Showing posts with label Takahiro Omori. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Takahiro Omori. Show all posts
REVIEW: DVD Release: Durarara!! Vol. 3
Series: Durarara!! Vol. 3
UK Release date: 13th June 2011
Distributor: Beez
Certificate: 15
Director: Takahiro Omori
Genre: Anime
Format: DVD
Country of Production: Japan
Language: Japanese
Review by: Alice Instone-Brewer
The recently released third volume of Durarara!! continues the anime adaptation of the first three novels in Ryohgo Narita’s light novel series. Brought to us by the team behind the famous Baccano!, and dealing with everything from shy students to city gangs and the supernatural, Durarara!! is a character-driven series of similar tone to the one that made Baccano! so popular, and has already gathered itself a loyal fan base.
The series as a whole follows seemingly shy country teenager Mikado Ryugamine after he moves to the “Big City” in search of excitement. Despite his shy appearance, his greatest fear is living an ordinary life – a fear that drives his often dangerous actions. The “Big City”, in this case, is Ikebukuro, Tokyo. Once there, he crosses paths with his confident and streetwise childhood friend, Masaomi, who takes him under his wing.
The plot centres around an internet-based city gang called the Dollars and their rivalry with the Yellow Scarves - a feud that is made worse by repeated attacks from a mysterious Slasher, who the Yellow Scarves claim works for the Dollars. On top of this, various characters possess elements of the supernatural. The most notable of these is Celty Sturluson, an Irish Dullahan (headless horseman) who travels disguised as a biker whilst she searches for her lost head. Like the rest of the characters, she becomes deeply involved in the gang war.
Though Mikado is technically the main character of the series, equal time is given to everyone, developing each character’s plotline as they intermingle and complicate each other’s lives. Episodes are told from different characters’ points of view through a Noir-esque narration. In volume three, which starts on episode 18 (‘Life And Death Are Up To Fate’), we pick up with Mikado and Masaomi as they walk Anri - the curvy completion to their trio - from hospital after her recovery. The episode hooks people straight into the third volume DVD with some revealing flashbacks for Masaomi and his history with a girl named Saki. The following episodes continue to deliver shocking revelations to and about the characters, causing their situations to become more and more volatile and unstable as the action heads towards the season’s life-or-death climax in episode 25, ‘World Peace’…
Durarara!! is certainly an anime with style and class. From the artwork to the scripting to the music, there is a bluesy, moody feel to the series. A laymen’s stereotype of the anime art-form might be of something loud, fast paced and highly saturated; this couldn’t be further from the truth here. This show is quiet, subdued, shadowy; all as Noir as its narrations. The acting communicates the tone perfectly; dialogue is often spoken in a quiet murmur, subtly tinged with either angst or menace, and often effortlessly cool. Of course, it wouldn’t be anime without irate and emphatic outbursts, but if you were to leave this DVD running in the background of your home, the tone of the voices, accompanied by the music, would often conjure up very smoky, Raymond Chandler inspired images.
Telling the story from changing points of view was a perfect choice for this style of show. It develops the plot slowly, yet to a rich effect. In a series where everyone has secrets and there is no clear-cut right and wrong, seeing the events from every angle allows us a privileged peak into characters’ hidden motives. We’re the only people that know what’s really going on. Coming at the series from this all-seeing perspective shows the audience just how complicated the web of secrecy has become. We can see the misunderstandings and the moral dilemmas for what they are. This is an advantageous way to enjoy a plot about gangs and trickery, but also the complexities of the human relationships within it - be they good or bad. If you can tolerate the pacing, you get more out of the show for it, much like the slower, character-driven early days of films and television.
Izaya Orihara buys and sells information, and his influence can be found behind many of the important plot developments. Like the audience, he too sits in a position of power, overlooking the events with more knowledge than the other characters – mere pawns, as he sees them, running around as he manipulates them. He is also the king of the charismatic delivery mentioned earlier, thanks to the voice of Hiroshi Kamiya. Every show needs a morally grey character with menace and charisma for us to harbour a guilty love for, and Orihara fulfils that requirement here. He seems to torture and control people for the sheer love of it, though his grand goal is to cause a full-out war in the city in order to wake Celty’s sleeping head.
In the volume’s first episode, his love of manipulation is symbolically demonstrated as he schemes hunched over Japanese board game pieces. He gloats about causing a three-way standoff between the Dollars, Yellow Scarves and the third gang, the Blue Squares, speculating and delighting at the power and explosive nature of such struggles. This scene comes right after one discussing a love triangle, making the link between person-to-person dynamics and the constant bigger picture. Whilst gloating, Orihara sets the pieces on fire and watches them burn, marking the downward spiral of events that will follow.
Thanks to the pacing, the audience has time to soak in and appreciate Durarara!!’s skilled artwork. Akira Ito’s images and Akira Takata’s animation are both expressive and admirable, mingling with Makoto Yoshimori’s music to create something that not only communicates the story, but is in itself a pleasure to listen to and observe. It is sometimes fortunate for the show that these visuals are as emotive and engaging as they are, as they help hold the audience’s attention. If these elements were not strong players, then no matter how good the writing might be people would lose interest. There are, of course, plenty of action scenes as well, which are animated to a similarly good standard.
Discussion of the gangs can feel unnecessarily repetitive, at times, such as Anri’s many repeating questions to herself as she runs from the Yellow Scarves in episode 19, ‘The Blue Sky Perishes’. In fact, you may start to worry that the words “Yellow Scarves” and “Dollars” will have burnt impressions of themselves onto your TV screen from how many times you’ve read them in the course of an episode. This could, however, be fruitful fodder for a drinking game. The scripting also struggles with the issue that much of the drama takes place online, as this is where the gangs originate and how they communicate. Fortunately, as said above, the voice acting, artistry and score help these moments stay interesting.
Because it shares many of the same creators, Durarara!! has inevitably been compared to Baccano! by many people. It is considerably less violent than its brother show, but certainly not lacking in grit and drama. If you appreciate one of the shows, the chances are you should check out the other one. Durarara!! is clever, attractive to look at, occasionally moving, and has a healthy balance of action and relationships – so, everyone’s happy. If you’re not usually an anime fan, you might find that you still enjoy this one. If you are already fond of the genre, and haven’t watched this already, then definitely give it a try.
REVIEW: DVD Release: Durarara!! Vol. 1
Series: Durarara!! Vol. 1
Release date: 29th November 2010
Certificate: 15
Running time: 220 mins
Director: Shinya Kawatsura & Takahiro Omori
Starring: Toshiyuki Toyonaga, Mamoru Miyano
Genre: Anime
Studio: Beez
Format: DVD
Country: Japan
Based on Nyohgo Narita’s popular graphic novel series, this television version of Durarara!! is adapted by director Takahiro Omori. Omori has past experience in adapting Narita’s works, having previously overseen the television series Baccano! based on Narita’s writing in 2007.
Durarara!! revolves around the strange happenings and legends of the Ikebukuro district of Tokyo. At the behest of his popular childhood friend Masaomi Kida (Mamoru Miyano), Mikado Ryugamine (Toshiyuki Toyonaga) transfers from his hometown to the same school as Masaomi in order to pursue the excitement of big city life in Ikebukuro.
Yet Mikado gets more than he bargained for, as he crosses paths with a number of characters within this strange district. Ikebukuro is host to a number of exciting new dangers and legends, including secretive street gangs such as the ‘Dollars’ and the mysterious ‘Headless Rider’ roaming the city aboard a pitch-black motorcycle.
Upon his first day in the area, Mikado witnesses the ‘Headless Rider’ driving through the city streets; piquing his interest in Ikebukuro’s hidden depths and supernatural sights in the night time. From then on, a series of random attacks and events begin to occur on the streets of Ikebukuro, and a group known as the Yellow Scarves arises as Ikebukuro begins to crumble…
Throughout the Durarara!! series there is a multitude of interesting and often bizarre characters who interact with each other in different ways. Mikado is undoubtedly the anchor of events; witnessing the strange idiosyncrasies of Ikebukuro for the first time much in the same way as the viewer. Mikado’s quiet and modest nature contrasts with the brashness of his friend Masaomi, who is (deliberately) annoying as the ‘cool kid’ at the school who is seemingly aware of what lurks in the city.
Yet, while Mikado is the anchor of events in the series, it is the other characters with more mysterious or even supernatural elements that are the most interesting. For instance, one of the chief recurring symbols of the inherent strangeness of Ikebukuro is the legendary figure known as the ‘Headless Rider’, also known as Celty Sturluson. In episode four of the series, the murky back-story of Celty is examined for the first time, where she is referred to as a ‘dullahan’ (from the Irish myth of a headless faerie and harbinger of death).
Where at first the character appears dark and dangerous, this episode reveals another side to the creature who is constantly searching for memories held in her lost head. She shares a flat with an underground doctor, and is shown talking to her flatmate and carrying out mundane tasks while they discuss her past. If this situation sounds odd, it’s because it most certainly is – yet, oddly enough, it fits within the strange brilliance of the Durarara!! series. The ‘Headless Rider’ is revealed literally to have no head under her motorcycle helmet (instead there is a wispy black smoke like presence), and yet is still able to speak and to see “further than a normal human being.” In other circumstances, this facet of the character might be somewhat laughable, yet the character maintains a sense of mysterious allure that is seemingly inherent to the area of Ikebukuro. As a result, the viewer can buy into the story.
Indeed, the series as a whole is full of twists and turns, and bizarre (yet enthralling) events. Durarara!! also scrutinises the emotions of young people who go through seriously difficult and turbulent events; further allowing the viewer to buy into the absurdity of a world where true character emotions lie at the core. In one episode, a classmate of Mikado contemplates suicide because she becomes aware of her father’s adultery, and cannot face up to the prospect of damaging her family by acknowledging the truth. She is goaded and manipulated into almost performing an act of suicide by the dangerous Izaya Orihara (Hiroshi Kamiya), before she is prevented by the ‘Headless Rider’ with the message: “Life isn’t so bad.”
Durarara!!, then, is an anime series with a great deal of darkness and emotion at its core that improbably co-exists with some of its supernatural thriller elements, pushing the boundaries of its 12-rated UK classification.
The series is beautifully and vibrantly drawn, with the bleakness of unlit alleys and dangerous night-time areas contrasting with the vibrancy of Ikebukuro where there are masses of people under lit-up Tokyo backdrops (similarly, the masses uniquely appear as grey shadows in contrast to the vibrant colours of the main characters in each scene).
The plot can occasionally become rather bogged down and the full plethora of interwoven character stories may be hard to follow, but the series as a whole overcomes these issues through its immensely quirky charm.
This is an excellent adaptation of Nyohgo Narita’s original anime series, and it’s not hard to see why the property has been so popular (it has spawned manga comic spin-offs and a Playstation Portable game in Japan). Full of twists and turns within an often convoluted yet intriguingly odd world, Durarara!! is a highly recommended watch for anime fans. DB
NEWS: DVD Release: Durarara!!: Volume 2
The second instalment of the Japanese anime show adapted from the light novel series by Ryohgo Narita.
Since moving to a new school in Ikebukuro, where he was re-acquainted with his friend, Masaomi Kida, Mikado Ryuugamine has encountered some strange characters living in the city.
After escaping the Headless Rider, Mikado now has to deal with more supernatural beings, namely the Slasher and the Yellow Scarves gang.
Series: Durarara!!: Volume 2
Release date: 24th January 2011
Certificate: 15
Running time: 220 mins
Director: Shinya Kawatsura & Takahiro Omori
Starring: Toshiyuki Toyonaga, Mamoru Miyano
Genre: Anime
Studio: Beez
Format: DVD
Country: Japan
Since moving to a new school in Ikebukuro, where he was re-acquainted with his friend, Masaomi Kida, Mikado Ryuugamine has encountered some strange characters living in the city.
After escaping the Headless Rider, Mikado now has to deal with more supernatural beings, namely the Slasher and the Yellow Scarves gang.
Series: Durarara!!: Volume 2
Release date: 24th January 2011
Certificate: 15
Running time: 220 mins
Director: Shinya Kawatsura & Takahiro Omori
Starring: Toshiyuki Toyonaga, Mamoru Miyano
Genre: Anime
Studio: Beez
Format: DVD
Country: Japan
NEWS: DVD Release: Durarara!!: Volume 1
The first instalment of the Japanese anime show adapted from the light novel series by Ryohgo Narita.
Fed up with his uneventful life, Mikado Ryuugamine (voice of Toshiyuki Toyonaga) jumps at the opportunity to move to a new school in the city of Ikebukuro. While there, he is re-acquainted with his friend Masaomi Kida (Mamoru Miyano), who warns him about some strange characters that live in the city, who would be best avoided.
Soon Mikado sees one of these characters, the Headless Rider, travelling on his black motorcycle, and thereafter further supernatural happenings plague the city.
Series: Durarara!!: Volume 1
Release date: 29th November 2010
Certificate: 15
Running time: 220 mins
Director: Shinya Kawatsura & Takahiro Omori
Starring: Toshiyuki Toyonaga, Mamoru Miyano
Genre: Anime
Studio: Beez
Format: DVD
Country: Japan
Fed up with his uneventful life, Mikado Ryuugamine (voice of Toshiyuki Toyonaga) jumps at the opportunity to move to a new school in the city of Ikebukuro. While there, he is re-acquainted with his friend Masaomi Kida (Mamoru Miyano), who warns him about some strange characters that live in the city, who would be best avoided.
Soon Mikado sees one of these characters, the Headless Rider, travelling on his black motorcycle, and thereafter further supernatural happenings plague the city.
Series: Durarara!!: Volume 1
Release date: 29th November 2010
Certificate: 15
Running time: 220 mins
Director: Shinya Kawatsura & Takahiro Omori
Starring: Toshiyuki Toyonaga, Mamoru Miyano
Genre: Anime
Studio: Beez
Format: DVD
Country: Japan
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