Difference between revisions of "Rurouni Kenshin"

From The ADTRWiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Main description added, stub tag removed.)
(Keyboard Kid)
Line 57: Line 57:
 
==Personal Opinions==
 
==Personal Opinions==
 
===Keyboard Kid===
 
===Keyboard Kid===
While I'm not a huge fan of shonen, I think Kenshin is a great series. Kenshin is a great character, and many of the villains that appear for more than a few episodes are memorable. Naturally, I watched this on TV when I was younger. I decided to revisit it a few months ago, and still thought it was amazing. The Meiji arc contains a lot of good individual episodes showing Kenshin's new way of life, while the Kyoto arc has a lot of nonstop back-to-back fighting. The OVA series are superb, especially Tsuiokuhen (Trust and Betrayal). The final season of the anime is horrible, even for filler standards, and ended up being canceled before the end of the manga could be animated. The final arc is fully contained in the manga (volumes 18-28), and is worth a read if you enjoyed the anime.  
+
While I'm not a huge fan of shonen, I think Kenshin is a solid, enjoyable series. Kenshin is a great character, and many of the villains that appear for more than a few episodes are memorable (conversely, one-shot bad guys aren't so awesome here). Naturally, I watched this on TV when I was younger. I decided to revisit it a few months ago, and still thought it was superb. The Meiji arc (episode 1-26 or so) contains a lot of good individual episodes showing Kenshin's way of life and developing the story. The Kyoto arc has a lot of nonstop back-to-back fighting, but it never quite comes off like tournament shows (Yu Yu Hakusho, Dragon Ball's tournaments). The OVA series are superb, especially Tsuiokuhen (Trust and Betrayal). The final season of the anime is horrible, even for filler standards, and got the show canceled before the end of the manga could be animated. The final arc is fully contained in the manga (volumes 18-28), and is worth a read if you enjoyed the anime. The original volumes are dirt cheap, and they've even been reprinted in a nice 3-in-1 oversized edition as well.
  
 
==Links==
 
==Links==
 
[http://www.sonymusic.co.jp/Movie/TV/Kenshin/ Sony's Kenshin site] (Japanese)
 
[http://www.sonymusic.co.jp/Movie/TV/Kenshin/ Sony's Kenshin site] (Japanese)

Revision as of 04:02, 4 May 2011

Rurouni Kenshin
Kenshin.jpg
Original Manga Nobuhiro Watsuki
Director/Artist Kazuhiro Furuhashi
Format Anime (TV), Manga
Made By Studio Gallop
Episode Length 25 minutes
# of Episodes 95; 1 Movie; 2 OVA
# of Volumes 28

Genre

Shounen, Action

Sum it up in a Sentence

Rurouni Kenshin is a story about the eponymous Kenshin Himura, a legendary swordsman wandering Japan to atone for assassinations he committed during the Meiji Revolution.

Note: The two OVA series licensed by ADV were released as "Samurai X" in the US.

Main Description

During the Bakumatsu, a legendary assassin known as the Hitokiri Battousai merciless cut down those who supported the Tokugawa shogunate. But once the conflict ended, he vanished without a trace.

Some 10 years later, a kendo practitioner named Kaoru Kamiya has a serendipitous meeting with a wandering swordsman who she initially believed to be a murderer who had been attacking her sword school. She is shocked to find that not only is he (Kenshin Himura) not the man she's looking for, but the sword he carries is strangely reversed; the blade is on the inner edge, ostensibly preventing the sword from cutting anyone. In fact the murderer she had been looking for was claiming to be the Hitokri Battousai himself, a fact that is refuted once the reverse-blade-wielding swordsman reveals himself to in fact be the Battousai. After helping Kaoru defeat the impostor, he stays by her side to help her and their friends in times of need. After a life of bloodshed, the former assassin Kenshin now fights for peace while vowing to never take a human life ever again.

If You Liked This, You Might Like...

Personal Opinions

Keyboard Kid

While I'm not a huge fan of shonen, I think Kenshin is a solid, enjoyable series. Kenshin is a great character, and many of the villains that appear for more than a few episodes are memorable (conversely, one-shot bad guys aren't so awesome here). Naturally, I watched this on TV when I was younger. I decided to revisit it a few months ago, and still thought it was superb. The Meiji arc (episode 1-26 or so) contains a lot of good individual episodes showing Kenshin's way of life and developing the story. The Kyoto arc has a lot of nonstop back-to-back fighting, but it never quite comes off like tournament shows (Yu Yu Hakusho, Dragon Ball's tournaments). The OVA series are superb, especially Tsuiokuhen (Trust and Betrayal). The final season of the anime is horrible, even for filler standards, and got the show canceled before the end of the manga could be animated. The final arc is fully contained in the manga (volumes 18-28), and is worth a read if you enjoyed the anime. The original volumes are dirt cheap, and they've even been reprinted in a nice 3-in-1 oversized edition as well.

Links

Sony's Kenshin site (Japanese)