The unassuming main male protagonist, right before his life turned to hell.
The unassuming main male protagonist, right before his life turned to hell.

The main reason why I chose to watch Chaos;HEAd for today’s review is mainly because I want to watch its spiritual successor Steins;Gate in the near future. Just like Michiko to Hatchin, this is a 2008 title, therefore it will not wrest this blog’s ‘Anime of the Year 2008’ title away from One Outs. In fact, Michiko to Hatchin is better than this anime, for reasons that you will find out. And that’s a shame, because this anime has so much unfulfilled potential.

Please spare a thought for our main protagonist who are being monitored around the clock by a pink-haired serial murderer just because he happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong time.
Please spare a thought for our main protagonist who are being monitored around the clock by a pink-haired serial murderer just because he happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong time.

Story:-
The tranquil life of our reclusive main male protagonist, living his hikkikomori dream in a shipping container at Shibuya’s rooftop, shatters when he inadvertently become a witness to one of the serial murders cases that is happening in his district. Because of that incident, crazy delusional sword-toting beautiful ladies suddenly appears out of nowhere and starts chasing after him! A certain pink-haired one in particular, seems obsessed at ‘erasing’ him off the surface of the planet, therefore he has to live in constant fear, anxiety and paranoia, around the clock without any place to hide.

Surprisingly for its genre type, this anime is a character-driven title, with the main male protagonist at the center of all things. By far the best character in this anime, the single best aspect of this anime is watching his delusions become stronger as time passes. I think he is like that because he watched too many anime. One thing I like about him is that he is surprisingly perceptive, a rare trait for a main male protagonist in a harem title. The main male protagonist is the single bright spark this anime has, because the rest of the character roster and the anime’s elements are nowhere as interesting as him.

Personally, I think she was introduced into the anime just to make up the numbers, do you agree?
Personally, I think she was introduced into the anime just to make up the numbers, do you agree?

Somewhat related to what I said above, character developments for characters in this anime is pretty much non-existent, apart from the main male protagonist of course. The only girl of the harem that is just a tiny little bit interesting is the bespectacled one that has streaks of yandere tendencies. Unfortunately for this anime, she has little airtime after the first few episodes. The aforementioned pink-haired girl, whilst important to the storyline, did not have the same impact as the yandere girl. Personally, I think even the main male protagonist’s little sister is a little bit better than her. Ditto for the short-haired girl too, but the other two characters, especially the one that has speech impediment problems (see the screenshot above), seems to be there just to make up the numbers (the magic number is 7).

This is the problem inherent in an anime title with low episode count, yet having big amount characters with the writer trying to put some kind of story behind each of them. I found out that this anime is a visual novel adaptation. If I were the writer, I will make the magic number as 5, then cut off a couple of characters entirely from this anime and concentrate with the rest. This anime is a very good candidate for a adaptation with improvised storyline, unlike many other titles out there that has one.

Speaking about the storyline itself, this anime really missed a golden opportunity to become a masterpiece. This anime starts strongly, and after 4 episodes or so, I started to think that I am watching another Another (pun definitely not intended); an indication of how good the mystery elements this anime has. But around episode 7 or so, it seems that the author started to channel the main male protagonist himself, throws out the mystery elements from the storyline and replaced it with some conspiracy-themed plots instead. The quality of the storyline collapsed dramatically after that point, culminating in one of the worst endings I have ever seen since Princess Lover. Watching the cliché-laden final two episodes is truly torturous; in fact, I think Princess Lover’s ending is a little bit better than what you can see in this anime. I think if the anime starts right way with the conspiracy stuff (like having the true nature of the antagonist revealed earlier), this anime would not have done this badly story-wise.

The pacing of the storyline is spot-on at first, but increased slightly in the last 4 episodes or so. It is obvious that being overloaded with too many characters isn’t good for this anime’s storyline. For what it’s worth, the flow of the storyline is good though, even in the bad parts. There are several scene transition problems though, an example would be the ‘encounter’ at the start of episode 4 that is not bridged properly with a related scene in episode 3.

Life is hard for our main protagonist because he has to deal with insane asylum escapees like the character above.
Life is hard for our main protagonist because he has to deal with insane asylum escapees like the character above.

Character Design:-
The character designs in this anime is average, and definitely unoriginal. Only the character design of the main male protagonist is decent, with its’ realism that matched his hikkikomori status. Black hair is rare in this anime that takes place in modern Tokyo, with only one of the girls (one of the worst ones) having one.

Voice Acting:-
Just like the character design, voice acting in this anime is pretty much normal in quality. There are no bad gigs here in particular, but there are no great ones either. For all of the main male protagonist’s greatness character-wise, his voice acting does not really stand out from the rest.

Music:-
The OST of this anime is good, but the same cannot be said for the OP/ED themes.

Animation/Direction:-
This anime uses the blurry animation technique last seen in Daily Lives of High School Boys, therefore one point will be deducted from this anime’s final evaluation. Other than that, the animation quality in this anime is actually good, better than the ones in the aforementioned Daily Lives of High School Boys and also Michiko to Hatchin. Choreography of action scenes is mostly average though, unlike Michiko to Hatchin. The directing is not the best; the problems in presentation I mentioned earlier are some of the mistakes he has made.

Conclusion:-
4 out of 10. Same score as Princess Lover is. I’ll decide when to watch Steins;Gate by the time my next review is posted. I already have the HDTV rip in my queue, and if I decide to watch that version, Steins;Gate will be the title I will watch after my next review comes up. If I want to wait for the Blu-ray version just like I decided to do with Mirai Nikki, then the wait would be indefinite. One thing for sure is, I hope Steins;Gate to be considerably much better than this anime.

What he said is completely on the mark, but what he forgets is that he is in an anime series, not in real-life.
What he said is completely on the mark, but what he forgets is that he is in an anime series, not in real-life.

Shortlink: http://wp.me/prgSo-ze

The Michiko of this anime, and one of the best characters of this anime too.
The Michiko of this anime, and one of the best characters of this anime too.

A little bit more than a month ago in the last post, the first Anime of the Year 2012 of this blog has finally been chosen if the form of Another. But when compared to its counterparts from the preceding years, that anime would be hard pressed to compete with the likes of One Outs (2008) and Zan Sayonata Zetsubou Sensei (2009). Talking about the former, today’s post is a review of an anime title that will futilely try to dethrone One Outs, titled Michiko to Hatchin. But even if this anime failed to outshine one of the best title I have ever reviewed in this blog, this anime is still a decent watching experience, especially if you stayed with it until the end.

The Hatchin of this anime, also one of the best characters in this anime.
The Hatchin of this anime, also one of the best characters in this anime.

Story:-
Set up in a fictional Central American environment, the first main title female protagonist, Michiko, escaped from a maximum security prison where she is supposed to serve a number of years in. After committing a string of robberies after the escape, she then kidnapped her daughter, the second main title female protagonist, Hatchin, from her ‘happy and serene’ adopted household. Then, over the course of several months, the duo travels across the country to find Hatchin’s father while avoiding the police and also the drug dealers et al., Natural Born Killers style.

The anime starts very slowly, especially for the first half of the series. In that period, the anime eschew actions scenes, has a very thin plot and has hefty amounts of slice-of-life elements as the two characters aimlessly traveled around trying to find their man. The lack of meaningful plots problem is mitigated by the interactions between the two title protagonists though, whose relationship is filled with drama and comedy. Story-wise, this anime slowly improves once it enter the month of May, and the last third of this anime is so radically different (and better) if compared to the early parts of the series.

Still, I do have some complaint about the storyline of this anime. The first one definitely has to do with the fact that many of the sub-plots in this anime has ambiguous endings, especially the ones that happened in the first half of the series. Some examples includes the favelas arc and also the Venice-like watery town arc. This problem happens mostly on arc that happens on the first half of the anime though, and not the better final third of the storyline.

My second complaint about this anime is the poor characterization of the first main title protagonist, Michiko. That character has three mode: 1. The badass mode. 2. The stupor naïve mode and 3. The plain ‘I want to be stupid and do stupid things’ dumb-ass mode. In the first half of this anime, she defaulted into the latter two modes most of the time, which is so out of character for a escaped convicted murderer that she is. One of the very few great moments in the first half of the anime happens when she acts her proper murderous convict character and starts kicking ass, such as when she kidnaps the second main title protagonist and also in the early parts of the favela arc I mentioned above. In fact, I think the favela arc will turn out differently if she stays the course throughout the arc. And maybe the arc will have a much clearer conclusion than what the anime currently presents (what happened to that fat-ass brat anyway?).

When the trains derailed in this big-ass accident, so is the suspension of disbelief when I found out all of its human passengers survived. In the real-world, the reverse will surely happened.
When the trains derailed in this big-ass accident, so is the suspension of disbelief when I found out all of its human passengers survived. In the real-world, the reverse will surely happened.

The third complaint I have for this anime is some of the episodes in this anime are simply awful, for example, like episode 12. Again, this phenomenon happens only in the first half of the anime. In those crappy episodes, not even the camaraderie between the two main protagonists can save the given episode. Some action scenes in this anime can be mind-boggling too, it caused the destruction of suspension of disbelief, like what you can see in a certain scene in Gosick. Just see the image above for an example.

And my final nit-pick for this anime is the employment of parallel storytelling techniques in consecutive episodes, that destroy the flow of the storyline in the process. For example, in one episode, we can see Michiko in bad-ass mode dodging snipers in city trains as she searched around for Hatchin’s father, then right after that episode that ends in a cliffhanger, the next episode shows Hatchin monkeying around at a circus. Then only in the next episode, I’m able to see what happens to Michiko at the end of her action-packed adventure. I think it is better that both Michiko adventures and Hatchin’s misadventures being simultaneously told in the same episodes so that their progress can be watched at the same time.

This anime would've fared better story-wise if she has more airtime.
This anime would've fared better story-wise if she has more airtime.

Meanwhile, character development is another of this anime’s strong points, with both of the main title protagonists being the most outstanding characters of this anime. Michiko do outshine Hatchin by a little bit though. Some of the side characters are also good, like the policewoman with that huge afro (this anime would do better if she has more airtime), Satoshi Batista and his subordinate named Shinsuke, amongst others.

The pacing in this anime is variable; it is slow in the first half of the anime when the plot doesn’t reveal itself openly yet but it speeds up as the anime enters the month of May (in every episode, the date and place where any given story arc started will be shown). Predictably, the flow of the story is much better in the second half of the anime than in the first one. More often than not, this anime also use ill-timed flashbacks too, which, to a certain extent, pose problems with an arc’s pacing and flow. The ending was spoiled somewhat in the first minute of the final episode, but all in all, the ending is very good (but surely not in the main protagonists’ point-of-view).

The statute-hugging man should've asked the question to himself.
The statute-hugging man should've asked the question to himself.

Character Design:-
Character designs in this anime is excellent in general, except for Hatchin, which is just about normal. Black hairs are quite common too in this anime that takes place somewhere in the Americas. Unfortunately, another serious drawback that I will explain further below marred this aspect that was supposed to be a positive for this title.

Voice acting:-
This anime also has done very well in this aspect in general, except for Hatchin, again. While Michiko and others like that policewoman and Satoshi Batista are outstanding (their voice actors are excellent), Hatchin’s voice actress delivers some wooden performances too many times, especially in the second half of this anime.

Music:-
This anime doesn’t really use its OST very much, but at least it is still good. The out-of-place ending theme is excellent, although I personally think it was used in a wrong series. The ED theme would be at home in titles like Ouran Koukou High School for example. The 3 insert songs are not that bad either, and the only blemish in this aspect for this anime is the OP theme.

This anime's animation quality really regressed a lot as the series went on. I feel bad for Shinsuke for having his character very badly drawn in this scene. I don't think manglobe is even trying at this point anymore.
This anime's animation quality really regressed a lot as the series went on. I feel bad for Shinsuke for having his character very badly drawn in this scene. I don't think manglobe is even trying at this point anymore.

Animation/Direction:-
If this anime improves story-wise as the series goes on, the reverse is true for this anime’s animation quality. For starters, the animation quality is just average in the first place even at the start of this anime, but as I watched more episodes, the quality slowly become worse. This phenomenon applies mostly on character animations (frame rate problems just like Daily Lives of High School Boys), but what makes this problem even more pronounced is that character drawings also suffered very badly as times went on. An example can be seen in the screenshot above. This ruins the otherwise excellent character designs this anime has.

Choreography in action scenes is great, especially the ones that happens in the second half of this anime. Not only that, this anime really excels at using innovative camera angles, kind of like what you can see in action-based TV series from United States. I’ll say this anime exceeds Fractale in this aspect. The directing is mixed bag as you can expect, with problems seen in storytelling methods and characterization while excelling in the aforementioned camera works and choreography.

Quoted for Truth I.
Quoted for Truth I.

Conclusion:-
6 out of 10. Nowhere near as good as One Outs is. Then again, One Outs is so stupendously good, I don’t think there are any 2008 titles out there that is a s good as it.

Quoted for Truth II.Quoted for Truth II.

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The main male protagonist, still escaping the full wrath of Japanese law!
The main male protagonist, still escaping the full wrath of Japanese law!

The audition for this blog’s ‘Anime of the Year 2012’ ends with the only sequel in the line-up, titled Nisemonogatari. This anime is the only sequel in the audition, being the follow-up of Bakemonogatari, which I have reviewed here before. This sequel has to be better than its flawed ‘8-out-of-10’ predecessor to prevent Another from becoming the first winner of the audition today. Read on to see if this sequel can actually achieve that feat or not.

Story:-
In this new season, the sex predator that is our main male protagonist now has chosen to expand his horizons from targeting underage ghost girls to include more underage girls with ‘blood’ relations, such as his own little sisters and that blond loli. Of course, to avoid detection and subsequent arrest, he is doing those crimes in the pretext of ‘helping’ them goes through their troubles, in the name of ‘justice’ and ‘goody older brother’s name’. All of these happens while he is doing the bare minimum (UNENTHUSIASTICALLY to say the least) to keep his girlfriend of legal age satisfied on bed. Under duress to say the least.

Before you continue reading this review, I have a public service announcement to make. If you have watched Bakemonogatari, but not yet watched this sequel, you should stop any plans to watch this sequel in the near future. From my observation, this sequel is best watched only after you watched not only Bakemonogatari, but also the prequel movie OVA that should come out in the theatres later this year. This is mainly because some of the peripheral characters in the first season has made their grand entrances in this sequel, and I feel that it is better to watch this second season after knowing more about the background of a certain character here.

This 11-episode sequel still keep the same multi-arc format seen in the first season, but there are only two of them here. Overall, the quality of the arcs in this sequel is inferior than the ones in the first season. As a recap, the first season has 4 arcs, with the last one being the weakest of them all. Then the second season continues from where the first season left, but unfortunately, the first arc of the second season is even worse than the first season’s final arc. The second arc in this anime improves considerably from its predecessor, but not achieving the high attained by the best arc in the first season (which is the second arc). If you expect that this anime will outperform its predecessor story-wise, then you will be in for a disappointment.

But this sequel almost compensates for the loss of storyline quality by putting more emphasis on character interactions and developments, heavily aided by the two best characters from the first season; the main male protagonist and also his original sex assault victim, the snail girl. The scenes where these (still) two best characters interacts are the best moments of this anime. The interactions between the main male protagonist and some of the other characters is also noteworthy. As mentioned before, some of the peripheral characters in the first season also has huge amount of meaningful airtime in this sequel, allowing them to have significant amount of character development. A couple of the more mainstream characters in the first season has their airtime cut severely in this sequel though, probably because of the lower episode count compared to the first season. If this regression doesn’t happen, the loss of quality in the storyline could have been compensated fully.

My only complaint about the main male protagonist is that he is inching toward a certain character type best embodied by the main male protagonist of Index.

The presentation method,  pacing and the flow of the storyline in this sequel is relatively trouble-free, unchanged from what you can see in the first season. Just like in the first season, this sequel also make external references, but none of this sequel’s references is as good as the first season’s ‘reaction guys’ parody. The ending indicates that a third season will come out in the future, although I have not seen any news about one for now. You have to settle with the prequel OVA movie them for the time being.

A truly apt description for the main male protagonist.
A truly apt description for the main male protagonist.

Character Design:-
My comment from the same section of the first season’s review still applies.

Voice Acting:-
In general, the quality of the voice acting gigs for the mainstream characters from the first season is practically the same in the second season (the two best characters are still outstanding in this regard). Surprisingly, there are no regression at all in this regard. As for the first season’s peripheral characters that has suddenly found their voices in this sequel, only the loli blond, the first arc’s main antagonist and the main male protagonist’s younger sister who wears that Bruce Lee suit has managed to keep the high standard set in the first season. The rest of the new characters are average at best, especially that wannabe poser familiar whose voice actress failed hard to actually bring her character to life.

Music:-
You can definitely hear improvements in the sequel when compared to the first season in this aspect. The good quality of the first season’s OST has been carried forward to this sequel, and the OP/ED themes are actually good, except for the 2nd arc’s OP theme.

Animation/Direction:-
Unbelieveably, my comment from the same section of the first season’s review still applies. Every single word of it.

Conclusion:-
7 out of 10.
The sequel regressed slightly when compared to its predecessor. With this, the horror thriller anime series ‘Another’ will become the inaugural winner of this blog ‘Anime of the Year 2012’ title. At only 9 out of 10 score, the chances for other 2012 titles that is in my queue, such as Accel World, Hyouka, Nazo no Kanojo X et. al., to actually win the title in the future can be considered high, but thene again the 9-out-of-10 Katanagatari has been this blog’s ‘Anime of the Year 2010’ holder for over a year already and still haven’t been replaced.

The main male protagonist, with his rape face on the moment before he indulges on one of his underage victims.
The main male protagonist, with his rape face on the moment before he indulges on one of his underage victims.

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