Kaiji Episodes 1-3

October 22nd, 2007 by Brack

While the autumnal anime season hasn’t offered the massive dose of animation loveliness that the summer gave us, it has given me an anime about microbiology and this, an anime about game mechanics and probabilities. So it’s not all bad.

After 2005’s Akagi, Madhouse have assembled pretty much the same team to create an anime of Akagi creator Nobuyuki Fukumoto’s gambling manga Kaiji. Whereas Akagi’s title character was a cold fish, a man who could calmly bluff and cheat in the face of death, a genius at the game of mahjong, Kaiji’s title character is an emotional loser who finds himself thrust into a gambling tournament aimed the most desperate of competitors.

Kaiji, you see, foolishly co-signed a loan made to a former co-worker. This loan was made by the yakuza, and now they want their money back and can’t find the co-worker. Kaiji is given the option of paying it back over 10 years at a rate he can’t afford, or go on the ship Espoir and take part in the gambling tournament that takes place on there. If he wins, he clears the debt and gets to keep whatever else he wins. If he loses, he’ll be taken to parts unknown and made to work hard labour for a year. Or at least that’s what he’s told.

As a series about a man paying back a loan over 10 years would not be that exciting, Kaiji chooses Espoir, and finds himself taking part in a game of Restricted Rock, Paper, Scissors.

Restricted Rock, Paper, Scissors. This is now my dream anime.

Kaiji (manga) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:

The game featured in the gambling tournament the first night Kaiji spends on Espoir, with an average survival rate of 50%. The rules were outlined after the issuing of war funds, which were done in 2,000,000¥ and 10,000,000¥ increments referred to as the “lower” and “upper” bound, respectively. The money was in effect a loan, equalling the debt of the contestant and compounded at 1.5% every ten minutes for the four hour voyage; contestants who hold onto their funds for the length of the trip would have to pay 140% of what they invested, thus putting an incentive to finish games early. Money that exceeded the amount needed to repay the loan to the Espoir hosts would be pocketed by the contestant. This gamble is similar to the original game but with a twist - the hand gestures are represented by cards, and contestants are given four cards each with the same gesture for a total of twelve. Contestants are also given three plastic stars as collateral to bet on each round of play - whenever one loses a round, the winner gets a star from the loser. To survive the night, contestants must maintain their three star pendants and lose all of their gesture cards, while earning enough money to repay the interest owed to the Espoir hosts. Cards cannot be destroyed or thrown away, to do so is subject to instant disqualification. Unofficially, however, the star pendants can be traded using the war funds for around one or two million yen each, and they are typically how contestants manage to meet the interest demands of the Espoir hosts.

What makes this series great is how Kaiji’s mind works to find the way through the rules of the game, to find the best chance of surviving. At first glance the rules seem very constraining, but as desperation rises, Kaiji starts to see loopholes in the rules, and the clues in the game that will allow him to determine the best odds. As someone who can spend hours getting lost in the mechanics, logic and probability of games, I loved this. It will be interesting to see if Fukumoto’s story keeps this theme up throughout the series.

The animation improves on the standard set by Akagi. While it’s probably not everyone’s cup of tea, particularly those who only want the big eyes/small mouth look of “typical” anime, Yuzo Sato brings Fukumoto’s unique look to screen with aplomb. I hope that this and Akagi will be big enough successes that people will follow the lead of their characters and gamble on adapting other seinen series with unique visual styles, rather than the seinen moe series adaptations that seem to be the norm nowadays.

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Brief notes on new anime

October 21st, 2007 by Brack

Moyashimon Episode 1 - I loved this, mainly because I studied microbiology as part of my Food Science degree. It’s a comedy about an agricultural student who can see microorganisms with the naked eye. And he can talk to them too, and they can talk back. There’s a lot of stuff about fermented foods in this first episode, and a certain fermented food featured makes me pleased that natto was the most extreme food we tasted on my first year seminar on fermented foods.

Rental Magica Episode 1 - is, as I had surmised, a poor man’s Ghost Sweeper Mikami. The only good thing about it is the level of research into magic it has, but I would imagine that’s down to the original author of the novels it’s based on. Everything else was ferociously mediocre.

Genshiken Season 2 Episode 1 - this felt better animated than the first series on a technical level, but at the expense of the cartoon-y feel the best episodes of the first series had. The conclusion is that director Kinji Yoshimoto’s talent isn’t in directing sitcoms. As good as the story was, there was the nagging feeling that under the control of a director with a better head for comedy, it would be great.

Shion no Ou Episode 1 - More mediocrity. It wants to be some kind of gaming/suspense hybrid, but veers into melodrama at full speed. Oh and it has moe elements for good measure. It’s one thing to have a 10 year old orphan who is shogi prodigy, has never spoken since her parents were murdered in front of her, and a shogi king piece is the only clue to the murderer. But then it has the nerve to layer extra layers of ridiculous tragedy on top of that SPOILER ALERT her rival is a cross dressing teenager with a sick mother. And the animation is flat and dull. Watch Kaiji instead, which loads ridiculous layers of suspense, but isn’t trying to wring some kind of moe angst out of the viewer.

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Kawaii Jenny Episode 2

October 19th, 2007 by Brack

WEEK TWO UNDER THE HEEL OF OUR NEW DOLL OVERLORDS

THINGS I KNOW ABOUT BEARS #1

RAWR

DON’T BONK THEM ON THE HEAD WITH MALLETS~!

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Kawaii Jenny

October 7th, 2007 by Brack

Humans. Your culture has now peaked.

Bow down to your new puppet overlords.

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Fake Logo Watch #2: Lucozado

October 7th, 2007 by Brack

also... a London Bus~?

From Kawaii Jenny Episode 1

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