Freezing
[starrater]
[starrater]
Alternate Titles: None
Original Japanese Release Date: Apr 2011
Episode Length/Run-time: 12 Episodes
Summary:
Professor X notices that he can no longer sense mutants from a specific region of Japan. Concerned, he groups the X-Men together and sends them to investigate. Another mutant Hisako joins the team and they begin to discover there’s more than they suspected to the mystery in Japan.
Review:
X-Men started out great, and really just began to loose it as the series went on.
What started out as interesting, well animated, and engaging fight scenes began to loose their power later on in the series. It felt like the creativity in the battles began to lack culminating in a lackluster conclusion and a “final battle” that just lost it.
The plot went much the same way. The characters started out really engaging, Wolverine and Cyclops in a tense truce, Cyclops working though his own demons, and evolving a sub-plot around professor X that was surprisingly unexpected. But this development went nowhere in the series. It’s like they laid a foundation for a mansion, began building the studs, and then completely forgot about the rest of the house. The show became about the lackluster fight scenes, Cyclops blowing things away and then sneaking in a shirt-less pose, the Japanese girl being awkward every moment on camera, Storm using ONE ATTACK, and just fighting one mutant abomination after another.
Beyond that, fans of the X-Men comics will likely find this equally insulting as there are a slew of continuity problems you think they would’ve solved with the X-Men universe. While it takes place right at the end of the Phoenix saga (yes Jean Gray is in it), she seems to be made stronger than she should be and Storm is weaker. Storm is one of the strongest! Plus, what happened to Rogue and Gambit during this time? I guess just chilling back at the academy.
Overall this anime is not AWFUL but its nothing amazing either. It sits comfortably at average but don’t expect anything more.
Review: X-Men, 8.0 out of 10 based on 1 rating
[starrater]
Alternate Titles: The Vanishment of Haruhi Suzumiya
Original Japanese Release Date: Feb 2010
Episode Length/Run-time: 163 Minutes
Summary:
Kyon wakes up one morning to find himself thrust in some alternate dimension where Haruhi and the S.O.S brigade does not seem to exist. No one seems to have any recollection of either and he struggles to figure out what is going on and what happened to the world he knows.
Review:
This movie is 110% for Haruhi fans out there. Otherwise I don’t know who would sit through the near 3 hours that is this movie. It is literally the longest anime movie ever made and I have no idea why because it does not merit it. Don’t get me wrong, the movie isn’t terrible. It has its amusing moments and the animation is glorious. It also has great monologues that you would expect from Haruhi. But the movie just gets boring. Without haruhi being, well, Haruhi there are little antics or crazy moments that made the show wonderful. The ending is also mediocre, you knew nothing would really happen, as is the way of such movies, but this ending is borderline bad. They use a complete cop-out ending and even say “we’ll resolve it later.” They tried being too technical with alternate dimensions and got burned by the spiral of multiples and so on. Overall, its not bad but I stick by the fact that if you’re not a big fan of the series be ready to be bored to tears by the end.
Review: The Disappearance of Haruhi Suzumiya , 4.0 out of 10 based on 1 rating
[starrater]
Plot: Set in 2046 (in the same world as Sword Art Online) the world has been revolutionized by neurolinkers. A technology which almost everyone gets at birth placed around the wearer’s neck. By linking directly to the nervous system it has connected people as computers to the world around them via cell phone networks making online games and connections highly influential to real life. Here we meet the protagonist: Haruyuki. A short, fat, overly bullied and under-ly confident middle school student who often withdraws into the digital universe due to his ability to retreat from real life problems and excel at digital games. His proficiency draws the attention of Kuroyukihime, who is a student council member and the most popular girl in school. She has chosen him for a gift, a program known as Brain Burst in which people in different areas and prefectures battle each other as Burst Linkers to gain levels, the highest -and Kuroyukihime’s goal – being level 10. However, to reach level 10 you must defeat other level 9 opponents, losing one match uninstalls the program. Haryuyuki agrees on the onset to help Kuroyukihime reach the illustrious level 10, but as he becomes more involved in the digital world of Brain Burst black and white begins to gray as people aren’t what they seem, and new enemies lurk just around the corner.
Length: 24 episodes
Original Release: April 6th 2012
Staff: As mentioned in the plot summary the story takes place in the same world as a similar, popular, series: Sword Art Online. This is because both series share the original creator Reki Kawahara. Accel World is based off a series of light novels which are currently at 13 installments and still going. Because of this a second season is, of course, entirely possible (though not absolutely necessary based on the shows ending).
The director, Masakazu Obara, only has one other major directing credit which is Mi-Hime, given the action nature of that show and a “monster of the week” flair I can see how some things translated over to the burst linker fights we saw in Accel World. Even that may be a stretch and there are thankfully not too many other similarities between the two shows.
The music was done by Hiroyuki Oshima and I actually give this man props as this is literally is composer debut and the music was very well done. There was a large range to the show and because of that every type of scene was punctuated with good music. Not technically astounding music, but better than your run of the mill.
Animation-wise the show does not disappoint. The action sequences during the Brain Burst fights are engaging and well done. Two notes for this could be Studio Sunrise’s hand in the animation, as well as a man named Nobutaka Ike being one of the two main art directors. Ike has worked on other projects such as Tokyo Godfathers, Paprika, and Millenium Actress as the Art Director. The styling of the animation is also wonderful, however, I question some choices with regards to Haruyuki’s design.
Main Review: Accel World is a show that I really, really, wanted to blow me away. When I first started watching it I was completely sold. The characters were engaging and interesting, Haruyuki was dynamic and felt like he had a depth to him that I enjoyed – even if his character design was a little disjointed feeling.
It starts off in about a 6-episode getting to know the world and characters type of arc. The world has a depth and complexity to it while still having a number of quirks that make it feel very very real. As a result you’re hungry for more during these first episodes and there are more questions as you begin to learn more about Brain Burst and start to question people’s real motives.
Through episode 12 or so the show really continues to deliver on this. The battles are catchy, even if from time to time shonen cliche, and there’s even some romance, however superficial it felt to me.
However, around episode 13 and on the show really began to drag. Characters began to make decisions on a habitual basis that I kept wanting to punch them in the face for and that initial annoyance with Haruyuki that could be overlooked due to the magic of everything else began to creep up again. To me it felt like the show lost some of its focus on what it really wanted to do and introduced a new villain rather than delivering on earlier promises – such as achieving level 10 and meeting the creator. Granted, this can be as a result of the fact that the source material is still ongoing and they didn’t want to make any major closures but it did feel more than a little disappointing for the viewer. But, I do go back to giving the creators props that the villain in the second half was fantastic, a perfect example of a “love to hate” villain.
Not to harp on art but I think Haruyuki’s design as a strange chibi character was a wedge right from the start that kept getting deeper for me throughout the series. I get that he is meant to be fat, ugly, and from the “lower” rung of the social ladder but I feel like the chibi design showed a lack of commitment to this. It was almost like despite those things he was still cute, which put him in stark contrast to the depth he received from being that social outcast. I would’ve much preferred to see him in a similar style to all the other characters but still have all those other traits. And for the record, I’m not the only one! Men in Japan voted him the second most aggravating character from recent anime.
Either way, the show started out very strong and then lost itself somewhere along the way in the second half. There were things that remained good such as character growth and a big twist… But, there were also a lot of over-used plot devices, poor pacing, and just all around aggravation over the main point of conflict surrounding the villain. It involves blackmail and you just keep feeling like it drags on for no good reason.
In sum, the show could’ve been great, but ended up feeling very lackluster because it lost almost all of the great momentum it had gained on the onset. It’s almost even more disappointing this way and you really want to ream it, but the show did have a lot of strong points, and a few carried all the way through. In an effort to not let my personal let-downs with the show cloud my judgement I felt a 3.5 was a fair score. It was more than I expected from a shonen show, but didn’t live up to all it could’ve been.
[starrater]
Alternate Title: Last Exile: Ginyoku no Fam
General Summary: Set four years after the original Last Exile series, Last Exile Fam the Silver wing follows the story of a sky pirate named Fam who gets involved in a world-wide war when she saves the princess of Turan as the Ades Federation takes her kingdom by force. The Ades Federation operates under the belief that anyone who abandoned the earth during the Exile should not be allowed to return. Now, Fam, with the assistance of her co-pilot Giselle, and the rescued Princess Millia must cut a new path through the turmoil for the ultimate goal of peace.
Sequel?
This is the first thing worth noting is that Last Exile Fam the Silver Wing is a sequel to the original Last Exile series, while very few characters or events remain particularly relevant in this series the original Last Exile created a world deep with culture and history. You will NOT get as much out of Fam the Silver Wing without watching and knowing the importance of many of the events that happened in the original Last Exile, particularly the end. Plus, for reasons I will continue to go into the original is much better than this so if you’re watching only one watch that anyways.
Technical Notes:
Staff~
Fam the Silver Wing kept studio Gonzo for production and director Koichi Chigira.
The primary composer for the music also remained the same so the music feels in-line with the Last Exile feeling.
Music~
I’d place the music to be just above average one would expect with a few pieces here or there that stood out alongside a decent opening. It has a very dreamy quality to it that really matches the series well.
Animation~
While the character designs seemed to be a slight departure from the original Last Exile, trading in for a generally softer and more commercial look I would say the world has a beautiful style to it and glossy animation to match. The sky battles take place flawlessly and the characters move beautifully at every turn. It is definitely a show that is easy on the eyes at almost all times.
Review:
The show is filled with a number of double-edged swords for the viewer, where something shines it normally casts a large shadow on something else in the show that is very, very, noticeable.
Firstly, the show features a number of strong women. Women who are not directly reporting to men, the love interest for men, or who ultimately give up their dreams, powers, or whims for a man. As someone who identifies herself as a strong woman I admire this and the love taking a back-seat allows them to really shine and not clutter up the show with things that are really unimportant.
But, they can’t resist themselves in the end and having a cast that is all-female ultimately leads to pointless fan-service moments from time to time. Such as as a hot-springs scene in which the setting could have just as easily been a dinner table or sitting looking at the stars.
The second pro the show features is the gravity of the situation and the emphasis of the world events. Countries fall and others rise, there are discussions on selling out one’s people to save one’s self, and if it is better to bend a knee for the sake of world peace.
These are the things that really could make the show a special piece of work… But instead…
The main lead, Fam, through which we see almost all of these themes, is annoying and immature at best. Her whims that I can only assume are meant to be charming come off as hot-headed, brash, irrational, whimsical, and immature. It’s like watching a ten year old try to explain war in a five-paragraph essay. It ends up cheapening everything else that’s happening and the more mature viewer is left feeling teased and hungry, and not in a good way. War cannot be solved with a warm fuzzy friendship speech and anyone who is beyond the age to know this is simply disappointed by the treatment of such a serious topic.
What turns from bad to worse for the viewer is that Fam never seems to grow throughout all the ordeals presented to her. She remains virtually the same happy-go-lucky, peace dreaming, idealistic girl as when she started. To have almost no growth in such a character is disappointing to say the least…
As a fan of the original Last Exile this show feels like a cheap replacement and an effort to milk a previously successful franchise (which isn’t far from the truth for Studio Gonzo…). It ends up contributing very little to the world and disappointing to any fan. Halfway through the show you find yourself bored and while there are moments that shine they can’t support the many other short-commings glaring throughout the series. But, it’s animation quality, lingering style, and even hallow attempts keep it in the realm of below average.
[starrater]
[starrater]
Alternative title:
[starrater]
[starrater]
Alternate Titles:
The Place Promised in Our Early Days
Beyond the Clouds, The Promised Place
Kumo no Mukou, Yakusoku no Basho (Japanese)
[starrater]
[starrater]