Durarara! [review]

On Tuesday, May 24, 2011 1 comentarii



Type: TV
Episodes: 24
Status: Finished Airing
Aired: Jan 7, 2010 to Jun 24, 2010
Producers: Brains Base, Aniplex, Movic
Genres: Action, Shounen, Supernatural
Duration: 24 min. per episode
Rating: R - 17+ (violence & profanity)

Synopsis
In Tokyo's downtown district of Ikebukuro, amidst many strange rumors and warnings of anonymous gangs and dangerous occupants, one urban legend stands out above the rest – the existence of a headless “Black Rider” who is said to be seen driving a jet-black motorcycle through the city streets.

Ryuugamine Mikado has always longed for the excitement of the city life, and an invitation from a childhood friend convinces him to move to Tokyo. Witnessing the Black Rider on his first day in the city, his wishes already seem to have been granted. But as supernatural events begin to occur, ordinary citizens like himself, along with Ikebukuro's most colorful inhabitants, are mixed up in the commotion breaking out in their city.

Review

Animation: 9/10
The photo-realism of the background and simplicity of the characters generated a unique atmosphere for this series.

The background has extreme detail, with enough deliberate flaws (such as fading street lines, stained asphalt, individually colored bricks etc) and natural reflection of light to make them seem more than just drawings. What makes them seem even more realistic is that certain locales are exact reenactment of the actual city. The JR station in the first episode, for example even used JR's actual, un-altered logo. There were many other scenes where I actually recognized the backgrounds, and even the stores like Tokyu Hands and Wendy's had the original logo designs with minimal alteration in spellings.

3D-CG was applied very effectively, mostly used only to retain realistic form for moving backgrounds, and 'painted' over so that CG doesn't stand out.

Characters are often drawn without even having shading on their faces. However, character design was anything but generic, and quite memorable. The simplicity also makes the smooth movements possible. While some characters' faces were slightly idealized, they all had proper proportions, and distinct fashion sense that you'll encounter in the actual city.

The background characters (or extras, if this was live action) were sketchy outlines. I personally don't like this technique being overused throughout the series, but as usual, it worked very well in certain scenes to show the busyness of the city and one's insignificance in society. Of course, it also brings out the main characters.

I would say there was very little room for improvement in animation considering the atmosphere they were trying to create. Although there could've been a lot more surreal scenes.

Sound: 9/10
Voice acting done very well, especially for Kida, whose voice was somewhat unique and showed massive variance from when he's serious to joking. The entire cast were noticeably motivated. You can tell they gave everything they've got, especially in dramatic scenes.

This may be a personal opinion, but I firmly believe a seiyuu's skill is measured by quality of his/her narration. It's something that you can't bullshit through, and truly talented voice actors are capable of moving the audience by subtly expressing emotion in seemingly unemotional dialogs. "Durarara!!" had different narrators for almost every single episode, and I feel I really connected with almost every characters by the end of the show.

Music score was pretty good, often essential in setting the atmosphere. There was a particular clown-ish, jovial piece that really impressed me.

I didn't find any of the OP/ED to be catchy, but use of recaps as preview for each episode in middle of OP was a wonderful idea, especially since many episodes consisted of overlapping time lines from different perspective or a mystery in the past episode solved. It also removed the necessity for an entire recap episode for new audiences in middle of the series.

Story: 7/10
This may be a bit harsh since we live in an era where everything's been done before and recycled plotlines are hard to avoid, but the story of "Durarara!!" is like a bunch of previous Japanese works patched together.

Unveiling of the characters and exploration of loneliness in Tokyo in first half, as well as the intertwining events/lives and search for the exciting life is a carbon copy of 2009 film "Lala Pipo" (based on 2005 novel). This may be excused since this series was produced by many of the same staff from "Baccano!", but the similarity was disturbing.

The general atmosphere and gang war aspect in the second half is almost identical to the infamous dorama "Ikebukuro West Gate Park" (IWGP). In fact, the main color gang even had yellow identification color just like IWGP, so was the gang leader's jester personality and Heiwajima Shizuo as the invincible fighter (though he's in different gang and strength was significantly beefed up).

Then you have Orihara Izaya, who's pulling strings from behind the scenes like controlling chess pieces, much like the duo from "Death Note".

I did like the concept of cyber-gang community Dollars and the three-way standoff as leaders for gangs, though not sure if they've been ripped off from some other contemporary works...

Individual segments of the components may be unoriginal, but they were fused well together to make a story as a whole. The entire show had a consistent atmosphere and pacing, and surprisingly, the modernized Dullahan didn't seem to be forced into the story.

The ending was slightly disappointing for me, since


Characters: 8/10
Characters are the most intriguing part of this series, without being outright ridiculous *cough* Arakawa *cough*

The protagonist is Ryuugamine Mikado, seemingly an ordinary boy who's curious about everything about the big city he moved into for high school. Other than his super-cool name and secret background, I would say that he is THE Mr. Average, even that he doesn't have a personality since he's so bland.

Like "Baccano!" there are many main characters with nearly equal screen time, each of them with unique backgrounds and interests that eventually converge. (Amazing use of cameo and that particular episode was the highlight of the series too.)

The most interesting of such characters were Celty and Heiwajima. Celty Sturluson represents the mystique this big city Ikebukuro has to offer. Other than having kick ass 'horse' and method of communication, her character was the most complex out of all the cast in the series, ironically making her the most human out of all. Then you have Heiwajima Shizuo on the other side of the scale. Despite the fact that he is a human being, his monstrous power is just absurd with attention span of a child and serious temper tantrums. He's like the coolest walking destruction.

Most of the story focuses on the unveiling of the characters' unique backgrounds and secrets rather than actual development.

Value/Enjoyment: 8.5/10
"Durarara!!" attempts to explore a large number of extremely common themes in Japanese media such as personal barrier, search for meaning in life, violence as a form of love, responsibility as leader etc, but none particularly as in-depth as they could've been.

It is still the series that left me the most lasting impression this season though, with unique animation, sounds, and characters. The story lacked focus, but the pacing was excellent and kept me interested throughout the 24 episodes. Those who liked "Baccano!" and "IWGP" will most likely to enjoy "Durarara!!".

What this series had, was the magic, and I will definitely watch the sequel if it ever comes out.

1 comentarii:

Unknown said...

You might try checking out the light novels the anime was based off of, it's sad how much was left out of the anime and how things have been made to be more comical than they should be, actually. The characters are all a bit twisted in the light novels... though there are about 30 of them and so they are continuously doing things in the background, but the story doesn't really develop the characters as much as it could with a smaller cast. Though while it's not great with character study, the novels do always have some type of weird or interesting thing going on. And it makes me laugh a little because Mikado would cry if he heard you call him 'Mr. Average,' his priorities are completely wacked, actually. He's a self-deluding, little egotistical prat. Anime Mikado and light novel Mikado are like completely different characters (though the manga sort of gives a peak into his psyche, but it's not even up to the anime's ending point, so you wouldn't be getting anything from it you can't get from the light novels) and then the novels introduce more characters like the leader of the Blue Squares, Izaya's sisters, Vorona, Ruri (well, actually Ruri's in the anime, but she doesn't seem to be anything more important than a pop idol Togusa likes), Akabayashi, etc etc, so it's worth reading (what's available, anyways) if you would watch the sequel. It doesn't seem likely the anime will get a sequel, to be honest. I've heard the company responsible for it is kind of infamous for not doing sequels. Oh, and thank you for mentioning Lala Pipo, I think I'll be checking that out.

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