Initial D Fifth Stage
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The AAAPodcast does an MST3K style main topic on one of the most horrible, most ridiculous, most dangerous (?) anime of all time: The Most Dangerous Geist! Trust us this is not one you want to miss! Followed by some more reviews to wrap up the previous season.
Reviews: Red Data Girl and Initial D Fifth Stage
Reviews: Furyou Ni Hamerarete
The addicts went to the opening night showing of Miyazaki’s new film Kaze Tachinu, or in English, The Wind is Rising. In honor of seeing this film they will put all previous Ghibli films in the ultimate ranked list from best to worst – in their critical opinions.
Title | Mitsugi | Chiaki | Kram | Aggregate |
Grave of the Fireflies | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1.33 |
Princess Mononoke | 2 | 7 | 1 | 3.33 |
My Neighbor the Yamadas | 4 | 3 | 5 | 4.00 |
Kiki’s Delivery Service | 7 | 2 | 4 | 4.33 |
Porco Rosso | 8 | 4 | 3 | 5.00 |
Spirited Away | 5 | 5 | 6 | 5.33 |
Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind | 3 | 9 | 8 | 6.67 |
My Neighbor Totoro | 6 | 6 | 9 | 7.00 |
Castle of Cagliostro | 11 | 10 | 7 | 9.33 |
The Borrow’s Arrietty | 12 | 8 | 11 | 10.33 |
Whisper of the Heart | 9 | 14 | 10 | 11.00 |
Pom Poko | 10 | 13 | 12 | 11.67 |
Kaze Tachinu | 13 | 14 | 13 | 13.33 |
The Cat Returns | 17 | 11 | 13 | 13.67 |
Castle in the Sky | 13 | 15 | 14 | 14.00 |
Howl’s Moving Castle | 14 | 12 | 16 | 14.00 |
Only Yesterday | 15 | 15 | 15.00 | |
Ponyo | 16 | 16 | 17 | 16.33 |
From up on Poppy Hill | 18 | 18.00 | ||
Tales of Earthsea | 19 | 19 | 19.00 | |
Ocean Waves | 18 | 20 | 19.00 |
Mitsugi:
Grave of the Fireflies
Princess Mononoke
Nausicaa (before the studio’s founding but still Miyazaki)
My Neighbor the Yamadas
Spirited Away
My Neighbor Totoro
Kiki’s Delivery Service
Porco Rosso
Whisper of the Heart
Pom Poko
Castle of Cagliostro
Karigurashi no Arrietty
Castle in the Sky
Howl’s Moving Castle
Only Yesterday
Kaze Tachinu
Ponyo
The Cat Returns
Ocean Waves
Tales from Earthsea
Chiaki’s list:
Films I haven’t seen:
My list:
Grave of the Fireflies
Kiki’s Delivery Service
My Neighbors the Yamadas
Porco Rosso
Spirited Away
My Neighbor Totoro
Princess Mononoke
The Secret World of Arrietty
Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind
Lupin the Third: The Castle of Cagliostro
The Cat Returns
Howl’s Moving Castle
Pom Poko
Kaze Tachinu
Whisper of the Heart
Castle in the Sky
Ponyo
Kram:
Princess Mononoke
Grave of the Fireflies
Porco Rosso
Kiki’s Delivery Service
My Neighbors the Yamadas
Spirited Away
Castle of Cagliostro
Nausicaa
Totoro
Whisper of the heart
arrietty
Pom Poko
Kaze Tachinu
Cat returns
howl’s moving castle
ponyo
from up on poppy hill
tales from earthsea
Reviews: Kaze Tachinu
Alternate Titles:
The Wind is Rising
The Wind Rises
Plot:
An autobiographical film about the life of Jiro Horikoshi, the man responsible for the design and creation of the famous Japanese World War II Zero Fighter aircraft. Inspired by the aesthetics of design and the freedom of flying, Jiro pursues a life dedicated to the creation of a beautiful aircraft. The film covers the passage of time from Jiro’s childhood, filled with dreams of engineering, to adulthood as he creates an elegant, flight worthy plane that eventually is used for something quite different than he expected, war.
Director:
Hayao Miyazaki
Studio:
Ghibli
Review:
by Dustin Kramer
Art is personal. Creative self-expression is, by its very nature, a process of externalizing the internal. Many of your favorite movies, music records, and books were labors of love. But is there a point at which one’s art can become too personal? Can dedication and focus breed myopia? In examining Hayao Miyazaki’s latest film, I may have found the answer.
The Wind Rises tells a fictionalized account of the life of Jiro Horikoshi, the man responsible for designing Japan’s infamous Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighter airplane. The aircraft is known for its use during World War II, particularly in the attack on Pearl Harbor and in kamikaze missions. We begin with Jiro as a child in the early 20th century dreaming of flying machines and idolizing seminal figures in the then-young field of aeronautical engineering. Since poor sight will keep the young man from flying an airplane of his own, he attends university in the hopes of building them instead. Each act is ushered in with a scene featuring a strong gust of wind — a nice bit of theming with the title. The first reel contains some of the best pacing in Studio Ghibli’s entire oeuvre. After that, the story throws on the brakes and crawls through a slight, clichéd recount of the man’s endeavors up to just before the notorious event in Hawaii that brought the United States into the second World War.
The movie is, as expected, an impressive visual outing by the legendary Studio Ghibli. The candy-coated look that has defined Miyazaki’s work since 2001′s Spirited Away is on full display here. The interpretation of the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923, in which the ground and everything upon it moves like violent ocean waves, is probably the most impressive scene in the picture from an animation perspective. In a departure from Miyazaki’s usual fare, there are no cute, strange, or ugly creatures to break up the monotony of animated human beings, but the character designs are attractive and diverse enough to keep things interesting aesthetically.
With the knowledge that Miyazaki is somewhat of an aviation fanatic (he has said as much himself), it’s surprising how decidedly no-frills the flying sequences are. The two main types of flying scenes are test flights of Horikoshi’s designs and dream sequences where he has conversations with famed aeronautical engineer Gianni Caproni. What we get in the test flight sequences are a lot of long wide shots, as though the audience is watching from the ground. The dreams on the other hand are mostly medium shots, two-shots, and close ups that don’t really show off the aircraft that the characters are riding. The two most impressive of these scenes is a dream sequence that opens the flick and, somewhat ironically, a scene involving paper airplanes, but nothing quite as exhilarating is ever revisited. We’ve seen much better flying sequences from the animator in years past, such as in Porco Rosso, Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind, and Castle in the Sky.
Joe Hisaishi has made a career for himself as a solo artist who happens to score Ghibli films and in doing so has composed some of the greatest scores of all time. The orchestrated soundtrack to this movie is simple in its melodies and assimilates into the emotional atmosphere of every scene. The vocal theme song is lovely but feels like it came out of a decade about halfway between the present and when the movie is set.
An astute ear will notice something interesting that has been done with the foley effects. They are, by and large, created with human voices. Things like the mechanical locomotion of a train and the roaring ground during the aforementioned earthquake are given a special kind of vitality that I don’t think I’ve ever experienced in a motion picture before.
As Jiro dreams and draws and test flies his creations, we learn little more about the man behind the machine than we did at the title card. Horikoshi is reserved and zealous; this much is clear. A scene early on with his younger sister reveals that he is perhaps neglectful of his family in service of his aspirations. A poignant parallel can be drawn here to Miyazaki, who has been accused of allowing his work to detract from other aspects of his life. The animator even has Jiro smoke Cherry cigarettes, his own brand of choice. The scene with his sister is reflected later when she comes to visit Horikoshi as an adult and complains about his familial inattention yet again. Both scenes outline this character flaw in the engineer but are played for laughs as though ‘little sister nags older brother because that’s what little sisters do.’ The filmmaker clearly admires and relates with his subject, but an abundance of adulation and a lack of honest self-appraisal weaken the core of his most personal work to date.
After a couple of aeronautic failures and an exodus to pre-war Germany, our hero finds love. The adroit development of Horikoshi and Naoko Satomi’s fictitious relationship is managed over just a couple of scenes, including one mentioned earlier featuring paper airplanes. This portion of the narrative is the most captivating of the picture and is a truly touching depiction of young love. However, the whole thing takes a not-so-surprising turn for the hackneyed when Naoko confesses that she has tuberculosis. I suppose the void of dramatic tension elsewhere in the story forced Hayao’s hand, and out popped this done-to-death (pun intended) contrivance. His devotion to his sickly wife plays in contrast to earlier scenes with his younger sister, but because those scenes never cemented the necessary character flaw, the turnaround doesn’t feel like much of a redemption.
The standout performance belongs to Miori Takimoto, who provides the voice for Naoko Satomi. Despite the artifice of the character’s illness, Takimoto imbues the young woman with a delicate strength that is characteristic of a victim of terminal illness. Hideaki Anno’s efforts as Horikoshi aren’t quite so rewarding. Neon Genesis Evangelion‘s director-turned-voice-actor delivers what one might expect of a non-performer. Anno is wooden and one-note. However, he has a weathered quality to his voice that manages to bring something to the character, although it doesn’t make up for the actor’s shortcomings.
It is no secret that the product of Jiro Hirokoshi’s enterprise became responsible for much death and destruction in the years following the events of the film. The irony of his dream to “create something beautiful” being perverted should be the nucleus of this story’s themes. But in the final dream sequence — of which there are several — the horrors of the forthcoming war are swept under the rug in way that absolves Jiro’s guilt and allows him to be proud of what he has accomplished.
Returning to my questions at the outset of this piece, I think The Wind Risesis a perfect example of an artist getting too close to his or her art. The real irony is that the subject suffers from the same affliction as the storyteller. Both are too nearsighted to see beyond their affection for their craft. Horikoshi is as blind to what lies in store for his beautiful creations as Miyazaki is to the very thing that makes this story compelling. Maybe the filmmaker sees too much of himself in the engineer but isn’t prepared to admit his own deficiencies enough to paint a realistic portrait of this imperfect man. In the end, this latest effort by Studio Ghibli lacks the teeth that it needs to tell the tale it should be telling. What we get instead is a war film without war and a love story with a little too much Love Story. And perhaps worst of all, it doesn’t have anything to say.
Where to start with this one… So much to say so I suppose it’s best to just stick to the format…
Alternate Title:
Flowers of Evil
Plot:
The story centers around Takao Kasuga, a book-worm and generally quiet boy with his small circle of friends and normal social problems that come with shyness surrounding a girl in his class – Nanako Saeki – that he likes. Likes, may be a little bit of a general term. He considers her his muse, his angel, perfection embodied, which likely doesn’t help with crippling shyness when it comes to actually talking to her. One day he forgets his book in the classroom and goes back to get it and sees Saeki’s gym bag on the floor. Despite knowing that he shouldn’t do it, he ends up being compelled to touch and look inside the bag, holding Saeki’s gym clothes. After being startled by a noise he runs out of the room in a mad dash, gym clothes in hand.
The following day the class is a turmoil of whispers and frantic worries about the new “pervert” and “crazy man” who is stealing gym clothes and Kasuga shrinks deeper into his chair. His last shred of hope is crushed when the class outcast, the weird girl, and delinquent Sawa Nakamura confronts him telling him that she knows what he is, a true pervert, and that she knows about the stolen gym clothes.
Sawa and Kasuga enter into a, blackmail enforced, “contract.” She explains she wanted to see a true deviant in this boring town and that she will break down his walls to make him flourish as one.
Source:
Aku no Hana is based off an original manga that started running in 2009. It currently has 8 volumes and is unfinished. It was written by Shouzou Oshimi. Oshimi did the story and art for the manga Boku wa Mari no Naka and Drifting Net Cafe. This anime is currently the only other adaptation for Aku no Hana.
Director:
The director Hiroshi Nagahama has a few other substantial credits to his name. Including work on Kimi ni Todoke, Revolutionary Girl Utena: the Movie, School Rumble, Now and Then Here and There, and Mushi-Shi. However, all his work previously excluding Mushi-Shi has been working storyboard. Mushi-Shi was his first directorial credit.
Studio:
The anime was produced by studio Zexcs who have produced a huge list of titles including, My-HiME, Mushi-shi, Sister Princess, Umi Monogatari, and a fair bit of other things.
Music:
The music is, intentionally as far as I can tell, sparse throughout the show. What music is there is incredibly basic and is repeated. It completely works for the feeling of the show and images, however it is not something that will be winning any awards for its music. The ending theme is also nearly downright bad IMHO, but again, it’s nails-on-chalkboard esque feeling seems to fit every episode and that overall unnerving feeling the show gives.
Animation:
The animation must be mentioned. Zexcs used an animation technique called rotoscoping. This is a process where the animation is drawn over frame by frame over live action footage.
As a result the characters have a very natural movement and even subtle movements of lips, eyes, hands, and hair is captured. The world is incredibly detailed and everything has a very muted realistic tone.
However, some things are just awful, like water, and make the whole thing look really cheap.
Overall I liked the look of the rotoscoping but I’ve seen some people complain compared to the manga’s animation style. I think for the realistic feeling of the show it works but it definitely has aspects that will make you hate it.
Review:
Finally, we’re finally here… If I were to sum up this anime in a singular line it would be, a psychological train wreck that you can’t look away from.
The show starts out to center around the gym clothes but that is only for the first 3-4 episodes that they are the focal point. The focus eventually shifts to Nakamura and Kasuga and his rapidly failing mental state as a result of her handiwork. This show is entirely focused on the interpersonal relationships between the characters and psychological stability is the central point.
The only character who I can say is crazy from the onset is Nakamura. However, Kasuga, and even Saeki has their own share of problems that are only aggravated by their proximity and manipulations of Nakamura. Kasuga’s insecurities and crippling shyness is made worse by his developing dependence on Nakamura. Even Saeki’s problems that were previously unseen begin to come out, such as a need for validation.
Overall the pacing of the show is very slow, every episode accomplishes something. But it works up to two main climaxes, one at the end, and one in the middle at episode 7. The one at episode 7 is particularly significant as it shows Kasuga’s main break in his mental state. However, the one at the end – as it should be – is the most significant because it shows where the show will go in the future.
Speaking of the ending, it leaves much to be desired in that it has a minor conclusion/wrap-up of this season but it literally does a “part one of two” splash page. And, after being compelled to watch the manga, the show is about to really start. The entire first episode was simply a set up for where the characters are come the second season.
But, the second season may never come! Which this combined with the anime overall slowness makes it unworthy of a super high score, despite having some things really, really well done.
A pleasurably painful show to watch.
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Madhouse Studios
Dir. Akitoshi Yokoyama (worked on lots, PK is first head director gig)
Mus. Mina Kubota (Aria franchise, Kaleido Star, A Letter to Momo)
When Kazuya Maeda received a digital single reflex lens camera from his father, he was just sure the hand-me-down would irrevocably change his life. And boy, was he right! With a fresh membership to his high school’s photography club and a newfound love for the art form, Maeda gets closer to his female classmates by taking photos of them.
Photo Kano, based on the PlayStation Portable dating sim of the same name, gives us one of those is-it-or-isn’t-it-a-harem-show shows in the vein of Amagami SS that manages to do some things right without stepping into too many narrative potholes along the way. Our hero, Maeda, spends each of the series’s 13 episodes with a different girl, developing their individual relationships from ground zero to a full-blown mutual confession of love within the half-hour run time. The constant rotation of characters and the breakneck progression of each relationship manages to keep things interesting. I can’t say I ever got bored, which surprises the hell out of me.
Narratively, I have a few bones to pick. The show certainly implies that this story takes place mostly over the course of one school year, but the lack of perceivable time passage like the changing of seasons makes me assume that the entire show takes place over just the first semester or so. Keeping this in mind, the fact that Maeda dates almost 10 girls in this time implies some things about the character that I don’t think the show intends to say. He acts likes a playboy, but he doesn’t “act” like a playboy if you know what I mean. The girls don’t ever acknowledge that he has been courting all of them simultaneously or at least back-to-back — again, the show isn’t clear on the timeline. We learn through some dialogue that he dates one of the characters for three months, so I don’t fucking know.
The same inconsistency issue goes for his decision to join the photography club as apposed to the rival photo club. While the photo club is dedicated to beautiful landscape photography, the club of Maeda’s choice shamelessly pursues surreptitiously acquired risqué photos of female classmates. But despite this, the show never paints Maeda as a creep — just a nice guy cypher for its target demo.
Photo Kano says some fairly despicable things about female body image issues and relationships in general, including but not limited to a female character swearing to change so a male character will like them better. I took issue with an episode where Maeda blackmails a girl into letting him take some photos of her in a bathing suit, but he ended up getting blackmailed with some of his misplaced porno mags later in the series so I think it more or less balanced itself out.
The audience knows the character has a little sister from very early in the series, but as the season draws to a close, you realize that you haven’t seen his adorable sibling in quite a while. Now, the weathered cynic like me knows that when you get into something like this, you have to be ready for some kind of disgusting incest storyline clearly written by and for someone with no siblings. Watching episode 12 of 13, I was naively hopeful that I had dodged a sister-kissing bullet with Photo Kano. I was wrong. Episode 13 not only goes to the all the trouble of justifying the taboo with an awkward she’s-actually-his-stepsister-flashback, but it firmly cements Maeda’s sibling as his final choice for a girlfriend or sexual parter or whatever humans do with each other.
It isn’t a bad looking show. I guess it can’t be when its core offering as a piece of entertainment art is aesthetically pleasing girls. That said, it doesn’t have to worry about animating complex action sequences. The character designs are certainly attractive, but they save a corner of the budget for some CGI flourishes that aren’t quite out-of-place enough to make me physically ill. The effects shots in question occur whenever Maeda is taking photos of one of his girlfriends. Maeda sees the perfect shot and breathlessly gasps, “Shutter Chance!” The camera then pans around the now three-dimensionally rendered anime girl moving in slow-motion. Without ever playing the game that provided the source material or doing any kind of time-consuming research, I could almost guarantee this “Shutter Chance” thing was lifted right out of the PSP game. I’m going to go ahead and give a blanket recommendation of this show to all the fans of the game based on that alone.
My favorite thing about the show was the music. It was mostly pretty generic. At it’s worst you could call it a bit Animal Crossing-y, but at it’s best it was occasionally really great and reminded me of some of the electronic elements found in the Final Fantasy X and XIII soundtracks and the music of Owl City.
It’s no surprise that this isn’t my kind of show, but when it’s all said and done what the show attempts to do it manages to do pretty well.
2.5 beach episodes out of 5.
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Anime can have short, medium, or excessively long titles. But no matter which variety of length it seems like the anime can end up being something more, or far less, than its title implies. We re-assign humorous titles to shows that are what WE think the show should have been called.
Real Title | Our Title |
Gankutsuou: The Count of Monte Cristo | What vomit looks like on LSD after someone ate a textile shop |
Revolutionary Girl Utena | Sexual Orientation Confusion: the Animation, the extended cracked out edition |
Highschool of the Dead | Tits and Zombies |
5 Centimeters Per Second | Letting past loves ruin happiness now |
The Girl Who Lept Through Time | The worst use of time travel powers in existence |
Gurren Lagann | Not a Care to Be had After Episode 12 |
Howl’s Moving Castle | I’m dating a whiny man who lives in a house with legs |
The Disappearance of Haruhi Suzumiya | You can (not) finish, awake |
NANA | The Case for Lesbianism |
Kimi ni Todoke | A documentary in what you should not do to get a relationship (You can not date)(the count) |
Dragon Ball Z | Filler Ball Z (Zinn1) |
Amagami SS | Which of these bitches do I want to be my woman? |
Big Windup! | Sexual tension – I pitch and you catch |
Blue Gender | Attack of the vagina monsters! |
Boogiepop Phantom | What the hell is this anime about? |
Ponyo | Sushi anyone? |
Code Geass | Genius interrupted by Suzaku…..and filler |
Elfen Lied | A horror, comedy, sci-fi, drama with a story full of action, psychology, ecchi, and romance about nothing. |
Excel Saga | Girl on amphetamines screams a lot |
Fantastic children | Fantastically boring…until episode 9 |
.hack series | talking the animation (the count) |
GAnkutsuou | the legend of poor taste in clothing (the count) |
The Severing Crime Edge | Sensual Haircuts |
Redline | Madhouse Jizzes on Your Face |
Soul Eater | Nightmare Before Christmas: The Anime |
Durarara! | Ikebukuro is a weird place. |
Tokyo Godfathers | Three vagrants and a baby. |
Perfect Blue | This fake animated rape scene is uncomfortably real. |
Reviews: Aku no Hana and Photo Kano