11-07-2002, 10:58 PM
This will make Duragon happy , a review for Patlabor WXIII. It was originally from the AN forum (thank you kingsnake).
Hello -
No blab or flab, straight to the review:
Video: 5 / 5
+ Perfect! This is the cleanest R2 rip I've EVER watched! I did a zoom and the picture was still as tight as a legit copy. No artifacts or breakdowns on any of the scenes. Plus it's letterboxed -- 16:9 LB Ratio. So freakin' beautiful!
Audio: 5 / 5
+ Also Perfect!!! Comes in 3 flavors for you: Japanese /Dolby Digital /5.1ch, Japanese /Dolby Surround, and Japanese /Dolby Digital /Stereo. I slapped on the 5.1 and cranked it up! I haven't heard an HK release that had sound quality like this. The soundtrack is another masterpiece from Kenji Kawai -- a must own!
Subs: 5 / 5
+ Can anyone say "Perfect translation"? Believe it or not, Production I.G. subbed their own movie and these are the rips from the R2 DVD! They even subbed the signs that are relevent to the plot.
Contents: This was probably the best out of the 3 Patlabor movies. Madhouse produced the animation, so you know that it looks good. The Director this time around wasn't Mamoru Oshii but Fumihiko Takayama (Gundam 0080: War in the Pocket) and a screenplay by Tori-Miki. One thing that Production I.G. has been doing with their movies lately have been more character development rather than all out flashy action. Patlabor WXIII ("Wrecked 13") continues that trend by following the 2 detectives introduced in the first movie -- Hata and Kursai. There are mysterious attacks happening around Tokyo Bay and the Bablyon project that was destroyed in the first movie. The pieces begin to come together to reveal one of the coolest plots in the Patlabor 'universe'. Cameo appearances by the Special Unit 2 gang and even some Ingram action -- but not much.
One thing that really struck me about this movie were the contemplative scenes. Many of the shots related to the investigation without any dialog. This allows the viewer to get into the heads of the detectives -- and the criminals without having the whole thing explaned to you.
Once again, Production I.G. / Madhouse have produced a film that is more cinematic than what you would consider to be 'anime'. The end scene alone is worth the price of admission!
Note: This review was for the single disc DVD and not the double set that came out 4 days after I purchased the disc from Flora (grr...). The 2 disc set is actually the "Mini-Pata" DVD release. Think high-quality South Park inspired Patlabor!
Otaku Unite!
King Snake
Gravity is my only enemy.
Hello -
No blab or flab, straight to the review:
Video: 5 / 5
+ Perfect! This is the cleanest R2 rip I've EVER watched! I did a zoom and the picture was still as tight as a legit copy. No artifacts or breakdowns on any of the scenes. Plus it's letterboxed -- 16:9 LB Ratio. So freakin' beautiful!
Audio: 5 / 5
+ Also Perfect!!! Comes in 3 flavors for you: Japanese /Dolby Digital /5.1ch, Japanese /Dolby Surround, and Japanese /Dolby Digital /Stereo. I slapped on the 5.1 and cranked it up! I haven't heard an HK release that had sound quality like this. The soundtrack is another masterpiece from Kenji Kawai -- a must own!
Subs: 5 / 5
+ Can anyone say "Perfect translation"? Believe it or not, Production I.G. subbed their own movie and these are the rips from the R2 DVD! They even subbed the signs that are relevent to the plot.
Contents: This was probably the best out of the 3 Patlabor movies. Madhouse produced the animation, so you know that it looks good. The Director this time around wasn't Mamoru Oshii but Fumihiko Takayama (Gundam 0080: War in the Pocket) and a screenplay by Tori-Miki. One thing that Production I.G. has been doing with their movies lately have been more character development rather than all out flashy action. Patlabor WXIII ("Wrecked 13") continues that trend by following the 2 detectives introduced in the first movie -- Hata and Kursai. There are mysterious attacks happening around Tokyo Bay and the Bablyon project that was destroyed in the first movie. The pieces begin to come together to reveal one of the coolest plots in the Patlabor 'universe'. Cameo appearances by the Special Unit 2 gang and even some Ingram action -- but not much.
One thing that really struck me about this movie were the contemplative scenes. Many of the shots related to the investigation without any dialog. This allows the viewer to get into the heads of the detectives -- and the criminals without having the whole thing explaned to you.
Once again, Production I.G. / Madhouse have produced a film that is more cinematic than what you would consider to be 'anime'. The end scene alone is worth the price of admission!
Note: This review was for the single disc DVD and not the double set that came out 4 days after I purchased the disc from Flora (grr...). The 2 disc set is actually the "Mini-Pata" DVD release. Think high-quality South Park inspired Patlabor!
Otaku Unite!
King Snake
Gravity is my only enemy.