Archive for the Series Category


The Great “Girl With Guns on the Run” Trilogy Rewatch

December 23rd, 2016

If you follow me on Twitter, you know that I’ve finally done something I promised to do years ago. I rewatched Noir, Madlax and El Cazador de la Bruja back to back.

And it was good. ^_^  (From Sean G, a link to concise, amusing summaries of the main characters.)

I said as I began El Cazador de la Bruja, “If Noir is a knit narrative, then Madlax is crochet and El Cazador is macramé. Each successive iteration of the elements has more holes.” Upon reflection, though, I’m not sure I was right. 

Noir spends the most time building the story. More happens in the first episode of Madlax, than happens in the first 6 episodes of Noir.

It’s not that it’s killing time, but Noir is filling in all the details very slowly and carefully, with a lot of time spent in simply watching Kirika and Mirielle function as hitmen. Their relationship is built through this action, rather than through speaking. In fact, of the three series, this one has the most silences. 

The music here is a cue mostly only to that they are again in a shootout. It’s awesome music, though and worth re-hearing. And, by the time Kirika and Mirille’s full history is filled in, we kinda guessed already. ^_^ The climax of the series is satisfying and Soldats just ends up looking stupid and ham-handed.

In the end, I realized that I think of Noir, not as Kirika’s story, but as Mirielle’s.

Madlax starts with a completely different pace than Noir. There’s an obvious initial almost-schizoid split between episodes with Madlax and Margaret. Nonetheless long before Margaret goes to Garth-Sonika, we’ve figured out that there’s some connection between the two.

Where Noir takes place in identifiable places in our world, Madlax takes place in places that seem familiar, but are wholly fictitious. Nafrece might be France or England or Japan, but it’s not. This gives the story a lot of leeway to adding fictive elements, like a arms-dealing conspiracy driven by magic and the desire for more magic and allows for the entire climax to happen in a place that isn’t even of the world at all. 

Friday Monday is still a stupid bad guy with a ridiculous name.

Although Noir probably still wins for overall body count, there’s more deaths of people we cared about in Madlax than in Noir. In fact, I was pretty surprised to realize how dark Madlax was. Dark and dense. It was slow going, with so many storylines that had to converge. 

The music in Madlax is practically a character, it plays such a significant role.

El Cazador de la Bruja almost feels like a reaction to the intense darkness of Madlax and Noir. While there’s still a lot of shooting, the overall body count is much less. Nadie mostly shoots to disarm. And the general tone is much lighter and cheerier.

We’re back in the “real” world for this series, in an American Southwest-ish. There’s a President and a White House and Taco chains, but there’s also magic that works visibly.

This is the only story of the three with a deranged stalker who won’t take no for an answer.  Where Nadie and Ellis help each other to become more human, LA ends up being more and more a wounded animal who needs to be put out of his misery. To accomplish this, even some of the initially silliest plot elements end up fitting into the apparently hole-filled puzzle by the end. In fact, as I watched the final episodes tonight, I was surprised to find the climax much more tightly scripted than I remembered.

The music is purely window dressing, without much meaning as it was in the first two series. Rosenberg was a delightfully horrible bad guy whom we will not mourn.

While all three series end with a journey renewed,  El Cazador de le Bruja wins for the utter sappy wonderfulness of the ending, which could leave no doubt as to the fact that the main characters are incontrovertibly a couple. Squee.

Top characters of each series for me: Noir – Mirielle, Madlax – Rimelda , El Cazador de la Bruja – Jody “Blue Eyes” Hayward. So Hisakawa Aya beats Mitsuishi Kotono 2-to-1. ^_^ 

Still three of my favorite series, with some of the best music I’ve ever loved.

Ratings:

Noir – 10

Madlax – 9

El Cazador de la Bruja  – 10

This was a long time in coming, but it was loads of fun! I’ll do it again in another 10 years. ^_^





Code Name ha Sailor V Perfect Edition Manga, Volume 1 (コードネームはセーラーV 新装版)

December 7th, 2016

As most fans of Sailor Moon know, Usagi was not Takeuchi Naoko’s first super-powered schoolgirl. That honor belongs to Aino Minako, who made her debut in Nakayoshi magazine as Sailor Venus, Codename: Sailor V, before Sailor Moon.

And, now that Sailor Moon was given complete, new, “perfect”  editions, it seems only fair that her predecessor get her due as well.

Code Name ha Sailor V Perfect Edition, Volume 1 (コードネームはセーラーV 新装版) is a really good look at the early career of an incredibly talented woman who had one idea that changed the world…but only ever really had one idea.

While it is true that Minako is established as a an academic underachiever right away, she bears two unique qualities from her successor – Minako is ahtletic and an actively dedicated do-gooder. Unlike Usagi, who kind of skips over the petty crime-fighting phase of superherodom, Minako leaves gift-wrapped presents for the police all the time. Which is where the smidgen of Yuri in this series comes in.

Yes, it seems to us that – of all the Senshi – Sailor Venus is likeliest to be pansexual and desired by many, but Nakayoshi is still a children’s magazine. Nonethess,  although Sailor V is publicly derided by the local police, the female police captain is actually a huge Sailor V otaku. As well she should be.

Bad guys are many and varied, such as the pop idol, the pop idol’s younger sister who is a pop idol, the three brothers who are pop idols and the two sister who are pop idols. Puts the Starlights in perspective, doesn’t it? ^_^;

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – 5
Characters – 7
Yuri – 1
Service – 1

Overall – 7

It’s always fun to re-read Sailor V and remember the roots of the series that changed my (the) world.





Yuri Manga: Anoko ni Kiss to Shirayuri wo, Volume 5 (あの娘にキスと白百合を 5)

November 29th, 2016

aksyw5-e1476563876160Canno’s popular series, Anoko ni Kiss to Shirayuri wo, has made it to 5 volumes on the all-Yuri school formula.  It’s basically a Yuri trope du jour series, in a fantasy school, where adults are a vague concept and while boys are not unheard of, they are unseen. 

In Volume 5, we first run into Itou Sawa who is positive that Nishikawa Itsuki hates her. HATES. Big glare-y eyes from across the room-type hates. But, of course, that is not at all what is going on. Itsuki is struggling with a memory that Sawa doesn’t share…but should.

The middle of the book turns to look hard at the primary couple of the series. Rumors are flying that the day after exams, both Kurozawa Yurine and Shiramine Ayaka were seen together at the seashore. It’s a school scandal, but we learn the truth that Ayaka, rejected again by her family for not being number one in scores, runs off to have a good cry. Yurine helps her ground herself, and gives Ayaka a focus for her energy. Ultimately, they return to  school and face down the rumors.

Finally, we take the time for Sawa and Itsuki to confront their shared history and potential present. I’m not going to say it’s a stupid past, but under no circumstances am I to be held to any promise I made before 30, much less 5 years old. 

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 6
Characters – 7
Yuri – 8
Service – 1 on principle

Overall – 7

No, seriously. Any promises made in in kindergarten are no longer valid.





Sailor Moon 20th Anniversary Book (美少女戦士セーラームーン20周年記念BOOK)

November 21st, 2016

61y4xq55ktl-_sx368_bo1204203200_Last spring I was amazingly lucky and while in Tokyo for Rainbow Pride, I was also able to catch the Sailor Moon 20th Anniversary exhibit in Roppongi. Of course many of the coolest items, you couldn’t take pictures of – especially the original art from some of the series’ art books. That was my favorite part of the exhibit.

Well, if you are interested in seeing what exactly was on display at the exhibit, plus a fairly complete list of all the many items that have been released to celebrate the 2oth anniversary of the series, you are in luck! The Sailor Moon 20th Anniversary Book (美少女戦士セーラームーン20周年記念BOOK) has all that and more.

Character profiles, episodes,from the original series, albums, interviews, and info about Sailor Moon Crystal and the new musicals, and pages after pages of goods. (We indulged in a spot of “yup, got that, got that…how cool, we have that! Awww, that’s cute, don’t have that….” We’re only human after all. ^_^) A timeline of Sailor Moon‘s popularity and even a few pages on all the many versions of Sailor Moon around the world are included.

With all the interviews, I was a little surprised that there was nothing from Takeuchi Naoko herself. 

With the exception of that one thing, this book is about as complete as a fan could ask for. This fan was pretty pleased. 





Sailor Moon S is here! Join the Moonlight Party tonight!

November 11th, 2016

15027551_10154726708513552_1227742607169247655_nTonight Viz Media is having a Moonlight Party, featuring Sailor Moon S clips with the new dub, trivia and more. 

I don’t know about you, but I have never needed Sailor Moon more than I do right now, so please join me and other Sailor Moon fans on the official Viz Media YouTube channel.

I’m really looking forward to the dub of this and have all my digits crossed that it’s excellent. ^_^

Also in Sailor Moon News. if you joined the official Sailor Moon fanclub, today is the day you received your link to the Fan Club website. Remember, Chrome can automatically (poorly) translate the page, if you can’t read the Japanese! Ironically, I wanted only one of the official items, and found it last week in Kinokuniya. ^_^ I’ll be doing a review in days to come.

See you at the Moonlight Party!