Some quick first impressions: Rental Magica, Minami-ke and Prism Ark
Rental Magica


Okay, so this one turned into the shounen-version of Ghost Hunt, with slightly less-impressive production-values. Unfortunately, this one screwed up in a lot of areas, and the characters are nowhere as interesting as with Ghost Hunt. For starters, the director likes action way too much, and the action-scenes themselves aren’t impressive at all: it’s just the characters who launch their powers at the enemy until it goes down. Second of all, this series takes up too little time to build up. It’s like, five minutes of backstory until the action starts again, and the case for this episode was resolved a tad too easy for my tastes. To continue, this may not be a harem, but it’s got way too many harem-elements, and the main character does get surrounded by a bunch of cute and strong girls, among which are a few stereotypes like the energetic sister and the blonde American (seriously, since when are all Americans blond?). He himself takes up all the glory during the fights, and ends up fainting afterwards like the hero he is. I mean, I like the premise, but the execution feels rather meh to me. I doubt whether I’ll continue watching this one.
Minami-ke


After Mokke, this is the second slice-of-life series that focuses on sisters living together this season. So far, I’m more impressed at the former, but that doesn’t mean that Minami-ke is bad. This episode started out with a nice enough first episode, with some interesting banter between the different characters, even though you can probably guess their personalities by just looking at them on the promo-art. The animation is quite good for this series, and there are some interesting camera-angles used in this episode. I think that the success of this series will depend on whether it can remain fresh for thirteen episodes (I assume that that’s going to be the length, don’t take my word on it), and the characters will grow a bit instead of repeating their quirks infinitely.
Prism Arc


I’m a fan of fantasy-series, and Seirei no Moribito showed me that the more one of these series makes its setting believable, the better of a chance it has to become really good. While this is rather subjective for everyone, I do have to say that magic SHOULD NOT BE used to give a bunch of teenagers a cheap excuse to become stronger than any other adult with years more of experience. Seriously, this flaw can’t become more apparent in Prism Ark: the entire cast of strongest fighters in the country consists out of sexy females with a few males here and there, all around the ages of twelve to fifteen. Also, when the map of the world this show is set in is show: pay attention: it’s basically a very screwed up map of Europe, with the names of a few countries altered. This leads to hilarious names as the “Untied Kingdom”, “Russiasn”, “Speen” and “Poleland”. I have no idea whether this was intentional or not, but the fact remains that it’s not looking good for this series. ^^;


















