December 28, 2008

Mobile Suit Gundam 00 - 38



Short Synopsis: Celestial Being and Kataron both try to destroy Memento Mori.
Overall Enjoyment Value: 8/10 (Excellent)
I must say, that even though it was a pretty straightforward episode, it nonetheless was the perfect closure for the third quarter of Gundam 00, and definitely the best episode of the second season so far. At this pace, it’s going to easily surpass the first season. It’s also good to see that the white -haired commander is gone now.

This article is a pretty interesting one, and it shows that anime staff do check the opinions on the net. Unfortunately, on the wrong places such as 2channel… It also confirms a suspicion I’ve had for some time now: the producers indeed were quite limited in coming up with the storyline for this series. I really think that the “Mr. Bushido”-part was thought up by some crazy Sunrise executive who apart from that wasn’t that involved with this series, which is only confirmed by the guy’s glaring absence in any action so far. My biggest problem with Sunrise is with their top executives, who try way too much to make their series sell, rather than the actual production staff. Especially Mizushima did a great job of dragging Gundam back from the pit where Gundam Seed Destiny left it.

The question is of course where this series is going to go after this. Memento Mori is destroyed now, but I doubt that the innovators are going to give up that easily. The huge space fortress is also still missing, so I wonder when that one’s going to show up, although right now I haven’t seen any indication or hint as to how and why the thing will have to be built.

One thing that annoys me though is that these innovators refuse to die after being pwned by Setsuna. They always manage to escape in some sort of escape capsule, even though most other unimportant soldiers simply die when they’re shot. I guess that that’s the privilege of having your own custom built machine, but it remains a bit jarring.

Junjo Romantica 2 Review - 75/100


Junjo Romantica: it may have been a yaoi-series, but it was an actually good one, focusing more than simply hawt bishie-on-bishie action, it explored what it meant to be in a relationship with another person. I hoped that the second season would be much of the same, continuing where the first season left off, but unfortunately I was disappointed. Junjo Romantica 2 is definitely a step back from Junjo Romantica 1.

This mostly can be blamed to balance issues. For those who have yet to see the first season: the series focuses on three different stories about three different and unrelated couples: Romantica, Egoist and Terrorist. The latter two already were in a minority in the first season, but they become virtually non-existent in the second: Egoist only has two episodes, while Terrorist only has one single episode. That’s way too short to get some get some good development out of them.

What makes things even worse is that the creators lacked the inspiration to fill up the Romantica storyline. If the creators had a good storyline to fill up the nine remaining episodes, then okay, I could live with the extremely unbalanced episode count, but the story becomes downright dull and ridiculous. The creators introduce the most ludicrous love triangles you can imagine, that get absolutely nowhere. The creators would have done much better to use this time on the much more interesting Terrorist and Egoist storylines, which suffer from a lack of conclusion because of their staggeringly low episode count.

The only good part in terms of drama in the Romantica-storyline is that we do get to know the main characters better, and especially Usagi’s family problems become a bit clearer and fleshed out in the second season. If the creators simply focused on that, and removed all the love triangles, it would have made for a pretty interesting story.

My big problem with these Shounen Ai series is that nearly all of them play in a world where every single character is gay. It seems to be a taboo of including any straight romance in these sorts of series, and that’s really a wasted opportunity. I wished that Junjo Romantica would turn out more like Antique Bakery, which just has one gay guy and enough people who are simply straight. Junjo Romantica 2 has now turned simply into a series that you can laugh at: it’s consistently capable of raising chuckles and laughs, whether intended or not doesn’t matter. Unfortunately, the first season was more than just that, and that’s what I’m missing here.

Storytelling: 7/10
Characters: 8/10
Production-Values: 7/10
Setting: 8/10