Kaizoku Oujo – 5-6
Wooper: Pirate Princess Fena may not be the most pleasant surprise of the year (that’d be Odd Taxi), but it has to rank pretty highly on that list. Taken together, these installments served as a major turning point for the adventure series, and I’d say it handled the transition with aplomb. Things got real starting in episode 5, where the previously cartoonish band of female pirates from several weeks back revealed themselves to be major players in the show’s universe. Their alluring Captain Grace led an operation that landed Fena back in captivity, and her crew pulled far fewer punches in the process. The Indiana Jones-ish descent of the episode dovetailed quite nicely with our heroes’ sudden imprisonment in an undersea cavern; they escaped near the start of episode 6, of course, but that was far from a copout. Rather than throw Yukimaru & Co. back into the fray, the series hunkered down for some good old-fashioned exposition regarding its larger plot – emphasis on “good.” I can’t remember the last time an anime dumped so many mythical countries, legendary swords, and ancestral warrior clans into my lap while keeping my full attention. Abel was a positively magnetic antagonist here, fully earning the wonder of his new prisoner and the hatred of his former lover in the process of explaining all these concepts to us. Add to that Yukimaru’s surprisingly emotional decision to undertake a solo rescue mission, and you’ve got a recipe for a killer second half of an already-engaging anime. More please!
Re-Main – 8-9
Wooper: Re-Main just jumped the shark in a major way, but the question of how it’ll cross the finish line still interests me. After Minato’s memories were restored thanks to a five minute lecture from Chinu, he hit his head AGAIN in episode 8, this time maintaining his recollection of junior high but losing his cheery high school demeanor. Now he’s an overconfident asshole with the sort of anger issues that lead him to trash his room, and his seiyuu has been forced into mimicking Yuki Kaji’s babyrage voice in an effort to keep pace. The growl-off between Minato’s old self (which is new for those of us in the audience) and a surly former teammate made me embarrassed for everyone involved in the making of the scene, from the writers who had to play along with their boss’s Double Amnesia vision to the actors who had to pretend that it made any sense. Episode 9 did a decent job of bringing Minato back to Yamanami High and humbling him a bit in the process, but that hardly puts a dent in the whiplash created by this plot development. At this point, my curiosity about how the show plans to recover is morbid in nature, but hey, at least I’m curious.
Amun: Honestly, nothing really stood out to me this week – although I am a little behind on Fena. MHA was slightly better, and Iruma-kun ended the season on a high note. We’ll try again next week!