April 22, 2008

RD Sennou Chousashitsu - 03


I love the thing that this series is trying to prove: you can even have a great story if your main characters aren’t perfectly looking guys or girls. So many of them have lost their parents, so many of them have had a troubled childhood and they’ve had to endure the most horrible things in some cases, but nearly all of them have a perfect thyroid. Minamo may be annoying at times, but the only other female main character in anime that I can recall who doesn’t look perfect in every single way is Sunako from Yamato Nadeshiko Shichi Henge. Heck, even among major side-characters you hardly see any non-perfect-looking girls or women. Gintama and Blue Drop are the only two that I can name out of the top of my head. In the same way, I can’t remember any other anime with a main character of above seventy years old apart from Millennium Actress.

Anyway, enough blabbering. It indeed turns out that the diver from the previous episode was Haru, and in this episode attempts are made to find out what made him change back to his 30-year old self inside Metal. A few tests are run, to see whether he’s an able cyber-diver, but after numerous tests, he keeps on failing in his original body. In the end, it turns out that Minamo, combined with a dire situation is able to trigger this change. When Minamo checks up on the guy, for a minute she sees the face of his younger self. I’m not sure whether that was just her imagination, or the influence of Metal is more than just on-line. This episode already showed that divers are screwed if they dive too far into Metal and lose consciousness, because you actually need to get your cyber-body back. Much like the Matrix, actually.

On a totally different side-note: the fansub-scene has changed quite a bit compared to two years ago. Really, at this point, roughly two weeks after the start of the season, RD and Kaiba have finally also gotten subbed and the only unsubbed series left is out of all series Toshokan Sensou. I remember that two years ago, I had to wait four weeks until the majority of new series had gotten its subs. The fansubbers are slowly changing from quality-based to speed-based. I remember how back then, people used to talk bad about speedsubbers, but right now everybody seems to have accepted them.

D.N.Angel Review - 82/100


Series that promise to be better in their second half are always tricky. You never know whether they can actually live up to their claims or not; it went well for series as El Cazador, Chevalier, NHK ni Youkoso and Full Moon wo Sagashite, but on the other hand, things went disastrously wrong for series as Mahou Shoujo Lyrical Nanoha StrikerS, Utawarerumono, Mai Otome and Romeo x Juliet. Thankfully, D.N.Angel lies on the good side of this spectrum.

It starts out as a very strange series: a boy with a very bad haircut suddenly finds out that on his 14th birthday that he can change into a winged phantom-thief bishie called “Dark”. Not that promising, though thankfully this series turned out to have a similar story flow as El Cazador and Suteki Tantei Labyrinth: entertain your viewers with random cases (in this case random artworks that have to be stolen, or background on various main- and side-characters), and abandon these cases as soon as the second half hits, so that the characters can develop themselves.

Such a formula works surprisingly well, and indeed: once this series passes its halfway-mark the characters really start shining. Especially the teenagers turn into well-rounded characters that will make the journey through the first 13 episodes a rewarding one. Unfortunately, the other characters do feel a bit incomplete. Especially the major bad guys could have gotten more attention, there’s one particular side-character who feels out of place and doesn’t seem to serve any purpose whatsoever and Dark himself too feels like he could have been more if given more screen-time.

While I can’t say that D.N.Angel is a must-watch, I am at least glad that it managed to make use of its potential, and didn’t get itself caught in endless fillers. Even the random cases serve to flesh out and provide background for the different characters. If I recall correctly, then the creators completely rewrote the original manga for this anime, and I must say that they did a pretty decent job on it. Do note that the graphics can be a bit of a turn-off. Don’t get me wrong, they look great at times, but there are also quite a few lower-quality shots and the characters do take a bit of getting used to if you’re not a fan of bishies.