With no top tier theatrical DVD releases this week, it’s once again time to shine the light on the “Direct-to-DVD” category where the anime anthology film Halo Legends debuts, and to the “Anime Category” itself where two series bow on Blu-ray and a popular anime feature film levels some heavy social criticism at Japanese society.
Direct to DVD
Unlikely as it may seem the hugely popular first person shooter game Halo has a rather elaborate science fiction backstory that is explicated rather fully in Halo Legends (Warner Home Video, “PG-13,” $19.98, 2-Disc Special Ed. $29.98, BD $34.98), an anthology of Halo-themed animated short films produced by top anime studios including Production I.G., Bones, Studio 4*C, and Toei Animation. The animation styles differ wildly, but that is one of the joys of this Animatrix-like project. There are flat-out action segments such as “The Package” that should appeal directly to the “thumb jockeys” who have made the game such a hit, and there are segments like Hiroshi Yamazaki’s “The Duel,” which transposes elements of Japan’s samurai culture to a Covenant planet where the age-old battle between loyalty and integrity is played out in breathtakingly beautiful soft-edge, impressionistic hand-drawn animation that will surprise and delight anyone interested in the art form. For a more complete review, see “Halo Legends Review.”
The Halo video game is ESRB rated “Mature 17+,” while Halo Legends carries the lower PG-13 rating largely because of violence (and some mild language). Of course plenty of kids under 17 play the Halo game, which doesn’t (at least in the mind of this reviewer) deserve the same rating as Grand Theft Auto, so Halo Legends’ rating is a likely a truer reflection of who is actually playing the game. With the exception of the lighthearted Dragon Ball Z parody segment “Odd One Out,” the stories in Halo Legends are suffused as much with melancholy and loss as they are with exuberance and victory, so it’s probably a very good thing that players of the Halo video game balance their play with a viewing of something that reminds them in a very entertaining way of the often painful physical and mental costs of combat.
Anime
This is a major week for anime releases. Funimation is releasing two series, Claymore and Heroic Age on Blu-ray. Claymore Complete Series (Rated “TV MA,” 620 min. $79.98) features all 26 episodes of Madhouse’s adaptation of Norihiro Yagi dark fantasy manga (published here by Viz Media). Set in a world where humans are preyed upon by sentient monsters known as Yoma, Claymore is the story of the eponymous heroes, half-human half-yoma warriors who dispatch the yoma with giant “claymore” swords. The Claymore anime looks fantastic in Blu-ray and comes with a deluxe 48-page book filled with character style sheets, interviews with creators, and full color art.
Xebec’s Heroic Age (Funimation, “TV PG,” 635 min., $79.98) also looks great in the hi-def Blu-ray process. Set in the far-flung future but inspired by Greek mythology, Heroic Age makes for some interesting comparisons with other contemporary co-options of the Greco-Roman pantheon in works like the Percy Jackson series. The “Labors of Hercules” provide the primary mythic parallel in the Heroic Age series. Though the boy known as “Age” bears precious little resemblance to Steve Reeves, he nevertheless manages in his own way to match the heroic feats of powerful demigod Hercules.
Also due out from Funimation this week is Case Closed Movie #6: The Phantom of
Also due out this week is the next box set of anime based on Tite Kubo’s Bleach manga, Bleach Box Set 4 Part 2 (Viz Media, 350 min., $49.95). The Bleach anime series still gets prime exposure on the Cartoon Network’s Adult Swim. Another multi-disc release out this week is To Love Ru Collection 2 (Sentai Entertainment, 325 min. $39.98), the final 13 episodes of the sci-fi harem comedy based on a manga illustrated by Black Cat’s Kentaro Yabuki.
There are a couple of good bargain-priced releases due out this week. Viz Media is releasing Naruto Uncut Season 2 Box Set #1 (“PG 13,” 650 min., $39.98), a 6-disc collection of the original Naruto series at roughly half the per-episode cost of the original 3-disc uncut sets. Another good deal is the Dragon Ball Z: Dragon
Theatrical Films
There’s not a lot shaking in this category this week. Coco Before Chanel ( Sony, PG-13, $28.96, BD $34.95) features a scintillating performance by the always radiant Audrey Tautou, in a stately film, while writer/director Sebastian Gutierrez’s Women in Trouble (Screen Media, Rated “R,” $24.98, BD $29.98) takes more chances with a genre-bending, multi-layered film, which has a fine cast, but can’t quite overcome its subpar indie production values.
TV on DVD
It’s not a huge week for TV on DVD release but there are some interesting offerings including Barnaby Jones: The Complete First Season (
Branded (Time Life, 1144 min., $69.98) is an even more obscure series, though fans of the half-hour western might want to give it a chance. Starring Chuck (The Rifleman) Connors, Branded ran for just one TV season (1965-1966) with the ex L.A. Dodgers first baseman playing a disgraced cavalry officer who was falsely branded as a traitor after he was the only survivor of an Apache massacre.
Lark Rise to Candleford: The Complete Season 2 (BBC/Warner Home Video, 529 min. $59.98) leads this week’s
A couple of interesting series are making their TV on DVD debuts, the ABC Family back-to-the-hood saga Lincoln Heights and the 1980s syndicated science fiction comedy Small Wonder. Russell Hornsby plays a dedicated L.A. Cop who moves his family into a tough inner-city neighborhood in Lincoln Heights: Season One (Shout Factory, 570 min. $34.97). Also from Shout Factory is Small Wonder: Season 1 (540 min., $34.97), which includes the first 24 episodes of the syndicated series about a research scientist who developed a robot that looked exactly like a cute, 10-year-old girl.
Three single-disc TV animation releases are due this week including The Bugs Bunny/Looney Tunes Comedy Hour: Bugs Bunny’s Easter Funnies (Warner Home Video, 50 min. $14.98), Hot Wheels: Battle Force 5-Season 1, Volume 1 (WHV, 132 min, $14.98), and an excellent stop-motion animated offering produced by Aardman Productions (Wallace & Gromit), Shaun the Sheep-Vol.5: Wooly Good Time (Hit Entertainment, 39 min., $14.98).
Also out this week are The Dog Whisperer: The Complete 4th Season (Gaiam, $39.98), the vintage Best of the Loretta Young Show: Seasons 3&4 (Timeless, 775 min. $29.98) and Cannon: Season 2, Volume 2 (
Documentaries
Chris Rock’s Good Hair (Lionsgate, PG-13, $27.98) is a funny, informative, and sometimes sad documentary about the lengths to which some African Americans will go to straighten their hair and the industry that has grown up to serve the demand for “straight” hair.