Legend of the Legendary Heroes
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Alternate Titles:
Togainu no Chi – Bloody Curs
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Alternate Titles:
Fortune Arterial: Akai Yakusoku
FORTUNE ARTERIAL 赤い約束
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Alternate Titles: None
Original Japanese Release Date: Jan 2011
Episode Length/Run-time: 24 Episodes
Summary:
Kazuya Kujo has recently transferred as an international student to a school in the fictional European country of Saubure, located between France, Switzerland and Italy. Here he meets a mysterious girl who has been given the nickname of the Golden Fairy. She lives confined to the library on school, loves sweets, and is bored easily, always requiring a puzzle to solve. As mysteries begin to surround Kujo he becomes central to Victorique’s entertainment, and perhaps more. Their relationship evolves in the changing setting of a pre-World War 2 Europe still steeped in mystery, fantasy, and old lore.
Review:
Gosick starts out looking like a murder mystery type anime. Where Victorique is a Sherlock Holms type character, solving mysteries with almost nothing to go on and an astounding success rate and Kujo is her bumbling, yet helpful and well-meaning Watson. For someone who is a fan of this genre it serves to disappoint, because for one they don’t really give you enough clues to figure out what’s going on yourself, and two, it’s not really about the mysteries. The murders and mysterious happenings serve to illuminate the larger plot and evolve the relationship between Kujo and Victorique. The trouble-finding Kujo is just what Victorique is looking for and it evolves the unlikely friendship.
As mentioned, the mysteries serve to bring out the story. What you think will just be a string of one random mystery after the next evolves into a grater story in which the characters backgrounds are thoroughly fleshed out and a rich world is built. There are a few instances where they spend some time doing things that could likely be cut but you are so smitten with the characters that this is completely forgivable as it just serves as another step in elaborating relationships.
The story really begins to pick up as they begin to explain some of the lore in the world. There is an overarching struggle between science and magic and often times you wonder what is real and what is fiction. For example, one of the main things they begin to elude to is the “gray wolves” specifically around Victorique’s past. The gray wolves are linked back to Sabure’s ancient history and by my interpretation are known for their intelligence.
There are a lot of things like this throughout the show that leaves the viewer up for interpenetration. Don’t be fooled by the gothic lolita/moe ness surrounding Victorique. This is a surprisingly deep show dealing with a lot of mature content. The animation is good and the music is solid. Something I HIGHLY recommend.
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Alternative titles:
Mad Masochist
えむえむっ! Emu Emu! (Japanese)
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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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