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Otaku Evolution Episode 149 – Voice Actor Appreciation

I was going to do something else for this episode, but I wanted to get this one in so my 150th video is something that suits the number. Besides which, it’s nice to once in a while take time to appreciate the voice talent actually playing the anime characters we watch develop. I do have something special planned for next episode, but this one is special in its own way. I should really do more of these later on.

(Also, I got my Twitter account back, hooray!)

My Dailymotion page read more

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Otaku Evolution Episode 148 – Princess Mononoke

 

Bear with me, because currently my Twitter is suspended for a completely bullshit reason, so it’ll be harder to get out notices that these videos are finished and ready to be watched.

Just a short video this time, didn’t want to overdo it, made my point and ended it. Princess Mononoke is a gorgeous film and has some great characterization and development. I think it’s my second or third favorite Miyazaki movie (Spirited Away and Castle of Cagliostro are in that mix, and I’ve already reviewed those). read more

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Otaku Evolution Episode 147 – Mobile Suit Gundam: Char’s Counterattack

 

Ah yes, Char’s Counterattack, a movie full of oddities that nevertheless always impresses me. Perhaps it’s the production values, but I’ve always felt a sense of gravity to the proceedings, like I was watching a colossal, momentous event. Is it legitimately that, though, or is it that only in the sense that it’s forced into it by circumstance? It occurs to me that the feature might be great in spite of itself and it’s little Tomino quirks. Then again, I like some of those quirks, too. read more

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Otaku Evolution Episode 146 – FLCL

 

When prompted to skip to 14:42 to avoid spoilers, go to 14:17 instead (you’ll miss a bit on the production if you don’t). If you want to skip the story stuff at the beginning, start from 4:00.

Yeah, I know, more story crap you don’t care about. The non-talking characters at the conference table are Gen. Ronald D. Bell and Lt. Gen. Vanessa Bradiff. I can only do so many character voices (but they all sound the same). The mustached penguin is not the same one as the therapist, by the way, he’s the director of the intelligence branch that I used back when I introduced Yellow Yellow. Also, how do you pronounce syrup? SURUP or SEERUP? read more

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Otaku Evolution Episode 145 – Mid Year English Dub Review V

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Terminally Dogmatic: The Controversial (and Superior) New Eva Dub

 

(I typed this on a phone and IPad, so forgive the lack of bells and whistles for now. My laptop is busted.)

When Netflix announced that it would be featuring the seminal anime classic Neon Genesis Evangelion, fans of the 1995 TV series by studio Gainax, as well as neophytes who hadn’t yet seen it, waited anxiously to see how it would be handled by the streaming giant. Especially of curiosity was the possibility of a brand new English language version of the show, supplanting the previous one done by licensor ADV. Cast members from that dubbed version, including Amanda Winn-Lee, Tiffany Grant, and Spike Spencer all but confirmed that Netflix was going a different direction on social media.  read more

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Otaku Evolution Episode 144 – Dragon Ball Z: Fusion Reborn

First, a little tribute to Daron Nefcy’s Star vs the Forces of Evil, a show I only got into this year but will miss forever, for some reason. A really fun cartoon that blossomed into a compelling one with continuing story arcs. It’s been over a month since “Cleaved”, the final episode, but I wanted to sneak something in. I ended up doing more than I thought because I was able to link it to Dragon Ball. Starco forever, but the best relationship was Eclipsa and Globgor.

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Lupin III: Goodbye Partner Review

  Synopsis: Inspector Zenigata is arrested! The ICPO believe old Pops has been secretly colluding with Lupin this whole time, abetting his crimes! But there’s no time for our bored bandit to sort that out, as he’s challenged to retrieve a special black diamond that can be used to complete a quantum computer. Somehow, a kidnapped girl named Alisa, the works of Frédéric Chopin, and the President of the United States is tangled up in this, but that’s not the only surprise! It seems that Lupin’s hetero life mate, Jigen, has betrayed him! Why, after all these years? Will this be a Revolutionary Etude or a Tristesse? Goodbye Partner hits all the right notes!     Comments:   It’s been a while since I’ve written a text review for a Lupin feature, and even longer since it was a television special. Actually, it’s been a while since there was a TV special. The previous one, Italian Game, was basically just a compilation of a few Lupin III Part IV episodes with some added bits. Like Gundam 08th MS Team‘s Miller’s Report, I suppose. The TV specials had once been a staple of Japanese television, one every year for decades until they slowed down. It was for the best, though, because they were getting really bad. Princess of the Breeze, from a few years ago, was a desperate attempt to recapture the magic of Castle of Cagliostro, that face planted.   But with Goodbye Partner, TMS may have let the TV specials join the Lupin III Renaissance, because it was startlingly good!   Maybe I’m just a sucker for Chopin. Especially Opus 10, Etude Number 3 (usually in E), or “Tristesse” (“Sadness”), a favorite of anime producers and music composers, apparently, because not only do we hear it a few times here, but you’ll also hear it in 2003’s Fullmetal Alchemist TV series, the third Tenchi Muyo! OVA, and the “Baby Blue” short from the anthology Genius Party. It’s also probably my favorite piece of music of all time. The TV special also features “Revolutionary Etude” (Op 10, No. 12). And Chopin’s music and way of piano-playing are a key to activating and accessing the quantum computer AI, Emilka (named after Chopin’s nickname for his younger sister). You incorporate my favorite classical composer into your anime, you have my attention.   I was concerned that the black gem would have been some kind of magical object that controls all computers… which isn’t too far from the truth, but it’s not a supernatural force, it’s techno-magic/bullshit. The AI that forms its own sentience apart from its controllers is well-tread ground, but I just can’t help it, Emilka is just too cute. I’m not sure how that supercomputer is “quantum”, though. It’s not breaking physics or anything, it’s hacking into bank accounts, building droids, and re-routing resources. But at least this is somewhat topical in today’s climate (especially given Roy’s insistence on “America First!”), given the questions about technological singularities and redistrubution of wealth. The TV special doesn’t explore those topics with any great detail, but they echo the zeitgeist in which it’s been created in as atmospheric background.   The special was advertised as depicting a big rift between Lupin and Jigen, but the Lupin vs Jigen element was over in a little less than an hour into the ninety minute run time. Apparently, Jigen had been in love with the mother of Alisa (the young piano phenom villain Roy kidnaps to access the AI), but felt he couldn’t give her the life she wanted, since, you know, he was a hired gun and thief. Eventually Alisa’s mother and father both died and Jigen has made it his duty to protect her, even if he has to go up against his buddies, Lupin and Goemon. This is a decent angle to the story, but I wouldn’t have named the whole special after this element, I would have leaned into the Chopin one.   There are a lot of great scenes in this feature. The opening chase sequence, with Lupin’s casual escape in the face of great danger, Lupin’s diving between laser trippers on his way to the diamond (only to hit an alarm tile immediately after), the bit with Lupin disguised as a Goemon lookalike while Goemon is disguised as a captured Lupin, subverting expectations, was funny, any time Alisa and/or Fujiko tickled the ivories, Lupin and Jigen finding and using the German railway gun, the AI singing… this Lupin adventure is packed full of memorable moments. It never has a shortage of eye-catching visuals and humorous situations.   Goodbye Partner is a rare solid Lupin TV special that I wouldn’t mind rewatching, or even owning. I hope Discotek picks this up and even dubs it. It gives me hope that the TV specials may just have some more life in them.     – Penguin Truth (2019)
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Otaku Evolution Episode 143 – Bardock: Father of Goku

If the opening bit seems familiar, the first part is from Episode 97, “Mid Year English Dub Review III”, but I added a bit more of me fighting recolored Free—er, Golex. You wouldn’t believe how difficult it was to customize those fighting poses with the skeleton armor. I need to work on the beam effects, though. I used Dragon Ball Z sound effects for it, as you probably can tell.

Anyway, it’s time for me to rant about Dragon Ball Minus and the newest Broly movie. Yeah, I know I’m doing a review of Bardock: Father of Goku, but I spend most of the time griping about the lore mining in the DB franchise in general, and my complaints about Minus in particular. Can we please stop doing Bardock stories? It was enough a long time ago, the mystique is long gone. read more

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Otaku Evolution Episode 142 – Dragon Ball: Sleeping Princess in the Devil’s Castle

It’s the start of another Dragon Ball Month here on Otaku Evolution, which means padding the videos with my dumb pixel character pieces. This time, I thought I’d dive a little into the ordinary life of pixel-me, but obviously he’s luckier with women than I am, because nobody, ever, in their right mind, would want me to destroy them, sexually or otherwise. Yeah, when women see me, they normally destroy themselves right there to get out of talking to me.

On the bright side, the Dragon Ball movie I’m reviewing, Sleeping Princess in the Devil’s Castle, is a charmingly weird short tale with a wonderful aesthetic. You don’t really get that kind of quality atmosphere in the more recent Dragon Ball entries, with rich environments and an adventurous, but tense mood. I miss that. read more