It’s Nijuu Mensou no Musume Episode 12, and Chiko is on her own again, this time with the white haired woman kidnapping Tome. Can Chiko rescue her on her own?
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It’s Nijuu Mensou no Musume Episode 12, and Chiko is on her own again, this time with the white haired woman kidnapping Tome. Can Chiko rescue her on her own?
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This is my personal tentative schedule for panels, at least as they are currently listed in the Event Planner on the Otakon website (a pretty neat thing). Note that not all panels may be listed yet, and I’m sure times are tentative as well:
Friday, August 8th
1:00 PM – 2:00 PM: Lantis / JAM Project Q&A (Panel 3)
2:00 PM – 3:00 PM: FUNimation Q&A (Panel 2)
3:00 PM – 4:00 PM: Media Blasters Q&A (Panel 2)
4:00 PM – 5:00 PM: Kappei Yamaguchi Q&A #1 (Panel 4)
Wow, not a lot of panels on Friday that I’m interested in, at least that are listed yet. Friday – especially the morning and evening – may be spent checking out the anime viewing rooms. I may either skip the 1PM panel or leave early so that I can make sure I can get into the FUNimation panel. I’m not sure what the policy is as far as attending two panels in the same room back-to-back (do you have to leave and get back in line, or not?) but last year it seemed that people didn’t care if one just hung out in the room. Of course, I wasn’t necessarily attending packed panels either when I did that.
I also intend to visit the Dealers room as early as I can so I can grab up any remaining ADV titles which aren’t with ADV anymore which I may want to buy. Again, not sure when it opens, but if it opens before 1PM, then you can bet that’s one thing I’ll be doing.
Saturday, August 9th
10:00 AM – 11:00 AM: Laura Bailey Q&A (Panel 3)
11:00 AM – 12:00 PM: Bandai (Panel 2)
2:00 PM – 3:00 PM: Kadokawa Pictures USA Premieres Panel (Panel 2)
3:00 PM – 4:00 PM: Media Blasters Premieres Panel (Panel 2)
4:00 PM – 5:00 PM: AMVs: From Concept to Planning (Panel 1)
5:30 PM – 7:00 PM: Fansubber and Industry Discussion (Panel 4)
9:00 PM – 10:00 PM: Bandai Surprise (Panel 2)
Again, based on how well attended the Industry Panels on Friday are, I may or may not skip or pop-out of the Laura Bailey panel early so I can hit Bandai. Also, I have some nice breaks built into this schedule. I can get lunch in the 12:00 PM – 2:00 PM break and grab dinner in the 7:00 PM – 9:00 PM break
Sunday, August 10th
11:00 AM – 12:00 PM: State of the Industry (Panel 4)
1:00 PM – 2:00 PM: ADV Announcements (Panel 1)
2:00 PM – 3:00 PM: Closing Ceremonies (Panel 4)
3:00 PM – 4:00 PM: Con Feedback Panel (Panel 4)
I’ll probably go straight from leaving the State of the Industry panel to stand in line for the ADV panel since that is a absolutely-must-attend panel for me.
Just another note, if they show The Girl Who Leapt Through Time or the new Evangelion movie, then that may impact things, depending on what they conflict with. I would tend to prioritize them over the non-industry panels, but I would tend to put the industry panels over watching the movies.
Also, I’m just wondering why Otakon always tends to have panels like “Basic Photoshop” or “Basic Flash.” I found that odd last year too, but I guess it’s a way to learn something new if there isn’t anything else interesting to you going on at the time being.
Name: Ballad of a Shinigami, Momo the girl god of death
Genre: Drama, Fantasy
Episodes: 6
Released: March 2, 2006 – April 6, 2006
Based On: Shinigami no Ballad light novels by K-Ske Hasegawa
Director: Tomomi Mochizuki
Produced By: Pony Canyon, Group TAC, Ginga-ya
US Distribution By: N/A
Momo: Akiko Kobayashi
Daniel: Ai Shimizu
Kōta Seto: Akiyo Kanada
Mai Makihara: Chiwa Saito
Mitsuki Asano: Yuki Kaida
Yutaka Fujishima: Kana Ueda
Kantaro Ichihara: Toshiyuki Toyonaga
Tomato Fujiwara: Kanako Mitsuhashi
Chiaki Kazama: Tomoko Sadohara
Fuyuki Kazama: Ryoko Shiraishi
Eko Miyazaki: Fuyuka Oura
Sakura Kosakai: Nobuyuki Kobushi
N/A
Animation: 8/10 (x 4 = 32 pts)
Story: 9/10 (x 4 = 36 pts)
Music: 8/10 (x 4 = 32 pts)
Coherence/Story Arc: N/A
English Dubs: N/A
Gut Score: 8/10 (x 5 = 40 pts)
Total: 140/170 (82.4%)
Ballad of a Shinigami is about Momo, a Shinigami – basically the Japanese version of the grim reaper except cuter in this case – and her cat companion Daniel. The series addresses six different stories which deal with death in one way or another, with Momo playing a critical role each time.
These stories range from a young girl eventually succumbing to an illness, to pushing someone to live his life to the fullest since “you’ll eventually die someday,” to not being able to say “sorry” for things you said to a love one just before they died.
I think each of the six stories are interesting in their own right, and I like how each of the six stories were able to address the issue of death in unique ways. Of course the main negative to having six stories in six episodes is that none of the stories necessarily have time to really stand out or leave a lasting impression, but I’m not sure how important this is with a series this short (there is a reason why I have a minimum episode count before I give a coherence score, after all).
I’d say if you’re interested in a well written set of stories about an unusual topic (how many series deal with the issue of death this head on), I’d recommend Ballad of a Shinigami, especially since it is easy to watch in a single sitting.
First Watched: July 2008
Do I Own: No
Do I Recommend: Yes
It’s Someday’s Dreamers: Summer Skies Episode 3, and the training class gets their first magic jobs. However, Sora has a rather odd request, while Midorikawa is facing a serious issue in trying to complete his request.
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Sorry for skipping last week.
July 22, 2008
Bleach – Volume 11
Case Closed – Season 1 Box Set
Divergence Eve/Misaki Chronicles – Box Set
Haruka – Volume 4 (sub)
Transformers: Cybertron – Box Set
Tweeny Witches – Volume 3
July 29, 2008
BECK: Mongolian Chop Squad – Box Set
Inu-Yasha – Season 5 Box Set
Maria Watches Over Us – Season 1 Collection (sub)
Naruto – Volume 26 (dub)
Naruto – Legend of the Stone of Gelel
Pokemon Battle Frontier – Box Set 1 (dub)
Ranma 1/2 – Season 7 Box Set
Samurai Gun – Box Set
Shuffle! – Volume 5
xxxHOLiC – Volume 4
YuGiOh – Season 3 box Set (dub)
July 22, 2008
Ghost Talker’s Daydream – Volume 1
Knights – Volume 1
Shiki Tsukai – Volume 3
Wallflower, The – Volume 16
July 23, 2008
Berserk – Volume 24
Gon – Volume 5
July 25, 2008
Dark Edge – Volume 8
July 29, 2008
Air Gear – Volume 9
Kujibiki Unbalance – Volume 1
Me and the Devil Blues – Volume 1
Parasyte – Volume 4
Puri Puri – Volume 6
July 30, 2008
Tenjho Tenge – Volume 17
July 31, 2008
A.I. Revolution – Volume 4
Alice on Deadlines – Volume 3
A Wise Man Sleeps – Volume 2
Bogle – Volume 1
Honoka Level Up! – Volume 1
Kurogane Communication – Volume 1
Nephilim – Volume 2
Spiral: Bonds of Reasoning – Volume 4
Suzunari! – Volume 1
Tetragrammaton Labyrinth – Volume 3
Ultimate Venus – Volume 1
Yggdrasil – Volume 1
Name: Miname-ke
Genre: Comedy
Episodes: 26 (13 episodes in both seasons 1 and 2)
Released: October 7, 2007 – March 30, 2008
Based On: Miname-ke manga by Coharu Sakuraba
Director: Masahiko Ohta (season 1), Naoto Hosoda (season 2)
Produced By: Starchild (both seasons), Doumu (season 1), asread (season 2)
US Distribution By: N/A
Haruka Minami: Rina Satou
Chiaki Minami: Minori Chihara
Kana Minami: Marina Inoue
Makoto: Rika Morinaga
Toma Minami: Nana Mizuki
Fujioka: Tetsuya Kakihara
Yoshino: Aki Toyosaki
Yuka Uchida: Eri Kitamura
Keiko: Saori Goto
Maki: Reiko Takagi
Atsuko: Ryoko Ono
Hosaka: Daisuke Ono
Hayami: Saeko Chiba
N/A
Animation: 8/10 (x 4 = 32 pts)
Story: 9/10 (x 4 = 36 pts)
Music: 9/10 (x 4 = 36 pts)
Coherence/Story Arc: 7/10 (x 2 = 14 pts)
English Dubs: N/A
Gut Score: 9/10 (x 5 = 45 pts)
Total: 163/190 (85.8%)
Minami-ke is show about the lives of the three Minami sisters: Haruka, who attends high school and is the caretaker of the other two sisters; Kana, who attends middle school and who is rather clueless, lazy, and impulsive; and Chiaki who attends elementary school and who is intelligent and precocious, but rather rude as well.
There’s not much else I can say to describe the series since it basically is about the random things that the three girls and their friends do in life. However, one thing this series does to exceptionally well, especially in the first season, is be absolutely hilarious. The fact that the three girl’s personalities don’t mesh at all – especially Kana’s and Chikai’s – just adds to how great this series is. Add into the fix each of the girls’ friends and their own quirks, and you have a show with a rather consistent supply of hilarity.
The one thing I should note is that the first season, which consists of the first 13 episodes, is a bit funnier than the 2nd season, and that is really the only thing keeping the score down for this series, as the story and gut scores are largely an average between the first and second seasons (with the first season getting an easy 10 while the second season kind of splits between a 7/8). Even so, the second season is still a respectable watch, but may pale somewhat in comparison to the first season.
The animation and music for both seasons are pretty good, even though both seasons were handled by different production companies.
If you’re looking for a series with a lot of random laughs, and don’t care much about a central story line, then definitely check out Minami-ke.
First Watched: October 2007 – April 2008
Do I Own: No
Do I Recommend: Yes
Name: Baccano
Genre: Action, Adventure, Fantasy
Episodes: 13 + 3 OVAs
Released: July 26, 2007 – November 1, 2007
Based On: Baccano light novels by Ryohgo Narita
Director: Takahiro Omori
Produced By: Brains Base, MediaWorks
US Distribution By: Funimation
Isaac Dian: Masaya Onosaka
Miria Harvent: Sayaka Aoki
Firo Prochainezo: Hiroyuki Yoshino
Szilard Quates: Kinryuu Arimoto
Ennis: Sanae Kobayashi
Maiza Avaro: Mitsuru Miyamoto
Ladd Russo: Keiji Fujiwara
Lua Klein: Eri Yasui
Jacuzzi Splot: Daisuke Sakaguchi
Nice Holystone: Yu Kobayashi
Claire Stanfield: Masakazu Morita
Dallas Genoard: Atsushi Imaruoka
Eve Genoard: Marina Inoue
Chane Laforet: Ryou Hirohashi
Czeslaw Meyer: Akemi Kanda
Carol: Chiwa Saito
N/A
Animation: 9/10 (x 4 = 36 pts)
Story: 8/10 (x 4 = 32 pts)
Music: 9/10 (x 4 = 36 pts)
Coherence/Story Arc: 9/10 (x 2 = 18 pts)
English Dubs: N/A
Gut Score: 8/10 (x 5 = 40 pts)
Total: 162/190 (85.3%)
Baccano, at it’s simplest, boiled down form, is about the exploits and adventures of a set of alchemists in 1930s America who were able to summon a demon in the 18th century so that they could become immortal.
The story is largely told between two story lines taking place at two different times. The most visible storyline is about how, in late 1930, three different groups – the Russo group, the Lumeres, and Jacuzzi’s gang – all have different plans for the trans-continental train the Flying Pussyfoot in it’s run from Chicago to New York.
The Russo group, led by Ladd Russo, decides to kill many of the passengers on the train while holding the rest ransom in order to get a large ransom payment from the railroad company. The Lumeres decide to take the train passengers ransom so that they can demand the release of their group’s leader, Huey Laforet, from jail. Meanwhile, Jazuzzi and his gang plan on trying to rob some important cargo off of the train. The melee that ensues results in a lot of blood and a lot of fighting between the three groups, as well as the arrival of the Rail Tracer – a mythical monster which causes trains and the people on them to disappear.
The other story being told at the same time occurs earlier in 1930, and deals with the quest of one of the original immortals, Szilard Quates, to discover the formula for the elixir which allows immortality. However, while his researcher, Barnes, discovers the secret, his lab is destroyed in a fire, and he is able to salvage two bottles of the elixir. However, the elixir is soon stolen by a gang and starts rapidly changing hands.
Baccano certainly has an interesting and well written story, and it’s rare to see a story which has a good balance of action and story elements to it. However, my main problem with this story is how much it jumps around between the two stories, and to and from even other smaller sub-stories. While it is an interesting story-telling device, I think all the switching sometimes makes it unclear what is happening when and where and what is happening first and last and in between.
Despite this, I think it is still a pretty good watch, though I should note that it has a considerable amount of violence, and especially blood.
The animation quality is pretty good for this show, as is the music as they appear to do a pretty good representation of 1930s America, at least for one who doesn’t know any better like myself.
Overall, while how the story is told may be confusing, it’s still a good enough show to take a look at, if you don’t mind some blood.
First Watched: August 2007 – July 2008
Do I Own: No
Do I Recommend: Yes, if you don’t mind blood and violence
I’m surprised I didn’t spot this earlier, but there is a brief shot of an Evangelion poster in the 2nd episode of I Survived A Japanese Game Show:
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And if you’re blind as a bat and can’t see it:
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As I said, I’m surprised I didn’t spot it before since I’ve been trying to keep an eye out for anything like that. I wouldn’t be shocked if I missed something else too.