Kaguya Hime no Monogatari
Alternate Titles: The Tale of Princess Kaguya
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Alternate Titles: The Tale of Princess Kaguya
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Alternate Titles: Shingeki no Kyojin
Staff
Director – Tetsuro Araki Also directed High School of the Dead, Guilty Crown, Death Note, and Aoi bungaku (This guy loves dark shit)
Creator – Hajime Isayama (based on a manga that is still running and is serilized in Bessatsu Shonen Magazine
Story
The Story of Eren Jaeger who lives inside a city surrounded by gigantic walls. The walls exist to defend the last of humanity from an enemy force known as the “titans”. These walls are all that stand between the Titans and humanity’s extinction.
City has three walls
The richer more affluent people are located at the center because it has the most protection
Eren lives in the outer most wall, which gets invaded in the early going of the story
After the outermost wall is breached, there is a lot of chaos. Eren’s mother is killed right before him, a defining moment for his character, and a lot of additional carnage occurs. Eventually, Eren and Mikasa and friends join the militia inside the city the help defend humanity and take revenge on the titans.
Aesthetics
Music
There are a number of great themes used throughout the show.
The openings are – of course – awesome
Production and Animation
Production was a huge problem in this show. There were some episodes where there were upwards of 8 – 9 minutes of still frames, panning, reused cells, or non-animated lip flap sections. There was also a recap episodes in the middle of the show that I believe might have been used to allow the production studio to catch up on the production.
The fight-scenes showed strength in their animation with the 3D maneuver gear
Strengths and Weaknesses
Strengths
Certainly the uniqueness of the story is a big plus
Good action sequences but ones that I felt honestly, became a little redundant after the show went on.
Fantastic atmosphere and dread, especially in the beginning.
Great moments of tension and sorrow
Weakneses
Pacing. The shows pacing is Dragon Ball Z esque. It takes this show forever to do anything; LONG drawn out chase scenes, 5 episodes to move a boulder, and wordy as hell
The show often times would disrupt the most intense moments with LONG background information blurbs. They would be able to get killed by a Titan, and suddenly, an 8 minute flashback about how Eren should trust his comrades, or a huge section about scientific experiments on the Titans. These flashbacks always seemed to occur at really unfortunate times and it really pulled the viewer right out of the moment.
The dread and helplessness that the Titans generated early on TITAN dissipates by the middle of the season. The Titans go from being monstrous, unbeatable, sources of fear to easily killable and unnoteworthy. (For awhile, “special” titans aside, you see more titans getting killed than people)
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Sunrise
Directed by Kou Matsuo (Yozakura Quartet, Natsuyuki Rendezvous, Rozen Maiden)
Written by Ichiro Okouchi (Azumanga Daioh, Code Geass, Wolf’s Rain, RahXephon)
Music by Akira Senju (Mobile Suit Victory Gundam, Dead Girls, Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood)
SUMMARY
Valvrave the Liberator is a science fiction mech series produced by Sunrise studios. It follows Haruto, a high school student on a terraformed space station that is part of the neutral JIOR society. Although JIOR is a pacifist state, it must deal with two powerful military states, Dorssia and ARUS. When Dorssian forces invade JIOR to procure a secret weapon, our hero Haruto stumbles upon it first. What he finds is a giant red robot known as Valvrave. After watching his love interest supposedly meet a terrible fate during the invasion, he climbs into the cockpit with all his adolescent rage and powers the machine up. The computer greets him with a question, “Will you give up being a human?” Of course he says yes, and off he goes. The Dorssian military doesn’t stand a chance agains the agile war machine, and they quickly retreat, but this means war.
Fortunately for Haruto, his crush — the daughter of JIOR’s president — didn’t actually bite the big one. Not so lucky for him, though, the whole giving-up-being-human thing turned him into a sort of vampire with the occasional insatiable lust for biting people and body swapping with them. Soon the student body of Haruto’s high school decides to declare independence from ARUS, their sworn protectors, and establish their own military state within JIOR using the Valvrave as its sole show of military force. Naturally, other equally brightly-colored robots enter the fold, and new pilots are recruited to man them.
REVIEW
The most refreshing thing about this series is how it doesn’t take itself seriously in the slightest. As a sci-fi military epic about big ass robots, you get the requisite expository technobabble, but it never comes close to drowning in its own mythology before throwing an action scene at you. The show even has a song-and-dance number early in the series, so it’s clearly not gunning for any hoity-toity accolades.
This anime really knows how to prioritize its animation budget. While character designs and animations aren’t terribly attractive, the amazingly fluid action sequences more than make up for it. The whole show has a really excellent sense of color, and every frame explodes with over-saturated hues.
The music is great and overdramatic, utilizing full orchestrated pieces with a choir for the most over-the-top moments of action and melodrama. The opening and ending themes are energetic and rhythm-heavy, falling in line with mech shows of the past.
The show isn’t very thematically heavy, but the it seems to have something to say about the innate caste system of high school in how easily a student body can transform into a functioning society complete with governmental bureaucracy and political corruption. The story is slight and only serves as a backdrop for the great action beats. The characters are expectedly cookie-cutter, and the fan service is at a minimum, save for all of the robotic money shots. The situational humor can be quite funny at times, too. The show manages to land several jokes and make me laugh — a feat that very few anime have achieved.
Haruto’s vampirism affords the story some interesting if predictable opportunities to crank up the tension, but the details of the plot point don’t entirely make sense. The main character’s random and violent transformation is exclusive to Haruto and doesn’t seem to affect the other Valvrave pilots for reasons that are never explained. While under the influence of the curse, the desire to bite his victims — and subsequently swap bodies with them — seems to be his only motivation. That is until he rapes another character in the tenth episode.
The character who gets raped is called Saki, a pop idol who goes to high school with Haruto. She was at the center of the aforementioned song-and-dance earlier in the season. The rape scene comes totally out of left field but becomes even worse when the rape victim seems to stop struggling and accept her aggressor’s advances because, quote, “he is cursed.” Her character attempts to justify her victimization even further in the final episode when she tells Haruto that she is a pop idol and has been part of the dirty, adult world for awhile and is used to such things. So, whether or not she is being honest with Haruto, her character attempts to right the wrong of her sexual assault by comparing it to what the audience can assume is consensual sex she has been participating in her so-called dirty, adult world.
I don’t care who wrote this into the series our how naive Saki is supposed to be as a character, I cannot abide such irresponsible writing. This is not to say that rape has no place in any narrative. It is a terrible, powerful thing can conjure equally potent emotions in the audience, but mishandling such a thing can cause the audience to turn on your story. That’s exactly what Valvrave the Liberator did for me. Before that moment in the story, the one adjective I would’ve used to describe the series would’ve been “fun.” To be as succinct with my point as possible, rape isn’t fun. It doesn’t belong in this story. Shame on you, Sunrise.
Aside from such a huge misstep, Valvrave manages to entertain throughout and establish sufficient anticipation for its second season coming this October. Here’s hoping they leave the rape out of it next time.
3.5 pissed off Krams out of 5.
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Alternate Titles: Black Butler
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