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Review

by Carl Kimlinger,

One Piece

Season 2 DVD Part 7

Synopsis:
One Piece Season 2 DVD Part 7
Crocodile delivered to the tender mercies of the Marines and Alabasta far behind them, the Luffy Pirates continue their exploration of the Grand Line. They visit an island renowned for its fireworks, collect fruit on an uninhabited island, help a young cook regain his confidence and commune with a dried-up geezer and his herd of pet goats. Ordinary times for the extraordinary group. The visit with the geezer does end with a small-scale invasion by treasure-hungry government types, but really, given that the Luffy Pirates have unknowingly been saddled with a bounty that leaves Marines drooling, that's not uncommon. More uncommon is the rainbow-colored mist they encounter at another island; a mist that marks the entrance to a dimension in which time and space are twisted like pretzels. Naturally they charge right in, entangling themselves in an adventure revolving around a greedy mayor, some time-traveling tykes and a mountain of treasure.
Review:

So how do you follow up one of the grandest, most rousing climaxes in shonen action history? By backsliding into low investment fluff, apparently. The Luffy vs. Crocodile fight that capped off the Alabasta arc was a high-water mark in a series that had for some time been raising the bar on shonen action. This...this is One Piece sitting on its laurels, firing on one or two cylinders while it gives the other six or seven a deserved rest. It isn't something you can blame it for, but that doesn't make this slice of piratical nothingness any easier to swallow.

Fully five of these thirteen episodes are consumed by one-off tales where one of the Luffy pirates deals with something—Chopper acclimating himself to Robin, Nami trying to catch up on her cartography—while reflecting on their own past. There are nuggets of character to be gleaned from each, and a smattering of humor, but on a whole these are formulaic, disposable, and just a little forced. Not the kind of focused, larger-than-life sentimentality that the series usually deals in, and barely reminiscent of the juggernaut the series becomes when it hits its serial-storytelling stride. The goat geezer story, though lengthier, is hardly better. The geezer is more than a little irritating, the villain is perfunctory, and the emotional payoff hinges on...goats? Not one of the series' proudest moments. The Rainbow Mist story finds the series drifting a little closer to its customary groove, but ends in a less-than-satisfying manner. Any story that concludes without unleashing Luffy has failed on some level.

Not that any of that stops this from being superior to many shonen shows, even at their best. The best of the standalone character episodes—a look back at an important meeting in Zoro's past—is a nice little exercise in seriocomic economy, and even the poorer ones have their moments. No episode that ends with a world-stopping bang a la the Usopp episode or that silently builds a rapport between ex-enemies as the Robin/Chopper one does is a complete loss. Even the otherwise limp goat episodes drop a poignant hint about Robin's reasons for joining Luffy and culminate in a pleasingly cathartic villain-walloping. And the boldness with which the Rainbow Mist episodes mash up mawkish sentimentality, cracked slapstick, and pirate panache is pure One Piece; even if the hodge-podge that results isn't prime One Piece.

The thing is, enjoy them as you will, the set's superior moments can't help but be painful reminders of the potential that the series is currently not fulfilling. Having just come off of some of the most thrilling television to be marketed at kids, we know that the crumbs it feeds us are just that, crumbs. Like any swath of One Piece this run of episodes is filled with insane imagery and little jolts of weirdly timeless cool. A rope-wrapped marine taking to the sky like an aerial inchworm, a Bluto-esque bandit armed with a cannon-sized flintlock, a pumpkin-crowned tower that crashes into the sea to become an enormous treasure-transporting tube: few filler arcs were ever so blessed with imagination. The animators' canny use of speed-blurred stills, CG trickery, and other common shortcuts continues to add energy and, yes, excitement to what is essentially a budget-conscious series, and they milk more than one scene's gangly characters and canted cameras for incongruous coolness. But every drop of imagination, every spark of energy and ounce of cool, is but a shadow of the oceans, the gigawatts, the metric tons of each that lie dormant beneath its lazy surface.

There isn't much new to say about Funimation's dub. By this point the core cast is comfortable in their roles, their performances largely very enjoyable. The obvious relish with which they tackle the goofy filler humor makes the set a little easier to watch in English. On the other hand, I've grown to despise the dubbed songs. And that's about it. Hate it, love it, don't care (or any gradient thereof), by now you know where you stand. Take your pick and run with it. The next set, which thanks to Funimation's achronological dubbing schedule contains their earliest work on the series, is a more interesting prospect (review-wise). The contrast between the two should be instructive.

Colleen Clinkenbeard, Jason Grundy, and Vic Mignogna punch in for the customary commentary track. Their discussion of the merits of dubbing filler demonstrates pretty definitively that the best episodes to dub aren't necessarily the best to watch.

It can be easy to forget, in part because its idiosyncratic look gives it a deceptively cultish feel, that One Piece is an anime giant. It was promoting and perverting pirate tropes when Pirates of the Carribean was but a gleam in Jerry Bruckheimer's eye, and it only grows more popular with each passing year. There is perhaps no more damning criticism than to say that by the evidence of this set alone you'd never guess that.

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

+ Mindless pirate fun with a few burnished nuggets of characterization and action.
Pales in comparison to what came before.

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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 2 Voyage 7 (DVD)

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