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Archive for January, 2006

Monster Manga Out in US

Monday, January 23rd, 2006

Viz Media recently announced that Naoki Urasawa’s psychological thriller manga - Monster - will debut in the United States on February 21, 2006. The retail price is said to be US$9.99. Read more about the release at Viz Media.

And if you do not know anything about Monster, I might just be able to tempt you to read my review of the anime version of Monster, though unlikely as that may seem.

Okay, I have to admit that I’ve never read the manga version of Monster since I can’t find any English-subbed version online. But the anime is a breath of fresh air and I reckon the manga should be pretty good as well. Given that the US will see their copies of Monster soon, I suppose I could expect some to filter all the way to my tiny country soon enough.

Gendou.com: Anime Music Direct Downloads

Sunday, January 22nd, 2006

As the title of this post states, where do you get your anime music fix from (online means only)? While I’ve used quite a few methods over the years, e.g. Napster, Kazaa, IRC, HTTP download sites, one site has always stood out: Gendou’s Anime Music.

With a huge selection of free anime music - with user ratings to boot - all you need to do is to register to begin downloading. With a search bar powering navigation, finding the music files you want is a breeze. Moreover, speeds are good, but one rule must be followed: No download accelerators. Fair enough, especially since .mp3 files are too small to require the use of DL accelerators anyway.

Anime.c.la Back?

Friday, January 20th, 2006

With the recent downtime experienced by anime.c.la, I’m sure many didn’t expect it to come back up. After all, it must have been chugging some huge amounts of bandwidth - with no sustainable and reliable revenue source funding it.

But, plug in anime.c.la into your browser and you will find a working page with a French notice, but anime downloads are still not up. If you’re interested in the notice, read below for a Babelfish-translated version:

Animate-Network is back! Ca says anything to you?! The largest site of download of animated at the time! The site with due closing because of lacks of uploadeur.. But this problem will not reproduce any more because we henceforth will use Club-footed 100mbps for uploader and will make the distro episodes

What does “Club-footed 100mbps” mean?

Edit: Christopher provides a much better translation in the comments below.

Sugar Sugar Rune Episode 2

Friday, January 20th, 2006

Gah, another super late post from mua. But I’m back with more mahou shoujo and yes, my poor opinion of it has yet to change. In this episode, we welcome the appearance of the trusty sidekicks (or more accurately, familiars) of our two girl witches. For the demure and submissive Vanilla, we have a cutesy mouse, Blanca - who happens to dislike being called a rat. Do not let the cutesy appearance fool you though; this mouse is confident (or rather, arrogant) and aggresive. A pretty wierd master-familiar combination I would say.

Sugar Sugar Rune Ep. 2 Screenshot 1
Sugar Sugar Rune Ep. 2 Screenshot 2

For the spunky Chocolat, we have da frog. Yes, a frog. And this frog even has the spunk to arrive late (late after their summoning I mean) and reveals himself to Chocolat much later than the rat. This is a more matching pair I’d say. And that’s almost the first half of the episode. Just before we see the episodic competition between Vanilla and Chocolat for “hearts”, we see The Prince entering the scene proper. The handsome, egoistic and mysterious older student who picked up Chocolat’s yellow “heart” for her in the previous episode actually says good morning to Chocolat. Given Chocolat’s rude spunky personality (that happens to not return The Prince’s greeting), The Prince’s fan club becomes Chocolat’s next enemy. And what of The Prince’s agenda, greeting Chocolat and all? See the screenshot below (with subtitles).

Sugar Sugar Rune Ep. 2 Screenshot 3
Sugar Sugar Rune Ep. 2 Screenshot 4

The next half begins the battle for hearts, with each familar giving “expert” advice to their masters - with differing results. While both familiars give respectable advice, the results primarily differ due to their masters. Chocolat’s excellent performance - in gymnastics - merely gets her called a “monkey”, while Vanilla’s cute failure in executing even a proper jump (well, she does fall on her bum) gets the pity of her male classmates + of course, their love.

And expectedly, we are treated to another heart gathering scene (something I think we’ll most definitely see in every episode), but this time, it’s a massive haul for Vanilla. Not surprisingly, Chocolat ends up with nil for the day.

Well, so far, I’m not very impressed with Sugar Sugar Rune. It’s mahou shoujo with nothing really new to bring to the mix. While there are a few good moments to SSR, it doesn’t have the cute factor of other mahou shoujo like Pretty Pretty Cure (not that I found that very good - plot-wise - either). Mipple, Mepple and Porun were really cute and had distinctive, though not very fleshed out, personalities. In comparison, our dear rat and frog doesn’t seem cut it. But I suppose with just 1 episode with them, it is still too early to tell.

Sugar Sugar Rune Ep. 2 Screenshot 5

And to wrap this summary up… here it goes: The Daily Heart Count, yay! 1500 ecure (the points scheme for calculating the value of hearts) for Vanilla, and zilch for Chocolat.

Severe Downtime

Wednesday, January 18th, 2006

Anime Field recently experienced severe downtime (more than 24 hours) due to hardware problems on the host’s side. However, I hope I can say that the problem has been resolved and that this should not reoccur anytime soon.

Hopefully, the downtime did not inconvenience regular readers too much. I would like to say sorry for the downtime and thank you for your continued support!

Squidoo and Lenses

Monday, January 16th, 2006

Sorry for the slow updates. A bit of work came up on another blog of mine. But nothing fascinating there, so let’s go on to Squidoo.

I spotted it a while back, but never came around to testing it. Well, I finally decided to give it a test run, and thus, I started a new lens: Anime - Summaries, Reviews and Downloads.

For those who are not sure what Squidoo or lenses are, here’s an excerpt from Squidoo’s official website:

We have built an online platform that makes it easy for anyone to build lenses on topics they are passionate about. These lenses help you find a unique, human perspective on things that interest you… fast.

So, basically, lenses are just aggregations of content on a particular subject, published on a particular page in the Squidoo community. It really isn’t particularly different from a plain blog. Hehe, hopefully I managed to buy some time with this post…

Anime-Treasures.com - Another Anime Direct Downloads Site

Monday, January 16th, 2006

It’s almost on a bi-monthly basis that we can expect a new anime direct downloads site (fully equipped with a forum too) to popup into the animesphere. To open our fabulous year of 2006, we have Anime-Treasures.com.

1. Anime-Treasures.com

  • Speed: Quite Fast
  • Content: Recent fansubs, i.e. Blood+, Bleach, Noein, Mai-Otome, Magikano, Yakitate Japan, Suzuka and Kagihime.
  • Note: There is also the new and still empty Anime-Treasures Forum waiting for posters to post their hearts out.

anime, direct+downloads, forums

Kiddy Grade Review

Saturday, January 14th, 2006

Often I make judgment of anime series very, very early. I tend to favour anime that can make an impact in the early episodes. But there are anime that serve as exceptions and Kiddy Grade - one of the many anime series that were stuck in my backlog - is one of them. Warning: Spoilers ahead. The first few episodes of Kiddy Grade merely scratch the surface of the plot. It is the final portions of episode five that even begin the intriguing portion of Kiddy Grade - where we are prompted to question the history behind Eclair and Lumiere. But as this type of plot normally goes, nothing is revealed until later.

To go on though, I’ll have to briefly describe the world of Kiddy Grade. Kiddy Grade is a sci-fi anime series with its primary protagonists being Eclair and Lumiere - two C-Class ES-members of the Galactic Organisation of Trade and Tarriffs (GOTT). On the surface they work as receptionists as SO-members (SO-members are normal GOTT officers, while ES-members are the elite, underground GOTT special force). Their real jobs, however, are to perform tasks that traditional SO-members are unable to: Capturing hardened criminals, suppressing planetary riots and so on. Initially, the series focuses on individual missions with episode one to four having a mission each. Yes, with the exception of the introduction of other ES-members (such as Tumbledee/Tumbledum and Alv/Dvenger), it’s pretty mundane stuff.

But when the real action starts, it most definitely starts. From episode eight onwards, we are taken on a story focused on Eclair - her hidden past. At first, it seems that this mini-story seems to wrap up a bit too quickly. Within a few episodes, Eclair learns about her other murderous “selves” - split personalities or more specifically, “erased” memories, that have existed a long time before her current awareness - and quickly shuts it out, intending to live her life the way she wants it.

Quickly I was proven wrong, however, as the plot thickens from then on. Eclair and Lumiere are soon purged from GOTT due to Eclair’s refusal to obey a direct order to suppress a (rightful) revolution against the Nobles on some planet. From Tumbledee/Tumbledum to Alv/Dvengr, our two maidens are forced to fight their ex-coworkers and friends. They eventually “kill” Eclipse - GOTT’s Director, and GOTT collapses.

That’s merely the end of just one subplot Kiddy Grade has in store for its viewers though, but continuing the summary from here on would be difficult. We see many surprises coming out with the truth behind Eclipse’s “death” as the first. Later, the final twist in store for Kiddy Grade’s viewers finally begins with the realisation that the Atlas Colonisation Ship was meant as a Ark for the survival of the Nobles (and the eventual destruction of the commoners) rather than a mere high-tech planet coloniser. Alv - the true murderer of Eclipse - somehow takes over the all-powerful Atlas and attempts to use it to destroy Earth - the homeword of the pure-blooded Nobles.

And what do you expect next but an all out battle between Alv (Atlas) and all the other ES-members, including Eclair and Lumiere of course. The victor is, as expected, Eclair, Lumiere and the remaining ES-members. Let’s not forget the not-dead Eclipse as well. The traditional happy ending emerges.

Conclusion:
As far as my opinion goes, Kiddy Grade is good. I’d say that Kiddy Grade even had the potential to be one of those ‘great’ anime in my book, but the series somehow failed to completely mesmerize me. Kiddy Grade attempted to weave multi-layer story, one mystery (or subplot) ending with the beginning of another. Perhaps it was a bit too much to handle in a 24 episode series. There’s just a little too much. If you didn’t understand anything about what the short plot summary I wrote, I wouldn’t be surprised. I’d need at least another page to explain everything properly. (Of course, there’s my rather lousy summarising and elaboration skills as well)

But I think it was just me losing patience with continuous anti-climaxes at the end of every layer of mystery. The cool, adventure-thriller like mood built up from episode eight onwards was destroyed by the “mystery” involving Alv and Dvengr, never to be recovered even by the final battle. However, on the various mysteries, I have to admit that I’d never have expected the Chief Secretary (Chevalier) to be Eclair’s son. It’s easy to forget how old Eclair and the rest of the ES members really are, with the ahmm… fanservice and all.

On another note, the animation is good, with the design of certain characters fit to please lolicons (Oh, Lumiere!). But soundtrack wise, there’s nothing spectacular.

What actually struck me about this anime was how parts of it seem to parallel reality or our possible futures. The GOTT are not so much different from certain governments when it comes to using “illegal” means (e.g. alleged wiretapping by US government) to do what is supposedly in the interest of everybody. The fact that the GOTT is merely a tool of the Nobles - pure, unmodified and unaugmented humans - isn’t very much different from how some people perceive the World Trade Organisation. Nobles ruling the galaxy and suppressing the genetically and mechanically modified lower class is a segregation scenario commonly argued by anti-cloning supporters.

So, that’s the end of a good and very backlogged series. Oh yes, please don’t take the previous paragraph too seriously. They are just simplistic observations from an anime enthusiast.

anime, animation, reviews, kiddy+grade