Tag Archives: Umisho

Josh’s Anime Blog Podcast Episode 82

Josh’s Anime Blog Podcast Episode #82 is now online! In this podcast, I review the anime series Umisho.

This week’s Podcast Stats:
Time: 14:22
Download Size: 9.9 MB

Opening theme:
“Ready Steady Go” by L’Arc-en-Ciel
Second opening theme to Fullmetal Alchemist

Ending theme:
“Splash BLUE ~ Taiyō to Lemonade” by Ayumi Murata
Ending theme to Umisho

You can listen to my podcasts in the following ways:

Flash Player:

Directly: http://www.joshsanimeblog.com/podcast/JABPEpisode82.mp3

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

Anime Review - Umisho: 61.6%

The Essentials

UmishoName: Umisho, Kenko Zenrakei Suieibu Umisho
Genre: Comedy, Sports
Episodes: 13
Released: July 3, 2007 - September 25, 2007
Based On: Umisho manga by Mitsuru Hattori
Director: Koichiro Sohtome
Produced By: Artland, Marvelous Entertainment
US Distribution By: N/A

Major Japanese Cast

Kaname Okiura: Toshiyuki Toyonaga
Amuro Ninagawa: Aki Toyosaki
Momoko Orizuka: Hitomi Nabatame
Maki Ikuta: Ai Shimizu
Masa Ikariya: Makoto Yasumura
Mirei Shizuoka: Yukari Fukui
Maaya Nanako: Sayuri Yahagi
Sanae Kise: Ryoko Shintani
Kaori Himekawa: Ayumi Murata
Seito Takeda: Satomi Koorogi

Major English Cast

N/A

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: 6/10 (x 2 = 12 pts)
English Dubs: N/A
Gut Score: 5/10 (x 5 = 25 pts)

Total: 117/190 (61.6%)

Review

Umisho centers around a high school swimming team from the Umisho High School, it’s manager, Kaname Okiura, and a new (and strange) transfer student from Okinawa who joins the team, Amuro Ninagawa.

Kaname has a problem though: he’s afraid of swimming due to an incident when he was young when a “mermaid” attempted to drag him underwater at the beach. However, things start getting more difficult for him when Amuro suddenly shows up on a raft saying that she’s a new Umisho transfer student. However, she shows some good swimming skills and ends up on the school swim team. The problem for Kaname is that Amuro’s swimsuit of choice is, well, nothing. The rest of the swim team - the boys and the girls - all have their particular eccentricities as well.

What follows is largely a show that uses the fact that it’s centered around the swim team to show off as much fan service as possible, and of course all the guys (with the exception of perhaps Kaname) ogling over the girl’s bodies as much as possible. The show does have a bit of comedy, and there is a minimal amount of plot regarding the team trying to defeat a rival high school’s swimming team in competitions, plus the relationship between Kaname and Amuro.  However, the purpose of this series is fan service.

I’m not sure there is very much else to say about this series other than that.  As many series whose focus is fan service, it has a tendency to go over the top, which just damages the little plot that it has.

As far as it’s technical aspects, animation wasn’t bad, though it wasn’t excellent either. The music was OK as well.

In the end, if you’re looking for a fan service-laden series, or a halfway-decent comedy and don’t mind excessive amounts of fan service, you may like Umisho. Otherwise, this is probably a series you can avoid.

First Watched: July - November 2007
Do I Own: No
Do I Recommend: No

Late Season Episodes

I can tell that I’m going to be driven crazy now that all of these spring and summer series are heading towards their conclusions. The two shows that I think I’ll go craziest over are School Days and Idolmaster Xenoglossia, as all hell as now broken lose in both of those series.

Luckily for School Days, we now have what looks like a very reliable speed sub group taking it on, and they appear to at least know how to write English, so that’s good. That means less waiting time to get more of that.

Idolmaster is, well, behind but not as behind as they used to be. Serin is still 2 episodes behind on getting it out, but once again it took 10 days between releases. I’d download the raws, and if this were earlier in the season I might, but I don’t want to be half-spoiled about what happens by watching the episode but have no idea what people are saying.

As for other series, none of them are really heading towards any sort of major ending as far as I can see. Nagasarete Airantou has the potential for a significant ending, but we’ll see what they do. Lucky Star will probably just end with graduation. As for Seto no Hanayome…well, well see. Doujin Work will probably have some sort of cute ending. Sky Girls is supposed to be a full season I think, so we’ll have to wait until December or January or thereabouts before seeing how it ends. For Moetan, Nanatsuiro Drops, and Umisho - I don’t really give a flying flip for the most part.

Anime Credits: 30th Edition!

It’s the 30th edition of the Anime Credits post, so today I’ll give you not one, not two, but three credit sequences today, so enjoy!

Seto no Hanayome Ending 2

Sorry about the quality. YouTube apparently doesn’t like “busy” videos…

Umisho Opening

and my favorite…

Nagasarete Airantou Ending 2

Fansubs

Maybe this is standard operating procedure and I just don’t know it since this is the first anime season that I’ve downloaded fan subs for several shows, but it seems to me that fansubbing groups are rather, well, slow.

I’m probably not one to talk, but it would seem to me that, even if you take up something like fansubbing which is volunteer work, a group should at least try to stay on schedule (ie, get an episode out before the next episode airs, or at least before two more episodes air). The primary reason for this is that there are people who are waiting to watch, and the more behind you get, 1) the less likely they are to watch your shows later, and 2) the more likely they’ll just read about what happens elsewhere.

Given the range that I’d kind of expect an episode to be out, that’s basically an episode weekly, so between 6 to 8 days, give or take on any given week. However, most groups seem to be way behind, at least as far as the series I’m watching.

In any case, here are how the fansubbers are doing by series, with days since the last episode released, and number of days since the next episode they need to release has been aired:

School Days
Conclave: Last release yesterday; 14 days behind next episode

Nagasarete Airantou
Ayako - Last release 4 days ago; 6 days behind next episode

Seto no Hanayome
Ayako - Last release 22 days ago; 30 days behind next episode (at this rate, might have dropped)
gg Fansubs - Last release 5 days ago, 9 days behind next episode
Otacon - last release 5 days ago, 2 days behind next episode
Your Mom - last release 8 days ago, 2 days behind next episode

Idolmaster Xenoglossia
Serin - last release 10 days ago; 29 days behind next episode

Lucky Star
JEEB - last release yesterday; 9 days behind next episode
a.f.k. - last release 10 days ago; 9 days behind next episode

Sky Girls
Ayako - last release 11 days ago; 12 days behind next episode

Umisho
Ayu - last release 9 days ago; 7 days behind next episode

Moetan
FSH/MugiMugi - last release 16 days ago; 16 days behind next episode
Kedex - last release 9 days ago; 9 days behind next episode

Nanatsuiro Drops
Kedex - last release 18 days ago; 15 days behind next episode
Aquastar - last episode 3 days ago; 15 days behind next episode

Doujin Work
Spoon - last release 6 days ago; 7 days behind next episode

Ok, so ten series, and only 4 which are on time, if you consider 7 days behind still on time. Given the best group for each show, the average lag time is currently 11 days, and even if you take out the month behind Serin is on Idolmaster, it’s still 9 days. I guess actually looking it up, it’s not even as bad as it feels, but 3 series are now a full 2 weeks behind (one is 4 weeks behind) and another is at 12 days.

Also, there doesn’t seem to be any groups which are always good or bad. Ayako is on time with Nagasarete Airantou but almost two weeks behind on Sky Girls, and may have abandoned Seto no Hanayome, for example. For six series, it has also been more than a week since any group that is subbing those series has released an episode as well.

Then there are groups like Devil’s Lair which seems to just be taking up random episodes here and there, and while they’re quick, they’re not consistent on what show they’re subbing.

Also, am I the only one infuriated that 6 of the 10 series I’m watching only has one group which is taking up the series, yet 5 groups are doing Higurashi no Naku Koro ni Kai. Ok, I know that it’s a sequel to a pretty popular show, but come on, we don’t need 5 groups doing the same series when we have other series who have only one group doing them and is behind.

Spring and Summer Anime - Thoughts so Far

I thought it was about time for my thoughts on the current anime in Japan that I’m watching. I’m currently watching 10 series currently airing in Japan, 4 from the spring, and six from the summer. Here are my current rankings for all 10 shows. Number of episodes I’ve seen are in parenthesis:

1. Idolmaster Xenoglossia (15 episodes)

Idolmaster has seemed to be a very interesting show to me. Of course, I can’t ignore some of the parallels to Evangelion, but the story has seemed interesting so far, with interesting characters and excellent animation. I wouldn’t necessarily rate this as a fantastic series because it does have several weaknesses - lack of actual action being one (knocking down meteors gets boring after a while - but compared to the other shows I’m currently watching, I think this is easily the best.

2. Sky Girls (3 episodes)

Moving from mechas that wanna-be-idols are piloting to quasi-mechas that lolis are piloting, Sky Girls seems to be one of the better shows that started in the summer season. I’m hardly a fan of loli-themed anime series, but the story has been able to overcome this so far. I saw somewhere that this was going to be a full 26 episode series. I’m not sure if this is true, but I kind of hope it is, though. After 3 episodes we haven’t even had a whiff of the supposed villains in this series, and if it’s only a half-season, that’d mean we’re a quarter of the way through and we haven’t even established the conflict yet.

3. School Days (4 episodes)

School Days is a series that is kind of plodding along right now, but it is rather different from your normal harem anime. First off, I think the two main girls act more natural than in most harem series: they’re unsure of themselves and of what to do next. There is always the fact that we may get one of the messy endings from the game it’s based on concluding the series. And finally, there is the main “protagonist” himself. Most boys in the center of harem anime are usually clumsy or otherwise classified as a loser, but well meaning. Makoto in School Days is not only clumsy, but he’s a jackass as well. Basically all he wants is some T&A and, whether he realizes it or not, he’s basically taking advantage of the girl’s feelings to get towards that end. Usually in most harems you want to beat the center boy for just being clueless. In School Days, you want to beat him because he’s being a jerk. It sets up a situation where I think the series can go off down some unpredictable paths.

4. Doujin Work (3 episodes)

Doujin Work airs as half-episodes of between 13 and 14 minutes each. This story is about a girl who, after losing her job, decides to follow the path of one of her friends and create Doujinshi. Of course, this is rather humorous since this girl is hardly perverted at all, and seems like that type who has had little or not experience of her own. Her friend has her do “research” such as buying porn and and playing erotic dating sim games. It’s still early, but I think this has good potential of being a pretty good comedy.

5. Lucky Star (16 episodes)

Ah yes, now we’re getting into some series that fall into the “what could have been” category. Lucky Star, which started out pretty well, now seems to just be dragging on. This is a series that is meant to be carried almost completely by it’s comedy ala Azumanga Daioh. Unfortunately, while it does have it’s funny moments, it’s hardly enough to carry the series by itself. With minimal character development and virtually no actual plot, this is a series that, unless it can revive itself, may end up dying a rather gruesome death in the end.

6. Nagasarete Airantou (16 episodes)

For those who have read my episode reviews of Nagasarete Airantou as it’s aired, you already know my general feeling about this series, and that is that this series can’t decide whether it wants to be good or bad. It has good episodes which are of quality and explores the characters, but at the same time has some rather brain-dead episodes and moments as well. It’s humor is sometimes pretty good, and sometimes over the top. It’s a series that isn’t painful to watch, but is clearly stuck in mediocracy. I keep expecting for it to make a movement either upwards or downwards, but it’s kept riding the fence through almost 2/3 of the series so far, so I’m not sure if that will ever change.

7. Umisho (4 episodes)

It’s time to move from those series that “could have been” into the series that “never were.” Umisho is about a girl who moves into the town of the same name. She loves swimming. Naked. And she joins the swim team, and is a great swimmer, and all the other girls want to know her secret. You can already see where this is headed. We haven’t had an episode yet where just everyone starts swimming naked, but we’ve been close, and I kind of feel like it is inevitable. There is some back story that is yet to be revealed, so the series may get more interesting over time, but so far it’s largely just been a boob-fest.

8. Seto no Hanayome (16 episodes)

Sinking deeper into brain-numbness is Seto no Hanayome. In this series, a boy, Nagasumi, is saved from drowning by a mermaid, San. Unfortunately, if a mermaid is ever found out, either both the mermaid and the person who saw them has to die, or the witness must join the mermaid family. Well, the choice here is obvious as to what to do. When Nagasumi goes home from vacation (where he saw San), San goes with him along with, unbeknownst to her, the rest of her family, the head of which is her father and hates Nagasumi. We meet a collection of, shall we say interesting, characters along the way. Most of the humor in this series ranges from over the top to way, way over the top to the point of being just plain dumb.

9. Nanatsuiro Drops (3 episodes)

Finally, on to the final two shows, which transcend just being brain-numb and dive into the realm of full brain-deadness. In Nanatsuiro Drops, Masaharu accidentally drinks a potion that turns him into a stuffed sheep at night. The only way he can turn back to normal (other than it never being night again), is for a classmate of his - Sumomo - to collect the 7 stardrops. However, collecting these stardrops seem to be a rather simple task, and these stardrops also appear to fall at random, and there appear to be 7 types of drops rather than 7 drops period (from what I can tell). Yes, an opponent showed up in the 3rd episode, but I’m still trying to figure out, considering the situation, how this is much of an obstacle. On top of this, the main male character is someone that you can hardly sympathize with. There just doesn’t appear to be much if any appeal to this show at all.

10. Moetan (3 episodes)

However, the winner of the brain-dead anime show of the year so far goes to Moetan. Basically take Nanatsuiro Drops and change the magical girls into lolis and make the magical creatures that go along with them complete and utter perverts. Just add a dose of Engrish to the top and you basically have Moetan. About the only funny part of this show is laughing at it because of how horribly bad it is. And exactly how dense is the main guy in this show. You have a short loli girl in your class called Ink Nijihara who is good at English. Then suddenly a magical girl shows up who is good at English, looks just like your classmate except with blue hair, and is named Pastel Ink. The boy either is less aware than a rock, or he knows and just hasn’t revealed it yet.

So that rounds out the 10 series I’m watching. I’ll probably start watching Baccano! soon, and the Bokusatsu Tenshi Dokuro-chan 2 starts airing in a little more than a week (and I’ll be doing episode reviews for that one). After that, I’m not sure if I’ll start anything before most of the shows I’m currently watching end. It depends when and what starts up in the fall.

First Thoughts: Sky Girls and Kenko Zenra Kei Suiei Bu Umisho

Again, here are a pair of series that I’m not blogging episode-by-episode but that I ended up deciding to watch (despite my blog post about what summer shows I’d watch. Part of this is due to the people who are subbing the spring shows being way behind).

Sky GirlsThe first show up is Sky Girls. I wasn’t expecting much of this show since it basically looked like a lolis-with-mechas series. However, the first episode really surprised me. Getting past all the major characters basically being super-lolis, I actually liked this episode and the overall feeling of the series.

Now, I do have concerns with this series. Having this many lolis in one place definitely suggests that they are going to play to the loli-fanbase more than just having them in the show, and if we start having needless loli-pandering, then the show will turn into a downward spiral and crash and burn I think. However, if they keep the feeling it had in the first episode for the rest of the series, then I think this could be a pretty good show.

UmishoThe second show is Zenra Kei Suiei Bu Umisho, or just Umisho for short. This looks to basically be a show for guys who want to see an anime with lots of boobs. First off, you have the swim team - so you have swimsuits, and a lot of them. You have girls outnumbering guys on the swim team over 2 to 1. So you have a lot of girls. Finally you have a new girl who transfers to the school and joins the swim team whose favorite swimsuit is…to swim naked.

She’s also very good, and at least one other member of the swim team is willing to try anything the new girl does to be as good as her - including, you guessed it, swimming naked.

On top of this, the manager of the swim team can’t swim. There is a story here where the manager and the new girl have met somewhere in the past before (though neither can really pin it down), but clearly the point of the show appears to be to show breasts, and to show as many of them as often as possible.

I suppose this may be entertaining for some, and I’ll probably watch this show just to watch it, but I’m not expecting much.

Summer Anime

I’m glad other people know more what’s going on in Japan right now than I do. 21 months into watching anime and I’m still largely trying to catch up with what has already been released in the US for the past 10 years.

I’m currently watching four and blogging one spring anime currently. I may add another show to blog in the summer, though expect me to write those reviews different than Nagasarete Airantou as I’m still learning the best way to blog series. I’m also only taking one new series because I’m still not sure how much I can handle at once yet, so I thought that taking it slow first is better than biting off more than I can chew.

That said, what new shows will I watch?

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