Redline Anime Download
The original film Redline was released in 2007. This is a review of the Anime version of RedLine which was released in2012. I saw this on Amazon Prime Video as a streamed movie and so can't comment about the DVD, Blu-Ray or their respective packaging. I've seen both the live-action and animated version of this film. Redline is a 2009 science fiction auto racing anime film produced by Madhouse and released in Japan on October 9, 2010. The directorial debut feature of Takeshi Koike, it features the voices of Takuya Kimura, Yū Aoi and Tadanobu Asano, and an original story by Katsuhito Ishii, who also co-writes and sound directs.
| Redline | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Takeshi Koike |
| Produced by |
|
| Screenplay by | |
| Story by | Katsuhito Ishii |
| Starring |
|
| Music by | James Shimoji |
| Cinematography | Ryu Takizawa |
| Edited by | |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | Tohokushinsha Film |
Release date |
|
| 102 minutes[1] | |
| Country | Japan |
| Language | Japanese |
| Budget | ¥3 billion ($30 million) |
Redline (レッドライン, stylized as REDLINE) is a 2009 science fictionauto racinganime film produced by Madhouse and released in Japan on October 9, 2010. The directorial debut feature of Takeshi Koike, it features the voices of Takuya Kimura, Yū Aoi and Tadanobu Asano, and an original story by Katsuhito Ishii, who also co-writes and sound directs.[2] The film is set in the distant future, where a man known as JP takes on great risks for the chance of winning the titular underground race.
After a total of seven years in production, Redline was intended to premiere at the 2009 Annecy International Animated Film Festival and follow Summer Wars, Mai Mai Miracle, and Yona Yona Penguin as the fourth and final feature film Madhouse planned to release between summer 2009 and spring 2010. However, further delays resulted in the delay of its world premiere, pushed back a few months to August 14, 2009, at the Locarno International Film Festival[3] and its Japanese release to fall 2010.
Plot[edit]
On the planet Dorothy, human 'Sweet' JP races in the Yellowline car race, the galaxy's famous final elimination race, despite two interplanetary wars, to the most popular race in the galaxy, the Redline. The crowd is watching the race on an outdoor giant monitor screen in the desert town of The Water Stop. JP's alien mobster mechanic, Joshua 'Frisbee' Flathead, is watching the televised race with a mafia boss who constantly massages his gums with cocaine. The gambling boss is concerned that JP might attempt to win the fixed race but Frisbee reassures him that JP needs bail bond funds from the pay-off. JP attempts to win anyway while Frisbee resorts to using a remote detonator transmitter hidden in the palm of his hand, which the mob boss doesn't notice, causing JP's TransAM20000 to explode thereby making the 'Crab Sonoshee Sea' hovercraft, piloted by female racer Sonoshee 'Cherry Boy Hunter' McLaren, the final winner.
While recuperating from the explosion in a planet Dorothy hospital, Frisbee tells JP he's off the hook with his bondsman. JP initially turns down the money but a crowd of reporters storms the hospital room where JP learns that he has been voted by popular demand for the Redline following the dropout of two qualifiers due to the revelation of the race's location as being on Roboworld—a planet dominated by militant zealot cyborgs whose President has threatened on interstellar television to hang all involved with the Redline mothership if it appears out of hyperspace over their planet. The broadcast (sent over the race's thousands of satellites) also exposes the secret weapons Roboworld has built-up against treaties.
Inside DEST Tower on Roboworld, the President asks Secretary of Defense Titan for a report about ships landing on Roboworld's moon, EUЯPSS (pronounced Europass) - a de-militarized zone that Roboworld signed away to refugees in the M-3 Nebula Federation, making it off limits to Roboworld's troops. The President obtains a verbal oath from Colonel Volton to fight to the death to protect Roboworld and the M-3 Nebula.
While the racers are staying on EUЯPSS before REDLINE under constant media coverage, Frisbee's alien junk dealer, Old Man Mole, wants to put weapons on the restored TransAM, which JP refuses despite his competitors being armed. Old Man Mole also protests the presence of Frisbee on their team and his insistence on using a rare uncontrollable hyper-powered engine, but eventually gives in to JP's convincing.
JP finds Sonoshee in the slow hours of the Oasis Restaurant on the moon. Shinkai, formerly of the Roboworld army, shows up at the Oasis when racer Little Deyzuna, a recently AWOL subordinate of Col. Volton, attacks Shinkai's partner, Trava. The Redline favorite, Machinehead, a tall menacing but ultimately well-mannered cyborg, appears, and is attacked by a sobbing Little Deyzuna, who is retrieved by Col. Volton. Machinehead confronts Volton for being in the de-militarized zone. Volton reminds the racer any Redline event will be repelled by the army and police before leaving the damaged restaurant.

Fireworks celebrations and bookmaker agent desks break out on Roboworld despite the threats from the military, and are raided by deadly android police robots. Miners on Roboworld use their power suits to sabotage the military base's power station while the Race Commission, which promotes gambling, hires Earth-native racing partners Lynchman and Johnny Boya to sabotage the Orbital Disintegration Cannon, which Secretary Titan plans to use to destroy the Redline mothership the instant it comes out of hyperspace.
While in hyperspace, the Princess from the planet Supergrass marks the race course on the military base with a pair of scout vessels, with the starting line to the north at the Knock-out Tower and the finish line to the south, east of DEST Tower. Unaware of the sabotage against the Orbital Disintegration Cannon, the President realizes the racers are on the planet after the cannon fails, and sends his troops en masse at the racers. The President becomes increasingly desperate as the racers evade them and approach the mine-laden Zone XXXXXXX (pronounced, 'Seven-Ex'), lair of a secret illegal biological weapon named 'Funky Boy', who awakens from its stasis as the racers and the rebellious miners converge on it. With the several hundred foot tall Funky Boy awakening and subsequent destruction of the base coinciding with the orbital cannon coming back online, the President orders Funky Boy fired upon. The explosion takes out most of the Roboworld troops while JP pushes to right his overturned car off its side. Sonoshee, her vehicle totaled, agrees to ride with him to the finish line as Funky Boy regenerates. Funky Boy is taken out by Col. Volton, who had to dangerously merge physically with another bioweapon to do so.
Frisbee watches the race on several televisions parked atop a mesa in the mob boss's giant Cadillac hovercraft, where he revives the same deal as Yellowline. Frisbee however, refuses to detonate the explosive charge this time, wanting to see his friend win 'the big one' just one time. He is attacked by mobsters for his decision but is saved by Old Man Mole - who discovered Frisbee's sabotage - and shoots and kills the mob boss and his lackeys with a double barrel flechette firing shotgun.
As the race nears the finish line, Machinehead and JP race to the southern line boosted by their rare Steamlight boosters. As they come to a desperate neck-and-neck finish, a drunken Old Man Mole accidentally detonates Frisbee's remote detonator, propelling JP and Sonoshee towards the finish line, thrown from their vehicle. The boost is enough and JP wins by the length of his long duck tail pompadour.
As the racers rest at the end of the race amidst the ruins of Roboworld, JP and Sonoshee float back down to the ground kissing and thus declaring their love for each other. Machinehead (who vowed to win but comes in second) sees the romance and his rage turns to laughter, happy with the outcome anyway.
Cast[edit]
| Character | Cast | |
|---|---|---|
| Japanese | English dub[4] | |
| Joshua Punkhead 'J.P.' | Takuya Kimura (木村 拓哉Kimura Takuya) | Patrick Seitz |
| Sonoshee McLaren | Yū Aoi (蒼井 優Aoi Yū) | Michelle Ruff |
| Frisbee | Tadanobu Asano (浅野 忠信Asano Tadanobu) | Liam O'Brien |
| Boiboi | Akane Sakai (阪井 あかねSakai Akane) | Lauren Landa |
| Bosbos | AKEMI (小林 明美Kobayashi Akemi) | Laura Post |
| Inuki Boss | Chō (チョー) | Alfred Thor |
| Gori-Rider | Daisuke Gouri (郷里 大輔Gōri Daisuke) | George C. Cole |
| Todoroki | Ikki Todoroki (轟木 一騎Todoroki Ikki) | Cutter Garcia |
| Miki | Shunichiro Miki (三木 俊一郎Miki Shunichiro) | Sam Regal |
| Trava | Kanji Tsuda (津田 寛治Tsuda Kanji) | Joey Morris |
| Shinkai | Yoshiyuki Morishita (森下 能幸Morishita Yoshiyuki) | Tony Oliver |
| Secretary of Defense Titan | Kenyu Horiuchi (堀内 賢雄Horiuchi Ken'yū) | Doug Erholtz |
| Colonel Volton | Unshō Ishizuka (石塚 運昇Ishizuka Unshō) | Jamieson Price |
| Roboworld President | Kōsei Hirota (廣田 行生Hirota Kōsei) | David Lodge |
| Machine Head | Kōji Ishii (石井 康嗣Ishii Kōji) | Michael McConnohie |
| Old Man Mole | Takeshi Aono (青野 武Aono Takeshi) | Steve Kramer |
| Lynchman | Tatsuya Gashuin (我修院 達也Gashūin Tatsuya) | John White |
| Johnny Boya | Yoshinori Okada (岡田 義徳Okada Yoshinori) | David Roach |
| Little Deyzuna | Kenta Miyake (三宅 健太Miyake Kenta) | Derek Stephen Prince |
Development and release[edit]
Redline 2009 Anime Download
In 2003, prior to Redline's production and release, a prequel anime OVA entitled Trava: Fist Planet was released, featuring two characters (Trava and Shinkai) who would reappear as key characters in Redline.
Redline was produced by Madhouse[5] and directed by Takeshi Koike, who also wrote the storyboard and served as unit director and animation director. The film's producers were Yukiko Koike and Kentarō Yoshida. Masahiro Fukushima served as executive producer. The task of writing the script was shared by Yoji Enokido, Katsuhito Ishii, and Yoshiki Sakurai. The film's character designs, original and otherwise, were done by Katsuhito Ishii, who also served as one of the film's sound directors, the other being Youji Shimizu. The film's music was composed by James Shimoji.[6]
According to Tim Maughan of Anime News Network, Redline was released several years later than originally planned. Its development took seven years and used 100,000 hand-made drawings,[7] which Maughan notes is all the more unusual as it is Koike's directorial debut.[6]
Redline was initially meant to premiere at the 2009 Annecy International Animated Film Festival, where it would have competed in the Feature Film category.[8] Instead, it premiered during the Locarno International Film Festival in August of the same year.[9] Several more advance screenings were done at international film festivals during 2010.[10] In May, Redline was shown during the Sci-Fi-London 9.[11][12] In June, it participated in Annecy 2010 in the category 'Feature Films out of competition'.[13] During September, it was shown in Australia and New Zealand as part of Reel Anime 2010.[14]Redline was shown in Austin, Texas on September 23,[10] and in Edinburgh, Scotland, on October 15 as part of the Scotland Loves Anime film festival.[15] At the 2010 Nantes Utopiales Sci-Fi festival, the film received the special mention of jury and public.
The film opened in Japan on October 9, 2010. Coinciding with this, the film was shown in a San Francisco-based Viz Cinema theater from October 8–14, 2010. Distribution in North America is handled by Manga Entertainment.[5] It was the last product released through the American division of Manga before going dormant.
Soundtrack[edit]
An official soundtrack to the film by James Shimoji (ジェイムス下地) was released under GBC label on October 6, 2010[16] and contains 42 tracks.[17] It ranked 207th on Oricon's album chart.[18]
| Track listing: Redline Original Soundtrack | ||
|---|---|---|
| No. | Title | Length |
| 1. | 'Yellow Line' | 6:59 |
| 2. | 'Inuki' | 0:52 |
| 3. | 'Redline Title' | 0:48 |
| 4. | 'Boy's Memory' | 0:54 |
| 5. | 'Winner March' | 0:43 |
| 6. | 'Roboworld TV' | 0:34 |
| 7. | 'TV Show' | 2:27 |
| 8. | 'Roboworld' | 2:07 |
| 9. | 'Europass' | 3:17 |
| 10. | 'Mogura Oyaji' | 2:20 |
| 11. | 'Oasis' | 2:07 |
| 12. | 'And It's So Beautiful (feat. Kitty Brown)' | 4:49 |
| 13. | 'Shinkai' | 2:23 |
| 14. | 'Machine Head' | 1:02 |
| 15. | 'Capture Operation' | 2:18 |
| 16. | 'Let Me Love You (feat. Veronica Torraca-Bragdon)' | 2:25 |
| 17. | 'Get The Stones (feat. Andrew O. Jones)' | 3:23 |
| 18. | 'Crab Sonoshee' | 1:36 |
| 19. | '彼のシフトはブンブンブン (feat. Super Boins)' | 3:47 |
| 20. | 'Lynch Man & Johnny Boya' | 1:16 |
| 21. | 'Redline News' | 0:22 |
| 22. | 'Gori-Rider' | 0:56 |
| 23. | 'Miki & Todoroki' | 0:23 |
| 24. | 'Put-up Guy' | 0:41 |
| 25. | 'Red Angels' | 0:48 |
| 26. | 'Three-point Decomposition Cannon' | 0:53 |
| 27. | 'Tension' | 1:37 |
| 28. | 'Chatter Void' | 1:05 |
| 29. | 'Volton Unit' | 2:06 |
| 30. | 'Vertical Drop' | 1:40 |
| 31. | 'Moniter Room' | 1:06 |
| 32. | 'Sand Biker' | 1:28 |
| 33. | 'Spinning Car' | 1:52 |
| 34. | 'Trouble' | 1:33 |
| 35. | 'Semimaru' | 1:26 |
| 36. | 'Gangster' | 0:52 |
| 37. | 'Flying Finger' | 0:23 |
| 38. | 'Funky Boy' | 1:41 |
| 39. | 'Redline' | 3:30 |
| 40. | 'Exceed Limit' | 1:32 |
| 41. | 'Dead Heat' | 1:02 |
| 42. | 'Redline Day (feat. Rob Laufer)' | 4:52 |
Reception[edit]
Tim Maughan of Anime News Network describes the film as 'something very special, very different, and insanely exhilarating.' In particular he praises the film's director, saying that 'Koike has managed to make all this chaos believable.' He goes on to say that 'Redline is animation not only at its best, but also largely animation for animation's sake.' Although Maughan says some may dislike its techno soundtrack and 'minimal plot,' he calls Redline 'the most insanely exciting, visually exhilarating anime film you've seen in decades.'[6]
Thomas Zoth of Mania.com comments that while the film does not provide 'a deep plot or unique premise,' it still 'demands to be seen.' He said that if Scott Pilgrim vs. the World was 'an assault on the senses .. Redline is a declaration of war.' Zoth went on to praise the film for its 'imaginative creatures and clever designs', to compare Koike's work to that of Quentin Tarantino, and to compliment the film for its 'soundtrack, with its memorable high-energy tracks that greatly complement the chaos onscreen.' He concludes by saying that if 'the life of the industry has been drained and replaced with rote, cookiecutter shows-by-committee, Redline shows a path out.'[19]
Nicolas Penedo of the French magazine Animeland describes it as the 'Paris-Dakar revisited à la Ōban Star-Racers',[20] a remake of Hanna-BarberaWacky Races with arts inspired from Jack Kirby comics and know-how, rhythm and energy inherent of the best Japanese anime movies.[21] The reviewer praises the animation quality as breathtaking,[22] and declares that Takeshi Koike made an homage to comics and films of the 70s and 80s.[22] On the negative, he notes the lack of scenario stating 'Don't hope to find any scenario in Redline'.[22]
Kwenton Bellette and Peter Martin reviewed Redline for Twitch Film. Bellette describes it as a 'truly out of this world experience', 'Speed Racer on crack' and praised the supporting characters for being memorable and the background galaxy made of different races and creeds to be very solid.[23] Martin expresses that 'it feels like every centimeter of every frame is filled with some kind of kinetic color or action or bit of business, making it an experience that is sure to overload the senses' and asserts that writer Katsuhito Ishii succeeds at making a feature-length anime as insane as his film Funky Forest.[24]
Jon Liang of UK Anime Network comments that 'A sense of the cool and outrageous is seeped into every pore of the design, .. exaggerated is an understatement here', and notes that the film's 'cinema-quality smooth animation' makes 'even the most alien of things move naturally and the sense of speed that is often achieved is frequently mind-blowing.' He remarks that 'the visuals and over-the-top action will most likely overload sensitive brain cells,' but concludes by calling Redline 'an incredibly exciting cinematic experience that doesn't take itself at all seriously.'[25]
The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported that 50% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 6 reviews, with an average rating of 6/10.[26]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^'REDLINE'. British Board of Film Classification. September 29, 2011. Retrieved June 22, 2019.
- ^'English-language promotional film poster for Redline', Leeds International Film Festival Free Guide (24th ed.) (published October 2010), 2010
- ^Kelts, Roland (7 August 2009). 'Anime with Texas roots to debut in Switzerland'. The Daily Yomiuri. Yomiuri Group. Retrieved 21 November 2010.
- ^'Redline'. Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved September 28, 2015.
- ^ ab'Redline Opens in California, Japan in Same October Weekend'. Anime News Network. September 22, 2010. Retrieved September 26, 2010.
- ^ abcMaughan, Tim (May 19, 2010). 'Redline – Review'. Anime News Network. Retrieved September 26, 2010.
- ^'Crew: Subbed Redline to Open Throughout U.S. in 2011'. Anime News Network. October 6, 2010. Retrieved October 6, 2010.
- ^'Koike, Madhouse's Redline Pulled from Annecy Fest Slate'. Anime News Network. May 20, 2009. Retrieved September 28, 2010.
- ^'Redline'. Locarno International Film Festival. Retrieved September 28, 2010.
- ^ ab'Redline's N. American Debut at Austin's Fantastic Fest'. Anime News Network. August 27, 2010. Retrieved September 28, 2010.
- ^'Manga All-nighter'. festivalBiz Group. Retrieved September 28, 2010.
- ^'UK Anime All-Nighter at Sci-Fi-London Film Festival 2010'. Anime News Network. April 19, 2010. Retrieved September 28, 2010.
- ^'Film index: Redline'. Annecy International Animated Film Festival. Retrieved September 28, 2010.
- ^'RedLine'. Madman Entertainment. Retrieved September 26, 2010.
- ^'Redline'. lovesanimation.com. August 11, 2010. Archived from the original on November 7, 2010. Retrieved November 7, 2010.
- ^'REDLINEオリジナルサウンドトラック/ ジェイムス下地' (in Japanese). good-beat.com. Retrieved November 7, 2010.
- ^REDLINEオリジナルサウンドトラック (in Japanese). Oricon. Retrieved November 7, 2010.
- ^'オリコンランキング情報サービス「you大樹」' (in Japanese). Oricon. Retrieved Oct 24, 2010.
- ^Zoth, Thomas (September 24, 2010). 'Redline Movie Review: Madhouse takes racing to the next level'. Mania.com. Retrieved September 26, 2010.
- ^Penedo, Nicolas (July–August 2010). 'Redline Les fous du volants'. Animeland (in French) (163). ISSN1148-0807. Retrieved October 1, 2010.
le Paris-Dakar est revisité façon Ôban Star-Racers!
- ^Penedo, Nicolas (July–August 2010). 'Redline Les fous du volants'. Animeland (in French) (163). ISSN1148-0807. Retrieved October 1, 2010.
remake des Fous du volants, ce vieux dessin animé d'HANA & BARBERA, mais matiné d'un graphisme inspiré des comics book de Jack Kirby, le tout avec un savoir faire, un rythme et une énergie propres au meilleurs films d'animation nippons!
- ^ abcPenedo, Nicolas (July–August 2010). 'Redline Les fous du volants'. Animeland (in French) (163). ISSN1148-0807. Retrieved October 1, 2010.
- ^Bellette, Kwenton (September 16, 2010). 'Reel Anime 2010: Red Line'. Twitch Film. Retrieved September 26, 2010.
- ^Martin, Peter (September 24, 2010). 'Fantastic Fest 2010: Redline Review'. Twitch Film. Retrieved October 7, 2010.
- ^Liang, Jon. 'Anime Review: Redline'. UK Anime Network. Etharius. Retrieved September 26, 2010.
- ^'Redline (2011)'. Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved June 22, 2019.
External links[edit]
Redline Anime Filme Download
- Official Japanese Web site(in Japanese)
- Redline (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Redline on IMDb
- 'A Look at Redline with Takeshi Koike' -(ANN)
- 'Redline Blu-ray review' -(ANN)
| Night Warriors: Darkstalkers' Revenge | |
| Original video animation | |
| Directed by | Masashi Ikeda Animation directors: Hideki Takayama Hiroyuki Tanaka |
|---|---|
| Produced by | Masayuki Miyashita Kenichiro Zaizen Masao Maruyama |
| Written by | Tatsuhiko Urahata |
| Music by | Kow Otani Eikichi Yazawa (end theme) |
| Studio | Madhouse |
| Licensed by | |
| Released | March 21, 1997 – March 27, 1998 |
| Runtime | 40 minutes (each) |
| Episodes | 4 (List of episodes) |
Night Warriors: Darkstalkers' Revenge (originally titled Vampire Hunter: The Animated Series (ヴァンパイアハンター THE ANIMATED SERIES) in Japan) is a four-episode OVAanime series by Madhouse Studios under license from Capcom, directed by Masashi Ikeda[1] and originally released in 1997–1998. It is an adaptation of Capcom's Darkstalkers series of video games.
Plot[edit]
In the midst of a war between the families of Demitri Maximoff and Morrigan Aensland for control of the Demon World, alien invader Pyron arrives on Earth and plans to take it over by taking out those who stand a chance of stopping him, namely the Darkstalkers. Meanwhile, dhampir Donovan Baine seeks to rid himself of the cursed blood which runs through his veins.
Four of the original Darkstalkers, Anakaris, Rikuo, Sasquatch and Victor, were featured in the intro but not in the OVA's main storyline, apparently having been killed by Pyron in a flashback sequence shown in the beginning of the fourth episode.
Characters[edit]
| Character | Japanese VA | English VA |
|---|---|---|
| Morrigan Aensland | Rei Sakuma | Kathleen Barr |
| Demitri Maximoff | Akio Ōtsuka | Paul Dobson |
| Donovan | Unshō Ishizuka | Ari Solomon |
| Felicia | Yukana | Janyse Jaud |
| Gallon (Jon Talbain) | Fumihiko Tachiki | Alvin Sanders |
| Hannya (Bishamon) | Masashi Ebara | Don Brown/Michael Dobson |
| Phobos (Huitzil) | Jūrōta Kosugi | Ward Perry |
| Pyron | Shinji Ogawa | David Kaye |
| Lei-Lei (Hsien-Ko) | Yūko Miyamura | Nicole Oliver |
| Lin-Lin (Mei-Ling) | Maya Okamoto | Jane Perry |
| Anita | Akiko Yajima | Andrea Libman |
| Zabel Zarock (Lord Raptor) | Kōichi Yamadera | Scott McNeil |
| Lei-Lei and Lin-Lin's mother | Kumiko Takizawa | Kathleen Barr |
Episodes[edit]
- 'Return of the Darkstalkers'
- 'Blood of the Darkstalkers, Power of the Darkstalkers'
- 'Pyron Descending'
- 'For Whom They Fight'
Production[edit]
Night Warriors: Darkstalkers' Revenge is based on the Darkstalkers series of gothic-themed fighting games by Capcom. Characters were designed by Shūkō Murase and the animation was done by Asami Endo and Yoshinori Kanada. The ending theme for the series, 'Trouble Man' by Eikichi Yazawa, was also used as the opening theme in the Japanese home port of the video game Darkstalkers: The Night Warriors.
Release[edit]
By the time the first episode of the series was released in Japan, Viz Media had secured the U.S. rights and announced plans to release the series later in 1997.[2] Despite this, Toshifumi Yoshida and Trish Ledoux did not produce an English-dubbed version until 1999. The series was released on VHS, DVD and UMD in 2000. The North American anime company Media Blasters distributed it via rental kiosks in 2010.[3] The series was re-released on DVD in 2012 by Madman Entertainment.[4]Discotek Media released a remastered version on DVD in both language versions in the fall of 2015.[5]
The original soundtrack CD for Night Warriors: Darkstalkers' Revenge: The Animated Series (B00004SPLQ) was released in the United States by Viz Music in 1998. The anime series' manga and drama CD adaptations of were published only in Japan.
Reception[edit]
Nigh Warriors: Darkstalkers' Revenge received good reviews in the Western game magazines, with scores including B+ from GameFan in America[6] and 4/5 from Consoles + in France.[7] Bryn Williams of Gamers' Republic too gave it a score of B+, praising its 'superb' animation 'with vivid colors and smooth motion,'[8] as well as 'gorgeous' character designs.[9]Dave Halverson from the same magazine opined it was 'the finest video game-based anime produced to date,' citing animation quality, 'spectacular' and 'breathtaking' art and vibrant colors; the English dubbing, 'while not perfect,' was described as very good.[10]
Darkstalkers is featured in the 2009 book 500 Essential Anime Movies by Helen McCarthy. Richard Coombs of Blistered Thumbs ranked it as the seventh best video game cartoon in 2011.[11]
References[edit]
- ^'Anime: Nightwarriors, the Anime: Interview'. Web.archive.org. 2001-03-05. Archived from the original on March 5, 2001. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
- ^'Darkstalkers Anime Answers Call of the Bloodthirsty'. Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 95. Ziff Davis. June 1997. p. 22.
- ^'Media Blasters Launches Anime DVD/Blu-ray Kiosks - News'. Anime News Network. 2010-10-14. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
- ^'Night Warriors: Darkstalkers' Revenge'. Madman.com.au. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
- ^'VIDEO: Discotek Previews 'IGPX,' 'Darkstalkers' 'Lupin vs Conan,' and 'Iria' Releases - UPDATED'. Crunchyroll. 2015-08-20. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
- ^'AnimeFan'. GameFan. 6–2: 92–93. February 1998.
- ^'Vampire Hunter, the Animated Serie'. Consoles +. 64: 50–51.
- ^'Gamers Republic - No. 03 (1998-08)(Millennum Publications)(US)'. Archive.org. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
- ^Gamers' Republic issue 8 (July 1999), page 106.
- ^Dave, Halverson (June 1998). 'Anime Republic'. Gamers' Republic. 1.
- ^'The Top 10 BEST Video Game Cartoons - Blistered Thumbs'. Web.archive.org. 2013-02-18. Archived from the original on February 18, 2013. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
External links[edit]
| Wikiquote has quotations related to: Night Warriors: Darkstalkers' Revenge (anime) |
- Night Warriors: Darkstalkers' Revenge (OVA) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
