Hourou Musuko
Alternate Title: Wandering Son
[starrater]
Alternate Title: Wandering Son
[starrater]
[starrater]
Alternate Titles:
Sanju-sai no houken taiiku
Sanjuu-sai no hoken taiiku
A Thirty-Year Old’s Health and Physical Education
[starrater]
Studio: TMS Entertainment (Lupin III, Detective Conan, Baccano, Panda! Go, Panda!)
Dir. Hirofumi Ogura (Gintama, Inuyasha, Black Butler II, Samurai 7)
-BGR is his first head director gig
Wri. Tatsuto Higuchi + 3 others (AKB0048 Next Stage, Inazuma Eleven, Phi-Brain)
-Wrote six of twelve episodes, the most of the four writers
Music: Hiroshi Takaki (AKB0048, AKB0048 next stage, Dragon Ball: Episode of Bardock [sequel to Bardock – Father of Goku])
SYNOPSIS
Taking place in Kyoto during the late 1800s, Bakumatsu Gijinden Roman tells the story of Manjiro, an nigh impoverished ne’er-do-well gambler who lives with his younger sister in her decorative chopsticks shop. But when night falls, he becomes the masked superhero Roman, an analogue of Robin Hood, taking and returning things that were unrightfully stolen from the lowly citizens of Edo-period Japan.
REVIEW
It’s so nice to see Monkey Punch’s work on the screen again. There’s so much personality conveyed in these character’s faces and body designs that it’s impossible to deny the artist’s influence on the audience’s connection to them. It’s a shame the animation couldn’t live up to the fantastic design. This show is ugly. Like, embarrassingly ugly. TMS Entertainment cut every conceivable corner to get this thing produced, saving a little scratch for some slightly nicer sequences toward the end of the season.
The characters aren’t anything we haven’t seen before. Besides the goofball hero Manjiro, there’s his cute little sister, a busty prostitute, a pervy old inventor, and a stoic badass. There’s also a foreign mad scientist of sorts who I believe is supposed to be German. He speaks Japanese very strangely and incorrectly writes the Japanese characters on the sign outside his clinic. He’s a pretty fun character, but I’m not sure if I should be offended by his depiction or not. He also slaps a woman in the last episode for basically no reason, and the show plays it for laughs. The main villain turns out to be a defected American Civil War general who has gone completely bonkers, wears an eye patch, and constantly sings “My Old Kentucky Home” in a crippling Japanese accent (all due respect to the voice actor; the poor guy is really doing his best). With the aforementioned exceptions, all the voice actors bring something nice to the table, especially Kazuya Nakai with Manjiro, a performer probably best known for his work on One Piece as Roronoa Zoro.
The story is light and fun, but not surprisingly it’s all a little formulaic. The series spends about half its runtime giving you very little backstory and showing you how Manjiro and his crew of “get-backers” operate in largely episodic installments. The last half is a combination info-dumpy conversations, flashbacks, and some pretty cool and coherent action scenes that build up the larger conflict.
The music is great. The bygone big band style reminds one of the great Yuji Ouno and his incredible work on Lupin the 3rd. Some flourishes of traditional Japanese instruments make it its own, but it’s the swing music of Monkey Punch’s flagship franchise that truly sells it.
If the music were the only anachronistic thing about the show, I’d be a lot happier with it, but the show’s pervasive goofiness gets the best of it at times. The show starts dipping into genres it has no business being in and clearly has no idea how to handle them with any sort of finesse. I can say with confidence that this is the first historical fiction I’ve ever seen with super sentai rangers, fusing mech suits, zombies, a giant laser cannon, and a one-eyed, gun-armed cyborg mounted on a mini-tank at the waist. Some of this stuff can be fun while watching it unfold, but there is no rhyme or reason for its existence.
The show took a little while to get off the ground. It wasn’t until the last five or six episodes that I started enjoying it. It doesn’t have very much to say beyond the rote good vs. evil, dealing with regret, and a little bit of family-doesn’t-always-mean-blood, but what it does it does pretty well.
3 Lupins out of 5.
[starrater]
Alternate Titles: My Sister is an Osaka Mama
Review: This anime was, I would claim, a key addition to the ever-growing collection of 3-minute anime. Running at 12 episodes it added something to that genre that a lot of it’s predecessors hadn’t successfully done before: some knowledge. The anime focuses around a brother and his quirky sister, due to family situations they have been separated most of their lives. He lived in the Kanto region of Japan while his sister lived in the Kansai region, specifically Osaka. Now that they are back together he is discovering the differences between them their distance has caused.
Production-wise this anime is nothing to speak of, in fact it’s extremely sub-par. It looks like a college animation student’s flash product at best with awkward jerky movements and basic shading and styling at best. But, since you’re only watching the show in little 3 minute episode chunks and it’s a comedy-culture based show I find it more forgivable. The art is simply the medium for the jokes, and the jokes don’t fall flat.
For anyone who knows anything about Japanese culture this show will really resonate. It’s a long standing joke and friendly feud between these two regions of Japan and this show illustrates the differences in a hilarious fashion. Each episode has an overarching theme such as “shopping” or “sports” then in this theme some antics happen that normally illustrate 2-3 cultural differences in funny ways. They are punctuated with a note that blatantly says the difference so it’s impossible to miss – for those of you taking notes. Then, the episode ends with a cute little song sung by the main girl character summing up the points of the episode.
Even if you’re not knowledgeable in Japanese culture the show is very light and funny and you could still enjoy it if you have an interest in Japanese culture. In fact, it may be enlightening for someone who is trying to get into Japanese culture as these differences are something rarely seen by Westerners and this show illustrates them perfectly in an actually amusing way. But, if you’re not, then this show will likely offer little and less to you.
In sum, the show is not a long time commitment and as an anime fan it’s worth knowing these fun cultural notes that are illustrated in an enlightening but funny manner.
[starrater]
Alternate Titles: Kokuriko Zaka Kara
Kokuriko Zaka Kara
Studio Ghibli
Dir. Goro Miyazaki
Wri. Hayao Miyazaki, Keiko Niwa
Music Satoshi Takebe
Synopsis:
Umi Matsuzaki is a high school girl living in the Coquelicot Manor, a boarding house in Japan in the 1960s. She meets Shun Kazama and they decide to clean up the school’s clubhouse: Quartier Latin. But, a local businessman and chairman of the local high school Tokumaru decides to demolish the building and Umi and Shun launch into an effort to get him to reconsider.
Pros:
– Animation is beautiful. The interiors feel truly lived in. The kitchen of Coquelicot Manor and the Latin Quarter clubhouse are especially impressive. The exteriors are lush and warm. Very precise and detailed. Par for the course for Ghibli.
– Performances are subtle and nuanced. Actors give emotional resonance to their animated avatars.
– Music is mostly beautiful appropriate, but Joe Hisaishi is missed.
– Story is cute, if a little slight and predictable.
Cons:
– Nothing we haven’t seen before, story-wise. One plot point in particular feels a little too soap-opera-y.
– There are a few strange music choices that don’t feel emotionally compatible to the scenario.
– Feels a little too sentimental and
nostalgic. Like Makoto Shinkai by way of Hayao Miyazaki, two great tastes that don’t taste terribly good together.
– It’s biggest crime is that it’s kind of boring. It has the slice-of-life quality that Isao Takahata’s films typically bring to Studio Ghibli’s body of work, but isn’t nearly as entertaining as a Takahata film.
Rating: 3 signal flags out of 5.
[starrater]
Hey there, hope your having a great day. So this is a topic I wanted to touch on for while now, but I put it off in favor of other things to write about. However, recently something happened that made me need to rush out and write about how being an anime\video game fan can affect your relationships. I’m going to address this in general and add my own personal experiences. So let’s get into it.
Its probably pretty likely that most anime fans have a story of someone they know questioning their maturity because that person thinks watching and enjoying anime is only for children. Its a narrow minded view and it really annoys me that people I know have that view about something I really enjoy. Similarly, with video games some people take the view that if you play video games your a child in an adult’s body. I would always hear from my mother that games are a waste of time and that I needed to grow up, but I just told her it was something I enjoyed and would continue to do so. There is always times in anyone’s life when someone questions one of their passions because that person cannot do it as good as you or just because that person thinks its worthless. You just have to have the backbone and confidence to tell them that they are mistaken.
Now, I want to get into the romantic side of relationships and the effect being an anime of video game fan can potential have on it. When it comes to my personal experience with dating and being an anime\video game fan, its mostly positive. I do have some horror stories to share with you about some close minded women I had the displeasure of coming across. Since, coming to South Korea I have quite bit of experience dating Korean women, of which the majority has been good. That said, I have two stories of women that didn’t like the fact I played video games. The first one didn’t last long because during our first chat on the website we met on she asked what were my hobbies and I listed them all along the fact I play video games, and she basically flipped out told I me was a child and then she left the chat. The other story lasted a bit longer as I dated this women for about two months. She was actually half Japanese and Korean, she was fine with me being an anime fan. However, when it came up I was a gamer was when she decided she didn’t want to be together anymore, and I never got a straight answer as too why she dislikes video games. This raises a question in my mind; when is best or right time to tell a women\man that you are an anime\video fan? Some people might say to not mention it, but its eventually going to come up, so I would recommend telling the other person as soon as possible because you know almost from the start if that person will cool with your hobby or not. Honest is also important in an relationship and I’m sure the other person will appreciate it.
Well that’s all for now,
Devil_Survivor
[starrater]
[starrater]
[starrater]