The next short film by Zealous Entertainment, about a woman who’s trying to rebuild her life after tragedy. Please share and support the gofundme https://www.gofundme.com/hill-of-life-short-film-2vqaarhg
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The next short film by Zealous Entertainment, about a woman who’s trying to rebuild her life after tragedy. Please share and support the gofundme https://www.gofundme.com/hill-of-life-short-film-2vqaarhg
Gundam Evolve. This is a series of 15 shorts spanning across multiple Gundam continuities, from retelling events from the original series to showing sidestories in the Alternate Universes up to Seed. These are mainly for promoting certain model kits at times. The stories are all told with various animation styles, mostly being CG.
There really is no main plot to these shorts, aside from being connected to their respected shows. While most are side material or retellings, one in particular, the Nu Gundam short, is an alternate ending to Amuro's fight in Char's Counterattack and the Alpha Azieru. The other featured mecha spotlights are: the RX-78-2 Gundam, Ball, and the Braw Bro from the original Gundam series; Dendrobium from Gundam 0083; Gundam Mk-II, Zeta Gundam, Rick Dias, and Marasai from Zeta GUndam; The ZZ Gundam; Rekka Musha Gundam of the SD Gundam series; God Gundam from G Gundam; Wing Zero from Gundam Wing; Strike and Dreadnought from Gundam Seed. Along with these suits are also the compliment of grunt units form their shows, and other high profile guest Mobile Suits.
Due to the amount of shorts and variety of their styles, it's impossible to point where things are good and bad in a short manner. For the most part the CG ranges from decent tv-level CG in the early 2000's to some really impressive high quality models and fights. The oddest one out is the first short, which uses clips from the original Gundam TV series and compilation films. The majority of music and voice actors are all from their respected shows, so it is a great treat hearing those actors and scores again. This is Japanese audio only, but there are still English subtitles.
As a standalone piece, this is a 6/10. Great technical stuff and showcasing the featured Mobile Suits, but to someone unaware of those shows, a person is easily lost. This is truly for the diehard Gundam fans who want just a little bit more than what was in the shows. As a Gundam fan, though, this is an 8 for the pure Mobile Suit love.
Rightstuf and Nozomi Entertainment just released the DVD of these shorts to the West, something I never thought would ever appear here. They really do want to bring as much Gundam here as possible. http://www.rightstufanime.com/Gundam-Evolve-DVD
Patlabor, and Patlabor: The New Files. This tv series and OVA are a separate continuity from the Patlabor movies and the other OVA series. This one is much more light-hearted, with most episodes being self-contained, until a really neat story starts to connect some incidents. The OVAs are part of this timeline and have events that occur between many of the episodes, some of which were not able to be on TV. The bulk of these OVAs serve as a finale for the larger story arc in the series.
Like the rest of the series, this TV series focuses on the exploits of Tokyo's Special Vehicles 2 Section 2, a police unit who specialize in crimes using the pilotable robots called Labors. Utilizing several top-of-the-line Labors called Ingrams, SV2 and its team try their best to maintain peace and order in a time where a tool for construction can lead to mass destruction. Partway through these antics, a looming threat lingers in the air, building up to a confrontation with a highly advanced Labor built for war.
The animation is a bit of a step down from the original OVAs, and definitely from the movies. It's a budget TV series, but the Labor battles are usually entertaining. The characters are spot-on from the OVAs, and even the anime-only Takeo Kumagami is a fun character. The Japanese voice actors are good, and usually the English ones are spot-on. The music is rather catchy throughout the show. The only flaw I feel this show has are the episodes after the Griffin arc, and this goes for the OVAs too. Had the series ended there, it would have been great, but the slice-of-life episodes that follow it do not lead up to a bit of an interesting conclusion for the TV series, but the New Files end with a very somber conclusion. The one good thing about the second half of those OVAs is giving us the somewhat famous image of the anime Spanish Inquisition, the one with a guy holding a brush and a duck, and other one wearing a winged baseball cap, parodying the Monty Python skit. Yeah, it's from Patlabor.
Due to the unfortunate decline in the story at the end, this series gets a 6/10. Otherwise it would have been an easy 7. It's enjoyable, still, but the series is best watched in short bursts, with the Griffin arc being done all at once for maximum enjoyment.
Maiden Japan released the series across 4 volumes, and the New Files OVA in one set on DVD and on Blu-Ray. The video quality is pretty solid, as is the case with all their/Sentai's releases so far on BD.
Part 1: http://www.rightstufanime.com/Patlabor-TV-Series-Blu-ray-Collection-1-Hyb Part 2: http://www.rightstufanime.com/Patlabor-TV-Series-Blu-ray-Collection-2-Hyb Part 3: http://www.rightstufanime.com/Patlabor-TV-Series-Blu-ray-Collection-3-Hyb Part 4: http://www.rightstufanime.com/Patlabor-TV-Series-Blu-ray-Collection-4-Hyb New Files: http://www.rightstufanime.com/Patlabor-The-New-Files-Blu-ray-Complete-Collection-S-2-1990
OP1: https://youtu.be/Z9UtUzjUA5Q OP2: https://youtu.be/npH_bRSM-6o (Potato quality)
Ghost in the Shell: The New Movie. This 2015 film is a sequel and finale to the Ghost In The Shell Arise OVAs and TV series. The film does its best job to try to bridge the Arise series with any of the other parts of the franchise, with allusions, redesigns, and the like.
Following the events of the Arise series, Mokoto Kusanagi and her team are still dealing with the Firestarter virus and its fallout. However, with the assassination of the Japanese Prime Minister, the team, working with Public Security Section 9, now must investigate both, which have a frightening connection to one another.
The animation quality has increased a bit here. Already Arise was looking great, so with a feature film budget things look just that much better. A few of the characters have been designed to be closer to their designs in the original movie and Stand Alone Complex. The music and voice acting in both English and Japanese are just as good as they were previously. The story serves as a good conclusion to Arise, keeping the same narrative flow as the OVAs.
This gets an 8/10 from me. It was enjoyable, and fans of the original film are in for a great treat at the end of the film. New fans may be lost if they have yet to seen Arise, so this is definitely best watched after those episodes.
Funimation released the film on Blu-Ray and DVD. It's currently pretty easy to find.
https://www.amazon.ca/Ghost-Shell-New-Movie-Blu-ray/dp/B01ASMCU3Y/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1460575650&sr=8-1&keywords=ghost+in+the+shell
Oldboy. This 2013 movie by Spike Lee is the remake of the 2003 Korean film, which was an adaptation of the Japanese manga. Sadly this movie only ever acknowledges the previous film in the credits and never the manga, which I find disheartening. Regardless, this film is not meant for the kids, as it is quite graphic with its blood and a little bit of nudity. It's worth noting it bombed in the box office.
The film shares a near identical plot to the Kroean film. This one focuses on advertising executive Joe Doucett, who in 1993 is abducted from the streets and wakes up in a locked hotel room. On the TV there he watches the news as he learns of his wife's rape and murder, and he is accused of it. He spends the next 20 years watching the world's events unfold; intially he is depressed and tries to kill himself, but he wakes up after recieving unkown medical attention, and becomes focused on reuniting with his daughter and trains to break his alcoholism and learn combat techniques via the tv. One day after trying to escape, he awakens in a luggage trunk in a field, and now has to find out who imprisoned him and why before his daughter is killed.
The acting in this is surprisingly solid. The American actors mirror the Korean counterparts well enough. Josh Brolin is somewhat stoic most of the film but when his emotions flare he does it well. Samuel L Jackson is the shining spot of this, with him playing his role up to the hammiest it can be, and I love it. The cinematography is also well done, including the very long hammer hallway scene, one of the best scenes in the film. Unfortunately, the film does very little to bring anything new to this story, except for a much higher kill count. The music is incredibly forgettable.
I will give this film a 6/10. If this film did things a bit different, or maybe have more content from the manga as opposed to copying the Korean film, I feel this movie could have been a good Western adaptation. Unfortunately, it becomes an okay adaption of the Korean film, and fails to stand out on its own. it's been reported there was another cut that Spike Lee did that was 140 miutes long, but he was forced to cut it down. This caused Lee to remove his usual "Spike Lee Joint" from the advertising and labelling of the film. It is unlikely that verison will see the light of day. A shame, I bet it's better.
At the time of its release I could only find the DVD version of the film. The Blu-ray is also availab,e and is only on Amazon a dollar more. There's not much quality difference between the two, asides from the normal live action DVD to Blu-Ray differences in resolution and sharpness.
https://www.amazon.ca/Oldboy-Blu-ray-Josh-Brolin/dp/B00HZH1596/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1460053386&sr=8-2&keywords=oldboy
Nyaruko: Crawling With Love, or as others like to call it, Nyarko-san: Another Crawling Chaos, is a 2-season anime series based on light novels by Manta Aisora. The series borrows much of the lore of incredible horros/aliens as written by the likes of H.P. Lovecraft and a few other like-minded authors of the day. The anime also is very heavy on its otaku culture in-jokes. Not knowledgable of Gundam or Kamen Rider, a lot of the jokes will go over your head, sadly.
The series follows Mahiro Yasaka, a teenage boy on Japan who currently lives alone as his parents are working overseas. One fateful night he is attacked by a shadowy unknown monster, and is saved by a girl with silver hair. She calls herself Nyaruko, and claims to be an alien of the Nyarlethotepian race, the very same creature as Nyarlethotep, the Crawling Chaos in Lovecraft's stories. She tells Mahiro she has been tasked by the Space Defense Agency to protect Mahiro from other aliens who may try to attack him and Earth. She ends up living with him, and attens his school. Nyaruko quickly falls in love with him, yet somehow Mahiro fends off her agressive romantic advances, often with a fork resulting in a shout of pain in the form of often a Mobile Suit or ship form the Gundam franchise being uttered. Throughout the series they are attacked, but various other Lovecraftian horrors in human guise join the pair, though this also leads to some harem-level antics from the aliens.
The animation is usally pretty standrd for the slice-of-life moments, but amps up when action occurs, usually when Nyaruko takes on her Kamen Rider-like battle transformation. The monster designs are often really cool, but their motives can be stupid and otaku-like. Mahiro and his family are interesting characters. The aliens themselves start off really neat but sadly get swept up with harem anime traits and lose some of their flair. The Japanese voice acting, though, is pretty good despite this. The music is sometimes rather catchy. The first season is definitely the stronger season, focusing on the overall story happening along with the tension between Mahuro/humans and Nyaruko/aliens. The second season has less of this and more otaku trope antics and harem-level romantic blundering.
For the first season i'll give it a 7/10, and the second a 5/10. Sadly most of the jokes require decent to extensive knowledge of both H.P. Lovecraft's works, and of pre-2000's anime, especially of the sentai and mecha genres. If you aren't a fan of those, the show's jokes will go over your head. If you can understand all of these jokes, though, the show is fun but loses its strong focus and ends rather poorly. There was potential for a third season, but due to the passing of Kuko's voice actor, Miyu Matsuki, I doubt this will ever happen.
NIS America released both seasons on DVD/Blu-Ray combo pack; initially as premoum sets with hardcover epsidoe guide/artbook, a poster, and a magnet set, and now with season 1 so far, a standard release. I naturally have the premium editions. I believe soon the second season will get a styandard release soon, but for now the premium is still available.
Season 1 Standard Edition: http://store.nisamerica.com/anime/standard-editions/nyaruko-crawling-with-love-first-season-standard-edition Season 2 Premium Edition: http://store.nisamerica.com/anime/premium-editions/nyaruko-crawling-with-love-second-season-premium-bonus-set
OP1: https://vimeo.com/40211514 OP2: https://youtu.be/8PxnTy6CcCU
Natsume's Book of Friends seasons 3 and 4. These two seasons are going to be reviewed at the same time since both are not too different from each other, continuing the story set out from the first two seasons. Luckily this is not the end of the anime, with a 5th season newly announced. I figure it's a good time as any to bring up this review.
Like before, the series focuses on the adventures of Takashi Natsume, who has been able to see ghosts, or yokai, since he was a child, and has grown distant form humans as a result. After moving in with relatives from his late father's side, he encounters a book left behind by his grandmother Reiko. In it are various names of yokai she either befriended, beat, or tricked into signing their names. Those same yokai now look for Takashi, mistaking him for Reiko, wanting their names returned. Others want the book to use the power of the yokai inside; both malicious yokai and other humans in the know are gunning for the Book Of Friends. To protect Takashi is the yokai Madara, who disguises himself as the plump cat Nyanko-sensei. Takashi also gets human friends of his own, some who have some sort of spiritual affinity to detect, see, or sense yokai. These two seasons push Takashi's morality and give a glimpse into his tragic past.
Not much has changed in the quality of the series. My sets are now in Blu-Ray so the video is a lot sharper and a few more details are visible. The voice acting (Japanese-only) is still well done. The music is more of the same, very fitting pieces for the show.
I normally don't care much for Shojo titles, but this one is still a 10/10. The series is definitely one I recommend everyone to watch.
NIS America initially released both seasons separate as premium editions, which came with Nyanko-sensei keychains and a hardcover production book, on both Blu-Ray and DVD. Those are out of print but there's still the standard editions. Season 3: http://store.nisamerica.com/natsumes-book-of-friends-volume-3-standard-edition Season 4: http://store.nisamerica.com/natsume-book-of-friends-season-4-standard-edition
Little Witch Academia: The Enchanted Parade. This is the sequel to the Anime Mirai 2013 short film, backed on Kickstarter and released in 2015. Thanks to a successful campaign, Trigger was able to get enough funding to have it be almost an hour long in running time.
The OVA, like the original, centers around a school for young witches to learn magic. After getting in trouble with a class asignment gone wrong, Akko, Lotte and Sucy are forced to work on a parade at a festival in a nearby town involving making fun of witches. The three are joined by a trio of troublemakers, each with their own talents and quirks. Akko wants to make everyone in the nearby town see how amazing magic and witches are and change the public view of them. However, this will stress her friendship with everyone, running the risk of havign the entire plan fall apart.
The quality of the aniamtion is a bit better than the previous one. With more practice for the animators, their talents have grown and it shows in the animation. The new characters are quite enjoyable and quite unique. Then the town's children got their own charm to them. The voice acting, being Japanese-only, is pretty good. The music is quite enjoyable. The story in this definitely brings more detail to the world that this series takes place in, and is overall a fun story.
I'll give this an 8/10. It's an improvement from the original OVA, and I hope to see a tv series in the future with these characters and their various misadventures in the world of magic.
I ended up backing the Limited Edition of the OVA, which included a printed artbook, Line Art Collection book, soundtrack, and an original film reel cut (animation cell drawing). I'm lucky enough to have gotten one of Constanze, the witch who combines magic and technology. Both the normal edition and regular limited edition (BD and cd) are listed on Amiami, but stock comes and goes fast. http://www.amiami.com/top/detail/detail?gcode=MED-DVD2-30872&page=top%2Fsearch%2Flist%3Fs_keywords%3Dacademia%24pagemax%3D40%24getcnt%3D0%24pagecnt%3D1
Evangelion 3.33: You Can (Not) Redo. The long awaited third film of Hideaki Anno's Rebuild of Evangelion series is finally released in North America after nearly 2 years of delays in its home release. It's worth noting that Studio Khara had it delayed to have a new subtitle track that differed from the one FUnimation did for its theatrical release.
It's quite difficult to give a synopsis of this movie if you have not seen the other two, which is required for this film. It follows the events of the end of the second film, which has now established that the film series is now breaking free from the events of the TV series. Shinji Ikari wakes up to find himself in a world that's completely different from the one he's used to; everyone he knows is keeping secrets from him, and are divided in their goals and ideals. Shinji meets and befriends Kaworu, who guides Shinji through the events of the film, leading to him learning the truth of what has transpaired up until now.
Visually, this movie is great. The new Angel and Eva designs are very interesting. The visuals in environments are well done. Some characters have had some redesigns and look well. Sadly I can not say they have improved in characterization. As stated above, everyone is hiding information from Shinji, and the film could have easily had better things happen for everyone if they just went ahead from the get go and explained to him directly. Luckily the voice acting in Japanese and English is well done, and especially Shinji in both languages shows his frustration well. Of course, fan favourite Kaworu does not disappoint and, if anything, grows as a character compared to his previous appearances in both the TV series and the films. The music matches the visuals well, keeping the score strong and really giving each scene the feelings needed. Unfortunately the scenes do drag out a lot to fill up the time slot, where things could have been cut to allow this running time to be a lot shorter, or show more events to progress the plot in a more interesting manner.
I'll give this film a 7/10. Technicaly it is great, with strong visuals and great music and acting, but the scenes do drag and the characters are very evasive with their explanations and motives. This is still a must-see for fans.
Funimation released this on both Blu-ray and DVD, with a nice slip box and a book featuring artwork and information about the setting, characters, mecha, and making of info. It's widely available at most retailers. http://www.amazon.ca/Evangelion-Movie-Blu-ray-Not-applicable/dp/B00GS1DM2S/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1456698340&sr=8-1&keywords=eva+3.33
SENRAN KAGURA Estival Versus - Localization Blog #2
When you localize for a game company that’s known for LEs, editing the game’s script itself is only part of the project. Our LE extras can be text-heavy too – ask Tom, who wrote every word of Adol’s travel journal for Ys: Memories of Celceta from scratch. For Estival Versus, since the dual CD soundtrack containing 70 tracks didn’t need much help from our localization side, series translator Jason and I had to work together to create all the text for the art book and collectible “pin-up cards” to complete the LE package.
The art book, at 108 pages, is a hefty one, featuring illustrated bios of each character, translated pages of game-related manga, and various images of the characters at work and play. The bulk of my part, besides working with Jason on the dialogue for the manga, was updating the bios. With Estival being a sequel to Shinovi Versus, 20 of the characters already had bios, written for the syllabus in Shinovi’s LE. Those, though, were written as basic introductions to the characters, using only what was established about them prior to the start of the game.
On that note, spoilers for Shinovi Versus below…
To update the bios for Estival, I looked back on what the characters had experienced since the beginning of the first game – keeping track of which story elements made it into Estival, thereby becoming official, and which were left by the wayside. (Just as well; it would have gotten old to end almost every bio with “Left for dead by New Hebijo.”) Since the start of Shinovi Versus, not only have the characters learned and bonded more, but we as the players have learned more about them, so the new bios reflect both those things.
Those bios also appear in many of the LE’s pin-up cards, where each of the six sets contains ten cards highlighting each of the five lovely ladies in a faction in two distinct ways. Each character has one card showing them in a casual outfit, with info on their background and personality, and another card that shows them ready for battle, complete with combat stats and tips for playing them effectively. Many of the characters’ moves and stats have changed since the last game (sorry, Hibari fans, no more infinite butt stomps), so Jason and I rewrote the combat cards to match. The final results are 6 distinct packs of 10 high-quality, holographic collectibles – in fact, part of the reason they’re not all packaged into every box is because that would have driven up the price too high, hence each LE coming with one pack chosen at random. Here’s a sneak peek at the 10 cards in the Hanzo pack, where we’ve simulated the effect that the holographic foil is supposed to have.
As for the game itself, the NA release of Estival will include the base game, up to version 1.06, on the disc/game card. Series veterans might already know that Estival has had a great many content update patches in Japan since its initial release, and so, upon taking the game online for the first time, you’ll be able to download them all up to at least version 1.17.
Why is all that not on the disc? A couple of back-end reasons, but the main one is that, while there’d be room enough on a Blu-Ray, there wouldn’t be enough room on a Vita card.
What’s in the title updates? Right off the bat, you’ll get Rin and Daidōji for free, as they were in the Japanese version 1.07. You’ll also get new multiplayer match types (ever wanted to take the shinobi girls into mecha combat?), various game balancing tweaks, some new menu features, and numerous other goodies. You can see what’s in the patches by pressing the Square button on the main menu, and there just might be a little more content beyond all that on the way…
Premium DLC items, which we’re planning to roll out on day one (since Japan has already had them available for a while), include a variety of new scenarios and characters. Sadly, we couldn’t get the licensing rights to the three Ikkitosen characters from the Japanese version, but you will be able to play as Naraku, Kagura, Ayane from Dead or Alive, and Ayame the shop girl. Another featured DLC item is the “Dual Shinobi Hearts Ticket,” which presents several new missions pairing various characters up in comedy duos. Besides that, and besides all the costume items, you can also check out various Special Missions, which pit various groups of characters against one another in special circumstances. (The PS4 version, which can present ten-character matches to the Vita’s four, has a few more of these scenarios available than the Vita version does.)
The Dual Shinobi Hearts missions and Special missions were particularly fun to localize. Some of them pair up characters you don’t usually see together, some show new sides of the character duos we already know – witness Rin’s reaction to learning Daidōji’s one weakness – and some lean on the fourth wall in fun and inventive ways.
We’re still trying to finalize the release date and should have an official announcement soon, but the girls should be just about a month away from busting loose now as we’re targeting mid-March. Let’s see if the energetic shinobi can stand being cooped up for that much longer…
Screw you, Funimation. Not letting us get certain DLC?
Turn-A Gundam. After an absence from the franchise, Yoshiyuki Tomino returned to helm the last Gundam series of the 20th century in 1999. Taking place in a far-flung future, this series acts as a common conclusion point for the different GUndam continuities when it came out. The series made a large departure from others, focusing more on the cultural and political structure of the time as opposed to the mobile suits, with the later having only small skirmishes for the mos part.
The series takes place in a far future where technology on Earth is similar to the late 1800's or early 1900's, with the rediscovery of flight, old automobiles, and the similar fashion tastes of that era. A cataclysm occured where much of technology was lost, and the forgotten era called the Black Histroy. However, people on the Moon have kept their futuristic capabilities and now wish to return to Earth. Loran Cehack is sent down with two others to scout the planet and report if it is suitable for the Moonrace to return to. He integrates well into society, and comes under the employ of the Heim family, getting close to the sisters Sochie and Kihel; the later bearing an uncanny resemblence to the Moon's Queen Dianna. During Loran and Sochie's coming of age ceremony, their city is attacked by forces form the Moon. During this time, a statue of a giant crumbles and reveals a buried moustached white mobile suit. Loran, in order to protect everyone, jumps into the pilts seat and unknowingly begins the local militia's defence against the Moon invaders, and a fever of rediscovery of buried ancient technology.
For the most part, the character designs are very unique to the franchise. The Earthlings look like they are from a period piece while the Moonrace shows off their futuristic but old looks. Some old mobile suit designs return for a bit of fanservice, while others are incredibly odd and unique, with the titular Turn-A Gundam and many other suits designed by Blade Runner's Syd Mead. Some of the music pieces are pretty good, with the score being done by Yoko Kanno. The openings are kidna odd but catchy. There is no dub, so the show is Japanese audio only, still the actors did a decent job. Some of them were to quiet at times and not emoting enough, sadly, and then you get, for example, characters like Harry Ord having a fun time with his performance. A major flaw I felt with the series was that it took too long for the plot to move, with some rather unimportant episodes occuring. I hear the two movies that summarize the series are better paced.
I will give the series a 7-10. While much of the story is really good, it does drag its feet a lot for the 50 episodes it runs. When the shwo hits its high points, things are really good. Just expect a lot of slow moments and seem confusing character choices.
Rightstuf now has the exclusive distribution rights for the Gundam franchise. The series was released on DVD across two sets. As of this review it is currently cheaper to buy off Rightstuf. Set 1: http://www.rightstufanime.com/Turn-A-Gundam-Part-1-DVD-S Set 2: http://www.rightstufanime.com/Turn-A-Gundam-Part-2-DVD-S
OP1: https://youtu.be/tpqwY7tsZS4 Op2: https://youtu.be/LU2PP8V-ZmA
Ghost In The Shell Arise. Beginning in 2013, a new prequel/reboot OVA series of Ghost in the Shell franchise started. After all four episodes came out they were recut into a TV series with an extra story added in, followed by a theatrical film finale. This review is for the original 4 OVAs.
The series begins in Japan in 2027, where the world has recovered from a war. Cybernetics are becoming common among the normal population. Crimes involving cybernetics, cyborgs, and hacking are on the rise. Motoko Kusanagi is a member of the government's 501 Organization is tasked with investigating such incidents. As the series goes on she is contacted by Public Security's Daisuke Aramaki, and ends up forming the group that is known in the other parts of the franchise as Section 9.
As expected of GITS, the animation is great. The CG is decent, but seems a bit jarring when beside the 2d animation. I'm still on the fence about Motoko's younger design. It's probably her hair. Her outfit is great. Everyone else is excellent. The music is good for the series. The voice acting is strong in both Japanese and English, with the majority of the actors reprising their roles. Sadly ther prototype Tachikoma is not as lovable as the SAC ones.
I'll give this an 8/10. It's a good way to start a new continuity for the franchise while also giving allusions to how things might have happened with the previous titles.
Funimation released the series in two sets, each with two of the OVAs. The boxes are rather nice for these releases, and the price has dropped a bit since I bought them. Set 1: http://www.amazon.ca/Ghost-Shell-Arise-Borders-Blu-ray/dp/B00LXGN2L4/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1452737315&sr=8-3&keywords=ghost+in+the+shell Set 2: http://www.amazon.ca/Ghost-Shell-Arise-Borders-Blu-ray/dp/B012C89VGQ/ref=pd_bxgy_74_img_2?ie=UTF8&refRID=1WY6SQ7SYYPK6XA57487
OP: https://youtu.be/Fqi3xLcILZQ
I would rather not do this, but things are very difficult for me and my family right now. While I am struggling with finding work, I am in serious need for dental work. After my latest visit which resulted from an emergency, I have been told that my teeth are in very bad shape and need a lot of w...
Hello, Tumblr. I haven’t posted in a while. I’m sorry. I have been struggling with finding a job. Sadly things have escalated to the point where I soon won;t be able to afford dental work and will start losing teeth. I am still quite young. I reach out to you for help to afford as much as I can until I get work and can pay the rest myself. Whatever small amount you can give, please do. Regardless if you can or can;t please share this around.
Atelier Escha And Logy: Alchemists of the Dusk Sky. This 2004 anime is the first anime adaptation of the long-running Atelier game series. What strikes me as odd about this is that the game it is based on is the second of the Dusk series. Maybe the production team thought Ayesha would not have been as good? I don't know.
The series focuses on the city of Colset's R&D division and its brand new alchemist, Escha Malier. She is introduced to a new alchemist from the central government named Logix Fiscario, or Logy for short. Together they work on requests form both the government and local townspeople to create and solve issues, including a possible way to save the land from the fallout of the calamity known as "The Dusk", and the mysterious floating island in the sky.
The character designs for the anime are straight out of the game, so they look pretty good. The animation has some quality issues at times, though the BD release has a lot of fixes compared to the bad tv broadcast episodes. The voice acting is pretty solid, with the game's actors reprising their roles well. The music is also mostly straight from the game. The plot has a lot missing from the games; while some of it is fun character events, others were pretty important to the plot and are glazed over in the adaptation.
I'll give this a 6/10. It's enjoyable, but it skips a lot of content from the game. It helps to have played Atelier Ayesha to get the backstory of a few characters. Overall, it's a good supplementary series for the game. Definitely watch after playing for maximum enjoyment.
Sentai released the series on DVD and on Blu-Ray, Japanese audio only. The set often goes on sale so it can be pretty affordable to get. http://www.rightstufanime.com/Atelier-Escha-Logy-Alchemists-of-the-Dusk-Sky-BD-S
OP: https://youtu.be/Q_o0QHfSAo4
Dragon Ball Z: Resurrection 'F'. This film is the followup to the Battle Of Gods film, and set up a popularity springboard for the new DB Super anime. Instead of making a brand new threat, an old and iconic menace returns. The movie does have a guest character in the form of the title character from one of Akira Toriyama's newer manga, Jaco the Galactic Patrolman.
While Pilaf and his crew are searching for the Dragon balls, they have an encounter with the remnants of Frieza's army, who demand the Dragon Balls to bring their fallen leader back to life. Although in his personal Hell on Earth consisting of being trapped in a coccoon hanging from a tree with cute plush animals and fairies dancing and singing below and around him, Frieza is brought back to the realm of the living, although in pieces. With regeration technology, Frieza is made whole and trains for months to exact his revenge on Golu, reaching a new level of power. However, when he arrives, Goku and Vegeta are training with Lord Beerus and Whis off-planet, leaving the rest of Earth's warriors to fight Frieza and his army numbering over 1000.
Very little in quality has changed from the previous film. The fights looks great, but there is too much use of CG with Frieza's army, and some of the non-combat parts don't look as good as it could have. As usual, I find the dub is much better than the Japanese audio. Seeing Frieza was great, but his reappearance not a very important event plot-wise, other than show how much Goku and Vegeta have grown since meeting the God of Destruction. The comedic parts are also pretty sparce here. It was really cool hearing the Frieza song by Maximum The Hormone in the film.
I will give this a 7/10. While an enjoyable Dragon Ball film, the previous one felt more like a traditional Dragon Ball story with both good action and comedy, where this one feels like something from later DBZ with only a small amount of comedy and fun interactions, and a plot where you can really figure out the outcome and hope it just looks cool. Granted, yes this did look cool, but the story could have been more.
Funimation released the movie in a DVD/Blu-ray combo pack. It's pretty much available at all major retailers currently, so it is very easy to get a hold of.
http://www.amazon.ca/Dragon-Ball-Resurrection-Blu-ray-DVD/dp/B0149DT2L6/ref=sr_1_7?ie=UTF8&qid=1446512901&sr=8-7&keywords=dragon+ball
Project A-ko. This film from 1986 is a big throwback to many popular anime from the 70's and 80's, without having the references obvious like some other titles. It had several sequel OVAs released, giving strong headway for the OVA boom in the 80's and 90's.
The movie takes place in the fictional Graviton City, a rebuilt metropolis located where an alien spaceship crashed and wiped out the population of the area. The protagonist is A-ko Magami, a student at the all-girls Graviton High School. She posesses incredible strength and running speed, but thinks nothing of it. Her best friend, C-ko Kotobuki, is the target of the affection of A-ko's long-time rival, the wealthy B-ko Daitokuji. Using her massive amount of resources, B-ko tries to defeat A-ko and win the love of C-ko, going so far as making giant robots and power suits to fight A-ko. To add to the chaos, an alien race is invading Earth, looking for their lost princess.
The animation is quite fun to watch. A lot of effort goes into the scenes where pure action is the focus. For the 80's the animation during these parts look great. The comedic tone helps build up the riduclous scale of the action well, letting our characters shine whenever possible. The Japanese audio is quite strong, however the English dub, being a relatively early dub, is lacking to its source.
I'll give this a 7/10. If you like comedy and action and can tolerate older aniamtion, this movie is oen to check out. It's a treat to see if you're in the mood for fun and explosions.
Discotek re-released the movie a few years back, rescuing it from being lost when CPM went under. The DVD isn't too hard to find, and the price is usually reasonable.
http://www.rightstufanime.com/Project-A-Ko-DVD-Hyb
Ushio And Tora. This is the two OVA series from 1992 to 1993, that are conveneintly bundled in one DVD release here. Also included was the Comically Deformed OVA, but that's just fun side stuff making fun of parts of the series and is a bonus. For the sake of the review, I will not compare this to the new series, though I will say this is classic 90's OVA material with plenty of blood.
The series focuses on Ushio Aotsuki, a student who lives with his dad. One day, while told to clean up the storage shed, Ushio finds a hidden door in the floor, which houses a monster stuck to the wall, impaled by a spear by Ushio's ancestor 500 years prior. However, opening the door attracts many dormant monsters towards his home, which end up endangering Ushio's friends Asako and Mayuko. Forced to free the monster and weild the ancient Beast Spear, Ushio gains great strength and heightened instincts, characterised by his hair growing long and eyes appearing wider. The monster decides to claim Ushio as his prey and vows to stalk him and kill when Ushio is not expecting. However, since they keep encountering other monsters and spirits, this seems to be going so far as protecting and fighting alongside Ushio, possibly forming a friendship. Ushio decides to name the monster Tora.
For an early 90's OVA, its animation as decent. The action is really good, though sometimes the lighting is really dark. The characters are all different and stand out from each other. The monster designs are great. The English voice acting sounds good, however, the dub's audio is too muted and hard to hear the decent soundtrack and the sound effects, so the Japanese track is recommended, which does have much better performances.
I'll give this a 7/10. It's enjoyable, and if you have seen any of the new anime, check this out to see a darker adaptation.
Amazingly, even being an ADV release, the DVD is still easy to get a hold of. I would suggest getting a hold of this sooner than later. http://www.rightstufanime.com/Ushio-Tora-DVD-Complete-Collection-Hyb
OP1: http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x23tac2_ushio-tora-op_shortfilms (go a few seconds in) OP2: https://youtu.be/3pghKSpyftA (totally hair metal)