The small but diverse video label Discotek Media has picked up a number of old-school anime titles that should turn more than a few heads: Casshan: Robot Hunter and Samurai Pizza Cats. According to posts on the company's official Facebook wall, DVD editions of both Casshan and Cats are headed our way later this year.
Friday, August 3, 2012
Discotek Media Does Classic Anime Reissues Casshan Samurai Pizza Cats
New Feature Light Novels And Their Relation to Anime
Over the last couple of decades, one of Japan's publishing genres has also become one of its biggest sources for anime adaptations. Everything from Haruhi Suzumiya (shown here; compare prices) to Rental Magica have been inspired by "light novels" -- those short, easy-to-read books targeted mainly at younger audiences.
Anime Review Anohana The Flower We Saw That Day
You never get just one type of story with anime. Science-fiction action, blood-curdling horror, slice-of-life drama -- and three-hanky weepies as well. Anohana: The Flower We Saw That Day is the newest example of the latter, and the latest offering from the folks at NIS America as well.
Vote in the AboutCom Anime Readers Choice Awards
Every year, the About.com Readers' Choice Awards showcase the best products, people, organizations, and services in multiple categories, from technology to hobbies to parenting to religion, and yes, manga and anime too!
Your nominations have been tallied, and now it's time to vote on your favorite anime, anime distributors, and streaming services from between February 22 through March 21. Note that in order to vote you'll need to sign in with either a Facebook or About.com account, to keep the voting fair.
New FullLength Rurouni Kenshin LiveAction Trailer Debuts
We knew a live-action movie based on the classic anime series Rurouni Kenshin (compare prices) was on the way, and we've seen glimpses of it before. Now Yahoo! Japan has posted a good-quality full-length trailer (two minutes) that gives us a little more of an idea of the look and flavor of the movie.
EnglishSubbed LiveAction Rurouni Kenshin Trailer Debuts
Buzz has been building for months now about the live-action Rurouni Kenshin movie, and we finally have the first English-subtitled trailer for the film thanks to the magic of YouTube.
Anime Review Okamisan and her Seven Companions
What happens when the Big Bad Wolf, Little Red Riding Hood, the Seven Dwarves, Snow White, and a whole gaggle of other figures out of fairy tales and myth all rub shoulders at the same exclusive high school? That's the premise -- sorta-kinda -- behind Okami-san and her Seven Companions, FUNimation's latest anime offering on both BD and DVD.
New Feature Best Anime Adapted From Video Games
In Japan, anime's a two-way street -- meaning the sheer number of things that get made into anime, or that get adapted into other things from anime, boggles the mind. Crossovers go on constantly between anime, manga, light novels, live-action adaptations, merchandising efforts, themed events, and ... you guessed it ... video games.
A full list of anime created from video game properties (e.g., Devil May Cry, shown here -- compare prices) would probably exhaust everyone involved. But a list of the best of the bunch, the ones most worth tracking down whether or not you've played the games in question ... well, welcome to our new Anime.About.com feature.
Anime Review Studio Ghiblis Whisper of the Heart
If there is a finer, more widely-respected animation studio in Japan -- and maybe in the whole of the world -- than Studio Ghibli, it's hard to say who that might be. Under the stewardship of their founder, Hayao Miyazaki, they've been responsible for some of the finest
Now many of their titles are being reissued in the U.S. on Blu-ray Disc and DVD, thanks to a partnership with Disney. Newest to the lineup: Whisper of the Heart (compare prices here), originally released to great acclaim in 1997.
James Camerons Battle Angel Alita Off The Table UPDATED
For years, anime fans held their breath over the possibility that director James Cameron (Avatar) would be launching a live-action adaptation of Battle Angel Alita.
Now, a recent New York Times interview with Cameron hints at him taking all his non-Avatar related projects off the table for keeps, Alita included.
Anime Review Puella Magi Madoka Magica Volume 1
Longtime anime fans know the "magical girl" concept like the backs of their hands. An ordinary girl is offered the opportunity to wield great power against bad guys, transforming from her everyday appearance into a doubly-cute avatar of all that's good and innocent.
Shows like Sailor Moon codified the concept; shows like Cardcaptor Sakura expanded on it. Now comes the U.S. release of Puella Magi Madoka Magica, the first magical-girl show in some time to take the idea and push it into some unexpected and surprising new directions.
Anime Review Heavens Lost Property Season One
All Tomoki wanted was a little peace and quiet ... and the occasional glimpse down the necklines of his female classmates (or a peek up their skirts). Then one day, the "Angeloid" named Ikaros quiet literally drops into his life. She can grant any wish, and it isn't long before Tomoki's using her to do everything from sneak into the girl's locker room to you-name-it -- but who is this mysterious creature from the sky, really?
Monday, July 30, 2012
Anime Review Heavens Lost Property Season One
All Tomoki wanted was a little peace and quiet ... and the occasional glimpse down the necklines of his female classmates (or a peek up their skirts). Then one day, the "Angeloid" named Ikaros quiet literally drops into his life. She can grant any wish, and it isn't long before Tomoki's using her to do everything from sneak into the girl's locker room to you-name-it -- but who is this mysterious creature from the sky, really?
Most Anticipated Anime Releases of Spring 2012
With "White Day" (Japan's companion holiday to Valentine's Day, where women give tokens of appreciation to men) just behind us and spring coming fast around the corner, it's time to take a look at some of the most anticipated anime releases for the season.
Anime Review Legend of the Legendary Heroes
Fantasy adventures take many forms, but they usually have a few dependable elements to make them, well, fantasy. Among them are The Hero and The Magical Artifact(s), two things -- among others -- that The Legend of the Legendary Heroes stands on their heads.
Cyborg 009 LiveAction Film Gears Up
Prepare for yet another possible anime-to-live-action adaptation! Shotaro Ishinomori's Cyborg 009 (compare prices), originally a classic 1970s manga which later found its way to TV, has been picked up for a live-action production on this side of the Pacific.
According to the Hollywood Reporter's Heat Vision blog, Ishinomori Productions is looking to work with producer F.J. DeSanto (who previously gave us the live-action version of Will Eisner's The Spirit) to bring Cyborg 009 to the big screen as a live-action feature.
New Feature Best Sword Sorcery Fantasy Anime
You know the tropes. Big swords, daring heroes, dangerous villains, unpredictable magic, giant dragons. Turns out the whole subgenre of swords-and-sorcery fantasy that we all know, courtesy of everything from Lord of the Rings to The Wheel of Time, is its own subgenre of anime as well.
Toonami Programming Block Returns To Adult Swim
"Attention Toonami Faithful - We heard you," went out the broadcast on multiple social networks, along with a URL: http://www.adultswim.com/shows/toonami/
That's right -- the long-missed Toonami programming block, part of the Adult Swim block on Cartoon Network that broadcast action-oriented anime from 1997 through 2008 and helped allow anime to reach a wide segment of the U.S. viewing audience, is being reinstated as of May 26.
Animation Director Noboru Ishiguro Passes Away
Longtime anime director and industry veteran Noboru Ishiguro has died at the age of 73.
A full list of Ishiguro's achievements and contributions reads like a rundown of almost every major seminal anime franchise of years past: the 1980s incarnation of Astro Boy, Space Battleship Yamato, Super Dimension Fortress Macross (the series that served as the basis for the English-language Robotech), and Legend of the Galactic Heroes.
LiveAction Noir Anime On Pause
Looks like we won't see live-action versions of Mireille Bouquet and Kirika Yumura anytime soon.
Starz CEO Chris Albrecht, in an interview with Multichannel News about a number of Starz properties in development, admitted that the live-action remake of the Noir anime (which is a Starz project) is "in a bit of a holding pattern."
FUNimation Adds Anime Rentals On Facebook
FUNimation just added another way for anime fans to get their fix: video rental via Facebook.
New Feature Great Anime For Adults
Anime is a medium rather than a genre, in much the same way "the movies" encompass more than just what comes out of Hollywood. The diversity of anime is a big part of what drew me to it and keeps me there: it's more than just kid's stuff. (Not that "kid's stuff" is by itself a bad thing -- the new My Little Pony is far better than it has any right to be.)
Anime Review Grave of the Fireflies
On any list of undisputed classics of anime, there are a few titles that recur regularly: Akira, for instance, or My Neighbor Totoro. Grave of the Fireflies belongs on that very short list, although for the last few years it suffered from being out of print no thanks to the demise of its American distributor, Central Park Media.
Now that problem's been fixed thanks to Sentai Filmworks, who have since reissued Grave of the Fireflies in a new DVD edition and made it available through the Anime Network's online service.
Sailor Moon Gets A New Adaptation
Fans of a classic anime are getting their fandom rewarded. Sailor Moon (compare prices), the 1990s anime title that is widely credited for introducing anime to a whole generation of viewers worldwide, is being re-adapted from its source -- Naoko Takeuchi's manga, also recently re-released in English after being out of print for a time.
ViKi FanSubbed Anime Goes Legit
A new online video portal is looking at legitimized fansubbing as a way to reach fans that are being overlooked.
As anime distributors continue to weather out a tough market, they've started exploring new ways to get their product to a digital-savvy audience, from YouTube streams to digital downloads from the iTunes store. But one of the reasons why digital piracy continues to thrive is to serve the needs of the niche: people who want anime titles that may never get licensed for distribution outside of Japan.
Ergo Proxy Returning To DVD
FUNimation is bringing Proxy back.
The dystopian cyberpunk anime Ergo Proxy wowed (and baffled) audiences in its original release back in 2006. Set in a domed city where a subclass of robot servants are going berserk, and with a screenplay from Eden of the East and Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex scripter Dai Sato, it touched on a whole slew of themes -- self-aware machines, the problems inherent in creating a utopian society, and how to look good in blue eyeliner while wielding a shotgun.
Anime Review Oh Edo Rocket
Welcome to Edo -- Tokyo, that is, circa 1840 -- where fireworks are banned and so are many other forms of fun. What's Seikichi Tamiya, the town's scrappiest and most ambitious fireworks-maker, to do? Break the rules, and in the ballsiest way possible. He's building a rocket which can reach the moon -- all for the sake of the pretty young girl he met the other night who's, well, not from around here, to put it mildly.
New Feature Best English Dubs
Few topics in anime, apart from maybe piracy, are as divisive as English dubbing. Some love it because it makes their favorite shows that much more accessible to other audiences; some hate it because it was done outside of the original production team, or because they resent dubbing on principle.
I've been on both sides of this argument, and a big part of what's moved me gradually into the pro-dub camp has been the gradual but measurable improvement in quality of the average English-dubbed anime title. So much so that it seemed high time to compile a list of titles that have dubs of note.
Anime Releases for Winter 2012
Welcome to the new year, one in which with any luck the world won't end on schedule (my money is on "won't"), and in which we will be inundated with a whole spate of new anime releases. To celebrate that fact, here's a list of some of the best and most head-turning, eye-opening anime products for the first three months of the year -- including the title featured here in this post, Princess Jellyfish.
Anime Review Infinite Stratos
One thing I love about anime is how it makes everything look stylish -- yes, even future war machines and combat technology. In anime, it seems, the war machine of the future will be something you slip on like an evening dress or a three-piece suit.
In the world of Infinite Stratos, the new mecha / SF / comedy series courtesy of Sentai Filmworks, the "Infinite Stratos" of the title is just such a machine -- a personal suit of fighting armor that looks classy enough to give Tony Stark a fit of jealousy (and destructive enough, too).
New Series Profile Hetalia
"Controversial" is such an open-ended word. With anime, it's typically used to refer to two basic kinds of shows. The first sport the easy kind of controversy: violence, sexuality, or material intended for mature audiences that seems aimed at younger viewers (for the latter, consider Shin-chan).
The second kind of controversy involves political incorrectness, or better to say variations in cultural viewpoints that don't always make sense from the outside. What's offensive in Japan may pass without a blink in the United States, and the same is often true in reverse as well. Case in point: Hetalia, a surprise hit anime about ... anthropomorphic countries.
Anime Review Boogiepop Phantom
Japanese and American popular culture share many fascinations, among them a love of urban legends and modern-day folklore. Such obsessions show up routinely in anime as well, with Boogiepop Phantom (compare prices) being one classic example.
Originally released in 2000, Boogiepop Phantom appeared on video in English but -- as is the fate with many anime titles that don't begin with "Dragon" and end with "ball" -- lapsed out of print. Being able to find a copy of the series became something of an urban legend unto itself. But now Nozomi Entertainment -- the folks who gave us the excellent reissues of The Dirty Pair and Revolutionary Girl Utena, among others.
Series Profile Haruhi Suzumiya
Some anime are geared for the broadest possible audience; others seem designed for fans. This isn't a criticism, just a fact: you wouldn't give Finnegans Wake to someone just cutting their teeth on the classics, for the same reason you probably wouldn't want a newcomer to anime watching a "400-level show".
But some of those more fan-oriented shows are just about impossible not to run into even if you're a newcomer to anime. Among them is the Haruhi Suzumiya series (compare prices), center of a whirlwind of fandom that's engulfed audiences both in Japan and abroad, and which persists to this day.
Anime Review Princess Jellyfish
You know the classic formula for a love story: boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy gets girl. But this is 2012, and so we need a new twist on the old story. How about: girl lives in insular all-girl environment, girl meets and admires other girl, girl discovers other girl is in fact a boy? And that's just for openers?
Anime Profile KON
Face it: deep in our hearts, we all want to be rock stars. Why else would so many of us strap on guitars, pad our garages and basements with packing blankets and egg cartons for soundproofing, and wail away?
The four (and eventually, five) high school girls of K-ON! have a little of that ambition, but at first all they want to do is be together. K-ON! (compare prices for the show) is the story of how their casual afternoon "light music club" turns by degrees into something far more adventurous.
Anime Review Fractale
Virtual reality is becoming, well, a reality. Yesterday I watched along with a great many other people as Google demonstrated their new experimental "Project Glass" -- which is technically augmented reality, but either way, you're talking about a synthetic world that overlays the real world.
Fractale (compare prices on the show here) starts from that premise -- people in the real world are part of a universal network (dare I say "matrix"?) through which they communicate with each other seamlessly and live out their lives. For most of them, Fractale is their world -- which makes it all the more dangerous when Fractale begins to fail on them, inspiring a cadre of revolutionaries to urge mankind to throw off its digital chains.