The Case Files of Jeweler Richard Anime Review – 71/100

It’s nice to see some rare gems like Housekishou Richard-shi surface in anime medium once in a while. It’s about a niche subject matter that is gemstones, and how these jewelries reflect the quality of its owners. The show also builds up a solid relationship between the main duo Richard and Seigi, although it remains ambiguous till the end whether their relationship could qualify as “romance”. The cases vary in its delivery and quality and frankly my biggest issue with the show is that I find a real lack of engagement to the main characters, each has traits that I found unrelatable.

Continue reading “The Case Files of Jeweler Richard Anime Review – 71/100”

In/Spectre Review – 60/100

I love yokai shows.  Almost every season, sandwiched between your generic isekai and the high school drama, you’ll find some spooky yokai and poor humans who have to navigate the two worlds.  This season, In/Spectre filled that niche, as something of a cross between Bakemonogatari and Natsume’s Book of Friends. 

(I’m also part of the movement to make 50 the new average score, not 70.)

Continue reading “In/Spectre Review – 60/100”

Dorohedoro Anime Review – 80/100

In late December of last year, I labeled Dorohedoro one of my most anticipated series of winter 2020. Honestly, that was a poser move. I’m not a manga reader, so my high expectations were based largely on secondhand praise, plus the potential for bloody irreverence promised by the PV and synopsis. There was one element of the show’s production, though, that I was confident would give it a unique appeal: the involvement of Shinji Kimura, background artist for such films as My Neighbor Totoro and Akira. He’s done plenty of great work as an art director, too, which was his role on this project. Sure enough, Dorohedoro’s grimy cityscapes and ramshackle interiors were uncommonly polished for a TV production – but the show had much more going for it than detailed backgrounds. A potpourri of violence, mystery, and a strangely loveable cast, Dorohedoro proved itself as one of this season’s strongest offerings, despite its task of adapting an unadaptable story.

Continue reading “Dorohedoro Anime Review – 80/100”

Dorohedoro – 12 [Pinky Promise]

We came tantalizingly close to understanding the truth of Caiman’s identity in this episode, but in the end, Dorohedoro’s tendency to complicate itself prevailed. Not that I’m complaining – this was a strong ending, assuming that a second season will emerge some day to continue the story. It resolved some mysteries and created much bigger ones, and convincingly reconciled two friends after brutally pitting them against each other. The latter of those accomplishments was important, as without Caiman and Nikaido’s pinky promise towards the end, this finale would have felt overstuffed with flashbacks, dreams, and clues. Nevertheless, I enjoyed all of those hints at the show’s bigger picture, and I’m going to spend the bulk of this post unpacking them, since I can use tomorrow’s series review to discuss everything else.

Continue reading “Dorohedoro – 12 [Pinky Promise]”

Dorohedoro – 11 [See You at the Food Stall]

This episode wasted no time in picking up where the previous one left off, and right away we were hit over the head with a connection I should have made last time. The brawl at the town gate positioned Shin against Kasukabe, the doctor who saved his life during his time in Hole. You’d think that a former patient ripping off his savior’s arm with a hammer would leave a bigger impression, but sometimes Dorohedoro is in too big a hurry to emphasize those sorts of crossed paths. Not this week, though, as Shin’s easygoing nature triumphed over his bloodthirst, and we got a rare moment of cooperation between him and the gang from Hole (including Thirteen, who must be regretting his involvement by this point). For all of this show’s violence and grotesquerie, the scenes where even mafia cleaners and occultic professors manage to find common ground are among the best moments on offer.

Continue reading “Dorohedoro – 11 [See You at the Food Stall]”

Dorohedoro – 10 [Manju Terror]

Dorohedoro’s rampage continued this week, with sorcerous abductions, fungal transformations, and severed body parts aplenty. I managed to watch this episode twice before writing the post you’re reading now, so both its violence and its central mystery have had extra time to sink in. That mystery, of course, is the identity of the man inside Caiman, who was recognized as “Risu” by a fellow Cross-eye this week (just before his untimely death). After episode 9, I was convinced that the Caiman/Risu connection was less direct than that, but now we have evidence supporting the shared identity theory. There are other possibilities, of course – mistaken identity on the Cross-eye’s part, a fragment of Risu’s consciousness inhabiting someone else’s body – but I won’t dwell too intently on them. This show moves quickly enough that there’s always something new to consider (and in my case, to write about), so let’s get to it.

Continue reading “Dorohedoro – 10 [Manju Terror]”

Dorohedoro – 09 [Ah, Flower Smoke]

This episode was mildly confusing to me. Some of you might be surprised to read that, but it’s my belief that Dorohedoro should be presenting itself in a measured, straightforward manner. These weekly assaults of new plot points and ideas are great, but their greatness is sometimes in spite of that rapid clip. Take this episode, for example. Yaku and Baku have cool powers, and it’s appropriate that Shin and Noi get truly threatening antagonists. But what about our cleaner duo makes Yaku and Baku want them as partners, specifically? Even if the show provided that bit of info (and I don’t believe it did), it wasn’t sufficiently clear. And how about Noi’s stunted growth during her devil training? The last phase was only supposed to last one year, but Shin appeared to age much more than a year during that time. Even Risu’s recovery after getting blasted with smoke, while it makes perfect sense, doesn’t gel in the moment because the show’s focus shifts to Noi. I know Dorohedoro is on a journey to a particular stopping point in the manga, but damn, can’t it hold my hand for two minutes before moving to the next checkpoint?

Continue reading “Dorohedoro – 09 [Ah, Flower Smoke]”

In/Spectre – 07/08 [Preparing to Conquer Steel Lady/Fiction Spinner]

When I came to write about these past two episode of In/Spectre (Kyokō Suiri for you purists), I was afraid that I had actually missed 3 weeks of it – that much happens in these two episodes.

For a yokai show, In/Spectre has an insanely small cast – there were 3 (now 4) main characters that have dominated most of the season.  Normally you have several new ghosts per arc – Natsume’s Book of Friends (what I consider the gold standard of yokai shows), has several new side characters per episode.  In lieu of that, In/Spectre is doing an amazing job of the relationship development (Kuro, you lucky immortal, you).
Continue reading “In/Spectre – 07/08 [Preparing to Conquer Steel Lady/Fiction Spinner]”

Dorohedoro – 08 [Welcome to Blue Night Land]

After last week’s grand slam, I was prepared for a more ordinary episode this time around. That’s pretty much what we received (by Dorohedoro’s standards, anyway), but the breakneck tempo that I complained of in mid-February returned here, forcing me to flex my neurons just to keep up with the story. Every major character barring Nikaido crossed a major speedbump in this episode, and they didn’t bother to hit the brakes first. Even without getting into the nitty gritty of the editing or direction, you can look at the four chapter titles placed throughout the episode’s run to see how many stories it was juggling. Since I’m such a big fan of Dorohedoro’s characters and setting, I wish the show would decrease its average scene count, and use the extra time to lengthen each of the ones that remain. There is an advantage to high-speed presentation, though – it creates hesitation in the mind of the viewer, which mirrors the confusion that Caiman must have experienced in the sorcerer’s realm this week.

Continue reading “Dorohedoro – 08 [Welcome to Blue Night Land]”