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Review

by Rebecca Silverman,

One Piece

DVD - Season 4 Part 1

Synopsis:
One Piece Season 4 Part I DVD
After using Nami's navigational know-how (and some surprise luck) to escape from the island fortress of Navarone, the Straw Hats find themselves on the elongated island of Long Ring Long Land. Unfortunately they aren't the only ones there – the Foxy Pirates, an enormous and varied crew, have also come ashore, and they challenge the Straw Hats to a Davy Back Fight! If our heroes lose any of the three battles, they'll lose a crewmember as well...are they up to the challenge?
Review:

Ah, the Davy Back Fight – a series of pirate versions of playground games with a high stakes outcome – the losing team must surrender a crewmember or their flag, as the winning captain chooses. Falling between (in the manga) Skypeia and Water 7, the arc took up roughly a volume with a loose chapter or two beforehand. In the anime, however, it fills the majority of the twelve episodes presented on this set and likely will also comprise the first one or two of the next one. While those familiar with the manga or simply intrigued by the images in the new opening theme might be impatient for the Straw Hats to just get moving, these episodes manage to be surprisingly entertaining, and if they don't move the major plot along, they still make for a fun few hours.

This set of two discs covers episodes 206 – 217 and picks up with the Straw Hats attempting to make their escape from the anime-only island fortress of Navarone. Nautically-minded viewers will appreciate the way the Navy uses the tidal peculiarities of the island to their advantage, and while this isn't the strongest episode, it certainly still has its entertainment value. As soon as they're back on the open sea, the storyline returns to its manga roots and the crew finds themselves on Long Ring Long Land, an open island with strangely tall and long everything. Visually this is one of the best episodes – the elongated fruits, trees, and especially animals are delightful to look at, particularly hoooorse (all animals are given a drawn out pronunciation to differentiate them from normal ones) Shelley, who has the same beauty as the camels in the Alabasta arc. Luffy, Chopper, and Usopp meet Tonjit, an old man who has spent the last ten years up on a pair of stilts, and with his melancholy (albeit slightly silly) backstory, things seem to be following the usual course.

That, naturally, is when the Foxy Pirates arrive. An enormous crew captained by Foxy, this group seems to make its living by challenging other crews to something called a “Davy Back Fight,” a series of games governed by piratical rules. Over Nami's objections, Luffy agrees to a three game fight, and the main plot of the episodes begins. Readers of the manga will notice immediately that this segment has been elongated almost as much as the animals on Long Ring Long Land. Three more games are added that are not present in the manga, and the infamous 'fro doesn't appear until the final episode of the set. While this does cause the action to drag in places – for example, the between games scenes tend to go on too long – it also allows for some interesting foreshadowing of what is to come.

Of the games played in these episodes, probably the most entertaining is the Groggy Ring fight, a sort of basketball where one of the players is himself the ball. This game forces Zoro and Sanji to work together against three enormous monster-men, and viewers familiar with the swordsman and cook's dynamic will immediately realize that this is not going to be as easy as it sounds. The verbal bickering that goes on is equally funny in the sub and dub tracks (with the dub being slightly ruder), and the joy of rooting for the underdog in a clearly rigged game is very much present. The anime-only roller derby is another highlight of the Davy Back games, with ever more ludicrous odds and a chance for Robin to strut her stuff. Other games, such as the boat race and a vicious round of “red light, green light” are less enthralling, although they too have their moments. Overall what this arc has going for it is the addition of voices, making a fairly mediocre transition tale into something more. A major contributing factor is the sports commentator character Itomimizu, equally ably voiced by Ian Sinclair and Keiichi Nanba, who has a Seussian appearance that is difficult to look away from and an impressively high energy in both languages. (One actor in the commentary for episode 211 remarks that he looks like “Waldo's acid-trip cousin.”)

Both dub and sub are consistently good, with the unfortunate low point being Colleen Clinkenbeard's Luffy. It isn't that she does a bad job, because she doesn't. While some higher energy sections can have her sounding a bit strangled, she for the most part does a credible job of voicing the pirate captain...it just simply doesn't work quite as well as Mayumi Tanaka's voice, mostly in terms of the little nonverbal vocalizations. That the weakest voice is far from being bad says good things about the dub, and some viewers may find that giving dub Zoro a more resonant voice actually suits the character better than his Japanese counterpart. Ultimately a dub/sub preference will be a personal decision based on your own tastes, as good jobs are done all around. The art gets a little patchy in places, usually when the episodes are not manga-based; mostly this surfaces as ham-hands and misshapen shoulders, although an even more stretched out look for some of the people also occurs from time to time. The major extras on these discs are two episode commentaries, both hosted by line producer Mike McFarland and both quite interesting to listen to.

Overall the Davy Back Fight isn't the most powerful or interesting of One Piece's many arcs, and it perhaps isn't the most compelling place to resume the story. It is, however, silly and fun, and viewers in the know will appreciate some of the foreshadowing that has been added. With very good voice work in both English and Japanese making up for some of the deficiencies in visuals and plot, the option to “marathon mode” past the theme songs, and overall a feeling of good-natured shonen fun, this is still a voyage worth taking.

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

+ Somehow greater than the sum of its parts, good foreshadowing for the next arc, voices well done. Long animals are visually neat, some great Zoro vs. Sanji moments.
Characters can be off-model whenever the anime varies from the manga, dub Luffy can sound a bit strangled at times. In-between scenes drag on too long.

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Production Info:
Series Director:
Toshinori Fukazawa
Satoshi Itō
Aya Komaki
Yasunori Koyama
Kōhei Kureta
Hiroaki Miyamoto
Tatsuya Nagamine
Munehisa Sakai
Junji Shimizu
Kōnosuke Uda
Director:
Toshinori Fukazawa
Satoshi Itō
Aya Komaki
Yasunori Koyama
Kōhei Kureta
Hiroaki Miyamoto
Tatsuya Nagamine
Munehisa Sakai
Junji Shimizu
Kōnosuke Uda
Series Composition:
Junki Takegami
Hirohiko Uesaka
Shoji Yonemura
Script:
Shinzō Fujita
Hiroshi Hashimoto
Akiko Inoue
Naoki Koga
Takuya Masumoto
Kisa Miura
Isao Murayama
Tomohiro Nakayama
Tsuyoshi Sakurai
Michiru Shimada
Yoshiyuki Suga
Yōichi Takahashi
Junki Takegami
Suminori Takegami
Jin Tanaka
Atsuhiro Tomioka
Hirohiko Uesaka
Ryota Yamaguchi
Ryō Yamazaki
Shoji Yonemura
Storyboard:
Honehone
Masatoshi Chioka
Akitarō Daichi
Tetsuya Endō
Akiko Fujisawa
Junichi Fujise
Kentarō Fujita
Toshinori Fukazawa
Hiroshi Hara
Morio Hatano
Jong Heo
Ayako Hiraike
Mamoru Hosoda
Masahiro Hosoda
Takahiro Imamura
Eisaku Inoue
Shō Inuzuka
Megumi Ishitani
Katsumi Ishizuka
Naoyuki Itō
Satoshi Itō
Bahi JD
Hidehiko Kadota
Yukio Kaizawa
Gō Koga
Aya Komaki
Ken Koyama
Yasunori Koyama
Kōhei Kureta
Takeshi Maenami
Tetsuaki Matsuda
Shō Matsui
Wataru Matsumi
Nanami Michibata
Hiroaki Miyamoto
Yoshio Mukainakano
Tatsuya Nagamine
Yutaka Nakajima
Ryōta Nakamura
Tetsuji Nakamura
Yukihiko Nakao
Yutaka Nakashima
Masayoshi Nishida
Daisuke Nishio
Seiji Okuda
Hazuki Omoya
Makiko Orimoto
Takashi Otsuka
Munehisa Sakai
Toshihiko Sano
Hiroyuki Satō
Naotoshi Shida
Tasuku Shimaya
Junji Shimizu
Nozomu Shishido
Makoto Sonoda
Yoshiyuki Suga
Yūsuke Suzuki
Kenichi Takeshita
Yasuhiro Tanabe
Ryōsuke Tanaka
Takayuki Tanaka
Henry Thurlow
Katsumi Tokoro
Yûji Tokuno
Yong Ce Tu
Kōnosuke Uda
Yoshihiro Ueda
Ryota Yamaguchi
Shigeyasu Yamauchi
Kenji Yokoyama
Episode Director:
Tetsuya Endō
Yuji Endō
Junichi Fujise
Kentarō Fujita
Toshinori Fukazawa
Morio Hatano
Ayako Hiraike
Mamoru Hosoda
Masahiro Hosoda
Eri Hyun
Yōko Ikeda
Takahiro Imamura
Shō Inuzuka
Megumi Ishitani
Takaaki Ishiyama
Naoyuki Itō
Satoshi Itō
Hidehiko Kadota
Yukio Kaizawa
Hiroyuki Kakudō
Gō Koga
Aya Komaki
Harume Kosaka
Ken Koyama
Yasunori Koyama
Chihiro Kumano
Kōhei Kureta
Toshihiro Maeya
Shō Matsui
Wataru Matsumi
Nanami Michibata
Hiroaki Miyamoto
Kazutoshi Mori
Yoshio Mukainakano
Tatsuya Nagamine
Daisuke Nakajima
Yutaka Nakajima
Ryōta Nakamura
Tetsuji Nakamura
Yukihiko Nakao
Yutaka Nakashima
Kōdai Nakatsuka
Daisuke Nishio
Hazuki Omoya
Keisuke Ōnishi
Takashi Otsuka
Munehisa Sakai
Toshihiko Sano
Hiroyuki Satō
Tasuku Shimaya
Akira Shimizu
Junji Shimizu
Nozomu Shishido
Makoto Sonoda
Yūsuke Suzuki
Kenichi Takeshita
Hikaru Takeuchi
Yasuhiro Tanabe
Kōji Tanaka
Ryōsuke Tanaka
Henry Thurlow
Katsumi Tokoro
Yûji Tokuno
Kōnosuke Uda
Yoshihiro Ueda
Sumio Watanabe
Tōru Yamada
Shigeyasu Yamauchi
Unit Director:
Toshinori Fukazawa
Tomohiro Higashi
Eri Hyun
Megumi Ishitani
Satoshi Itō
Aya Komaki
Kōhei Kureta
Nanami Michibata
Tatsuya Nagamine
Takashi Otsuka
Tasuku Shimaya
Music:
Shiroh Hamaguchi
Kōhei Tanaka
Original Manga: Eiichiro Oda
Character Design:
Kazuya Hisada
Noboru Koizumi
Midori Matsuda
Art Director:
Tong Nian Chen
Kunihiro Chida
Jason de la Cruz
Yurino Doi
Momoko Fujikura
Kumiko Fukuzawa
Jun Golez
Eiji Hamano
Yoshiaki Honma
Guo Wei Huang
Toshinori Iino
Eisaku Inoue
Iwamitsu Itō
Michiyo Kawasaki
Shinichi Konno
Toshiaki Marumori
Takafumi Mizuno
Dhavee Morato
Hideto Nakahara
Nagisa Nishida
Elton John Ongjoco
Minoru Ōnishi
Erwin Sadia
Yū Saitō
Uli Samaniego
Yuri Sanan
Dino Francis Santos
Miyuki Satō
Tadami Shimokawa
Hiromitsu Shiozaki
Miho Shiraishi
Seiichiro Sugiura
Makoto Suwada
Natsuki Takeda
Midori Tanaka
Shoji Tokiwa
Natsuko Tosugi
Fumihiro Uchikawa
Tomoko Yoshida
Ryūji Yoshiike
Takashi Yoshiike
Chief Animation Director:
Kazuya Hisada
Keiichi Ichikawa
Takeo Ide
Hisashi Kagawa
Midori Matsuda
Yong Ce Tu
Animation Director:
Honehone
Majiro
Shigefumi Aragaki
Zhen Lei Cheng
Toshio Deguchi
Kentarō Fujita
Masayuki Fujita
Yasuko Fukumoto
Mami Furutoku
Huan Ge
Grand Guerilla
Yūji Hakamada
Eun Mi Han
Zi Wei He
Kazuya Hisada
Feng Cheng Hu
Keiichi Ichikawa
Takeo Ide
Kazuyuki Ikai
Takuya Imakado
Eisaku Inoue
Masahiko Inuzuka
Katsumi Ishizuka
Yūsuke Isōchi
Kimitaka Itō
Shūichi Itō
Nobuyuki Iwai
Atsuko Kawamura
Jun-Oh Kim
Yu Jin Kim
Yuki Kinoshita
Masahiro Kitazaki
Yukari Kobayashi
Noboru Koizumi
Takashi Kojima
Yūji Kondō
Kazuya Kuta
Ye Sung Lee
Shao Lei Li
Natsuko Makiyo
Hideaki Maniwa
Midori Matsuda
Kenji Matsuoka
Kiyoshi Matsushita
Yūki Minagawa
Keisuke Mori
Naoki Murakami
Yukiko Nakatani
Asako Narasaki
Hiroyasu Oda
Keita Saitō
Sadahiko Sakamaki
Toshihiko Sano
Masahiro Shimanuki
Takanori Shimura
Takayuki Shimura
Shigefumi Shingaki
Kouji Sugimoto
Shū Sugita
Shinichi Suzuki
Masayuki Takagi
Isamu Takara
Kazuo Takigawa
Shigenori Taniguchi
Naoki Tate
Yong Ce Tu
Yosuke Yabumoto
Takumi Yamamoto
Tadayoshi Yamamuro
Megumi Yamashita
Mamoru Yokota
Kenji Yokoyama
Art design: Ryūji Yoshiike
Background Art Director:
Yoshiaki Honma
Guo Wei Huang
Director of Photography:
Hideki Chiba
Tomoya Hosaka
Hirosato Ōnishi
Producer:
Shintarō Hashimoto
Miki Kobayashi
Yoshihiro Suzuki
Satoshi Teramoto
Licensed by: FUNimation Entertainment

Full encyclopedia details about
One Piece (TV)

Release information about
One Piece - Season 4 Voyage 1 (DVD)

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