NISA “Does It Again”
NISA has been having a bad week. TRSI has just revealed that all the copies of NISA’s latest House of Five Leaves Premium Edition Box Set supports only mono sound. NISA has been quick to offer replacement discs free of charge to all the early adapters and have halted the release of all other copies until April the cope with the issue.
While NISA’s fast (and honset) response is appreciated, this is hardly the first time NISA has been shipping defective products en masse. On July 2010 NISA released defective copies of the premium editions of Toradora! and Persona – trinity soul. These first edition copies suffered from interlacing and aliasing artifacts, as well as ghosting issues. While the interlacing and aliasing artifacts were quickly resolved with a replacement program similar to that which NISA now offers for House of Five Leaves, the ghosting problem persisted in later edition. Perhaps the most troubling aspect in this story is that most of these problems are easy to spot during routine quality checks, checks that NISA apparently does no take too seriously. These defective DVDs and the companies’ insistence on not releasing Blu-ray discs definitely puts NISA in a bad light. But with a big titles such as Toradora! and other fan favorites like Working! and House of Five Leaves in NISA’s arsenal it’s easy to see why fans are willing to forgive the company’s many mistakes.
The New Hunter x Hunter Movie Could Feature These Stories
It’s been a bitter-sweet week for Hunter x Hunter fans. The first ever HxH movie has been announced, and was shortly followed by news of Yoshihiro Togashi taking another hiatus from drawing the manga.
Today we focus on the upcoming movie. Its plot, production studio and release date are all unknown at this point. However, Mainichi Shimbun’s website report that the movie will have an entirely original plot, which opens the door for many interesting possibilities. Although movies in the shounen genre are usually big hollow fillers, HxH is different than most other shounen title in that a huge chunk of it was never explored in the anime and was only hinted at in the manga. Below are four possible scenarios for the movie that might make it canon material despite featuring stories not adapted directly from the manga. Do note that this post assumes you’ve watched the old 90s anime or read the manga. There will be spoilers.
My Spider Senses are Tingling
Oh Kurapika, how the mighty have fallen. You stole the show during the York Shin arc, and blended well in one of the series’ darkest of hours. For a time it seemed like Hunter x Hunter will be filled with blood, revenge and eyeballs. But then, after encountering the Spiders’ leader Chrollo, Kurapika massacre comes to an early end. In the wink of an eye Hunter x Hunter leaves Kurapika behind and moves to focus on Gon and Killua’s adventures, never to show Kurapika again. That is, until the picture above appeared in the manga last week. More than a year (in story time) has passes since Kurapika was phased out from the main HxH storyline. Could this new upcoming movie be a continuation of his revenge against the spiders? Or maybe a side-story adventure explaining how did so many Kurta clan eyeballs have come to his possession? It certainly seems like a dark route worth exploring.
The Magician and the Tent
One of HxH’s most nefarious and beloved characters is the murderous magician Hisoka. Hisoka’s personality is as twisted as they come – a pedophile, a narcissist and a skilled schemer, all in one. But how did Hisoka come to possess such a strange personality? People sure don’t turn out that way in a natural manner. Wouldn’t you love to see a movie specifically dedicated to Hisoka’s youth? Perhaps one that culminates in him murdering one of the spiders and joining their ranks?
The Adventures of the Worst Father Ever
Ging is one of HxH’s less explored characters. The only things we know for sure about him is that he’s Gon’s father, that he’s a powerful hunter and that he failed at the mission he set forth to accomplish when he left Wail island so many years ago. If you’ve read the manga you also might know by now that he’s the worst father ever. But this doesn’t change the fact that his history is foggy and mysterious. How did he become a hunter at such a young age? Why the heck did he create Greed Island? And how come he ended up leaving his son right after his wife (Gon’s mother) had died?
These are all intriguing questions, but even if you aren’t interested in Ging as a person surely you’re interested in seeing just what Nen powers he uses? Or maybe how he met and trained Kaito? A voyage down memory lane to his early life might shed light on these unknown parts of the HxH history.
Journey to the East
After being cursed by Kurapika’s Judgment Chain, the Phantom Troupes (also known as the Spiders) leader Chrollo is left alone, never the be mentioned again. Per the prophecy he was given Chrollo travels to the east in search of a way to remove the curse. It is later hinted that he discovers Greed Island, which is indeed located to the east, and enlist Hisoka to help him find a Nen remover. Hisoka finds a Nen remover…and then things starts to get strange. Nor the anime nor the manga show what happens after that. Chrollo is thoroughly forgotten by both Hisoka and the spiders. In fact, some of the spiders make an appearance during the Ant arc later on, and they don’t seem to miss of care about their long-gone leader. Could the new movie shed light on Chrollo’s destiny? Will he be cured of his curse only to enroll in a battle to the death with Hisoka? Or will Kurapika pop up for a final confrontation with this darkly clad mass murderer?
Four possibilities, all of them worth exploring in this upcoming movie. What do you expect from the movie? Do you have your own original ideas about the movie’s plot? Do you have a preferred and yet unexplored character you’d like to see featured in it?
Final Fantasy XIII-2 Official Guide Collector’s Edition Overview
As promised in an earlier post today I am going to do a quick overview of the Final Fantasy XIII-2 Official Guide Collector’s Edition. There is a little story behind this guide book, and it begins in March 2010 when Piggyback published the collector’s edition of Final Fantasy XIII’s guide book. Piggyback is not a new company, and obviously it wasn’t the only company to release a guide book for Final Fantasy XIII. What Piggyback did, however, was understand that Final Fantasy fans don’t want a simple book devoid of pictures and filled with gray pages of walkthroughs – we have the internet for that! No, Piggyback understood that we fans want a book that will be collectable in itself. They made a superb collector’s edition guide, using premium glossy paper, tons of full-page colored pictures, a hard cover, all the tables and graphs we FF fans so love, and not a page in grey. Continue reading
Black Rock Shooter (TV) Is Surprisingly Good
Black Rock Shooter is not your typical anime series. The idea for BRS came from the artwork used in a music video. The artwork was apparently so popular it brought forth a slew of dolls and figurines. And then, in 2010, BRS broke from the realm of otaku-affiliated toys to the TV screen in a single episode OVA which was called, surprisingly enough, Black Rock Shooter. Perhaps more surprising was the fact that this OVA was released simultaneously in Japan and the U.S., and was a DVD-Blu-ray combo with two Nendroid Puchi (petite) dolls attached to it.
The OVA told the story of Kuroi Matou, a cheerful and carefree junior high student who approaches a transfer student named Takanashi Yomi and become her first friend. While the story’s main focus stayed on Matou, a mystery figure called Black Rock Shooter was shown fighting in a strange apocalyptic world from time to time. After Yomi disappears without a trace Matou discovers that this apocalyptic world is somehow connected to their own and that her friend was absorbed by her alter-ego from that world.
The OVA proved to be lacking. With no prior information to go by other than the artwork and music video it turned into an artistic experiment with little in terms of plot or sophistication. The life of Matou and Yomi were hardly ever interesting, and the entire impact of the OVA rested on multiple short scenes where Black Rock Shooter fought in the artistically provoking apocalyptic world.
More than a year has passed since then, and now a revamped TV series by the same name is being broadcasted. I decided to check it out and see if the series manages to bring a bit more sophistication into this plastic-oriented franchise.
I was pleasantly surprised by what I saw. The show basically took the premise of the OVA, extended it and made it more sophisticated and intriguing. The new series focuses on the emotional aspect of junior high student life. The apocalyptic world of Black Rock Shooter still exists, but here it represents the emotional strifes of the teenage girls in the series. Each troubled teenager is represented by a fighter in the apocalyptic/emotional world, and if they have an emotional confrontation in the real world their alter-ego fight it out in the emotional world. There is a deep connection between the characters and their fighting alter-egos, but it’s only reveled near the end of the series. Suffice to say that if an alter-ego is defeated in the emotional world it’s character in the real world is drained of all emotions regarding the conflict at hand. And Black Rock Shooter is an emotional series indeed. In a smart move, the series tries to shock you with just how intense and insane the emotions of a teenager can be. Although Matou is still at the center of attention, the TV series show multiple views of certain conflicts and more characters are added as time goes by. The show also introduces us to an evil badass school counselor. I’ve never thought I’d see that one coming.
The art style has greatly improved from the OVA. Sadly, the main character designs remain simple to a fault, but are nonetheless more detailed than before. The emotional world, on the other hand, has been reborn in an amazing way. This world is now represented entirely in CG and looks quirk and colorful as it is sinister and surreal. It’s a delight to watch Black Rock Shooter fight in this world, and although the real world is a bit more intriguing this time around, the emotional world is what makes the show the interesting and artistic feat that it is.
If, like me, you were dissapointed by the OVA and hesitated whether or not to watch the series, I promise you it is a much more rewarding viewing experience. I look forward to seeing how the story will wrap up in the following weeks. I’m also eager to see how the Blu-ray will look like.
New Trophy earned!
Yay! I got my first trophy! Who did I get it from? The internet spirits of course.
It’s been three months since Anime Reviews went up, and I think the blog/reviews website has been doing pretty good. I managed to squeeze all the reviews I had the time to write. My goal is always to write a good review, which by my standards means a review that touches on the content of the anime, the quality of DVD/BD and the overall impression. I’ll try to maintain my current pace for reviewing and, of course, blog a bit more.
I’ve only two small grieves with the current state of the website. The first is about the layout of the main page, which I will eventually pay someone to change for me (because I know nothing about HTML, CSS or Jquery). The second are the comments, or more specifically the lack of them. I’d love to see more of you comment on my reviews and blog posts. Like my review? Say it! Dislike my review? Speak up and make your stand. Have a specific question about something I didn’t mention in the review? Fire away!
.hack//Quantum Blu-ray and DVD Review
The .hack//Quantum review is now available in the reviews section and here.
It took me a lot of time to write this review, and for good reasons. You see, I’m a huge .hack fan, to the point where I even read obscurities such as .hack//Zero. So I was pretty excited to watch Quantum. But when I did something strange happened: It didn’t make any sense to me!
So I decided to take up my PSP and finally finish my old save of .hack//Link – the game that chronologically came before this OVA. Only after playing the game a bit, and watching the OVA a second time, did I understand .hack//Quantum’s plot to the fullest. Well, except for the Sophia part. What the hell is Sophia?
I hope .hack fans will forgive me for not giving this title a better score, but it’s not hard to see why I scored it the way I did. I look forward to seeing the movie .hack//Beyond the World sometime in the near future in the hope that it will shed more light on the newest iteration of The World.