Showing posts with label Is. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Is. Show all posts

From I"s/I"s Pure Now Streaming


I know, I know - I'm slacking on reviews again (not to mention the new banner braves gave me to put up). ^_^;

For now though, I'm dropping in to point out something I was shocked to see happen. Viz, almost a year or more after releasing them on DVD, have put up both I"s OVAs for free on Hulu. You can watch them here, but you have to have an account since they're rated TV-MA (which likely means they do include the Delusional Diaries). It should be noted however, that this is the subbed versions that are streaming.

As much as I hate to bite the hand that's feeding me, I've got to say it's about time Viz did something for the title, though very little since I only found out about the streaming thanks to a post on Toonzone. Back when the DVD was forthcoming, they issued no statements at first, and we only had vague rumors to go off of thanks to the role of Iori appearing on Erika Weinsten's online resume. After that, the DVD was shoved onto shelves with no advertising what-so-ever, not even a page about it in their Shonen Jump magazine. The release is completely bare-bones as well, so far to the point that there's not even music on the menus, no behind-the-scenes features like even Buso Renkin got (not to mention no sign of the Japanese behind-the-scenes that were on the original DVDs), and not even a trailer online to raise awareness.

No, in fact it seems at times like Viz didn't even WANT this to sell. I'm sure it wouldn't have done that great anyway, seeing as how it's only 8 episodes all together, but a little advertising would have gone a long way, and have left me a happier fan. It's my only really great rant against them.

Anyway, check out the streams and let me know what you guys think, I'm always up for meeting another I"s fan. Terata - er, Gyt out.

Kiichi Nakai


If we had a “Most Underrated Japanese Actor” category here at JapaneseCultureGoNow!, 48-year-old Kiichi Nakai would easily qualify—although the guy has been nominated for and in fact won a swag of Japanese Academy Awards, including best actor.

He also happens to be the son of the late Keiji Sada, one of Japan’s more venerated stars of the silver screen before his untimely demise in 1964, at just 37 years of age.

As an actor himself, son Nakai blossomed as the sensational focal-point of Fukuro no Shiro (Owl’s Castle, 1999), possibly Japan’s most underrated must-see silly ninja movie. While he was nominated for that role, Nakai had previously won the Japan Academy Best Supporting Actor award in 1994 for the drama Shijushichinin no Shikaku (47 Ronin), directed by the late, great Kon Ichikawa, who died just last year.

Two years ago, Nakai sparkled in his supporting role in the high-profile Takuya Kimura (SMAP) vehicle, Hero, for director Masayuki Suzuki.

Incidentally that movie's playing on the telly here in Tokyo tonight - which is the reason I (somehow) remembered to write here about Nakai-san, by extension.

The actor earlier worked with Suzuki on the hilarious 'Samurai Cellular' episode of Tales of the Unusual (2000) in which Nakai played Oishi Kuranosuke, the leader of those 47 Ronin mentioned above - and touted a mobile phone instead of a katana blade.

Ditching such comic antics and going instead for a meatier role, Nakai conveyed a knowing sense of the dramatic in Mibu Gishi Den (When the Last Sword is Drawn, 2003) for which he won the Japan Academy Best Actor trophy, and narrated the tale in director Zhang Yimou’s Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles (2005).

He was also the standout in last year’s patchy comedy-drama JirochĂ´ Sangokushi (Samurai Gangsters) and shone even in the lackluster, rather disappointing live-action version of Osamu Tezuka’s Dororo (2007) - playing the mean dad who sells 48 of our hero Hyakkimaru’s body-parts (to demons no less).

These days Nakaii is often seen on the telly hawking Visa card brands and drinks, but I live in hope that he'll return to fine acting fettle shortly.

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