Monthly Archives: May 2007

Anime DVD and Manga releases for May 8 - 14

Anime DVDs

Disgaea DVD Volume 3May 8, 2007
Ah! My Goddess: Flights of Fancy - Volume 1
Disgaea - Volume 3
Guyver: The Bioboosted Armor - Volume 4
Kyo Kara Maoh! - Season 2, Volume 4

Manga

Kamichama Karin manga volume 7May 8, 2007
+Anima - Volume 4
Basara - Volume 23
Blame! - Volume 8
Boys Be… - Volume 13
Buddha - Volume 7
Dazzle - Volume 9
Flame of Recca - Volume 23
GetBackers - Volume 18
Hayate the Combat Butler - Volume 3
Hyper Police - Volume 9
Initial D - Volume 26
Kamen Tantei - Volume 3
Loveless - Volume 5
Pearl Pink - Volume 2
Project ARMS - Volume 16
Samurai Deeper Kyo - Volume 22
Shrine of the Morning Mist - Volume 4
Yakitate!! Japan - Volume 5

May 9, 2007
Musashi No. 9 - Volume 11
The Devil Does Exist - Volume 10

May 10, 2007
Kamichama Karin - Volume 7
Peach Girl: Sae’s Story - Volume 3

Anime Review - Infinite Ryvius: 84.5%

The Essentials

Infinite RyviusName: Infinite Ryvius
Genre: Science-Fiction, Action, Psychological, Mecha
Episodes: 26
Released: October 10, 1999 - March 29, 2000
Based On: N/A
Director: Goro Taniguchi
Produced By: Bandai Visual, Sunrise
US Distribution By: Bandai Entertainment

Major Japanese Cast

Kouji Aiba: Tetsu Shiratori
Yuki Aiba: Souichiro Hoshi
Ikumi Oze: Tomokazu Seki
Aoi Housen: Houko Kuwashima
Kozue Izumi: Sakura Tange
Airs Blue: Nobuyuki Hiyama
Juli Bahana: Kyoko Hikami
Stein Heigar: Isshin Chiba
Faina Shinozaki: Rikako Aikawa
Neeya: Rei Sakuma
Lucson Houjou: Bin Shimada

Major English Cast

Kouji Aiba: Brad Swaile
Yuki Aiba: Kirby Morrow
Ikumi Oze: Bill Switzer
Aoi Housen: Alexandra Carter
Kozue Izumi: Jocelyne Loewen
Airs Blue: Andrew Francis
Juli Bahana: Kelly Sheridan
Stein Heigar: Matt Smith
Faina Shinozaki: Chiara Zanni
Neeya: Chantal Strand
Lucson Houjou: Samuel Vincent

Scores

Animation: 7/10 (x 4 = 28 pts)
Story: 9/10 (x 4 = 36 pts)
Music: 9/10 (x 4 = 36 pts)
Coherence/Story Arc: 10/10 (x 2 = 20 pts)
English Dubs: 9/10 (x 1 = 9 pts)
Gut Score: 8/10 (x 5 = 40 pts

Total: 169/200 (84.5%)

Review

Infinite Ryvius is a story about a group of students who remain on a space training facility during a holiday break and who find themselves in the middle of crisis when someone sabotages the facility they are stationed on. This results in the station under dire threat of destruction by it sinking into the Geduld - a sea of radioactivity and intense gravity pressure that covers a large portion of the orbital plane in the solar system. The teaching staff who remain on the station sacrifice themselves in an attempt to save the station, leaving the students on their own.

Suddenly, an a ship named Ryvius hidden unknowingly within the training facility activates and saves the students from the Geduld. The students migrate to the new ship and wait for a rescue. However, instead of being rescued, the Earth military attacks them, attempting to secretly gain control of the Ryvius. The students must learn how to control their new ship as well as escape from the very people who are supposed to save them. But the crew may be as doomed from what happens on the ship than from their pursuers.

Infinite Ryvius clearly draws heavily from the Lord of the Flies as the 500 teenaged students on board attempt to govern themselves. Over the course of the series, several groups take over control of the ship, attempting to implement their own brand of leadership, none being particularly successful in doing so. As the weeks and months drag on with continuous battles against those who wish to take the ship for themselves and with no rescue in sight, those running the ship at any particular time have to keep everyone else motivated to keep working so that Ryvius remains operational.

Besides the macro-sociological picture, the series also focuses on the personal interactions between a large number of characters, but most specifically between the two brothers Kouji and Yuki Aiba, who are on bad terms with each other, their childhood friend Aoi, who can’t make up her mind which of the two Aiba brothers she loves, Kouji’s friend from the station Ikume and his quasi-girlfriend Kouze whom Ikume is obsessed about protecting.

While there are a lot of space battles, one’s interest in them may drop as the series progresses because, while each space battle is unique, they kind of all have the same type of feeling towards them. Instead, the most interest part of the anime are the social interactions of all the characters with each other, especially given the large number of characters. On top of the 5 main characters above, there are members of a group called the Zwei, who are training to be the next ship commanders, members of a powerful gang, as well as numerous other cliques which form over the course of the series.

The problems of a group of inexperienced students being on their own become more and more apparent as the series progresses, with the crew often suffering from the split personality of demanding equality of all students, and being angered when any single group takes command and attempts to institute rules of a society on the ship, yet at the same time often blaming whoever is in control at the time of not doing a good enough job of keeping order or of getting them rescued. A viewer of the show watches it almost like a train-wreck in slow motion as they watch the society on the ship degrade slowing by constantly as the series continues on.

As for the technical aspects, the animation is probably about average, with it not really being anything spectacular. The music is unique though, main based on a mix of rap, rock, and pop. The coherence of the story is pretty good considering each episode is pretty much based on what occurs in the previous episodes. There is very little wasted time screen on stories not related to keeping the story moving. The dubs are also pretty good.

Given the genres mixed in this series - sci-fi fantasy as well as psychological - this anime may only meet some people’s tastes, but if you’re one who is into those particular genres, there is a good chance you’ll life Infinite Ryvius.

First Watched: June 2006 - February 2007
Do I Own: Yes
Do I Recommend: Yes

I haven’t forgotten about the anime credits and Blockbuster still sucks

It’s been something like a month since I last put up an anime credits post, but it’s mostly because I forget about it.  I’m either tired or am so ready for the weekend that it slips my mind.  I’ll try to renew that this week, though I said that to myself last week and the week before too…

On another topic, I’ve had a subscription with Netflix for a while renting anime from them.  The problem with renting anime from a single place is that, while they may have most things, there is no guarantee that they’ll have every series, or every disc of every series.  While I haven’t run into that yet with Netflix with what I’ve rented, I know that there are some series on there that are incomplete.

To begin with, I remedied that situation by having a 1-disc subscription to Rent Anime.  I got tired of that when it took basically 9 or 10 days for a disc to go roundtrip.  So I switched back to blockbuster and signed up for their 1-disc plan.  After all, Blockbuster ant Netflix combined pretty much covers most everything.

Of course, I saw “switched back” because I had originally been with Blockbuster before going to Netflix.  Why I ultimately left was because their discs were always arrived later than they said they should (that’s rarely been a problem with Netflix) and they had a bad problem of not sending the discs at the top of your queue, even if it said they were available.

I thought that, since they’ve kind of tried to re-do their image and integrated their online store at least a little more into their traditional stores, that maybe things had changed.  Alas, they apparently have not.  While it typically takes 2 days for a Netflix disc from Richmond to get here, it has taken no shorter than 3 days for a Blockbuster disc from the same city to get to me.  Also, they sent the last disc to me over, I believe, two other discs ahead of it, despite the fact that both discs were labeled as available now.  I’ve never had that problem with Blockbuster.

Look, it’s cool that you get monthly coupons for free movies and can take the envelopes back for free movies at the store, and the like, but that deal becomes less appealing if they aren’t even going to send me what I most want to see on their online list.

Josh’s Anime Blog Podcast Episode #23

Josh’s Anime Blog Podcast Episode #23 is now online! In this podcast, I re-review the anime series Ai Yori Aoshi (plus Enishi).

You can now listen to my podcasts directly from this blog via this flash player:

Or you can still download it from here or from iTunes. (15.4 MB)

You can also download or add my podcast-only RSS feed to your favorite reader:
http://www.joshsanimeblog.com/podcast/podcast.rss

Enjoy!

Nagasarete Airantou - Episode 04

Episode 04 is really two half-episodes put together, both kind of exploring the, imperfections shall we say, of Suzu. Also, unless I missed it, this is a nosebleed-free episode, I think the first one of the series.

Don’t Eat the Cookies
Don’t East the Cookies. -Machi
Carrying giant radishes is hard Are you embarassed that I’m on your lap?
Carrying giant radishes is hard Are you embarassed that I’m on your lap?

Read More »

What I Want to See: Someday’s Dreamers

Someday’s DreamersOk, so Someday’s Dreamers is supposed to be targeted more towards girls than boys. Of course, that’s true for several series that I’ve seen and actually like. As long as there is a good story and isn’t so “girly” that guys just can’t stand it, then I think it still has crossover potential.

It’s description on Anime News Network sounds like it has potential as well:

Yume Kikuchi, a girl who can use magic, goes to Tokyo to be an apprentice mage to the handsome Masami Oyamada (a professional mage). In Tokyo, Yume learns about magic, helping people, and various other things on her way to being a mage. but she soon also finds out that even just magic alone isnt enough to make someone truly happy…

Also directed by the same person who directed Ai Yori Aoshi and coming out of respected production studios Rondo Robe and J.C. Staff can’t hurt either.

In the end, this one just caught my eye (as well as being recommended on Netflix) and so I thought I’d throw it in my queue.

Anime DVD and Manga releases for May 1 - 7

Anime

GUNxSWORD Volume 7May 1, 2007
Ayakashi - Volume 1
Black Cat - Volume 4
Bobobo-bo Bo-bobo - Volume 2
Full Metal Panic! The Second Raid - Volume 4
GUNxSWORD - Volume 7
Jungle Wa Itsumo Hale Nochi Guu Deluxe - Volume 1
Pokémon - Advanced Battle - Volume 10 (dub)
Pokémon - Advanced Battle - Volume 9 (dub)
Princess Princess - Volume 1 (sub)
Shakugan no Shana - Volume 5

Manga

Shaman King - Volume 12May 1, 2007
Air Gear - Volume 4
Baby & Me - Volume 4
Black Cat - Volume 8
Death Note - Volume 11
D. Gray-Man - Volume 5
Dr. Slump - Volume 12
Free Collars Kingdom - Volume 2
Godchild - Volume 5
Guru Guru Pon-chan - Volume 8
Hunter X Hunter - Volume 14
I”s - Volume 13
Kaze Hikaru - Volume 5
Kindaichi Case Files - Volume 15
Nodame Cantabile - Volume 9
Parasyte - Volume 1
Pichi Pichi Pitch - Volume 5
Read or Dream - Volume 4
Shaman King - Volume 12
Skip Beat! - Volume 6
The Prince of Tennis - Volume 19
Vampire Knight - Volume 2
Whistle! - Volume 16
Yu Yu Hakusho - Volume 12

May 2, 2007
Eden: It’s an Endless World - Volume 7
Oyayubihime Infinity - Volume 5

Otakon announces some guests

I normally wouldn’t make a blog post about a convention announcing guests, but since I’m actually going to Otakon 2007, I’m paying a little more attention to it.

In any case, Otakon has announced two Japanese Seiyuu as guests for their convention.

The first is Mamiko Noto (能登麻美子).  Mamiko has been cast in a large number of anime series.  Some of her notable roles are as follows:

  • Sayoko Mishima - Ah! My Goddess (TV)
  • Yuka - Elfen Lied
  • Yukinari Sasaki - Girls Bravo
  • Aya Toujou - Ichigo 100%
  • Rin - Inu Yasha
  • Yukino Kikugawa - My-Hime
  • Tsukiko Sagi - Paranoia Agent
  • Narue Nanase - The World of Narue [ok, I just threw it in cause I like it]
  • Esther Blanchett - Trinity Blood
  • Masane Amaha - Witchblade

Anime News Network Page

The other Seiyuu is Tomokazu Seki (智一).  He has also has numerous anime roles, some of the more notable ones are below:

  • Masaharu Ogata - Angelic Layer [ok, I just threw that one in there too]
  • Toya Kinomoto - Cardcaptor Sakura
  • Hiromu Shinbo - Chobits
  • Kyo Soma - Fruits Basket
  • Sousuke Sagara - Full Metal Panic
  • Chichiri - Fushigi Yugi
  • Yzak Joule - Mobile Suit Gundum Seed
  • Touji Suzuhara - Neon Genesis Evangelion
  • Van Fanel -Vision of Escaflowne
  • Kamui Shirou - X (movie)

Anime News Network Page

Otakon Seiyuu Page