One Outs

November 10, 2008 at 6:46 pm | In anime, fall 2008, guilty pleasure, ridiculous premise | Leave a Comment

Summary: Baseball as a gambling vehicle
Based on: 3 eps
Info at: Anime News Network (pic from there, too)

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Note: This is a guest review by Brendan Speer.

When found out about One Outs, I was very excited.   ‘Finally’, I thought to myself, ‘An Akagi where I’m familiar with the sport!  This is going to be great!’  Plus I can pretend that the Lycaons are the Cubs.  Thusly, I waited for 2 weeks for it to be subbed; begging and cajoling friends to do it for me.

Then I sat down and watched the first episode.

And I was really disappointed.  I figured out that one of the great things about Akagi is that I don’t know the first damn thing about Mahjong.  I could really follow Akagi play without the little nagging doubt in the back of my mind.   The prospect of an 120 kph (75 mph) pitcher with no breaking balls being able to psych his opponents out that much introduces an element of that ‘This is ridiculous!’ feeling.

And yet, I’ve watched 3 episodes, and will probably watch the fourth tonight.   First off, it’s still compelling to watch.  I _still_ want to see Toua beat his first challenger at One Outs Baseball.  Even if I know the prospect is preposterous.

What Akagi and One Outs do differently from traditional ’sports’ anime, like Hikaru no Go and Prince of Tennis, is that the latter play like ‘Japanese youth introduction to sport <insert sport here>’.   Prince of Tennis will spend half an episode talking about the Buggy Whip Shot, or try and illustrate the difference between an All-Arounder and Baseline Retriever.  One Outs doesn’t do this.  Instead the sport is only a vehicle to tell the story, quite well I might add.  You know what’s going to happen, you always know who’s going to win.  However, between the Narrator, the Music, and the situations, you’re still compelled to keep watching.   How will Akagi play out of this?  Will Toua get hit?  It’s quite ingenious.

As Ron has referenced in his paragraph, the character designed have been tarted up for the female audience.  In Akagi, the character designed were basically ugly.   Distinctive, and stylish, but unattractive.  The unattractive, gritty style fit Akagi well.  In One Outs both Kojima and Toua are pretty-boy anime arch-types, the former being the squared-jawed Japanese traditionalist, and the latter having that punky bishonen going for him.  Even the first opposing team’s pitcher has an Kaneda-like street punk handsomeness to him.

The first two episodes were very Akagi like.   Very slow paced, building suspense.   The third introduced another element, of the Owner of the team.  I’ll try not to give away too much, but I like the way this is turning from the Akagi formula.   I suspect when I go back to rewatch something like this, however, I’ll still turn to the Mahjong master.

To Aru Majutsu no Index

October 14, 2008 at 8:15 am | In adventure, anime, could be worse, fall 2008, fightfightfight, guilty pleasure, ridiculous premise | Leave a Comment

Summary: Action magic/drama in Young King Ours/Square-Enix style.
Based on: 2 episodes
Series Summary: at Anime News Network (picture stolen as well)

Okay, so this one has me conflicted after 2 eps. I’m going to tell you why you shouldn’t like it, then why you should.

First, it’s utterly typical of a style you find in Young King Ours magazine, which I subscribe to, and anything Square-Enix sponsors. An adolescent male appeal with violence, sexual undercurrents, and an emphasis on fighting and sheer coolness over plot. Of course there’s always magic/psychic powers involved, lots of fighting and explosions, and a young guy who’s sort of helpless (but not a totally weak despicable dork, thank god) but turns out to be the only way the world can be saved once his powers can be trained up. World Embryo is the epitome of this. So when I see it my reaction is to go ‘meh’.

On the other hand, given the formula setup, the characters in this are relatively well done, likeable, and believable (minus the loli teacher). It certainly delivers the action. I can’t fault the character design or animation or music. The heroine (?) out-Rei’s Rei for being white-haired autistic savant, but since the hero’s not even slightly romantically attracted to her (so far) that’s tolerable. The most eye-rolling thing here is that everyone believes in psychic powers but not magic, though they have a Justification for this.

So what am I saying? I’m not sure yet, but if Yozakura Quartet drops the ball this could be my action show for the season.

Kuroshitsuji

October 8, 2008 at 7:31 am | In anime, fall 2008, ridiculous premise, shoujo cliche, yaoibait | Leave a Comment

Summary: Shojou Hellsing (again)
Based on: 1 episode
Series Info: at Anime News Network (pic shamelessly stolen)

[edit: I reread my initial review of this, and it came off far too harsh - sure, this is formulaic, but it's not as bad as I made it out to be.]

Sigh. It really is disappointing that anime/manga for girls are even more more generic than anime/manga for boys. Aren’t women supposed to be more subtle, nuanced, and intelligent than stupid brutish men? Then you look at Harlequin romances (and shojo anime) and realize this isn’t the case. Women prefer their plots even more formulaic and predictable than men do.

So now that I’ve got that ranting out of the way, if you liked Nabari no Ou this is the your shojo anime for you this season.  Ciel Phantomhive (eye-patched prettyboy) is the heir of the English Phantomhive toy dynasty. His butler, Sebastian, is an ultra-competent ultra-handsome demon lord. Everyone else in the household is comic relief.

I had a brief moment of appreciation for this show when it actually invoked some horror (the oven scene), but then it completely cheapened and nullified it. The best I can say is this isn’t as horribly bad as Trinity Blood.

But, for you people who need your formulaic prettyboys (and I have my own guilty pleasures), this is your show. And the production values are indisputably good.

Vampire Knight

May 14, 2008 at 12:51 am | In adventure, anime, could be worse, one episode rule, ridiculous premise, school syndrome, shoujo cliche, spring 2008, yaoibait | Leave a Comment

Summary: slightly better than average vampire bishounen
Based on: 4 eps
Series Info: at Anime News Network

(Image taken from FuanBLOG where you can see ep by ep summaries)

At this school there is the Day Class and the Night Class. The Night Class are all secretly(!) vampires, and all the girls of the Day Class are wildly enamored with them because they are of course all gorgeous and moody and aloof.  Two prefects from the Day Class are adopted children of the headmaster and are the only ones who know the secret, but of course they have mysterious secrets of their own.

Everything about this screams typical – it’s got all your bishounen vampire cliches, it’s at a fabulously stylish high school, and moody sullen pretty boys abound. But I think in this case it actually manages to transcend the cliches with some very nice art, some decent action sequences, passable plot and dialogue considering the setup, and a slowly growing sense of discomfort. The only place where it really falls down is where the headmaster is involved – when he’s in the scene it’s a painful reminder of everything wrong with shows like Trinity Blood and Saiyuki.

So this isn’t exactly a glowing endorsement, but if you need your shoujo fix this season this is probably your best choice.

Moyashimon: Tales of Agriculture

May 14, 2008 at 12:22 am | In anime, best, comedy, one episode rule, ridiculous premise | Leave a Comment

Summary: Boy can see microbes, mild comedy, must watch
Based on: 11 Episodes (all of them so far)
Series Info: on Anime News Network

(This great pic is taken from randomc where you can see more pics and more plot.)

This show falls firmly into the ‘ridiculous premise yet still managing to be awesome’ category.  Tadeyasu, seen above, can see microbes like E. Coli, brewer’s yeast, mold spores, as little cartoony characters. But this is really used mostly as a gimmick – the real action is in the relationships of people around him. He himself is just a big hapless straightman who gets swept up in the various dramas and people plotting to use his talent. Since it’s based at a college and not a high school or middle school it’s technically a school anime but completely escapes school syndrome.

It reminds me of Nodame Cantabile more than anything else, so I guess it’s not surprising that there are some small Moyashimon/Nodame crossovers in the manga.

There’s also plenty of fascinating information about the various microbes (especially yeast in the context of fermentation) – make sure you watch the Microbe Theater after the credits at the very end of every episode.

The big downer here is that the anime is only 11 episodes, which covers a small fraction of the story that’s gone by in the manga.  It also severely cuts back the manga microbe scenes.  I’ve resorted to buying and reading the manga even though it’s intensely text-heavy and my kanji skills are weak. Apparently I’m not the only one who feels this way, since the manga has been winning awards left and right, including the prestigious Kodansha Manga and Tezuka Cultural awards.  So maybe they’ll make some more anime (please?).

The only negative thing I can say about it is that it resorts to more cheesecake than it really needs to.  Nothing like the constant panty flashes of your teen anime, but it’s a bit gratuitous and out of context here.

define: ridiculous premise

May 1, 2008 at 7:06 am | In definition, ridiculous premise | 4 Comments

The title pretty much says it all, but this certainly deserves its own category. Sometimes you get an anime that has a trick premise that’s just so ridiculous it impacts your enjoyment of it even if you love it otherwise. It just erects a huge barrier between you and your immersion.

On the other hand, if a really bad anime has a ridiculous premise, that’s a plus because then you can at least enjoy making fun of it.  Or if it’s a comedy anime it doesn’t matter so much that the premise doesn’t make sense because you’re just in it for the characters and comedy.

The poster child for ridiculous premise is probably Library War.

Update: a commenter (read the great comment below) notes that Midori no Hibi is another candidate for most ridiculous premise: the girl the guy secretly likes (and vice versa) ends up as his left hand.  But in this case it doesn’t really hurt the anime, which is passable teen comedy romance.

And now that I’m thinking about it, there’s Luna Varga, which has a girl sticking out of a T-Rex’s forehead.

Library War (Toshokan Sensou) (spring 2008 anime)

April 30, 2008 at 7:56 am | In adventure, anime, comedy, guilty pleasure, ridiculous premise, spring 2008 | 2 Comments

Summary: dumbest premise ever, but I love the execution
Based on: 6 episodes
Series Info: at Anime News Network

This just has me in the grips of despair. Zetsubou! Zetsubou daaaaaa!

It’s very similar to Planetes, which I liked a lot, and I find the clean, heavily edged art style and character designs very appealing. It’s also in the ’short haired tomboy leading character’ genre like Planetes and Patlabor.  So far the plot is thin, but dialogue and characterization are excellent.

However – it has possibly the dumbest premise I’ve ever seen in an anime that’s obviously aimed at adults. A Media Cleansing Act is passed which causes the formation of a bunch of elite book censorship Nazis (they even have the snappy uniforms).  In response, a freedom of information act is passed which causes libraries to become more or less their own country with their own elite military force. They battle it out in bookstores and alternate heavy weapons training with Dewey decimal system filing. I am not making this up. How could I?

Okay, close your eyes, breathe deep, let it wash over you. Ignore the requisite Japanese sexism (‘Wow, you guys made it here in only one day even with a woman in the group!’). This is still pretty enjoyable.

Himitsu: The Revelation (spring 2008 anime)

April 30, 2008 at 6:38 am | In anime, ridiculous premise, spring 2008 | 2 Comments

Summary: technogibberish for dumb adults
Based on: 1 episode
Series info: at Anime News Network

This is really the epitome of ‘grownup anime is not a panacea‘. It’s based on the ridiculous premise that 50 years from now people who have no idea about how the brain works will be able to run MRIs on the brain up to 48 hours after brain death. That will somehow boost up the brain’s function to exactly ‘120%’ and extract perfect video of the deceased’s last moments.  Video which can be infinitely zoomed, yet has no audio track – which is where the new guy, our hero, comes in: he can read lips.  Also the hippocampus stores several minutes of perfect video which can be rewound and forwarded as well. I swear to you this is even dumber than it sounds.

Follow this up with several astounding coincidences and leaps of logic and you have an utter trainwreck of a series that for some reason even tosses in some yaoibait between the new guy and his ooooo so mysterious boss.

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