Tag Archives: Love Hina

Josh’s Anime Blog Podcast Episode 56

Josh’s Anime Blog Podcast Episode 56Josh’s Anime Blog Podcast Episode #56 is now online! In this podcast, I review the the anime OVA series Love Hina Again.

This week’s Podcast Stats:

Time: 23:39
Download Size: 16.2 MB

Opening theme:
“Sentimental Generation” by Ami Tokito
Opening theme to School Rumble Nigakki

Ending theme:
“Be For You, Be For Me” by Yui Horie
Ending theme to Love Hina Again

You can listen to my podcasts in the following ways:

Flash Player:

Directly: http://www.joshsanimeblog.com/podcast/JABPEpisode56.mp3

You can also download or add my podcast-only RSS feed to your favorite reader or add my podcast using iTunes.

Enjoy!

Josh’s Anime Blog Podcast Episode 46

Josh’s Anime Blog Podcast Episode 46Josh’s Anime Blog Podcast Episode #46 is now online! In this podcast, I review the anime series Love Hina.

This week’s Podcast Stats:

Time: 18:07
Download Size: 12.5 MB

Opening theme:
“Saa” by Surface
Opening theme to Mamotte Shugogetten

Ending theme:
“Kimi Sae Ireba” by Megumi Hayashibara
Ending theme to Love Hina

You can listen to my podcasts in the following ways:

Flash Player:

Directly: http://www.joshsanimeblog.com/podcast/JABPEpisode46.mp3

You can also download or add my podcast-only RSS feed to your favorite reader or add my podcast using iTunes.

Enjoy!

Anime Review - Love Hina Again: 47.2%

The Essentials

Love HinaName: Love Hina Again
Genre: Comedy, Romance
Episodes: 3
Released: January 26, 2002 - March 27, 2002
Based On: Love Hina manga by Ken Akamatsu
Director: Yoshiaki Iwasaki
Produced By: XEBEC
US Distribution By: Bandai Entertainment

Major Japanese Cast

Naru Narusegawa: Yui Horie
Keitarou Urashima: Yuji Ueda
Kanako Urashima: Natsuko Kuwatani
Mitsune Konno: Junko Noda
Shinobu Maehara: Masayo Kurata
Kaolla Su: Reiko Takagi
Motoko Aoyama: Yuu Asakawa
Haruka Urashima: Megumi Hayashibara
Mutsumi Otohime: Satsuki Yukino
Sarah McDougal: Yumiko Kobayashi

Major English Cast

Naru Narusegawa: Dorothy Melendrez
Keitarou Urashima: David Umansky
Kanako Urashima: Tina Dixon
Mitsune Konno: Barbara Goodson
Shinobu Maehara: Ellen Arden
Kaolla Su: Wendee Lee
Motoko Aoyama: Mona Marshall
Haruka Urashima: Jane Alan
Mutsumi Otohime: Jean Howard
Sarah McDougal: Julie Maddalena

Scores

Animation: 6/10 (x 4 = 24 pts)
Story: 4/10 (x 4 = 16 pts)
Music: 6/10 (x 4 = 24 pts)
Coherence/Story Arc: N/A
English Dubs: 6/10 (x 1 = 6 pts)
Gut Score: 3/10 (x 5 = 15 pts)

Total: 85/180 (47.2%)

Review

This is how you get Love Hina Again: Take Love Hina, completely erase the progress made by Naru and Keitarou in their relationship at the end of the series and in the specials and take the ridiculousness found in Love Hina and double it. If Love Hina was one of the biggest waste of resources ever in anime history, Love Hina Again probably contends for most brainless anime series ever created, ever.

The series starts when Keitarou breaks his leg on the first day of classes at Tokyo U. and, for some reason, has made him unable to attend classes. As a result, he decides to go after his life’s dream and go on an archaeological trip with Mr. Seta (how is going on an archaeological trip any easier with a broken leg?). Upon returning from his trip at the end of the first episode, nothing more is said about Keitarou’s supposed life dreams until the very end of the third episode when Mr. Seta saves him and Naru from the rampaging tenants of the Hinata Apartments.

While he’s gone, Keitarou’s step-sister, Kanako, arrives and announces that she is the new manager of Hinata Apartments. Kanako’s ultimate goal is to drive Naru away and having Keitarou for herself. How Kanako knows about Naru and Keitarou’s relationship, I’m not sure since Keitarou himself says that he hasn’t written Kanako. The rest of the series seems to be about Kanako not being able to make up her mind between trying to run Naru off and taking Keitarou for herself or trying to get Naru to profess her love to Keitarou which the creators of Love Hina Again apparently forgot she had already done previously in the franchise.

Throw in a magical closed down hotel which enforces romantic promises made within it’s premises (how did Naru and Keitarou break the spell the hotel put on Keitarou and Kanaka anyway?) and a flying and talking cat (so now we have flying turtles AND cats) and you get a story even more ridiculous than the series it is based on.

There is no appreciable improvement in the dub, music, or animation from the Love Hina series. If you were a fan of the original Love Hina, you may like Love Hina Again. However, if you are looking for Love Hina to redeem itself in this final OVA installment, you’ll be sorely disappointed.

First Watched: December 2005
Do I Own: No
Do I Recommend: No

Anime Review - Love Hina: 62%

The Essentials

Love Hina Name: Love Hina
Genre: Comedy, Romance
Episodes: 25, plus two specials (Christmas and Spring)
Released: April 19, 2000 - September 27, 2000 (TV), December 25, 2000 (Christmas Special), April 1, 2001 (Spring Special)
Based On: Love Hina manga by Ken Akamatsu
Director: Yoshiaki Iwasaki
Produced By: XEBEC, Production I.G
US Distribution By: Bandai Entertainment

Major Japanese Cast

Naru Narusegawa: Yui Horie
Keitarou Urashima: Yuji Ueda
Mitsune Konno: Junko Noda
Shinobu Maehara: Masayo Kurata
Kaolla Su: Reiko Takagi
Motoko Aoyama: Yuu Asakawa
Haruka Urashima: Megumi Hayashibara
Mutsumi Otohime: Satsuki Yukino
Noriyasu Seta: Yasunori Matsumoto
Sarah McDougal: Yumiko Kobayashi

Major English Cast

Naru Narusegawa: Dorothy Melendrez
Keitarou Urashima: David Umansky
Mitsune Konno: Barbara Goodson
Shinobu Maehara: Ellen Arden
Kaolla Su: Wendee Lee
Motoko Aoyama: Mona Marshall
Haruka Urashima: Jane Alan
Mutsumi Otohime: Jean Howard
Noriyasu Seta: Ron Allen
Sarah McDougal: Julie Maddalena

Scores

Animation: 7/10 (x 4 = 28 pts)
Story: 6/10 (x 4 = 24 pts)
Music: 7/10 (x 4 = 28 pts)
Coherence/Story Arc: 5/10 (x 2 = 10 pts)
English Dubs: 4/10 (x 1 = 4 pts)
Gut Score: 6/10 (x 5 = 30 pts)

Total: 124/200 (62%)

Review

Love Hina is about a boy, Keitarou, who is studying to take the entrance exams for Tokyo University for the 3rd time. He’s trying to get into Tokyo U. because of a promise he made to a girl when he was little. The only problem is that he can’t remember who the girl is. Suddenly, his grandmother decides to travel around the world and taps Keitarou to run her Hinata Inn. However, the Hinata Inn is now an all-girls dorm and now Keitarou must deal with the harassment of the dorm’s female’s residents as they have to do with having a male manager and the fact that they’ll have to move out if Keitarou doesn’t become the new manager. However, Keitarou starts to wonder if one of the girl residents of the dorm is the girl he made the promise to when he was young.

For me, Love Hina can best be described as one of the biggest piles of wasted film, time, money, DVDs, and DVD boxes that has ever come out of the medium of anime. It is a series that impresses on virtually no level, and disappoints on many.

For example, the story line of who the girl that Keitarou made the promise to is brought up several times during the series, but it is often more of a side-story than front-and-center. Most of the story revolves around the dysfunctional relationship between Keitarou and one of the tenants, Naru, and how many times Keitarou can stupidly walk into the female’s bath or some other compromising situation which ultimately results in him being punched 2 miles away by Naru or being attacked by Motoko with a sword, and/or various other assaults.

While some of the episodes, especially episodes 21-24, actually have some coherence to them, the episodes are largely independent of each other. While the two specials kind of wrapped things up, they seemed to be basically be the same story from the series just slapped into a new situation. The animation could have been better considering that this series was the first done entirely digitally. The music largely sounds like cheap keyboard music (and this is 2000!) and the English dubs are barely tolerable - maybe, with a few characters with decent dub voices, but most with bad to terrible dubs.

Love Hina may be popular in some circles for the very reason that it’s a zany, random love comedy, but I didn’t find the humor all that funny, and it seemed so random and over-the-top that I found it more on the stupid side rather than humorous. If one is into truly random harem romance comedies, you may be into Love Hina. However, this is a series that can easily and safely be passed on by most anime fans.

First Watched: November 2005 - December 2005
Do I Own: No
Do I Recommend: No

Anime Left to Review - Part II

Back on March 19th, I made a list of anime I had left to review. Lets look at that list:

  • Ai Yori Aoshi
  • Castle in the Sky
  • Chobits
  • DearS
  • Dual! Parallel Trouble Adventures
  • Kimi Ga Nozomu Eien
  • Koi Kaze
  • Love Hina
  • Nausicca of the Valley of the Wind
  • Onegai Twins
  • Princess Mononoke
  • Video Girl Ai
  • World of Narue, The

Well…i’ve done well. I’ve reviewed…well…Chobits and Dual! it looks like (though I have reviewed some others that I have watched since then). Here is my now updated list:

  • Ai Yori Aoshi
  • Akane Maniax
  • Castle in the Sky
  • DearS
  • Kimi Ga Nozomu Eien
  • Koi Kaze
  • Love Hina
  • Nausicca of the Valley of the Wind
  • Neon Genesis Evangelion
  • Onegai Twins
  • Porco Rosso
  • Princess Mononoke
  • Spirited Away
  • Video Girl Ai
  • World of Narue, The

Soo…take off the two I did, and add two new anime (Porco Rosso and Evangelion) and two I had forgotten about before (Spirited Away, Akane Maniax) with I”s Pure and the rest of Cardcaptor Sakura coming around the corner (assuming I’m not forgetting anything). And, as I said in a previous post, I own four of these series. Not much of an excuse there to not review them lol.

UPDATE: I decided to add a page listing Anime and Manga to be rated.

I”s Pure and The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya

There are now two being-released-in-Japan-right-now series that I am currently following (at least the best I can with my internet connection): I”s Pure, which I’ve been watching since it first came out in December; and The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya, which I’ve just finished downloading the six episodes that are out on torrent so far (7 have aired so far).

I”s Pure should be done in June (at least it’s Japan released…as far as being fansubbed…we’ll see about that) and TMoHS, if wikipedia is correct about it being a 14 episode series, should be done in late June as well. I hope to write reviews of both when they finish.

I’m also one DVD away from finishing His and Her Circumstances, so I should be able to post a review of it in not too long. Also, I almost posted a review of Please Twins! earlier, but I wanted to re-write it a little before I posted it.

I’m currently working on my first long series through blockbuster in Cardcaptor Sakura, which is something like 18 volumes long (it has 70 episodes) and blockbuster put volume 5 in the mail just a couple days ago.

I still have quite a few other series I wish to review as well. I’m renting DearS through blockbuster so I can listen to the English dub before I review it (I saw a subtitled fan sub of it before), ditto with Girls Bravo. I’m in the process of buying Koi Kaze, and the same watching it dubbed thing applies.

Ai Yori Aoshi and Love Hina are ones I’m finished with but haven’t gotten into a mode to write a review of. I want to see Neon Genesis Evangelion again first, and, if I don’t run out of anime to review before then, I want to wait until KimiNozo finishes it’s release in December before I review it.

Well, thats all for now.