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Otaku Evolution Episode 115 – Dragon Ball: Curse of the Blood Rubies

Yikes, this one’s pretty short. Introducing Dragon Ball Month on Otaku Evolution, where I comb through some of the movies and try to find the spirit of the source material in the midst of “original” stories. Here I start with the first Dragon Ball movie, Curse of the Blood Rubies, and you’ll understand why the video’s short, because the movie is less than an hour long. So I padded it with that wonderful book end storyline nonsense that nobody appreciates but me. There’s still a review in there, though, it’s not just a summary with quips. read more

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Legend of the Galactic Heroes: Die Neue These Episode 09 Review

Episode 09, “Each Person’s Star”

*****SPOILERS*****

Synopsis:  On Heinessen, the High Council of the Free Planets Alliance debates the pros and cons of launching an offensive into Imperial territory. The majority, reacting to their sagging poll numbers, approve, as a military victory will bolster voters’ opinions. Meanwhile, Yang Wenli’s letter of resignation is turned down on the basis of the need for competent officers and the possibility of the 13th Fleet breaking down. Yang and Julian have dinner with Frederica and her father, Admiral Dwight Greenhill, who discuss Julian’s accolades in school and the general political mood. On their way home, Yang discovers Jessica Edwards has been elected for political office on an anti-war platform. On the planet Phezzan, Adrian Rubinsky manipulates the economies of the two warring nations. read more

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Lupin III Part V Episode 10 Review

Episode 10, “Thief and Thief'”

*****SPOILERS*****

Synopsis:  Politics make for strange bedfellows, and even stranger team-ups, as Lupin and Albert agree to cooperate to retrieve the black notebook from Jose’s gang of killers! But that association of assassination proves to be a continuing challenge, even with Jigen and Goemon close behind. Who will finally retrieve that ledger of liars, Lupin, Albert, or Calvess? Lupin writes his own message in this explosive conclusion!

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Lupin III Part V Episode 09 Review

Episode 09, “The Man Who Abandoned ‘Lupin'”

*****SPOILERS*****

Synopsis:  Lupin reels from his loss to Albert, barely escaping with his life, but the DGSE director is himself immediately targeted and the notebook is stolen by assassins. However, instead of turning it over to Guillaume, the band of butchers instead hand it to a right wing politician running on an anti-immigration campaign. Despite losing the notebook, Lupin, Jigen, and Goemon are relentlessly pursued by the killers. Both Lupin and Albert decide taking the initiative, coming face to face at Guillaume’s residence, where their goals overlap. Have they gone from rivals to associates or is this team up temporary? It’s an explosive chase for Lupin that tests his limits! read more

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Otaku Evolution Episode 114 – Giant Robo (OVA)

Ah, Giant Robo. Best anime I’ve reviewed so far this year. This classic 7-episode OVA, directed by Yasuhiro Imagawa, combines classic Chinese wuxia, Western retro-future, and good ol’ mecha action to give us a celebration of Mitsuteru Yokoyama’s work. It’s a real stunner, folks. It has exciting action, gripping drama, splendid art/animation, fantastic music and sound design, and is even greater than the sum of its parts. Imagawa is criminally underrated and we’re all lucky to have him in the industry. So join me in this look at one of my favorite anime of all time, Giant Robo: The Day the Earth Stood Still! read more

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Legend of the Galactic Heroes: Die Neue These Episode 08 Review

Episode 08, “The Castrop Rebellion”

*****SPOILERS*****

Synopsis:  Reinhard von Lohengramm assembles his admiralty of several talented officers, and assigns Rear Admiral Kircheis a task for which he would earn a promotion. The mission is to put down a rebellion from a hoarding aristocrat, Maximillian Castrop. Kircheis takes a small fleet to subdue the rebellion by luring the overconfident Castrop into a trap. Reinhard’s other subordinates are impressed. It’s then that Reinhard is visited by Paul von Oberstein, who fled from the battle at Iserlohn, and will be court martialed for desertion. Oberstein proposes to help Reinhard overthrow the royalty, and while initially suspicious, Reinhard relents to helping the dour man, exchanging a favor owed for a pardon. Reinhard plans on using Oberstein as he is being used by him. read more

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Lupin III Part V Episode 08 Review

Episode 08, “Who Has the Black Notebook?”

*****SPOILERS*****

Synopsis:  At Gaston’s grave, Lupin and Jigen meet Camille Bardot, a retired detective with photographic memory. He reveals that he was the one who commissioned Gaston to copy the original black notebook. However, a group of assassins target Camille and Lupin, and the detective is gunned down. Lupin sets up a meeting with Albert to hand over the book, hoping to outwit his old nemesis with a few tricks. However, he underestimates his opponents’ powers of observation. Is Lupin’s showdown with Albert a bridge too far? Watch out, Lupin! read more

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Legend of the Galactic Heroes: Die Neue These Episode 07 Review

Episode 07, “The Capture of Iserlohn (Part 2)”     *****SPOILERS*****   Synopsis: Walter von Schönkopf and the Rosen Ritter, disguised as Imperial soldiers, are welcomed into Iserlohn Fortress. After a couple of close calls, they’re brought to meet Admiral Stockhausen. After reminiscing on his past in the Galactic Empire, Schönkopf succeeds in taking the admiral’s gun and holding him hostage. After sleeping gas is pumped into the air vents, the rest of Yang’s fleet enter as conquerors, and use the fortress’ Thor’s Hammer cannon to destroy most of the previously deployed garrison fleet. The Imperial forces withdraw and Yang’s gambit pays off with the Alliance’s ownership of the station. The Dominion of Fezzan, and its leader, Adrian Rubinsky, take notice of this event.     Comments:     Completing the adaptation of Chapter 5 of the first novel, this episode sees the FPA’s 13th Fleet successfully carry out its mission to seize Iserlohn Fortress. It’s a pretty straight forward adaptation, too, with very few changes or embellishments. The biggest departure is that the Rosen Ritters are taken directly to Admiral Stockhausen in the book, who is already so frustrated that he’s let his guard down immediately when told that the fleet that went out was destroyed. Also in the book, Schönkopf brought in a ceramic gun, bypassing the only detector check, rather than a full body scan in this episode. Amusingly, the forged IDs he made were never even checked.     The OVA has the soldier Schönkopf is playing as so injured that he’s rolled in on a gurney for added effect (that also has weapons hidden in it). Iserlohn’s commander surrenders almost immediately, rather than needing additional cohersion via the Seffle Particles. Also, there’s more activity throughout the fortress, like a scene with the city section of Iserlohn and a rather bloody battle scene with axes. I guess the staff wanted to make it seem like there was a little bit more of a struggle to take the place. At the end of the OVA episode that covers this, Yang tries to resign, but is rejected, as the newly formed 13th Fleet needs him.     What we do get in this version of the story is the introduction of the Seffle Particles. They’re multi-use combustable particles and they’re often deployed to prevent the use of energy weapons in a closed area or redirect objects in space. The Rosen Ritters use them to prevent the firing of guns in the control room of Iserlohn (though that kind of makes Schönkopf’s use of the commander’s gun sort of pointless). It reminds me somewhat of the Minovsky Particles of Gundam‘s Universal Century timeline, which are mainly used to block radar. I wouldn’t quite call either special technology McGuffins per se, since neither franchise has stories revolving around them, but they are interesting story conveniences. They don’t seem overly contrived in either case, but I just like to draw parallels. Maybe Tanaka was inspired by Gundam? I know a lot of people were/are.     Even though it’s only a short scene and we barely get a sense of the characters, we finally get to Phezzan, where we meet Landesherr Adrian Rubinsky and his aide, Nicholas Boltik. The Phezzani are, uh, a bit like the alien Ferengi from Star Trek, dialed down a little. They’re consummate merchants who take pride in free trade and self-determination. They’re the ultimate “the free market will solve everything” libertarian-types. Hopefully we’ll see more of that in later episodes. It’s interesting how they changed Rubinsky’s character design, with a thinner, tanner face and those long sideburns (despite being otherwise bald). Boltik looks older than in the OVA.     This was an excellent episode, though much of the quality was because of the core novel material and not necessarily this particular production (though I loved seeing some parts of Iserlohn we never saw in the OVA, and Schönkopf’s flashbacks to living in the Empire). Yang and Schönkopf’s plan to take Iserlohn without losing a single man works and is an impressive feat. It’s always exciting to see the Thor’s Hammer fired off, too. No wonder so many of the FPA’s attempts at taking the base failed. Yang’s plan managed to lure out the fleet with one move and infiltrate the base in another. Unfortunately, now that he’s famed, he’ll find it harder to walk away from the military life he dislikes.     Next episode looks to return to the Empire, where Oberstein will plead his case to Reinhard and Kircheis will show off his competence. We’ll probably get some actual dialogue for Reuenthal and Mittermeyer!    

Overall Score:

4 out of 5

Legend of the Galactic Heroes: Die Neue These can be watched on Crunchyroll.

 
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Lupin III Part V Episode 07 Review

Episode 07, “His Name is Albert”     *****SPOILERS*****   Synopsis: An old acquaintance of Lupin’s, an art forger named Gaston, hires him to steal a work from a collector known for hording masterpieces. The painting in question is a fake, as Lupin confirms with a seller named Aghion, but the DGSE are eager to retrieve it. Within the canvas is a ledger that pulls Lupin and Jigen into increasing danger, and a couple of shocking discoveries has Lupin unsettled. It’s suspense you can’t fake in the next big chapter of Lupin and the gang’s antics!       Comments:   As I suspected, the Pink Jacket adventure from last week was a little breather before the next multi-part story arc, and here we have it! It’s good to have a little variety, and I’m curious as to what the next one-off episode will be. However, at least in this series, I rather prefer the story arcs, and this one seems like it’ll be a doozy, as it hints at Lupin’s past dealings with this guy, Albert.   In Part IV, there was an episode where Lupin was determined to steal the Mona Lisa and replace it with a well done forgery, but there was another copy as well, and there was a whole mix up about which was which, that ultimately ended in Lupin’s favor. Little did he know that one of those paintings was actually painted by a cloned Leonardo da Vinci himself, and as the second one was the Isleworth Mona Lisa, all three were from the original Renaissance Man. But here, Lupin and Jigen track down a forged Picasso that Lupin’s friend Gaston had sold to a collector which seems to garner the attention of men in black. Unlike in Part IV, this painting is definitely not real, but hides a valuable, and deadly secret.   There were a few really clever elements in the scheme transpiring here. One was that the painting was intentionally sold to an art hoarder to ensure its easy retrieval later on, with no fear of it being resold. The second was Lupin’s plan where he had Jigen pose as him while he waited in that intelligence officer’s car to get the skinny on the true purpose of the artwork. What it ended up being was that within the canvas, there was a list of all the dirty dealing and detailed crimes and corruption of the French police, presumably with names, dates, and times. Something worth hiding in plain sight and potentially extremely valuable. French Intelligence, DGSE, was definitely interested in getting the notebook before it could be leaked or used for blackmail, but the guy posed as Gaston had confidence in Lupin’s curiosity.   Now, presumably, the guy named Albert, whose hobbies include watchmaking, is the puppeteer in this affair. He’s described in in official descriptions of this series being in law enforcement and as a figure in Lupin’s past. His last name is d’Andrésy, the maiden name of Arsène Lupin’s mother. He seems to be the one leading Lupin and Jigen around. But if he’s already part of the DGSE effort to obtain the notebook, why did those other agents take on their own initiative to get it? Is Albert possibly playing for his own side in this? He certainly seems to think of this as an interesting game, and I’ll be interested in learning more aout him. It’ll be monocle vs monocle!    

Overall Score:

4 out of 5

Lupin The 3rd Part 5 can be watched on Crunchyroll.

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Legend of the Galactic Heroes: Die Neue These Episode 06 Review

Episode 06, “The Capture of Iserlohn (Part 1)”

*****SPOILERS*****

Synopsis:  As Yang Wen-li prepares to launch his mission to capture the Empire’s Iserlohn Fortress, he gathers resources and recruits. Among them are Commodores Fischer and Murai, as well as Captain Patrichev. Calsenes assigns Yang an adjunct, Sub-Lieutenant Frederica Greenhill, who recalls the time she met him on El Facil. Other officers are skeptical of Yang’s skills, but he’s defended by the 5th Fleet Commander, Vice Admiral Bewcock. For the plan to take Iserlohn, highly skilled commandos are needed, so Yang selects the controversial infantry unit, the Rosen Ritter, commanded by Captain Walter von Schönkopf. Meanwhile, at the stronghold in space, the two commanders in charge are informed of strange activity, and speculate on whether or not it’s a trap. Suddenly, they’re contacted by an Imperial soldier, who requests an audience with them. read more