Narutaki & Hisui VS. 2012

From a secret location in a nuclear submarine with a Q-band satellite uplink the ballots are being tallied for the most important awards show in anime history. The powerful and reclusive Hisui and Narutaki take time away from solving the greatest mysteries in the world to weigh in on the best and the worst of anime and manga this year. Shows given the thumbs up will become international best-sellers and titles that are ridiculed will become pariahs to shun for all time. So sit back and relax as we process the HAIPE encryption on the signal and announce the results.

NOTE: Hisui did not pick certain green-eyed blonde-haired swordswomen as to give other characters a chance to shine. Otherwise he might just pick her every year and eventually force Narutaki to take action.

Best Anime of 2012
(Proof Anime is Not Dead … For Now)

Fate/Zero Season 2 by ufotable Look. If you expected anything else here you have just not been paying attention for the last 5 years. Fate/Zero season 2 built on everything from last year and had it all come to a very satisfying conclusion. Everything ties together leading into Fate/Stay Night which means that most (but not all) of the character’s fates were set in stone. Despite that much of the conclusion was preordained there was still fun and a little heartbreaking to see how exactly it all wrapped up. Also I LIKED  Fate/Stay Night so it is not like I was sad to see Shiro at the end.

We finally get Saber on a motorcycle so all is right with the world. Now all we need is a Fate/Hollow Ataraxia anime. And maybe a remake of the original series by ufotable.

Runner up: Kids on the Slope by MAPPA American anime fans have wanted to see Shinichiro Watanabe direct a new anime but he has always been far more popular in the West than he has ever been at home. This series has a unique setting that combines the nostalgic feel of  60s Japan with a rebellious undercurrent of jazz. But the heart of the story is three friends who come together due to a mutual appreciation of music and drift apart due to various circumstances. It is not as energetic as Samurai Champloo or as western as Cowboy Bebop but it is a touching story that has a good chance of being an anime that remains a part of the lexicon of fandom of western fans for years to come.

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Space Brothers by A-1 Pictures Space Brothers is a show that warmed me from the inside out, as it presented us with a very special type of dream: the lost kind, the kind you thought you had given up on. Each episode pulled (and continues to pull) my heart-strings as characters pursued their aspirations and made us all part of their dream of space exploration. My desire is so great for Mutta, Kenji, Seirika, Hibito, and many others along the way to succeed that each triumph makes me exhale a breath I didn’t realize I was holding. Space Brothers is quiet but powerful.

Runner up: Tsuritama by A-1 Pictures Talk about a show that took me by surprise, if anyone told me I’d fall in love with a fishing anime I wouldn’t have believed them. But no one told me, it happened all on its own because the friendship between these four guys is irresistible. These guys are each quite different from the other, but, as the saying goes, defending the earth from an alien that causes people to dance uncontrollably make for some strange bedfellows.

A-1 Pictures clearly impressed me this year.

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REPOST – The Speakeasy #006: The Black Russian and the White Russian, The Art of Adaption

Drink #006: The Black Russian and the White Russian,
The Art of Adaption

A majority of the anime produced is based on a preexisting work. A good deal of shows are adapted from manga but there is also anime based on light novels, video games, literature, and even some more unusual sources. But not all anime is adapted equally. Assuming that the source being adapted is solid, what makes a good anime adaption and where can adaptation go wrong? We will be talking about the different philosophies used in adapting works and the strengths and weaknesses that comes with any strategy. We will also try and discover why the adapting an anime into a manga seems to fail so often.

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And now your helpful bartenders at The Speakeasy present your drink:

BLACK RUSSIAN
5.0 cl Vodka
2.0 cl Coffee liqueur
Pour the ingredients into the old fashioned glass filled with ice cubes. Stir gently.

WHITE RUSSIAN
5.0 cl Vodka
2.0 cl Coffee liqueur
3.0 cl Fresh cream
Pour coffee liqueur and vodka directly into old fashioned glass filled with ice. Float fresh cream on the top and stir in slowly.

All the Titles Fit to License, 2012 Edition

This year we started a new monthly column, The Line-Up, where we listed all the new (and rescued) U.S. licenses, newly streaming titles for the U.S., and new anime and manga news from Japan. One of the fruits of this is having a clear, albeit incredibly long, snapshot of all the series picked up in 2012 for U.S. distribution.

Looking at this, it is hard to feel like the stateside industry is struggling. But then again, it would be interesting to see a list like this for some of those prime time years in the mid-2000s, maybe it would be double this!

Some industrious fellow could also probably break this down into genres to see what is in and out of favor.

Let us know in the comments if we missed any so we can add them.

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