Difference between revisions of "Vampire Hunter D"

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Latest revision as of 02:30, 30 May 2011

Vampire Hunter D
HunterD.jpg
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Original Manga Hideyuki Kikuchi
Director/Artist Toyoo Ashida
Format Anime (OVA)
Made By Ashi Productions
Episode Length 80 Minutes
# of Episodes 1

Genre

Horror, Action

Sum it up in a Sentence

In a dark era only a dark hero can prevail.

Main Description

In the year 12090 ad the earth has fallen into the clutches of ruthless vampires and humans are enslaved by a corrupted feudal system prey to a mockery of freedom and justice. Only one being has dared to challenge the cruel authority of these vicious arrogant immortals the mysterious vampire hunter called D.

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Personal Opinions

TannhauserGate

Often recommended as a first anime experience, D was one of the first anime movies to get an American release. Vampire Hunter D is about- er, you know Blade? Same main character, essentially. He's a half-vampire who has to kill vampires with his sword. Only this half-vampire's right hand talks to him, and he lives in a post-apolacyptic world that looks lot like medieval Europe. D is dark, moody, and depressing- both the character and the film he's in. The whole adventure is a little forgettable, but it's a decent mix of genres from horror to sci-fi, and it's one of the easiest-to-find pieces of anime in the US. A staple of any collection.

Robert Denby

Seeing this in high school, long after it's initial popularity, it didn't really make much of an impression on me. After seeing a particularly weird scene from it someone had linked to me, I rented and watched it again. I have absolutely no idea why I didn't think much of it before.

Although I wouldn't really call this good per se, it's an experience equivalent to watching something like "Zardoz". It's hypnotically weird, and constantly topping itself in terms of it's design and strange visuals.

"Bloodlust", the theatrical sequel, is decent; a more conventionally-plotted but still visually imaginative piece of work.