Monthly Archives: January 2007

Anime Review: Fushigi Yugi - 82.5%

The Essentials

Fushigi YugiName: Fushigi Yuugi, The Mysterious Play
Genre: Fantasy, Adventure
Episodes: 52
Released: April 4, 1995 - March 28, 1996
Based On: Fushigi Yuugi manga by Yuu Watase
Director: Hajime Kamegaki
Produced By: Studio Pierrot, TV Tokyo
US Distribution By: Pioneer/Geneon

Major Japanese Cast

Miaka Yuuki: Kae Araki
Tamahome: Hikaru Midorikawa
Hotohori: Takehito Koyasu
Yui Hongo: Yumi Touma
Nuriko: Chika Sakamoto
Chichiri: Tomokazu Seki
Tasuki: Nobutoshi Hayashi
Nakago: Tohru Furusawa
Mitsukake: Kouji Ishii
Chiriko: Tomoko Kawakami
Taiitsukun: Hisako Kyouda
Keisuke Yuuki: Shinichiro Miki
Tetsuya Kajiwara: Ken Narita
Soi: Atsuko Tanaka
Amiboshi, Suboshi: Yuji Ueda

Major English Cast

Miaka Yuuki: Ruby Marlowe
Tamahome: David Hayter
Hotohori: Sean Thorton
Yui Hongo: Wendee Lee
Nuriko: Melissa Williamson
Chichiri: Sean Mitchell
Tasuki: James Penrod
Nakago: Michael Gregory
Mitsukake: Richard George
Chiriko: Sandy Fox
Taiitsukun: Catherine Luciani
Keisuke Yuuki: Derek Stephen Prince
Tetsuya Kajiwara: Bo Williams
Soi: Melodee M. Spevack
Amiboshi, Suboshi: Steve Cannon

Scores

Animation: 8/10 (x 4 = 32 pts)
Story: 9/10 (x 4 = 36 pts)
Music: 8/10 (x 4 = 32 pts)
Coherence/Story Arc: 9/10 (x 2 = 18 pts)
English Dubs: 7/10 (x 1 = 7 pts)
Gut Score: 8/10 (x 5 = 40 pts)

Total: 165/200 (82.5%)

Review

Fushigi Yugi is a show about two middle school friends - Miaka and Yui - who happen upon a mysterious Chinese book in the restricted area of the National Library. The two start reading the book only to get sucked inside the book. The two girls, who both fall in love with the boy, Tamahome, who saved them when they first arrived in the land end up becoming rivals. The two strive to become the Priestesses of two best gods which protect two rival nations - Miaka attempts to become the Priestess of Suzaku, which protects the land of Konan while Yui attempts to become the Priestess of Seiryu, which protects the land of Kouto.

The story largely focuses on Miaka’s attempts to gather the Suzaku Seven - a group of celestial warriors which must all be present when Suzaku is summoned - as well as on Nakago, the leader of the Seiryu Seven, and the man who has tricked Yui into becoming the Priestess of Seiryu, and his attempts to disrupt Miaka’s plans. The Priestess, upon summoning their respective beast god, is given three wishes to be granted. Yui strives to use her wish to get Tamahome, while Miaka wants to use her wish to get Yui back as a friend and to return both of them to their own world.

I thought that this was a pretty enjoyable series, though I think it drags on a little more than it needs to. Some sub-arcs in the story take 2 or 3, or even 4 episodes or so when only 1 or 2 episodes were needed, with the time in between taken up by characters cackling or remarking at how brilliant their plan is or Miaka worrying about Yui or Tamahome for the millionth and a half time.

There are enough twists and turns to make the story compelling through most of the 52 episodes, however. At times things that are blatantly obvious to the viewer appear to be lost on the characters, or characters are being overly stubborn, though, and sometimes you feel like grabbing them through the screen and slapping some sense into them.

The series also includes a good mix of suspense, action, comedy, romance, and drama, and while some viewers may think that the drama and romance part may go overboard, while others may think that the suspenseful parts drag out a tad too long, I think the mix of all of those factors balance out reasonably well.

Given that the series was created in 1995 and 1996, the animation is pretty good I thought and appears to be rather comparable, if not better, than some other shows that I’ve seen that have been released at roughly the same time. The music is also pretty good, I thought, again for the time period, and fit the mood and situations well. My only real complaint with the series is the English dub. The dub isn’t bad, and I think is still good enough to be able to listen to without flinching or anything, but I think it is clearly it’s weakest point.

This isn’t a series that would be for everyone, I don’t think. I think most people will find it entertaining, at least for a while, but some may find some aspects of it tiresome before they get to the end of all 52 episodes. Some pure fantasy fans may tire of the romance between Miaka and Tomahome while others may think that 52 episodes is just too many. However, overall, I still think i was a reasonable enjoyable series.

First Watched: August - October 2006
Do I Own: Yes
Do I Recommend: Yes

Josh’s Anime Blog Podcast Episode #8

Episode 8 of the podcast is up.

You can download it directly from the following address (15.3 MB):
Josh’s Anime Blog Podcast Episode #8

You can download the RSS file for the podcast here:
http://www.joshsanimeblog.com/podcast/podcast.rss

Remember to update your RSS feed address if it wasn’t updated automatically!

Also, I have re-reviewed the anime Howl’s Moving Castle, increasing it’s score from 81.1% to 83.3%

Also, my podcast is up on itunes. If you search for anime under podcasts, you should find it as Josh’s Anime Blog Podcast.

Enjoy!

One (hopefully final) Podcast update

I think my transition over to the new server for my podcasts is complete. I wish go daddy allowed more customization of the website and RSS feed, but I guess that’s what you get for getting a cheapy (well, if you call $50 a year cheap) 1 gig space with someone who is somewhat reputable.

However, one improvement - if you have iTunes, each episode should now come with it’s own image so that little box where you can watch videos or show album artwork should have an image for each episode now - assuming you redownload all the episodes (I don’t think it’ll work if you already have them downloaded).

Also, in the process I discovered that my podcasts were being recorded at a sampling rate of 32000 instead of 44100 by audacity (despite every setting in the program) when the bitrate is at 96kbs it’s set at so I’ll have to think about that. The temporary solution is to record at the full 192kbs (in which case it behaves and does a sampling rate of 44100) and then use another program to knock it down to 96kbs.

So I guess that’s the roundup. I should have episode 8 (has it been that many already?) up sometime tomorrow!

Anime Credits: Mahoromatic Opening #2

Manga Review: Onegai Twins - Score: 80%

The Essentials

Onegai TwinsName: Onegai Twins, Please Twins
Genre:: Comedy, Romance, Drama
Tankoubon: 1
Serialized In: Dengeki Daioh
Released: 2005
Based on: Please Twins anime
Story: Please!
Art: Akikan
Published By (Japan): Media Works
Published By (US): DrMaster

Scores

Story: 8/10 (x 3 = 24 pts)
Art: 8/10 (x 3 = 24 pts)
Gut Score: 8/10 (x 4 = 32 pts)

Total: 80/100 (80%)

Review

The Onegai Twins manga is, as noted above, an adaptation of the 13-episode anime series. Onegai Twins is about three teenagers: Maiku, Karen, and Miina, who all find their way to a house that they saw on TV during a national news story two in the past - a house that each of them have a picture of, behind two children - a boy and a girl - playing in an inflatable pool. The boy, Maiku, gets to the house first, gets a part time job, and starts renting it. However, soon after that, both girls show up on his doorstep, both claiming to be his twin sister. It’s impossible for them to tell which one is Maiku’s real sister from the photo, and Maiku doesn’t want to just throw out a potential sibling, so the three live together until the mystery can be resolved. However, this creates an awkward situation where relationships start to form, yet no one is quite sure who is the sibling and who isn’t.

The fact that this single-volume manga tries to push material from 13 episodes of the anime into about 200 pages is quite an ambitious feet, and yet, amazingly, it works pretty well considering. This is mostly complished by putting in things from the first 4 or 5 episodes, then skipping most of the filler in between and going straight to the conclusion. While one might miss out on all the sub-stories that make the anime funny, the manga is still able to keep it’s coherency while not feeling too rushed. The art is also pretty good as well, with it basically looking like the anime in manga form.

The manga also changes some things, such as whose point of view a scene is seen from to give the manga some freshness. However, the biggest difference is how the conclusion plays out and, in a way, gives the manga’s ending even more finality than the ending in the anime, as it goes more in depth into the circumstances behind the trio’s abandonment.

I’m not sure if the differences in the manga are big enough to warrant reading it if you’ve already seen the anime, but it is a single volume and quick read, so you won’t cost one much if one does choose to check it out. In any case, the manga may be a good, quick read for someone to get introduced to the series if they haven’t seen the anime yet.

First Read: August 2006
Do I Own: Yes
Do I Recommend: Indifferent

Ok, more podcast website information

I uploaded some supposedly better versions of my podcasts on the new server (though I’m not really sure they are better…I may play with them when I’m actually on my home computer).

In any case, my new podcast webpage is located at http://www.joshsanimeblog.com/

The new RSS feed for my podcast is located at http://www.joshsanimeblog.com/podcast/podcast.rss

I’ve set the old feed up so that if you have itunes or another podcast reader, it should automatically redirect to the new feed the next time it checks it, but make sure you check first.

My anime blog may be moving (update: or maybe not)

Due to the space required by my podcast, and the fact that I’d like to get listening statistics on it (which I can’t get by posting them to the internet archive site, and also the fact that I don’t like hosting my files on someone else’s website anyway), there is a very strong possibility that this blog and it’s podcast will be moving to it’s own address very soon - possibly even by the end of the week.

I’ll let you know whenever I learn anything else more specific.

UPDATE: OK, I think this is basically what is going to happen: I got a podcast hosting thing with go daddy, and I think this is essentially meant to be that: a podcast host with a feed and a very small webpage to go with the podcast.

As a result, my podcast may be getting a little webpage of it’s own, but my anime blog webpage will probably remain here.

Anime DVD and Manga releases for January 16 - 22

Anime DVDs

Fafner Box SetJanuary 16, 2007
Fafner - Box Set
Noein - Volume 2
Ranma ½ - Season 1 Box Set
Shakugan no Shana - Volume 3
Speed Grapher - Volume 5
Utawarerumono - Volume 1

Manga

MÄR Manga volume 11January 16, 2007
Case Closed - volume 15
Fullmetal Alchemist - volume 11
Inuyasha - volume 28
MÄR - volume 11

January 17, 2007
Kamikaze Kaitou Jeanne - volume 7

Josh’s Anime Blog Podcast Episode #7

Episode 7 of the podcast is up.

You can download it directly from the following address (15.2 MB):
Josh’s Anime Blog Podcast Episode #7

You can download the rss file for the podcast here:
http://www.joshsanimeblog.com/podcast/podcast.rss

Also, I have re-reviewed the anime Last Exile, increasing it’s score from 90% to 94%

Also, my podcast is up on itunes. If you search for anime under podcasts, you should find it as Josh’s Anime Blog Podcast.

Enjoy!

Anime Credits: Cardcaptor Sakura Opening #3