Black Rock Shooter

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Black Rock Biker

Were you stocked when you saw that new Fate/Zero Saber figma riding that bike last week? Don’t worry, we got you covered. Here’s a list of the coolest, meanest, shiniest lumps of metal a figure has ever laid hands on. Continue reading »

2011 Winter Anime Season Retrospective

The 2011 winter anime season has concluded and a new season is just around the corner. Instead of summarizing the plot of new series and calculating how the next season might end up being I though I’ll review in retrospective five series from the last season. So before we clear our schedules for the season to come here’s a brief check on how some of the last season’s favorites turned up. I’ll be going at this in a simple manner: each day will bring a new brief spoiler-free (as much as possible) review of one series that aired this last season. These reviews are here to allow you to judge for yourselves which series you missed out on and should watch, and which aren’t worth your time. There were at least a couple of surprises this last season. Which series raised the bar for anime? and which series was so terrible that it should not be watched even by the fans? Read on to find out.

 

Bakuman (Season 2)

Bakuman’s 2nd season had a promising start. Mashiro and Takagi’s manga finally enter serialization and things are going smoothly. That is until their manga drops down in the magazine’s popularity chart and is cancelled. The rest of the season focuses on their attempts to pump out a more promising manga. It’s an interesting journey to watch, if not a very exciting one. Creating a superb manga takes time, and lots of it. We encounter so many little nit bits about manga production and creation in these episodes that the whole process can eventually become tedious to watch. But somehow Bakuman manages to take mundane tasks and make them exciting enough for us to hang around for another episode. The conclusions of important staff meetings or big announcements are always taunted at the end of an episode to create tension and anticipation. That way, even if these decisions end up being total fish-bait (and some do) you end up watching another episode nonetheless. A lot of new characters join the fry in this season, but surprisingly the best this season has to offer comes from Aoki Kou. A script writer in the first season, she now tries to draw a manga on her own. After passing many trials and errors she not only succeeds in creating her own manga, but also grows as a person. She was a cold-hearted woman in the first season, but by the end of the 2nd season she’s become my favorite mangaka. One that I hope will play an active role in the the 3rd season as well.

Verdict: I have to admit that the 2nd season came a bit short. It wasn’t fast enough, was boring at times and began to stutter considerably in the later episodes. But even with all those shortcomings taken into account it still had enough surprises and tension in it to be more than worth your while. It also helps that Monochrome Rainbow is one hell of an ending theme.

 

Tantei Opera Milky Holmes (season 2)

A year ago Milky Holmes had a wonderful first season. It was funny, cute and refreshing at the same time. In fact I found it so witty that I hurriedly proclaimed it as no less than the new Power Puff Girls. But then came a  2nd season that was, well, terrible. Although the main theme remains intact – the girls are still looking for a way to restore their Toys – the  2nd season of Milky Holmes quickly spirals into the realm of hardcore slapstick nonsense. All the characters are reduced to their utmost stereotypes and are painfully dumber than how they appeared on the firstseason. It was easy to sympathy with four cute girls who diligently look for their lost powers. It’s much harder to sympathize with four dumb girls who have forgotten about their powers altogether and spend their days leaching on their friends and wreaking havoc in the process. The ideas behind the second season dry up fast, leaving you wanting in pretty much every aspect in the series. The 2nd season is so barren and inconsistent with the first that there is in fact only one battle in the entire series, and it too is reduced to a slapstick finale. If you think I’m overreacting or expecting too much of Milky Holmes watch this:

 


This is how the characters are shown in the PSP game, a game in which they actually use their powers and solve detective mysteries. Is creating a decent detective plot with some action too hard a thing to ask from a series which has the word Tantei (detective) in its name? Wouldn’t the series appeal to a larger audience if it were a bit more polished, like the games are?

Verdict: This season definitely isn’t worth your time, even if you did watch the first season and loved it. It will only leave you with feelings of emptiness and missed chances. Even though it had a solid first season to build upon and unlimited possibilities it could have exploited the 2nd season turn out to be one big sour disappointment. Better luck next season, Milky Holmes!   

 

Hunter x Hunter (2011)

A boy named Gon sets out on a journey to find his father. But to do so he first must become a hunter – a dangerous and prestigious occupation for which an elaborate test was established. Along the way he meets up with the assassin Killua, the avenger Kurapica and the inspiring-doctor Leorio. Although their goals are different they find themselves helping each other on the way to becoming hunters…
As someone who watched and loved the original Hunter x Hunter series I pretty much knew what to expect from the new 2011 version. At its core HxH is a shounen series, but it packs considerably more intelligence and surprises then it’s counterparts in the genre. The new series has been polished for the HD generation, has better pacing, much better animation and is a more accurate reproduction of the manga. Mind you the original series was also accurate and “more accurate” in this context translates to less filler episodes. It’s always better to have less fillers and more meat on your shounen series. That said, the new series falters where its old counterpart shined best: in its music and feeling of tension. Hunter x Hunter 2011 has terrible music that doesn’t blend with the action or the comedy. It also doesn’t have a single track to play during times of tension. The old series used the known formula of ending episodes on cliffhangers, and tension was high. The new series lowers your expectations and reflects less tension, not only due to the lack of an appropriate music score, but also because most of the cliffhangers were left on the editing room floor in favor of the better pacing. Moreover, for some strange reason Hunter x Hunter 2011 feels more childish and colorful then it should. This is a dark series we are talking about here. What will happen to all this colorfulness and cheerfulness in the later episodes when blood starts flowing freely down the streets and terrorists start blowing people up?

Verdict: This one’s easy – if you haven’t seen Hunter x Hunter yet you should definitely watch this new version. It’s better suited for the new millennium and is still relevant in all the right ways. Not only is it a good series in its own good, it was also one of the series that built the foundations of the modern shounen genre (want to know were Naruto’s ninjas got their Sharingan from? Kurapica did it first). If, on the other hand, you’ve already seen the old series (perhaps you even own the incomplete Viz sets?) I advise you to skip the first episodes and wait at least until we get to the darker York Shin arc in a couple of weeks’ time.     

 

Black Rock Shooter TV

After being unimpressed with the Black Rock Shooter OVA more than a year ago I approached Black Rock Shooter TV with low expectations. Little did I know that this 8 episodes show will turn out to be the best thing I’ll be watching this season. I won’t explain to plot here, since I already wrote an entire post about it before. Read that post if you want a more in-length analysis about the series. I’ll just conclude my observations by saying that Black Rock Shooter TV offers an exquisite combination of action, psychology, art and music (and by music I mean the tear-jerking ending theme Our Footprints). It’s what all anime should be – a little risqué, a little vogue, and rewarding to watch.

Verdict: If you only have the time to watch one series from the 2011 winter season it should definitely be Black Rock Shooter TV. I’ll post a more formal review of this gem once I get my copy of the Blu-ray in July.       

 

Ano Natsu De Matteru

Ano Natsu De Matteru (we’ll be waiting in that summer) was a new romance series from the creator of Onegai Teacher and Onegai Twins. Not surprisingly it featured a young boy who falls in love with an alien girl. Kiato falls in love with Ichika, who appears to be a foreign exchange student at first. The story revolves around the two’s gradual growing relationship. Along the way Kiato’s friends are introduced and they all decide to film an amateur movie together. We soon discovered that most of Kaito’s friends are locked in a strange love predicament in which they are loved by someone they don’t care about and love someone who doesn’t care about them.
Ano Natsu has that magical feel its predecessors had, that feeling of encapsulated nostalgia. You know you never had such a childhood and that everything is over simplified, but it still seems nostalgic somehow. The series itself is far from being realistic or immersive. The plot is very simple and the characters unimpressive. It’s hard to swallow the notion that this group of friends all love each other in secret, and have done so for many years. It’s also hard to care about it considering someone confesses his or her love every single episode. The fact that Ichika is an alien adds nothing to the plot, and in fact makes the series unbelievably tasteless. The first episodes are fine, but you will lose interest by the time the third or fourth person confesses their love. The end of the series relies solely on the whole alien meets boy setting. This in turn causes the series’ shaky foundations to collapse in all their cliché glory.

Verdict: Don’t waste your time on this one. If you yearn for some sweet romance nostalgia you can always play it safe and rewatch Onegai Twins.

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.

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