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2
OVA
Finished Airing
Dec 17, 2011 to Jun 23, 2012
A large scale remake of the time after Kenshin leaves Tokyo up until before the inferno of Kyoto.
4.7/10
Average Review Score
29%
Recommend It
7
Reviews Worldwide
The most succinct way to describe Shin Kyoto Hen would be: "glossed over." What else would you expect from a two hour retelling that attempted to cover 27 episodes of the original series? That's not to say, however, that the OVAs are entirely without merit. ART The environments are strikingly beautiful. The characters are modernized: cleaner and redesigned to better suit the current aesthetic, but unfortunately look washed out and unfinished when set against the detail of the backgrounds. Cinematography is done very well; the usage of color and light, particularly contrasting Kenshin's meetings with Misao and Shishio, is a nice touch. Animation was hitand miss. Where the TV show would use light and sound to indicate a superhuman move being performed, Cage of Flames impresses with full animations; noteworthy in Kenshinâs confrontation with Misao and battle with Chou. The fights in Song of the Light, however, lack the impact of those in the series. (Saitouâs evaluation fight with Kenshin comes to mind.) An argument can be made for the finesse of Kenshin vs Soujiroâs shukuchi duel, but the gatotsu and the futae no kiwami just donât have the same raw explosiveness. MUSIC The soundtrack is still excellent. While the renditions lack their predecessorâs quaint appeal, they are more intricate in timbre and more âcinematic.â Familiar themes are used accordingly and donât fail to accentuate the mood of a scene or remind us that this is indeed Rurouni Kenshin. Just donât expect something as amazing as Tsuiokuhenâs OST. STORY *SPOILERS* Much of the gag humor and lightheartedness of the series was omitted in favor of a serious tone that accurately reflects the gravity of the arc. Studio Deen was aware of the age of the RuroKen fanbase, and thus had no qualms about showing the brutal reality of the fights and Shishioâs world; things that were implied and understood but not displayed by the series. This is where Cage of Flames truly shows its potential, setting all the scenes for conflict, building tension, and acknowledging all the right events from the original anime. As if discouraged by the nostalgia-biased criticism of OVA1, the staff seemed to give up in Song of the Light. Sloppy animation aside, every character seems deflated. Both writing and delivery are unnatural given how little the development of their camaraderie is depicted. (I did like the more mature Misao, though; more convincing for the role of Okashira.) Aoshi and Shishio, obviously keeping their desire to strike in check in the first OVA, never demonstrate that catharsis, wasting all the anticipation. As for how everything plays out... The absence of so many things (and members of the Juppongatana) completely overshadows the version of the story they attempt to tell. Kenshin and Sanosuke never meet up; Sano is instead exclusively partnered with Saitou. Sanoâs parallelism with Anji is not explained. Hikoâs arrival at the Aoiya is far less grand, because Yahiko never proves himself against Henya or demonstrates his impressive spirit. Soujiroâs internal struggle to reconcile Kenshinâs and Shishioâs philosophies is barely there. Saitou does not show his loyalty to Aku Soku Zan & police fighting Usui. In fact all the duels that are glossed over donât take place in Mt. Hiei, even though it was shown in Cage of Flames. I can go on, but the greatest wtf of the OVA and absolutely unforgivable omission is that Kenshin never uses his ougiâŠevery major fight is won handily and anticlimactically. The conclusion of Watsukiâs Kyoto Arc is fundamentally altered and weakened. *One thing did pique my interest: Saitou didnât disappear in the blaze; he escapes with Soujirou. What might happen should the prodigy be taken under the wolfâs wing? And so our heroes return (heroes being Kenshin and Aoshi, wtf happened to Sanosuke?) While Studio Deen apparently forgot how to make shounen/seinen fights epic, they do reunions passably well. (Kaoru finding Kenshin in OVA1, Misao welcoming Aoshi back.) TL;DR Longtime fans of RK, Cage of Flames is worth checking out. Song of the Light is a waste of the vaâs reprising their roles. Newcomers, donât bother, watch the series, but feel free to stop before the Christian Knights and FengShui >_>
Click an episode to read its synopsis.
what's the point of this? Every five minutes or so I had to wonder that. Why would you have the sword collector and not give him swords? Why have over the top techniques and not show the name painted across the screen? Why reanimate and exclude the animation intensive scenes? Why have Kaoru and Yahiko if you take out all their scenes? Why have Kenshin's master and super fast Soujiro if there is no secret super fast final technique? Why have Soujiro loose his calm over a moral issue if you don't show whis moral issues? Overall this feels like someone with a plot synopsiswas asked to highlight the plot points on their first read without take backs. (For example you'd assume at first that Chou is filler, and he originally was, but his character developed enough to put him in charge of the epilogue. Actually, all the characters that earned an epilogue are no longer part of the story.) Ruroken always had some rhythm issues with Watsuki improvising way too much along the way. The artwork of the manga and some great episode directors made the originals work, but if there's a remake that changes events they could had fixed a lot of stuff. So, what's the point of it? Was there really a need to do it this way? I think they wanted to capitalize on the live action films to promote the original, so they took out some sort of middle ground to motivate people to check it out. But the movies can do whatever they want because they are for a new audience and being live action you have a lower limit to push the fights before you lose the audience. There's nothing gain in this adaptation of an adaptation. I would had been happier with 90 mins of the final fight, but that would make it exclusive for fans who still care about it and are willing to rewatch it. Maybe a retelling from Shishio's perspective would had been attractive to people who watched the anime/movies while being significantly shorter. But Ruroken without fights is just really boring, and there are literally no fights for more than an hour. And the ones there are after that fall flat because the motivations are said out loud 2 minutes before being refuted if there's any build up at all. Usui constantly cock blocking Shishio was probably the only extra content that I sincerely loved. All historical elements were taken out (the burning of buddhist temples, prostitutes officially being defined as farm animals, the british economical control through Hong Kong, and so on) with all the great dead scenes. How do you dumb down an action show for 12 year olds? What's even the point?
Iâm not going to use any arbitrary numbers because that wonât provide an accurate representation of what I just watched. One thing Iâd advise before ever picking this title up is be sure you watched the original Rurouni Kenshin series prior. If you donât you might be completely undone before you get to some of the juicier bits of this two part series. For everyone whose unaware of the story surrounding the New Kyoto Arc in Kenshin these films(?) are hard to follow and donât convey enough of what made the original run of the arc so satisfying. Now Iâm not going to waste time arguingwhat was done better in the original versus this adaptation, Iâll just get straight to it, itâs fast. The beginning of this series plunges you into the action of the story (with exposition, oh boy) and doesnât really take its time to explain why the characters are all jumbled around, why Kenshin abandoned his friends, whose dead, whose not and thatâs because it had to sum up the 30+ episodes that made up Rurouni Kenshinâs major arc in (give or take) 90 minutes. The soundtrack captures our wandering spirit (with a tinge of that sweet violin) just like the good olâ Kenshin and Studio Deenâs fight choreography is great when Shishio and Kenshin finally get to have it out in [undisclosed location to avoid spoilers this time], so watch it for that even if itâs brief (the other fights are good too). Like any good fight scene though, context is necessary to drive emotions home and these films(?) donât have time to provide context. Or at least not enough to make everything thatâs happening feel justified. Who am I recommending this to? People who watched (and/or loved) Rurouni Kenshin, because theyâre the only ones whoâll get the whole picture. Itâd be a pretty confusing watch otherwise.
As a fan of all things Rurouni Kenshin I was quite excited to see an updated two episode OVA remake of the Kyoto arc of the original series involving Shinshio Makoto as the bad guy, probably made to coincide with the release of the live action film. After all Rurouni Kenshin inspired me to take up martial arts. I have to say I was left disappointed. Disregarding the fact that the two episodes were released so far apart, the first episode was good but the second felt rushed like the producers were trying to squeeze in as much as possible and as a result some ofthe story was different from the original series, the voice acting was lackluster and some of the characters just looked odd because of the modern animation techniques. However, the main charge I would aim against this OVA is that by using modern animation techniques much of the charm of the original series was lost. All in all an unworthy addition to the Rurouni Kenshin saga. I gave this a 7 but it really is a fan's 7. I would imagine most would give it much lower,
Rurouni Kenshin New Kyoto Arc is quite disappointing and not something I can recommend. Cramming a 30 episode arc into 90 minutes isnât the best idea and did not work out. They drastically rewrote key elements and set pieces, as well as omitting characters and taking severe creative liberty to condense it for time. The OVA took a darker turn which ended up contradicting many of the characters and forgoing their development. The most egregious example of which is the main protagonist himself, Kenshin. He is way more brutal in this appearance, for some reason. Nearly all the fights are inferior compared to the originalseries. They do not have the proper pacing nor emotional buildup. Sure it has better animation. If this is your first experience of the Kyoto Arc do not let it be your first. Watch the anime or read the manga instead. The way it was meant to be experienced.