Monday, December 15, 2008

Blade of the Phantom Master






Blade of the Phantom Master:
Shin Angyo Onshi

Anime video Review

Long ago, the legends say, there was a secret army. Unseen until needed, these warriors struck from the shadows, protecting justice and defending the Jushin Empire from both tyrants and thieves. They were called the Amen Osa, The Phantom Masters. But now Jushin has fallen, yet from the ashes of destruction, a hero has appeared to defend the people. His name is unknown, but there are clues. Is he the last of the Amen Osa?

Blade of the Phantom Master: The character Munsu.Shin Angyo Onshi is the story of Munsu, an angyo onshi — a government agent of the mythical country of Jushin who travels the country incognito and roots out corrupt officials and warlords to restore the peace and bring justice to the common people. He has access to a phantom army he can summon via a magical amulet, and his fighting prowess is second to none. However, as the story begins, Jushin has fallen, and Munsu wanders the ruined countryside cleaning up the shattered remains of the once glorious country.

This is an anime based on a Korean manga (Manhwa) serialized in Sunday GX, published by Shogakukan. It is a real first in that it is a Japanese anime with Korean producers, based on a Korean manga published in Japan that is heavily based on Korean folklore. This work is the brainchild of writer In-Wan Youn and artist Kyung-Il Yang, who grew up reading and enjoying manga despite not knowing much about Japanese culture. In the same way, they believed that Japanese readers would enjoy reading a work drawn from a Korean cultural background as long as it was interesting. In this fashion, they have seamlessly integrated an eclectic array of Korean culture and folklore into an amazingly woven tale.

The characters who drive the plot are also wonderfully developed. Munsu is as anti-hero as an anti-hero can possibly get. His stout stance in his principles and seeming lack of morality and kindness at times (much to the dismay of anyone within range of his guns) hide a darker past. Often, his amoral solution to any problem is just to kill everyone. Sando, his servant (and sometimes bodyguard) is totally opposite from him: innocent, naive, and sweet, she is often taken aback at Munsu's seemingly incoherent acts. Despite her prodigious fighting skill, she still has much to learn, but Munsu's poor communication skills (he doesn't clue her in on what he knows) obviously make him a difficult master to properly serve.

Blade of the Phantom Master: Shin Angyo Onshi You *really* need the manga to appreciate this film as the plot moves through a little too quickly, trying to shove a great deal of detail into a very small space. At least read the Wikipedia article before trying to digest the film. However, if you're a fan of action, and aren't too picky about trying to understand what's happening, then by all means, forge ahead. There's more than enough blades flashing, gunfire, and decapitations to keep anyone happy. The film covers only a small portion of the overall manga, so let's hope for a sequel!



Black Lagoon

Black Lagoon
Manga Review

After easily making our list of top-ten coolest animes we'd love to be stranded on a desert island with, the manga for this awesome series makes life worth living after all. It goes much more in-depth, as only a manga can (by not being limited to a 22-minute episode), with all the internal politics only hinted at within the series.

The manga also delves much deeper into the moral and philosophical quandaries that are expressed in the anime series. The manga exudes existentialism, essentially asking the reading to accept that values and morality are things we create in our own minds, and furthermore, objects that we assign value to are essentially meaningless, if viewed outside the context of "normal" society.

All this and more as well as a ton of exciting action as Revy blasts anything that moves (while wearing as little as possible), combined with the political struggle between the Russian, Italian, Columbian and Chinese Mafias, all of whom either want to hire the Black Lagoon team, or see them dead and buried.

And poor Rock is in the middle of it all, trying to sort out the insanity of the situation, while also trying to come to terms with many of the philosophical points made during the course of the manga, as he sorts out his own personal demons and learns more about Revy's dark past.
Black Lagoon
Anime video Review

Rokuro Okajima is a meek, mild-mannered, middle-manager nobody working a dead-end, life-draining, white-collar, meaningless job for a giant, faceless corporation. However; his business trip in South-East Asia turns from pleasure cruise to terror when modern-day pirates board the ship to take the corporate data he is transporting. Grabbed initially as a hostage, he finds that he is expendable (according to his boss), and so, he joins with Dutch, Revy and Benny, who make up the crew of the Black Lagoon, a 'privateer' operation run from a PT Boat that takes on any job offered to them.

This series pleasantly surprised me. It is much, much better than you would expect. None of the characters are exactly what they would seem from the start, and each evolves into something else along the way. Furthermore, the team ends up playing politics with the Russian, Italian, Columbian and Chinese Mafias, all the while trying to stay one step ahead of the authorities and various others that may want them dead.

The director is clearly having fun — each episode starts serenely, like a peaceful sunrise, and then quickly evolves into complete anarchy. The action sequences are astounding; MADHOUSE is doing a top-notch job on this anime series. Even the end titles are a shocker.

And while "Rock" is the central protagonist, it's obvious to any fanboy with a libido that psycho-bitch, gun-crazy Revy is going to be the favorite and the subject of many blogs. Her dark past is meant to be in stark contrast to Rock's mundane existence.

Black Lagoon combines the dark and cynical nature of Fight Club with the non-stop action of a John Woo film. It also manages to be insightful and thought-provoking without being preachy. All the intrigue and philosophy behind the series is communicated by the action and the staccato dialog. It also presses buttons on the viewer, because South Seas Piracy is a very real threat and it is interesting to see these killers to be human as well.

This anime series is rife with cigarette smoking, foul language and significant bloodshed. It is however, startlingly accurate in the portrayal of the life of a soldier of fortune immersed in the criminal underworld of the china seas. Amen. Hallelujah. Peanut Butter.

Reviewed by Brian Cirulnick, July 2007

Below: Scenes from the Black Lagoon anime video.















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