Now This is Only My Opinion, Big 10th Edition!

November 27th, 2011

From time to time, I open up a Q&A here on Okazu to address random questions about life, love and Yuri. It’s been a while since we did the last one, but this will be our 10th edition of this, so let’s all eat some cake as we reflect on the deep questions you are asking. ^_^

I am always interested in the questions I’m asked – especially when there is no one simple answer for the question. As always I’m giving it my best shot, and welcome other opinions and perspectives in the comments.

In any case, here we go for the 10th edition of Now This is Only My Opinion!

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Q: How are minority characters treated in Yuri?

A: Not surprisingly, this is an incredibly complex question, because Yuri is unlikely to be different than manga as a whole in this regard.

Treatments of foreigners in manga and anime as a whole tend to be very stereotypical, although there will always be exceptions to the rule. What I’m seeing more and more in Yuri manga specifically, is the addition of the “American otaku girl” as a minority. But I have no doubt that’s not what you meant. I’m wracking my brain trying to come up with minority characters in Yuri. Anthy from Utena, of course, fares no worse than anyone in the series and, by my interpretation a damn sight better than most. Chinese characters are rarely treated well in manga in general, although I recall a Chinese/Japanese relationship one-shot from a Yuri anthology in which their linguistic (and presumably cultural) differences were superseded by their love. I can’t think of any stories with a Korean character, so if any of you do, please let me know. There have been a few Yuri stories here and there with a woman with dark skin, perhaps stereotypical African features, but I can’t think of any where that is a *thing*. And there are always stories where Japanese girl goes to some unnamed southern tropical island and falls in love with some unnamed dark-skinned beauty. In those cases, the women are merely a fantasy role, although in one case I can think of she at least is given a personality.

As I say, it’s a very hard question. There are some Yuri series which feed into typical stereotypes and others that don’t. What we can say is minority characters have yet to become a typical part of the Yuri manga landscape outside something like Battle Athletes, which played quite openly with stereotypes.

Because Japan is so much more homogeneous than the US, even Tokyo as compared with, say, New York, there’s less minority presence. This is reflected in every form of entertainment, so it’s not that surprising to see it in manga.

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Q: I don’t read much Yuri, and in part it’s because of my impression that Yuri characters tend, overall, to be very stereotypically feminine. By contrast, BL is, as a genre, highly invested in gender nonconformity, and even general shoujo has a fair amount of genderbending. Do you agree that Yuri characters are more hyperfeminine, and if so, do you think it’s because of the influence of male readers/writers?

A: No, I absolutely don’t agree. I going to guess that you’re just familiar with one kind of anime or manga.

For one thing, our earliest role models in Yuri were the exact opposite – women who were portrayed as being specifically masculine or with masculine skills/roles in shoujo series. Prince Sapphire of Princess Knight, Haruka/Sailor Uranus from Sailor Moon, Arisugawa Juri and Tenjou Utena from Utena, even Satou Sei in Maria-sama ga Miteru, who is compared with a Takarazuka otokoyaku, an actress that takes on a male role.

I talk about the two main tropes of Yuri in my two essays on Hooded Utilitarian. I strongly suggest you read the second one, about the Girl Prince.

Yuri did not start to show up in seinen and shounen manga until most of the main tropes had already been established by shoujo manga (again, I discuss this in my essay about the tropes of Yuri on Hooded Utilitarian.) Once those tropes did become part of the seinen/shounen landscape, of course they wanted their lesbians drawn sexy. Because the audience was primarily male, they embraced a trope of the pervy lipstick lesbian, who does things to other girls that the audience wishes they had the balls to do. But this is a very, very late interpretation and is found in far, far fewer series than the much more common cool, slightly masculine lesbian character.

What you’re doing is seeing something in the series you’ve read and watched and generalizing it to the whole genre. But as you say, you haven’t read or watched much, so you just haven’t seen anything that contradicts your experience. ^_^ Watch Revolutionary Girl Utena.

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Q: Why do you occasionally use the word ‘space’ so much; and in odd (but not incorrect) places?

A: What an interesting question! I guess I’d call it a verbal tic.

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Q: While I was in one of my dictionaries yesterday, I happened by the page listing Japanese government bureaus. I returned there for a second look, because I was sure my glance had misread one of them. Sure enough, I was wrong, there is no “Cabinet Lesbian Bureau.” It is the much more prosaic and boring “Cabinet Legislation Bureau.” It did give me a laugh and make me wonder if my Freudian slip is showing.

So, my question for you: if Japan were to have a cabinet level “Lesbian Bureau,” what should it’s charter be and who would you wish its members were (real or fictional)?

A: I’ll be honest, I never have any thought that I wish a fictitious character was somehow real, so that limits me to a much smaller pool of candidates.

In fact, the only person I could unequivocally say should  be there is Osaka Assemblywoman and out lesbian politician, Otsuji Kanako. The charter would be to provide equal opportunities for lesbian representation in local, regional and national government.

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Q:  What is the best way to spread Yuri-love (more precisely, love of reading Yuri works) to straight friends?

A: We’ve dealt with this question here before. You can’t and no one likes a friend who proselytizes. IF, and only if, you can think of a series that your friend would genuinely enjoy for other reasons, then introduce them to a series that fits those criteria. Otherwise you’re just being a pain. I mean really, would you want them to proselytize mecha to you when you don’t like mecha?

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Q: Could you go through all the components of the Six Degrees of Yuri? I’ve read it somewhere before, but have been unable to find it again for precise quoting when telling people about it =D.

A: Six Degrees of Yuri is a riff on the Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon. In short, it’s the utter lack of coincidence that you’ll see the same voice actors and actresses over and over again in series with lesbian themes or characters.

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Q: What is the best present for one lesbian to give to another?

A: Whatever would make the other one happiest.

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Q:  What’s one interesting item you have on your Bucket List?

A: I only have two things left on my Bucket List, in fact. Of them, one is to see the Palace at Knossos, Crete.

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Q:  Short of actually going to Japan, what do you think is the best way to learn Japanese both in terms of effectiveness and cost considerations?

A:  Another entirely complex question. The problem here is that people learn differently, and what will work for one person may simply not for another.

First, take a look at local colleges or adult school programs and see if they have a class you can take. Spend some time memorizing the hiragana and katakana syllabaries.

If there are no classes available, there are a lot of beginner’s exercises online you can work with.

Effectiveness is going to entirely depend on you and how you learn. Language tapes might work great for you, or they may not, so there’s no one way I can suggest that is sure to be a winner for you.

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Q: Is Japan the only country in Asia where domestic authors of lesbian themed works are regularly published? Is there anything like Yuri manga and anime in South Korea, China, etc.?

A: Honestly, I have no idea. I’m putting this question up so hopefully my readers can answer it for us. I’d also like to know.

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Q:  What are your ground rules for having a public blog and protecting your privacy?

A: The main ground rule is that when one decides to go online, one should not be delusional about the concept of “privacy.” There isn’t any privacy anymore, whether a person decides to be in the public eye or just has a Facebook page. (For instance, once a year there is a scare about zOMG, your name address phone # is available on XYZ site! But all that is public info and it is and always has been available, whether you like it or not.)

My biggest concerns are not privacy, as such, but safety. I do draw the line at tolerating threats of or implications of physical violence. When I receive those, I take measures.

And, while I let my readers into my thoughts and feelings, you do not have full access to all areas of my life, of course. ^_^

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Q:  How would you start an anime/manga club specifically for adults, not just the typical high school and college age fans? How would you go about advertising it, what kind of venue should it be held at, should it be more of a discussion group vs marathon viewing, and what steps would you use to go about keeping the group going and growing?

A: That’s a great question and I have no definitive answer for you. Years ago, when there was a local video store with a fair selection of anime I toyed with the idea of creating fliers and advertising such a group there.

Now, it’d be that much harder, with digital distribution.

Here’s a suggestion – try your local library. Offer to show anime that anyone might like. My library shows up to PG-13 anime. You might get some kids, but there also might be adults who come. You could also go for stealth advertising and stuff fliers in adult-oriented manga that has anime (say Planetes) with contact info…but librarians usually notice that kind of thing. ^_^

As for going and growing…group dynamics will affect this, and the venue and the age/level of maturation of the members. Groups always grow, get settled, go through cramps, die. It’s nothing personal when people drop out, it just means you always have to be growing the group and time and place affect that.

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Q:  Ok, just a question, since it has been a topic of conversations, albeit not so much a heated debate as an occasional statement by given sides, what is your opinion of “futanari” is it/are they in your eyes Yuri, Yaoi, Str8, or something else…?

A:  I’ve talked about this way back in 2004. I think of futanari as having two separate approaches to the topic; women with penises, and men with breasts. Women with penis series like Stainless Night are, IMHO, Yuri. A man with breasts series, like Chimera or Purple *might* have some Yuri, but are not in and of themselves Yuri. The audience in Japan is mostly straight adult males.

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Q: What is your opinion of the trend of taking old myths or legends that had male characters as the central protagonists and creating stories around gender reversed versions of them?

A: Generally, I like reworking of myths. In fact, that is one of my primary hooks in having been captivated by anime and manga.  Gender reversal is rarely something I care about and, as I am very female-centric in my interests, I don’t know that I’d specifically watch or not watch a series that starred male characters in a typically female role. I’m otaku, not fujoshi, and prefer the girls to the guys.

I usually have no idea what I’d watch or not until I have an opportunity to do so. Yes, I have watched Ikkitousen, and Kohime Musou. If it were the other way around, say a BL version of Orihime and Hikoboshi, it would depend on other factors in combination with the story to determine whether I’d watch it. (Thinking about it though…that would be a pretty cool story idea and I probably *would* watch it! ^_^)

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Thanks again to all of you who wrote in with questions! I see I’m going to have to get smarter to keep up with you all. ^_^



Yuri Network News – November 26, 2011

November 26th, 2011

Yuri Manga

Top news story this week, in case you missed it, is that Seven Seas announced that they have licensed GIRL FRIENDS by Morinaga Milk and will be releasing it in omnibus format. The first volume is slated for autumn 2012.

Shannon L. reminded us on the Yuricon & ALC group on Facebook  that Yen Press licensed the Puella Magi Madoka Magika graphic novels, the first one of which also should be coming out in spring 2012.

YNN Correspondent Tomo K. wrote in with the most wonderful news! Ame-iro Kouchakan Kandan (飴色紅茶館茶話) is getting a number of post-series one-shots Ame-iro Kouchakan Kandan~Golden and Silver Tips~. Terrific news for all of us who enjoy spending time in Fujieda Miyabi’s Amber Teahouse. (And maybe, just maybe, for those of us who would like to see more well-established, older couples in the pages of Comic Yuri Hime?)

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Yuri Anime

Nozomi/Rightstuf is restarting showing Season 1 of Maria Watches Over Us on their Youtube channel. Catch 2 episodes a week for the next few weeks.

Also of interest to us on the Nozomi/Rightstuf website, is an interview with Director of Revolutionary Girl Utena, Kunihiko Ikuhara. Of specific note, Okazu reader and contributor Cryssoberyl asks the first question – and it’s about the romantic relationships involved! Cool for Cryssoberyl – and the answer is cool for us! ^_^

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Other News

Deb Aoki on Twitter brought this to my attention: We Love Fine, a t-shirt company has a Saiilor Uranus/Sailor Neptune meets Nagel art t-shirt design. Looks pretty cool. If you buy it, let them know I sent you. ^_^

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That’s a wrap for this week.

Become a Yuri Network Correspondent by sending me any Yuri-related news you find. Emails go to anilesbocon01 at hotmail dot com. Not to the comments here, please, or they might be forgotten or missed. There’s a reason for this madness. This way I know you are a real human, not Anonymous (which I do not encourage – stand by your words with your name!) and I can send you a YNN correspondent’s badge.

Thanks to all of you – you make this a great Yuri Network!



Great (Retro) Anime/Manga Gift Guide 2011 (English)

November 25th, 2011

I’m staring at my pile of to-watch and to-read anime and manga and I can’t but help notice that there are a lot of familiar titles among the mix. And, as it’s that time of year again, at which Americans decide what matching pen and pencil set to get their relatives, and otaku Americans decide what anime or manga they should buy to indoctrinate their younger family members, I had a thought.

This year, I’m specifically suggesting anime and manga that were awesome and wonderful a decade or more ago and are just as wonderful, now that they are available again. These will all make perfect family watching/reading to brainwash educate your young family members in the ways of anime and manga fandom. And, possibly create a new Okazu reader or two. ^_^

Princess Knight – This is as close to a kernel as we have in America for the concept of “shoujo manga.” And, not at all coincidentally, Sapphire is the inspiration for many of our favorite cross-dressing, sword-wielding heroines, Lady Oscar, Tenou Haruka and Tenjou Utena among them.

This manga makes a great starting point for discussion of gender roles, societal expectations, Disney as a role-model for manga and anime, and the history of manga. It also makes a terrific end point, after you’ve handed your youth of choice some of the other items on this list and they are intrigued as to where this kid of thing all started. History lessons disguised as entertainment…what will nefarious adults think of next?

Magic Knight Rayearth manga. This fetching all-in-one edition of CLAMP’s sword-and-sorcery classic manga is…really nice. Color pictures make the volume an attractive collector’s item, especially for those people who missed this the first time around. The story is, perhaps, “basic,” but as a result it makes a fantastic entree’ into role-playing, strong female characters, chicks with swords, teamwork/friendship-focused stories and other touchpoints that mean a lot to readers of Okazu. Let me be blunt, this would have been my favorite series ever at 8 years old.  Give this to the girl prince in your family, or the gamer kid and see what they make of it. I bet they love it. Then, when you’ve got them good and interested, invite them over for a marathon watching of….

Magic Knight Rayearth remastered Anime. Media Blasters did a really, really nice job.

Yes, the anime itself seems kind of kiddy-anime. That’s because it was. It was still pretty classic sword-and-sorcery stuff. Evolving armor, magic, weapons, a little light politics and romance, magical creatures, even giant robots. This is your chance to have heart-to-heart with your young relative about love and hate and violence and friendship and how many different ways humans make bad decisions.

And the remastered animation really looks good.

When you watch  Season 2, you can advance the discussions of politics a bit.

Also, I recommend start using the word “delusion” in discussion about the way we as adults, especially, talk about our world. Let them know that it’s not their imagination. ^_^

Or you can do none of that, and just enjoy the colorful animation in fine CLAMP style (personally, I always like their swirly bits,) and the D&D-ish world with Japanese influence.

About this time, you should introduce them to Code Name: Sailor V.

Bearing in mind that this may be the very girliest of all the girly things on this list, it’s still adorable and important.

Minako is not an “average girl” in the way that most magical girls are presented. She’s very athletic, she’s not too sharp and her life is centered around the kinds of things an actual 13-year old might care about – boys, pop idols, having fun with friends, playing games, reading about stuff that she’s not yet buying, but would one day like to.

As bizarre as that might seem, at 13 most girls actually do want to be more grown up, more active in their own lives, and they kind of have to wait a few years before they are allowed to be. Minako provides us a glimpse into a really typical teen girl id – fun, friends, fashion, yummy food, and an overwhelming, if somewhat limited, sense of justice. Sailor V is solid fun, with some weirdly non-moral of the story wrap-ups. The second volume of Sailor V gets a little deep and very superficial at the same time. Some of those chapters are perfect openings for discussion of body image, among other things.

Of course once your young family member has read this, hit them with the big guns….

Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon is not a classic by accident. This series combined elements of classic “girls” stories with elements of the most popular “boys” stories to a create a whole that resonates with readers even now. It’s not accidental that Sailor Moon was made into an anime, where Sailor V was not. The themes of friendship, teamwork, strength in numbers is one of the binding ideas of this series, just as it is in One Piece.

The supporting characters are exactly what makes this series so powerful. With such a large ensemble, each targeted to a personality archetype, there was someone for everyone to like in Sailor Moon. As the older characters are added in, it’s likely to be read by more family members than just the kid you’re giving it to.

Now that your target kid is thoroughly hooked, hand them Volume 1of the Card Captor Sakura Omnibus. I originally gave these to my 14-year old niece, but she’s in a more Doctor Who phase right now. However, my 17-year old nephew ended up liking this series enough to keep reading.

I can’t say enough about this series. There’s so *much* here. Sakura is strong, in a complete girly, down-to-earth way. You can imagine having her over for lunch and really enjoying her company. (And Tomoyo’s, because of course she’d come, too.) There’s just enough sexual politics, elementary grade version, in this book to intrigue and bewilder anyone of any age. The art is some of CLAMP’s absolute best. I consider this series to be their peak work.  For those of you with kids in your life you think are even the slightest bit bent, this series is a must-read for them.

Volume 2  continues with even more great freaky magic, and more deeply intense relationships that you just don’t normally see, all within an adventure that’s perfectly child-friendly. I’m reminded over and over why this series was so damn popular when it came out. Because it’s *excellent* on every level.

Every new character that it introduces is delightful to know, even (and often especially) when they disturb you just ever so slightly. ^_^ This series also genuinely has the best magical creatures I’ve ever seen in any fantasy series.

(As an aside, my number one and two wishes for 2012 are that the Sailor Moon and Card Captor Sakura anime are relicensed and re-released by a company that cares about quality. Number three and four would to complete the body of literary precedents with the licensing of Rose of Versailles, anime and manga.)

Which brings us to the final suggestion I have for this year’s Gift Guide. In this case, it’s the manga that remains out of print, and the anime which has been re-issued.

Revolutionary Girl Utena could not have been without all the previous series. It took so many of the elements established in earlier series and combined them in unique, powerful ways.

Because of the non-linear story, the surreal art, and some of the themes, it makes a great benchmark to the inside of your family member’s brains.

This 10th anniversary edition looks good, has great extras, and has stood up well against the last decade of animation. The music is still a magical cookbook of awesome.

I must comment on  the tremendous overlap of voice actors in the anime for Utena, Sailor Moon, Card Captor Sakura. I consider these people masters of their craft for very very good reasons.

In any case, when you are considering your family members and you think you’ve got one that could become an Okazu reader in the future, stick these under their tree and see what happens. ^_^



Giving Thanks

November 24th, 2011

Today is Thanksgiving in the United States, and as I have done for the last few years, I’m taking a few moments to express (out loud where other people can hear it!) how thankful I am for some things.

This year I would very much like to begin by thanking Nozomi/Right Stuf, Seven Seas, Kodansha, Media Blasters, Dark Horse, Sentai Filmworks, Viz, Vertical, and Yen Press  for their various Yuri and Yuri-friendly series in the past year. 2011 was a very good year for reboots and re-releases of older series.

I would like to thank Rica Takashima, Takami Koka, and Yorico Murakami for their continuing assistance with the Rica ‘tte Kanji!? Omnibus project. Especially Takami-sama. ^_^ We’re still on track for a 2012 release and I think you’ll be very pleased and surprised at what we have planned.

Thanks to Yuricon staffers and my dear friends, Serge, Sean, Bruce, Donna and Kelli. Traveling to new and exciting cons is always best when it’s a group trip. ^_^

Very special thanks to all my Okazu Guest Posters this year: Mara, George R, Felix, C Banana, Bruce, Katherine H, Hafl, John B, Ayra, each and every one of you has helped this blog become the resource it is. My very sincere and heartfelt thanks to  all of you.

Of course I must thank all my Okazu Heros and Superheros! I quite literally could not do this without you. Thank you all for your kindness and generosity, your support of Yuri and of Okazu. And for friendship, which none of you are required to give, but all of you do in great measure.

Always, always I want to thank you, my dear Okazu Readers. You push me to be a better blogger, critic and commenter all the time and for that, I thank you. You yell at me, make fun of me, but I am so pleased and proud to know that my comments fields are the opposite of a cesspool. Your wit and insight help me understand more about the topics I cover here.

Always foremost in my thoughts, I want to thank my wife, who not only puts up with this nonsense, but actively encourages it. I love you with all my heart.

Thank you all from the bottom of my heart.

Happy Thanksgiving Day, whether you celebrate the day or not.



Last Exile: Fam the Silver Wing Anime, Guest Post by Felix (English)

November 23rd, 2011

It’s Guest Post Wednesday! Today we have an exciting post, from long-time Okazu reader and commenter Felix! We’re very excited to have Felix join out Guest Reviewer community. Please extend a welcome hand and thank to Felix!

Last Exile, Fam the Silver Wing is the story of three girls, each of 15 years of age: Fam Fan Fan, sky pirate and fantastic vespa pilot, Giselle Collette, Fam’s genius navigator and closest friend (whom Fam calls “Gisey”), and the girl they meet, the young princess of the Kingdom of Turan, Millia il Velch Curettola Turan. This is the story of how Fam decides to steal a battleship from the middle of battle, save a princess, and embark on a quest to help Millia save her beloved older sister and their kingdom from the conquering Ades Federation. This story also involves a legend, how once long ago humans left a dying earth but one day returned. The legend of the Exile…

When I was first writing this review, I was thinking of doing a detailed synopsis of the first four episodes, but I decided instead tell you my reasons why you should start watching.

1) Three great female leads:

Because you are reading Okazu, I am assuming you love great female leads, like I do. In these four episodes I have come to truly love Fam, Gisey, and Millia. Outside of some of my favorite Yuri series, I don’t think I actually have been as excited to see how the leads develop, as I am with this series. In the beginning, Fam was a somewhat crazy, hotshot pilot, Gisey was really her straight man, and Millia was…a princess. My god, the amount of actual character development just in these first four episodes, I can honestly say is more then I have seen for the female leads in most series I watched. Fam may come up with “crazy” plans, but they are in fact actually based on extremely solid ideas. Actually, of all three characters, and despite what you expect, she is probably the most mature, often times the most level headed.

The main reason for their success is because Gisey is in fact a genius when it comes to battleship design and has a photographic memory. She memorized the layout of the enemy’s flagship, and was miffed that they did some remodeling. There was a scene in the lift were she quickly flipped through an updated copy a plotted their route to the bridge, which gave them the updated info they needed for their plan to succeed.

Millia, like I said, is a princess and, when we are first introduced to her, is all she is. Over the first few episodes, Millia changes from a generic self centered damsel-in-distress type princess to someone that is kind and mature. While she has realize she don’t have much power to change what has happened to her, instead of wallowing in it, she is determined to move forward, with Fam’s and Gisey’s help.

Not only are Fam, Gisey, and Millia great indivudually, I absolutely love their interactions. Fam and Gisey are basically as close are you can get, short of openly being lovers, both relying on each other. Fam often says she believes “we” can do it, referring to Gisey and herself. When Millia asked Fam why she is exposing herself to so much danger on her behalf, Fam replies it’s because she wants to see Millia smile.

2) Return of some fan favorites:

While not a direct sequel to the original Last Exile, a number of fan favorite secondary characters return. The first we are introduced to is Dio Eracles, who joined the sky pirates a number of months before. While as of episode 4 it’s not clear why he joined the pirates, it seems that his role is to bring about the meeting of Fam and Gisey with the next two returning characters – the two I am most excited about, Tatiana Wisla and Alister Agrew. In this world, Tatiana and Alister command a legendary battleship, the Silvius. Nicknamed “The Reaper,” it’s said that it first appeared two years ago, destroyed an Ades fleet, and disappeared. The first meeting between Fam, Gisey, Tatiana, and Alister is really nothing short of epic.

3) The looming threat is more direct and real to the characters:

While there are some plot elements that are similar to the first series, the tone of the series is rather different, in a good way. In the first four episodes, which cover less than 72 hours in time, it has been made abundantly clear that this series is going to going to be darker then the first series. The second episode, without giving too much away, introduces a disaster that directly and personally affects one of the female leads. People on some of the boards I frequent noted this was a “wham” episode that you would expect half or most of the way though the series.

While the first series takes place against a world that is ending, it didn’t seem to directly have a gut punching effect any of the main characters like episode two did, which basically ends with the reaction shot of a one of the leads watching her world crumble around her. Then again, this personal disaster is the catalyst for a lot of the development of Fam, Gisey, and Millia. You can describe the arc of the episodes 01 to 04 as:

Episode 01: Cool action, kind of what I expected.

Episode 02: Holy shit, they wouldn’t! Holy shit, they did! Holy shit, that is dark!

Episode 03: A wonderful bit character development and a truly emotionally moving last few minutes to allow the characters to come to terms.

Episode 04: Hell ya, this is epic, Tatiana and Alister are awesome!

In conclusion:

While I started watching originally simply because I had watched the first season, I wasn’t particularly expecting anything amazing. Right now can honestly say I haven’t been as excited to see what happens next in a series in a long time.

Ratings:

Art, Character design: 8 – Fam, Gisey, and Millia do have some moe style elements to their character design, but at the same time their design is interesting, unique, and not moe blob at all. Tatiana and Alister are cool and mature.
Art, Mechanical design: 7 – The whole world really exists for the purpose of supporting Range Murata’s unique mechanical designs. Your enjoyment might vary depending on how much you enjoy the steampunk/dieselpunk design aesthetic.

Characters: 8 – Like I said, I absolutely love Fam, Gisey, and Millia.

Story: 8 – I have loved a lot of series, but it’s been a while since I been so excited to see what comes next.

Yuri: 4.5 to 5 – It might be the fanboy in me, but honestly by episode 04 the series seems to heading towards Fam and Millia as a couple. Then again it’s already been established Gisey really is Fam’s most important person.

Service: 2 – Slight bit of fan service, mostly boiled down to Fam’s old fashion underwear we see her in a couple times and Liliana is maybe naked from the waist down the first time we see her, but we really can’t see anything. It’s actually in line with the first season.

Overall: 8

If you looking for an action orientated series with awesome female leads, Last Exile: Fam the Silver Wing will fit the bill nicely.

Erica here:  Thanks again for the review! I’ve linked to Hulu, where you can watch this in English, for free, legitimately along with me. Post-watching the first few episode, I’d put the Service score much higher. The first episode fills the camera with panty shots, completely obliterating  any bonds of female friendship for me.