Rose of Versailles Anime, Part 1, Disk 4 (English)

August 8th, 2013

The final disk of part 1 of  Rose of Versailles is SO. FULL. OF. MELODRAMA.

The thing about Rose of Versailles is – we know going into it, there really can’t be too many happy endings. If we know anything about the French Revolution, we know that most of the people we are following on the screen will be dead or exiled by the end of the story. But knowing that there will be one happy ending and one alone does not make it any nicer as we watch the universe kick Rosalie around a bit for no reason. Even obnoxious little spoiled Charlotte goes from oppressor to oppressed.

Honestly, I would wonder how the leaders of the country could have been so blind, but then articles like this one pop across my desk and I shake my head and stop wondering.

The art remains as hyperbolic as the plot, but every time I think it’s all just too much to handle, I check Wikipedia, to find that that bit was actually more true than not.

Oscar faces her own conflicting desires and puts them aside for duty…again. And we watch, wishing we had an Oscar we could call on to explain their duty to our nobles. She’s too wonderful. Far too wonderful to be real.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 9
Characters 9
Yuri – 1
Service – 3 (Oscar in formal whites!)

Overall – 8

Next up, Part 2 and the Affair of the Necklace. I don’t know if I can do it….



A Certain Scientific Railgun S Anime (English) Guest Review by Mara

August 7th, 2013

ACSRSWoo-hoo! It’s Guest Review Wednesday! Please welcome back serial Guest Reviewer Mara!

A Certain Scientific Railgun S (streaming for free, legally with applicable region limitations from Funimation) is a direct sequel to the anime A Certain Scientific Railgun… which doesn’t have ‘S’ at the end. Picking right up where its predecessor left off, it adapts the manga of the same name. If you are one of the lucky ones who only watched the anime of either Railgun or its mother series A Certain Magical Index, you should give this new season a go right now as it will be more of the same – i.e. an incredibly entertaining esper action story.

However if you are as voracious a consumer of the ‘A Certain Blank’ franchise as myself, you may be hesitant. Understandably so as this new series of Railgun is forced by existing cannon to now tackle the story arc that pushed Railgun into the so called ‘dark side’ of Railgun’s setting: Academy City. A story that focused on illegal cloning and perhaps the most gruesome form of level grinding in fiction. Known as the “Sisters” story arc – in the original novels it was responsible for introducing a lot of important characters; such as Kuroko, the Misaka clones and Accelerator. When it came time for the Sisters arc to appear in the Railgun manga the story focused almost entirely on Mikoto’s point of view leaving fan favourite characters out of the spotlight for an extended period of time; pretty much assuming you had already seen the Index version of the story in some way.

Not so for the anime adaptation. The anime gives you a complete story to enjoy and while Mikoto and the Sisters arc cast take centre stage we are not allowed to forget the rest of the cast, including characters that were introduced in the first Railgun anime:

By that I mean that Haruue is still around as is Banri, both characters from the first season. It is a treat to see that the anime staff did not just ignore them and assume that no-one would care if these characters appeared or not. In a show that had less effort put into it Haruue would have been put off stage now she has been reunited with Banri, instead we see their story continue alongside everyone else’s.

But it is Kuroko Shirai who receives a good portion of episode seven all to herself with her own sub-story that includes Saten, Uiharu and Haruue too. It keeps Mikoto’s story from becoming the dense all-encompassing mass it was in the manga buy piding up other events that would otherwise be entirely sequential. It also gives us an important glimpse of Kuroko’s view of Mikoto during this period, how concerned she is and the frustration that comes with trying to help someone who does not wish to be helped.

New to the Railgun story are quite a few scenes from Touma’s point of view as a digest version of the events he experienced in Index to add context for those who may have not seen or not remember the Index anime (way back in 2009). The manga assumes that we have seen Touma’s point of view before and thus gives us little to explain his appearance or motivation.  The anime however does show us how Touma finds out about Mikoto’s situation, including his interaction with Kuroko which involves a fun bit of perv to perv verbal combat that I really enjoy.

So if you have read the manga like myself and are wondering if you should bother with the first half of Railgun S, rest assured. The first season improved and expanded upon the story and the second season does the same with its source material far better than expected.

Score so far (Episodes 1-16):

Art – 7
Character – 10 (The A Certain Blank series is a fantastic example of Erica’s thesis that every character should have a unique ‘voice’. You would not mistake one character for another based on their lines… apart from the clones.)
Story – 6
Yuri – 5
Service – 9
Overall – 9

E here: Well, you’ve convinced me to watch it! I was dithering, since the manga had been so gloomy, but okay, I’ll give it  a try. ^_^ Thanks so much for the review and the prompt to reenter Academy City once again. ^_^



Serial Experiments Lain Anime, Disk 2 (English)

August 6th, 2013

lain coverI posited that there was more than one Lain at the end of  disk one, and here, on disk two of Serial Experiments Lain, we learn that that there are an almost infinite number of Lains, as every memory of Lain in every individual’s mind, exists as an artifact in the Wired.

This causes Lain no end of grief as various artifacts act in ways that she could not have anticipated, nor can approve of. Eventually, the Lain who we have been following and who we were supposed to believe to be Lain Prime, turns out to be merely another artifact. It wasn’t terribly hard to tease that from the narrative, though, so  it has less power as a big reveal than the creator hoped, I think.

Nonetheless, there are some interesting elements of the narrative – primarily, the idea that memories of us linger as different versions of us. Anyone who has had an opinion on the Internet  has probably encountered this phenomenon. (Things I wrote 10 years or go or more are thrown back at me by random people who have just discovered them, as if they are fixed, inviolable and I must feel a pressing need to defend them.  In my reality, I’m perfectly comfortable pointing out that my opinions change and I’m okay with being “wrong” all the time. ^_^)

Also interesting  – and very accurate – was the representation of  the Wired as a series of bodies, with no faces, but mouths yapping, yammering away endlessly. All I can say to that is, yup. ^_^

Ultimately, Lain finds a way to “fix” the narrative, tie-up the loose ends and repair the broken connections, by removing herself  from the story completely. Which she does.

In that moment it dawned on me that Serial Experiments Lain is  much less a child of William Gibson’s Neuromancer and much more of Herman Hesse’s Siddartha.*

Ratings:

Art – 4 The focus on sound and color/light is more developed than the line work
Character – 7
Story – In the end, 8
Yuri – 3  I have always been ambivalent about “Arisu x Lain”. There is genuine affection…perhaps there is love. YMMV
Service – 4

Overall – 8

* Both these books are excellent. You should read them. Go, do that and come back and tell me what you thought.



Bloody Lily Manga (ブラッディ・リリイ)

August 4th, 2013

There were 6 stories in this manga. 9 people died. Most of them were cute little girls. All of the murderers were cute little girls. Welcome to Bloody Lily (ブラッディ・リリイ), a horror comic from Ciao, one of the three leading shoujo manga magazines.

In the first story Dahlia joins a class and all of the girls are charmed by her beauty – and the fact that her family makes a popular perfume, Crimson Dahlia. Lily, who has always been popular with the boys, learns of a rumor that the secret ingredient of the perfume is the blood of a beautiful girl. When Lily ends up fighting off one of the boys, she runs to Dahlia’s house, where the mysterious girl kisses her and promises to protect her. Dahlia invites the attacker over and confides to Lily, as the poison in the tea kicks in and he falls to the floor, that the real secret ingredient is the blood of a beautiful boy. Bloody Lily and Crimson Dahlia go off together, forever.

Mako is being picked on by the girls in her class. When she finds a strange little gaming system that causes whomever’s name is used as the character name to suffer the character’s fate, she plugs in the names of her tormentors and watches them die with a sense of power. She climbs the levels of the game, controlling those around her; she becomes a Witch and rules the game…until the hero of the game defeats the Witch and she dies herself.  Whoever plays the game, the game tells us, is herself cursed.

Touko loves to make clocks. She doesn’t have friends, the other girls think she’s weird, but she’d be happy enough if people left her to make clocks. Misa befriends her and they are inseparable…Misa tells her that a large supermarket is killing the stores in the local shopping arcade and her own family’s shop is in danger. Touko decides to help by building a bomb and destroying the supermarket.. It works, Misa’s family is saved. Touko is so happy that even when it’s becomes apparent that Misa was merely using her and that’s she’s quite psychotic…it’s okay.

The school rumor is that if you go to sleep in the Infirmary, you’ll die, so Fumie is really, really worried about her friend Ryo who sleeps there almost every day, but is still getting more and more listless. Something is up – the school doctor is hiding something, so Fumie tries to peek in, but finds herself being touched by a creepy, gasoline-smelling tentacle arm. Determined to save Ryo from whatever it is, Fumie breaks into the Infirmary to find Ryo covered in a gloopy creature, that the school doctor calls “my baby.” Fumie rescues Ryo and sets, creature, doctor and school on fire.

The other girls don’t like dark gloomy Mayoru (midnight), but bright, sunny Mahiru (noon) is totally willing to be friends. It turns out they share a birthday, so they decide to pretend to be twins. But as Mahiru gets closer to a boy, Mayoru panics. She demands Mahiru never see him again, and when Mahiru apologizes, but says she’s seeing him, Mayoru comes up with a plan. She get surgery to look just like Mahiru so they can be real twins. Mahiru is, predictably, creeped out. Mayoru deceives Mahiru’s boyfriend, kills him, then asks Mahiru to join her. When Mahiru arrives, Mayoru explains she meant “join her” in death. She kills Mahiru , puts her in a coffin, then kills herself and now can be with her forever.

In the final story Houka is a beautiful, kind girl who raises rabbits in the school hutch. Kirika is her best friend whose feelings are slightly deeper, who is on the basketball team. Kirika sees Houka with a boy after the basketball game and is disappointed, but the next day when she finds all of Houka’s rabbits slaughtered and Houka missing, she’s distraught. No one will even talk to her about Houka and she gets hysterical and ends up in the hospital. Her tablet computer develops a devil face and tells her he can show her want happened. A bunch of the boys brought airsoft guns to the hutch and shot the rabbits as target practice. Houka discovered them, so they shot her and buried her in the forest. The evil tablet tells Kirika that she can bring Houka back with a lock of Houka’s hair and the blood of the boy who killed her. Kirika goes out and uncover’s Houka’s body, vowing to bring her back. She finds the boy who killed her, kills him and pours his blood over Houka’s hair. Houka is revived, but she is a demon, ugly and malformed. Kirika realizes she’s done a terrible thing. Demon Houka does not accept the rejection, and decides to solve it by killing Kirika and bringing her back as a demon, as well. The two demons fly away together happily.

The overall lesson in this book is – don’t trust anyone who wants to be your best friend. ^_^

Nakayoshi’s horror series Jigoku Shoujo (licensed by Funimation as Hell Girl) has a frisson of morality (at least in the first series, I haven’t followed it past that.) The people who are condemned deserve it and the people who condemn them themselves bear responsibility. Not so in Bloody Lily, where random people manipulate other people and people die. There is no shortage of blood, violence or death, even though the art is purely shoujo. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – Variable – 7
Characters – Variable – 7
Yuri – 6 Whether it is actually desirable or not, in two stories, the girl gets the girl.
Service – 1 – there’s little physical service but you just gotta know someone is fetishizing murderous girl children

Overall – 8

Remember, parents, this is the kind of stuff your children read. ^_^ I especially loved the adorable little ghost logo for the imprint Ciao Horror Comics. Cute ghost=murder and mayhem.
chcg



Day Off

August 3rd, 2013

My apologies, reviews have been sparse enough and now I need an extra day off. Went to a party yesterday and both of us have come down with a case of “being around people whose biomes don’t match ours”.

I’m reading some wackadoodle stuff, so I promise to be back soon. Have a good weekend!