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Review

by Carl Kimlinger,

Bleach

DVD 16

Synopsis:
Bleach DVD 16
The violence and chaos of Soul Society behind them, Ichigo and his crew of would-be heroes return to the far friendlier violence and chaos of high school. But the palling around and pummeling of friend and family are short lived, as a new menace closes in on the apprentice Soul Reaper. A mysterious group begins abducting Ichigo's friends, starting with Orihime, and, using them as leverage, forces Ichigo into a series of mind-bending "games" in which the stakes are anything but playful.
Review:

It's that time. The time that all fans of long-running shonen series dread: Filler Time. These four episodes officially kick off Bleach's much-reviled "Bount" story arc, a story arc that has absolutely zilch to do with Tite Kubo's original manga. Nothing pisses shonen fans off like animators monkeying with their favorite manga, but frankly filler stories are a necessary evil (without them the series either has to stop or go completely off the rails a la Rurouni Kenshin) and as far as filler goes, the Bount arc isn't half bad.

It isn't half good either (more like three-eighths good, a quarter bad, and a quarter indifferent with one-eighth held in reserve—but who's counting?), but that's what the qualifier "as far as filler goes" is included for. These episodes suffer from all of the unavoidable deficiencies of filler. No matter how hard the show tries to build suspense, the knowledge that the writers are forbidden by the precepts of filler from doing anything irrevocable drains most of the potential excitement away. Likewise they are forbidden from any real character development and aren't allowed within spitting distance of unresolved plot threads and relationships. All of which has an inevitable dulling effect.

Which accounts for the one-quarter of indifference. The one-quarter of badness comes from director Noriyuki Abe's, shall we say, borrowing. These four episodes are obviously meant to provide a somewhat more cerebral alternative to the series' usual slash 'n bash action, which is worthy ambition. Unfortunately in order to do so Abe steals so brazenly from his own animated adaptation of Yū Yū Hakusho (with a dash of Die Hard With a Vengeance thrown in) that this volume sets off plagiarism alarms from start to finish. Bleach was never a work of scalding originality, and likely never will be, but prior to entering Filler Land, it at least had the sense not to lift its plots wholesale from other sources.

That said, Abe and his crew are all hoary veterans of shonen entertainment, and the experience shows. Even when pulling a story-arc from their rears (or their back-catalogs), they have the skills and the smarts to make it feel as if it belongs. The action is stylish, and stylistically uniform, and the angst is unsubtle and the jokes funny (Kon-cruelty never gets old). The new characters (three bizarrely-clad yet bizarrely cool villains) really look like a part of the cast, and the extended structure of the fights—or in this case head-games—is perfectly in keeping with the series' usual narrative stride. In other words, the Bount story-arc is, at least for now, a very reasonable facsimile of a typical Bleach arc.

But it's still a facsimile. And Abe's estimable technical skills can do little to change that. He can apply the same rocking action music, the same delicate introspective themes, and the same razor-edited, hard-edged visuals to these episodes that he did to previous episodes. He can introduce a cuddly cute yet infuriatingly evil lead villain. And he can throw all of the borrowed mind-twisters he wants at Ichigo, and still he'll never be able to match the brutal, anything-can-happen energy that fuels the best of Bleach.

I am, by this time, a bon-a-fide fan of Viz's Bleach dub. Which means that any weaknesses I see in these episodes get blamed on the source material rather than the dub. Thus Wendee Lee's rather stiff TATSUKI is the fault of the rust that TATSUKI has gathered due to disuse, and the humor that falls flat does so because it was never funny in the first place. If I could coddle the cast and crew more I would, but they don't give me very many opportunities. Quinton Flynn's Kon is an ad-libbing riot, Johnny Yong Bosch's Ichigo is all brash yet sensitive fire, and Stephanie Sheh's Orihime is a treat no matter how lame her dialogue. In the name of maintaining a semblance of critical objectivity, I will mention that the monologue used to open each episode is painfully awkward, and should really have been completely re-written.

Aside from some production art, the only extra you'll find here is a clean version of the new closing. Nothing too exciting, though it is one hell of a closing—a psychedelic stuffed-animal dance choreographed to a cruelly catchy number by SunSet Swish. Just try watching it without getting a little boogie in you butt. How embarrassing.

Be warned, the Bount arc is long. Forty-five episodes long, in fact. Forty-five episodes that can be skipped without causing so much as a hiccup in the series' continuity. If you find these episodes dull or irritating—and many will find them both—then take a Bleach breather...a long one. But if you can take it, there are worse ways than this to while away the time until Bleach returns to canon material.

Grade:
Overall (dub) : C+
Overall (sub) : C+
Story : D+
Animation : B
Art : B+
Music : A-

+ A refreshing lack of "recycle that funny quirk" humor; there's worse filler out there.
There's better Bleach; did they really think they could get away with cannibalizing Yu Yu Hakusho?

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Production Info:
Director: Noriyuki Abe
Series Composition:
Tsuyoshi Kida
Kento Shimoyama
Masashi Sogo
Script:
Kazuyuki Fudeyasu
Miho Imamura
Mio Imamura
Rika Nakase
Masahiro Okubo
Masao Ōkubo
Kento Shimoyama
Masashi Sogo
Natsuko Takahashi
Michiko Yokote
Genki Yoshimura
Storyboard:
Noriyuki Abe
Masami Anno
Koji Aritomi
Tetsuya Endō
Manabu Fukazawa
Kiyomu Fukuda
Shigeki Hatakeyama
Yasuyuki Honda
Masashi Ishihama
Satoshi Ishino
Shigenori Kageyama
Jun Kamiya
Rei Kaneko
Akio Kawamura
Masahiko Komino
Chiaki Kon
Junya Koshiba
Masashi Kudo
Hodaka Kuramoto
Toshihiko Masuda
Tadahito Matsubayashi
Hitoyuki Matsui
Yasuhiro Matsumura
Yukihiro Matsushita
Yuzuru Mitsui
Shigeyuki Miya
Kazunori Mizuno
Yūji Moriyama
Minoru Murao
Takehiro Nakayama
Yasuto Nishikata
Hiroaki Nishimura
Satoshi Nishimura
Mitsutaka Noshitani
Tetsuhito Saito
Masami Shimoda
Ogura Shirakawa
Yoshifumi Sueda
Natsuko Suzuki
Hideki Tachibana
Yuzuru Tachikawa
Jun Takada
Hiroki Takagi
Motosuke Takahashi
Takahiro Takamizawa
Shinichi Tōkairin
Sanzou Tsuyukida
Shigeru Ueda
Atsushi Wakabayashi
Shinichi Watanabe
Hideyo Yamamoto
Minoru Yamaoka
Episode Director:
Noriyuki Abe
Eitarō Ano
Koji Aritomi
Matsuo Asami
Kiyomu Fukuda
Shigeki Hatakeyama
Tomoko Hiramuki
Tetsuo Ichimura
Akane Inoue
Yasuo Iwamoto
Akira Iwanaga
Taiji Kawanishi
Takushi Kimura
Chiaki Kon
Harume Kosaka
Junya Koshiba
Masashi Kudo
Hodaka Kuramoto
Yasuhiro Kuroda
Keizou Kusakawa
Tadahito Matsubayashi
Nobufumi Matsuda
Yasuhiro Matsumura
Yuzuru Mitsui
Ryo Miyata
Kazunori Mizuno
Geisei Morita
Eiko Nishi
Yasuto Nishikata
Hiroaki Nishimura
Kazuo Nogami
Mitsutaka Noshitani
Yoshinori Odaka
Rokou Ogiwara
Yukio Okazaki
Masaya Sasaki
Kazuma Satō
Yuji Sekimoto
Akira Shimizu
Kazunobu Shimizu
Ogura Shirakawa
Yoshifumi Sueda
Yuzuru Tachikawa
Hiroki Takagi
Takeshi Tomita
Shigeru Ueda
Takeshi Yamaguchi
Minoru Yamaoka
Mitsue Yamazaki
Unit Director:
Noriyuki Abe
Masashi Kudo
Shingo Ogiso
Yuzuru Tachikawa
Music: Shirō Sagisu
Original creator: Tite Kubo
Character Design: Masashi Kudo
Art Director:
Natsuko Suzuki
Sawako Takagi
Art:
Tsuyoshi Fukumoto
Masaya Hamaguchi
Yuki Kasahara
Hideaki Kudo
Katsusuke Okamura
Mayu Shirai
Sawako Takagi
Shinobu Takahashi
Mayu Usui
Norihiko Yokomatsu
Animation Director:
MANASITA
Chiaki Abe
Yoshie Anzai
Shigemi Aoyagi
Eiki Arasato
Eri Baba
Bum-Chul Chang
Manabu Fukazawa
Akihiro Fukui
Yeong-Hun Han
Daiki Handa
Kenji Hattori
Yūri Ichinose
Shin Jae Ick
Hidenori Igari
Hiroaki Imaki
Keiichi Ishida
Masashi Ishihama
Tomomi Ishikawa
Nobuyuki Iwai
Gil Soo Joo
Akio Kawamura
Toshihiro Kikuchi
Gi Nam Kim
Hyon Ok Kim
Hyun Ok Kim
Il Bae Kim
Sang-Yeob Kim
Seong Beom Kim
Yong Sik Kim
Yoon-Joung Kim
Seiji Kishimoto
Akemi Kobayashi
Ryo Kobayashi
Yukari Kobayashi
Ryou Kodama
Makoto Koga
Masahiko Komino
Atsushi Komori
Mitsuki Kosaka
Fumiaki Kouta
Tsuguyuki Kubo
Masashi Kudo
Manabu Kurihara
Shinichi Kurita
Boo Hee Lee
Sung Jin Lee
Shuji Maruyama
Ippei Masui
Tamami Miura
Shuuji Miyazaki
Kazuya Miyoshi
Joo Yeon Moon
Minoru Morita
Yūji Moriyama
Tsutomu Murakami
Keiya Nakano
Shingo Ogiso
Masaya Ōnishi
Shigetsune Ōsawa
Chang Hwan Park
Hye-Ran Park
In-Hee Park
Jong Jun Park
Tomoko Satō
Yang Kwang Seock
Sanae Shimada
Makoto Shimojima
Jae-Ik Shin
Kim-Young Sik
Sayuri Sugitou
Natsuko Suzuki
Shin'ichi Suzuki
Shinichi Suzuki
Yoko Suzuki
Hiroki Takagi
Motosuke Takahashi
Akira Takeuchi
Yukari Takeuchi
Masaya Tanaka
Seiki Tanaka
Takashi Uchida
Miyuki Ueda
Tomomi Umemura
Masaru Yamada
Asuka Yamaguchi
Keiko Yamamoto
Osamu Yamamoto
Yoshimitsu Yamashita
Naoki Yamauchi
Teruhiko Yamazaki
Takeshi Yoshioka
Director of Photography:
Toshiyuki Fukushima
Katsufumi Sato
Producer:
Shunji Aoki
Ken Hagino
Kyoko Kobayashi
Mai Nagai
Yutaka Sugiyama
Jun Takibuchi
Yukio Yoshimura
Licensed by: Viz Media

Full encyclopedia details about
Bleach (TV)

Release information about
Bleach - The Bount (DVD 16)

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