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June 4, 2008

RD Sennou Chousashitsu - 09


Whoa, such a difference from the previous episodes. This episode takes all the focus away from Minamo, Haru and Holon, and instead focuses on Souta and especially his father. As it turns out, he’s a businessman, and he’s the chief of the unit that keeps the metal up and running. Perhaps this was already revealed in a previous episode, but I’m having enough trouble understanding this series as it is, and this episode was particularly dialogue-heavy.

Having said that, though, this episode was really good. It’s a bit like a social commentary, and how much people have become dependant of the metal. In this episode, it only goes down for a few minutes, and it’s already featured in the news, and the responsible one (Souta’s father) has been demoted. Again, it makes sense: today, more and more people become dependant on the internet.

So, if I understood things correctly: everything started with that red phenomenon, we saw in episode one. Kushima then probably oversaw the creation of the metal, based on that red phenomenon. I think that that’s where the whole issue of cyber-diving comes from, as it’s starting to look like the metal is an extension of the ocean, like how in this episode, a virus managed to reach the main database through the ocean.

Souta’s relationship with his father was a breath of fresh air in terms of having parents who are very busy with their jobs. Anime usually make a very big deal out of this, but Real Drive handled it subtly. Of course, when he was young, and his mother left to Australia to raise Minamo with her own mother, he was left all alone, and of course he felt sad, but over time, he began to accept the fact that his father is a busy man, and instead he decided to help him whenever he could. Quite a change from Production IG’s previous major anime: Ghost Hound, where Masayuki and his family totally grew away from each other.

I’m really surprised at how little hate there is in this series. So far, the only real evil intentions came from Kushima’s boss (who Souta turns out to be sleeping with O.o) and the hackers from episode four. And yet none of them feel like real villains, like you usually see in anime. Usually, anime add in a little grudge here and there, to spice things up a bit, but in Real Drive, most of the conflict comes from people’s own interpretations to how they should live.

I’m really loving this series more and more, simply because it’s one of these series that attempts to do something new and innovative. It’s series like this one that keep pushing anime further, instead of repeating the same harem over and over. Seriously, what is so great about watching ten different series in which a guy gets surrounded by five or six different girls with different distinctive personalities/stereotypes? I can understand why you want to watch such a series once or twice, but what’s the merit of watching virtually the same thing ten or more times after each other? What seems to be that hidden charm of series as To Love-ru and Kanokon that I can’t seem to understand, aside from the obvious fanservice? Is this the “anime as escapism” that people seem to be talking about lately?

Crystal Blaze - 09


Awesome episode! Only now I realize how similar this series is to Kurenai: we have Shinkurou taking care of Murasaki versus Shu, taking care of Sara. Manami and Ayaka are comparable to Shinkurou’s two neighbours, while Poririn and the tech-guy whose name I forgot are similar to Benika. In Kurenai, the bad guy is a family, obsessed over their own bloodline, while Crystal Blaze has a crazy scientist who’s obsessed over his own research. Both evil parties also have well-trained goons and spend the first 8 episodes, trying to track down the good party.

The big difference is that Crystal Blaze puts a lot of emphasis on storytelling, while the big focus of Kurenai is the dialogue. As a result, Crystal Blaze has a plot that continues to develop with lots of interesting twists and turns, and Kurenai is at its best when characters are just talking to each other. If I had to be honest, then I’d say that I like Crystal Blaze better, but that’s mostly because of how well it handled the beginning of its finale, when compared to Kurenai. I didn’t pay much attention to it when I watched the latest episode of Kurenai, but the fact remains that Kurenai’s wish to go back to his home one more time, even though they were discovered was stupid, while in the case of Crystal Blaze it was only a matter of time before they were found, plus Shu and the others couldn’t move anywhere because Sophia was turning into glass.

And I must say, that Sophia’s death was really built up well, and it turned out really touching. The second episode then wasted no time to give us a small gunfight, and I must say that it was quite an interesting idea to fool the enemy’s night-vision by turning up the heat to body-temperature. I’m not sure whether this actually works in real life as well, but it’s an interesting idea. On top of that, Akira’s gotten shot in his shoulder. With only three episodes left, I’m really curious to see where this one is planning to end.