Aria the Scarlett Ammo
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Alternate Titles: None
Original Japanese Release Date: Apr 2011
Episode Length/Run-time: 12 Episodes
Summary:
Professor X notices that he can no longer sense mutants from a specific region of Japan. Concerned, he groups the X-Men together and sends them to investigate. Another mutant Hisako joins the team and they begin to discover there’s more than they suspected to the mystery in Japan.
Review:
X-Men started out great, and really just began to loose it as the series went on.
What started out as interesting, well animated, and engaging fight scenes began to loose their power later on in the series. It felt like the creativity in the battles began to lack culminating in a lackluster conclusion and a “final battle” that just lost it.
The plot went much the same way. The characters started out really engaging, Wolverine and Cyclops in a tense truce, Cyclops working though his own demons, and evolving a sub-plot around professor X that was surprisingly unexpected. But this development went nowhere in the series. It’s like they laid a foundation for a mansion, began building the studs, and then completely forgot about the rest of the house. The show became about the lackluster fight scenes, Cyclops blowing things away and then sneaking in a shirt-less pose, the Japanese girl being awkward every moment on camera, Storm using ONE ATTACK, and just fighting one mutant abomination after another.
Beyond that, fans of the X-Men comics will likely find this equally insulting as there are a slew of continuity problems you think they would’ve solved with the X-Men universe. While it takes place right at the end of the Phoenix saga (yes Jean Gray is in it), she seems to be made stronger than she should be and Storm is weaker. Storm is one of the strongest! Plus, what happened to Rogue and Gambit during this time? I guess just chilling back at the academy.
Overall this anime is not AWFUL but its nothing amazing either. It sits comfortably at average but don’t expect anything more.
Review: X-Men, 8.0 out of 10 based on 1 rating
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Alternate Titles: The Vanishment of Haruhi Suzumiya
Original Japanese Release Date: Feb 2010
Episode Length/Run-time: 163 Minutes
Summary:
Kyon wakes up one morning to find himself thrust in some alternate dimension where Haruhi and the S.O.S brigade does not seem to exist. No one seems to have any recollection of either and he struggles to figure out what is going on and what happened to the world he knows.
Review:
This movie is 110% for Haruhi fans out there. Otherwise I don’t know who would sit through the near 3 hours that is this movie. It is literally the longest anime movie ever made and I have no idea why because it does not merit it. Don’t get me wrong, the movie isn’t terrible. It has its amusing moments and the animation is glorious. It also has great monologues that you would expect from Haruhi. But the movie just gets boring. Without haruhi being, well, Haruhi there are little antics or crazy moments that made the show wonderful. The ending is also mediocre, you knew nothing would really happen, as is the way of such movies, but this ending is borderline bad. They use a complete cop-out ending and even say “we’ll resolve it later.” They tried being too technical with alternate dimensions and got burned by the spiral of multiples and so on. Overall, its not bad but I stick by the fact that if you’re not a big fan of the series be ready to be bored to tears by the end.
Review: The Disappearance of Haruhi Suzumiya , 4.0 out of 10 based on 1 rating
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Alternate Titles: The Children who Chase lost voices from deep below
Original Japanese Release Date: May 2011
Episode Length/Run-time: 100 Minutes
Summary:
Asuna lost her father at a young age and has lived an independent lifestyle with her loving, yet absent often due to work, since. One day, she meets a boy whose sudden death triggers a series of events that pulls Asuna with unlikely companions into a mysterious world beneath the earth that holds the secrets of life and death.
Review:
This movie is made by Makoto Shinkai, if that doesn’t tell you some things about it then you have clearly not seen his other works or listened to the show much before.
But! If you are such a person I shall elaborate for your benefit.
Unlike Shinkai’s past works this one really hits the ground running. Asuna is an uncertain yet strong character and we first meet her listening to a mysterious song on a crystal radio. Her father passed when she was young and she lives just with her mother, making her a fairly independent young woman. One day, heading out to her special place she runs into a strange, large, and violent creature, a mysterious boy saves her from this creature and as theynspend time together for the rest of the day she develops a clear strong admiration/love for him. But as mysteriously as he comes he disappears from her life, dead. Now Asuna is drug literally to the bottom of the earth lead by Shun’s (the boy) brother and her new teacher Ryuji. The world they find themselves is defended by large ancient beasts known walrus quetzacotl, for this world holds the powers of life and death.
All this in the first 25 minutes, I told you it moved fast. And that’s the first, and really only criticism for this show. Shinkai moves so quickly in his storytelling that you barely have enough time to stop and absorb things before you’re already three steps further. The world that he creates I such a short time is so rich and vast that you are literally yearning for more time there, but if he stopped to do it the movie would be 3 hours long… Though I wouldn’t complain.
Another thing that Shinkai does not fail on is the execution. In his normal fashion it is beautifully animation with an attention to detail that could make a grown man weep its so lovely. It suits the fantasy world and his storytelling well. Compared to his previous films he still pays close attention to light and dark but seems to have a new kind of restraint that adds additional sophistication and refinement to his work.
The music is simple but well fitting and really helps the overall package.
In all, this movie won’t disappoint and I cannot recommend it enough.
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