off the Touken Ranbu browser/card game, so we’ll give the first one a try too soon, though it’s obviously very different.

Pokemon Sun & Moon — As I was expecting last time, the expanded use of secondary characters is paying off. Also, they seem to be trying to round out their depiction of Pokemon a bit, like with Litten being a stray and on-again-off-again character over several episodes before joining Ash.

Classroom of the Elite — I also call this ‘Classroom of the Elite Bust’ as all the females are a bit overendowed, though there’s not a lot of direct fanservice. Plot-wise, it’s pretty good, and very intelligent, though it has something of a Lord of the Flies vibe, which is something of a turn-off for me, despite good writing.

Chronos Ruler — Smudge and I nearly dropped this several times, but it kept turning around the writing at the last second and keeping us going. (Like one over-done over-dramatic fight that had us rolling our eyes in disgust… and then we lost it when it’s shown the ‘villain’ is really a nice boy trying so very hard to be evil, and he allies with one of the heroes because ‘that’s the most tragic backstory I’ve ever heard!’) The concept with monsters that eat time, and are attracted by regret is good, but the writing keeps veering back and forth between good and bad.

Children of Ether — This was a one-shot that promises more. Worth seeing, as the characters were well done, though the plot and setting are a bit cliche without enough chance to get their own feel.

A Centaur’s Life — We nearly gave up on this one several times for excessive fanservice. It seems to be an off-branch of the recent ‘monster show’ fad, and is at least a lot less fanservicey than those have been. The excuses given for all the various types of people doesn’t really fly, but some of worldbuilding on top of that gets interesting. When they aren’t going for the cheap fanservice, there’s some really sweet stories, which get more common as it goes on, which is what kept me and Smudge on board. But it’s over, I doubt it’ll come back, and I’m fine with that.

And there’s been some watching of other things, and older series, though not a lot, thanks to the crowded schedule.

Your Name — Got to see this a few weeks ago, and it is excellent! There’s a very good reason why this is one of the highest-grossing movies of all time in Japan, and it really needs to make more of a splash here. Our copy was borrowed, which is a pity, because I’d like to re-watch a few bits, because I know you don’t catch it all the first time.

Sweetness and Lightning — This was in Smudge’s queue of ‘things to try out’ a season or two back, and we happened to see a clip that was extremely adorable. And the series as a whole lived up to that. I think this is part of an effort I vaguely remember hearing about of a Japanese cultural office funding series to promote ‘cultural’ activities (in this case cooking); certainly there’s a fair amount of practical advice on more intermediate/advanced cooking tasks in here. But they’re part of the story instead of taking the place of it, and it’s amazingly sweet.

Kokoro Connect — The series came up in connection with Your Name at one point, so we tried it out. Smudge had originally skipped it as it looked like standard high school drama. No, not quite standard. A club of the school misfits keeps getting screwed with by bored ‘Q-like’ being (starting with body swapping). I think it doesn’t entirely live up to the premise, but I did find it interesting that despite what gets said, it seems like the real point is for the club members to get over some problems.

Pokemon Advanced — The latest boxed set collection. Ash being on his own for a couple episodes was interesting, but it went back to the usual party pretty fast. May is a nice changeover in viewpoint that was echoed with Serena, Max is annoying, and Brock… is actually being allowed to be in domestic mode instead of girl-crazy mode most of the time. This is also the generation where they start spreading out the starters among the crew instead of giving them all to Ash, which I think is a good idea.

The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya — Got the boxed set on sale, and found even more annoyance than I expected. Not only is the original series shuffled into chronological order, but both seasons are shuffled into each other for chronology. So I’m stalled partway through, hoping Dave and Baron will catch up before continuing on to new episodes.

└ Tags: anime
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Anime Spring 2017

by Rindis on July 10, 2017 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Anime

This was a really good season for anime. I watched 7 new series, and liked them all. As usual, this is technically in order of preference, but the top four all tangled in a roughly co-equal ball.:

My Hero Academia — It’s hard to believe it’s been a year since the first series came out. I wasn’t too happy with the very beginning of the first series, and a giant tournament didn’t seem that appealing this time. But it actually worked out well, showcasing some real character development, and laying the groundwork for the next round of storylines.

Akashic Records of Bastard Magical Instructor — You know, if the girl’s school uniforms weren’t woven of fanservice, this might have been my favorite series of the season. That’s really the only thing holding this down. The characters all have troubles, but they round out the characters instead of being excuses for overblown emo-drama, and the writing is really smart. If you missed this (and especially if you missed this because it looked like fanservice all the way down), check this one out.

The Eccentric Family 2 — I was a bit worried that this would suffer from sequelitis as a new story after the first series, but it turned out to be very strong. While it does introduce new characters at the beginning, threads from the first story continue here, and I’d recommend watching the first series before picking this up.

WorldEnd — I’m not even going to bother with the full overblown subtitle (yeah, the one that takes up an entire screen). Bring kleenex. Another really well-done world that’s looking at a slow-grind apocalypse, focused on a love story (admittedly, while we see a decent number of those in anime, there’s only been one other I’ve been aware of recently).

Alice & Zoroku — I somewhat randomly spotted this this and said ‘let’s try it!’. I… should do that more often, it turned out to be very good. The ending wasn’t really final, but it’s quite satisfactory, and anything more would probably be an anticlimax.

Natsume’s Book of Friends 6 — I was a lot happier with the latest season of Nastume than the previous one, as it spent a lot more time on character development. Not a lot happened in the various continuing threads, but those never proceed very fast, and they were present this time.

Granblue Fantasy — At almost any other time, this would have been a pretty strong series, but this season was so good it’s the bottom of the pack. Another videogame adaptation, its weakened a bit by a rapidly growing cast, and an over reliance on a few tropes (go to place, have trouble, defeat boss monster), but the art is good, and it doesn’t feel like it’s taking itself too seriously like Zestiria did. I have a feeling we won’t see any more of this, but I’d like to be proven wrong.

I also watched a few things from the previous season or two:

Showa Genroku Rakugo Shinju — One of the nice things about anime is the occasional series that exists to show off a love for a particular subject, in this case rakugo, a traditional type of comedy native to Japan. The full series covers a period from the early ’30s to ~2016, focused on the impact of a couple of performers, and is an excellent trip.

ACCA-13: Territory Inspection Department — Supposedly this was a seinen series, but by look and feel it is oh so shojo. In either case, it’s very smartly done and stylish throughout and a great political drama (not quite in thriller territory).

The Saga of Tanya the Evil — So… ‘god’ decides to shock a bastard out of a heartless, materialist, viewpoint by getting him reborn in an alternate timeline that’s going through something of a mix of WWI and WWII in the ’20s. Smudge wasn’t sure I’d like this with good reason, as I generally don’t go for anti-hero stories, but this was very well done. Tanya is horrible, and what she’s fighting against isn’t any better. Even with ‘divine’ intervention, I’m not buying a lot of the technology seen in the later parts of the series, as its springing up with no antecedents or problems, and that really drags down the later parts for me, but ignoring that part, this was a really strong story.

Voltron: Legendary Defender — Finally caught to the second season of this. It continues to be very good, and got a lot more climatic than I was willing to give it credit for going in. Now I’m anxiously awaiting season three. I have to wonder what this series’ version of Prince Lotor will be like….

Akiba’s Trip — Um, yeah. If you’ve heard anything about the pervy/parody game, this is about what it says on the tin. But, it’s really an Excel Saga-style parody series, tackling a different fan subject each episode. The quality of the humor went slowly downhill over the series, but at least the overall story stayed to help make up for it. Someone was really getting something off his chest for episode 2. If you’ve looked at this and thought ‘could be good, could be awful’, its on the ‘good’ side.

And between other things, I’ve gotten around to re-watching Mushishi and Girls und Panzer; I consider both of them in the top five of the last several years (or longer), and I really need to see them more often, I’d certainly forgotten too much of Mushishi.

And finally, some more Pokemon:

Sun and Moon — This has finally started updating on the Pokemon Channel, so I’ve only seen a few episodes. But, the new style has been good, and the larger constant cast will give it a nice dynamic if they start leveraging it more. (I really liked the middle part of X and Y where all the secondary characters were there most of the time.)

Master Quest — After a long delay getting the set from Amazon, we’re about a third of the way through the last section of second generation. It’s the usual mix, with some really clunky episodes, but we still giggle over “Pudgy Pidgey Island”.

└ Tags: anime
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