Yuri Anime: Bloom Into You Premium Box Set, Disk 1 (English)

December 10th, 2019

Welp, I’m convinced. For once in my entire life, I feel completely justified in buying a premium box set Blu-Ray edition of anything. Sentai Filmworks’ Bloom Into You Premium Box Set was totally worth the money I paid for it.

Bloom Into You is based on the manga of the same name by Nakatani Nio, which is available in English from Seven Seas. The story follows first-year highschooler Koito Yuu as she becomes involved in Student Council activities and involved in an intense, and sometimes confusing, relationship with the Student Council President, Nanami Touko.

Yuu becomes interested in Touko initially over a perceived shared inability/unwillingness/lack of desire in regards to romance, but almost immediately Touko confesses that she has fallen in love with Yuu. How Yuu feels about Touko is the main part of the story, but by no means is it the only thing going on.  Council Vice President Sayaka has her own feelings about Touko to deal with.

You may remember I spoke to the fine folks at Sentai Filmworks at AnimeNYC 2019. We had a terrific conversation and while I was there, I bought this for myself as a present. When Bloom Into You anime streamed on HIDIVE last winter, I subscribed just to be able to watch it. And generally, I found it to be worth it, with a few small exceptions. Those exceptions became relevant once again…as they have, very unusually, been addressed.

It was inexplicable to me that the animation for the scene in which Touko confesses to Yuu be so seriously lacking. This moment, which comes early on, is one of two key scenes of the entire first disk. For it to have been so flat and lifeless was intolerable. Imagine my surprise then, when that scene was done beautifully for this disk. I was beginning to think I had imagined it, but an episode or two later, when Yuu reminisces about the moment, the flashback was not corrected and it was, as I had remembered, cheaply done. It was gratifying to see both the scene fixed and that my memory in this regard was not wrong. ^_^

The higher definition visuals also mean the backgrounds look breathtakingly detailed and if the character animation had not been improved it would have made them look just that much worse. There are still scenes that distinctly look like the B-Team did the art, sometimes, merely an angle or a part of a scene, and it can be a little bit disconcerting. But overall the art is much improved. So that all gets a big thumbs up from me.

The second change of note was the eyes. We spend a *lot* of time in hyper close-up in anime these days, which is really just a waste, since eyes are rarely animated that well. In this anime in particular I remember bitching about the eyes being so oddly drawn. That too has been corrected for the Blu-ray. We still spend way too much time staring at eyeballs, but at least they look better.

Disk 1 contains episodes 1-9 of this 13 episode series, in dub and sub. I have not yet watched the dub, but plan on doing so for Disk 2. Disk 1 contains the episode where Miyako tags Sayaka, she confides in the older woman and we get insight into the VP of the Student Council. I wanted to watch that in original, before I gave the American VA a chance. ^_^

But what really makes this set stand out are the physical extras.

To begin with, the box the set comes in is nice enough, although I have always felt that on their own collector’s boxes are not worth a jacked up price. What sets this set apart is that it has a pleasant assortment of physical extras. The physical extras include a booklet of storyboards for the OP and ED, an attractive booklet of key animation scenes, character references, interviews with staff and cast. It’s a book I actually want to read. Extras include some double-sided art cards, the script for the Student Council Play and Yuu’s older sister’s cheesecake recipe, which I will be making this year for my wife’s family Christmas get-together, in the interest of a complete review. I’ll let you know how it goes. ^_^ Both the recipe and the DVD come in an inner box with series art.

Ratings:

Art – 9 Visibly better when its better!
Story – 8
Characters – 9
Service – 3 especially towards the end as Touko is more aggressive physically
Yuri – 9

Overall – 9

A really nice variety of physical extras, sub and dub of an anime series that improves upon the manga in a number of ways and a better visual experience over the streaming version, all of which justify putting this set on your wish list!

10 Responses

  1. Super says:

    Yagatte Kimi ni Naru always gives me the confidence that “pure” yuri without excessive moe and ecchi can be successful and motivate producers to give green light to more good titles. Since the author fully supports this, I hope that the second season can become a reality.

    • It’s almost certainly not going to have a second season as 1) Dengeki Daioh is known for short anime seasons for ongoing manga series to bring i new readers and 2) it’s over.

      • Super says:

        I heard that according to the author, the second season could completely cover the rest of the manga, so it’s sad to hear.

        • It could, obviously, but it’s unlikely, since Dengeki comics have a long history of having a 13-episode anime made as a loss leader to bring in readers, not to complete the story. It’s really very common for them.

          This is one of the many reasons why Hayate x Blade creator Hayashiya Shizuru changed publishers.

          That all said, I don’t mind at all if I am wrong about this.

  2. burnouts3s3 says:

    Man, Sentai Filmworks has done such a service to the Western audience by adapting this.

    As one of the few people who actually watches dubbed anime, I was blown away with Luci Christian (Touko) and Tia Ballard (Yuu). They’ve delivered such amazing performances and it’s amazing how the director, David Wald, was able to pull from those performances.

    All in all, a great package.

    With this and Kase-san, Sentai Filmworks has definitely gotten a loyal customer out of me.

  3. chapellefan says:

    Such a great series and such a great localization effort by Sentai Filmworks.

    As one of the few people that watches dubbed anime Luci Christian (Touko) and Tia Ballard (Yuu) completely blew me away and I give credit to them and director David Wald for pulling those performances in such a slow, intricate work.

    With this and Kase-san, Sentai Filmworks has made a loyal customer out of me.

  4. Wow, this looks amazing! I was on the fence about this or the standard version, but who could resist with such awesome extras?

    And ha, I totally remember you being out of sorts about the eyes. It’s so encouraging to find they’ve addressed these issues and made such a concerted effort to meet fan expectations.

    And I’m with burnouts3s3 and chapellefan above: Sentai has made a fan in me thanks to this and Kase-San.

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