A yuri fan's blog containing reviews and impressions of yuri, as well as general silly fannishness. The word "boke" in the title comes from the tsukkomi and boke in manzai comedy.
Friday, October 1, 2010
Anime Review: Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha StrikerS
I knew that I would love Nanoha StrikerS, and, surprise, I did.
StrikerS takes place ten years after A's, with Nanoha, Fate, Hayate, and the Wolkenritter living in Mid-Childa (i.e. the magic users' world) after having worked their way up the ranks of the Time-Space Administration Bureau. Nanoha is training new mages as a wonderfully (and not unexpectedly) hard ass combat instructor in the HQ Forces, along with Fate and Vita. Hayate is working as a Lieutenant Colonel and, along with the Wolkenritter, still shaking off the stigma of being associated with the Book of Darkness incident. Hayate forms a new unit, the Sixth Mobile Division, including Nanoha, Fate, and their students Subaru, Teana, Caro, and Erio.
About halfway through the series they find a little girl named Vivio who, for various reasons, is the key for the grand master plan of this season's villain, mad scientist Jail Scaglietti. (A criminal Fate has been hunting for years who, ironically, helped Precia create the technology that created Fate.) Nanoha and Fate, who live together (and despite their presumably decent salaries and the spacious size of their apartment, are sharing one bed- just putting that out there), start taking care of Vivio and she starts calling them both "Mama." (The evidence is piling up, Watson.)
Scaglietti's underlings, the Numbers, attack a TSAB press conference, making a wreck out of the military and kidnapping Vivio and Subaru's sister Ginga. Nanoha and the rest of the Sixth Mobile Division need to stop Scaglietti's plan- involving unethical human experiments, reviving the technology of a lost civilization, etc, business as usual for Nanoha- and save Vivio and Ginga.
Of course they're successful and everybody gets their chance to shine in a heady culmination of fight sequences. I loved seeing Fate go into sonic-mode and the part where Nanoha located Quattro and Quattro was like, "Dear god, she's going to shoot through the ship!!" (If Nanoha wants to "befriend" you, she'll do it.) Tea was pretty awesome, taking on three Numbers at once. I'm also especially happy that the Wolkenritter got their share of battle glory- particularly Vita destroying the engine room and every single scene that Signum was in. lol The ending was great, giving us a peek into the characters' lives ahead yet again.
Along with everything that I've already written about, I adore Nanoha for having a strongly likeable protagonist who ages. And gets a job. That she likes. (Nanoha pretty much has it made.)
Nanoha's ongoing themes of "how you were born (or who you were born to) isn't the end game for who you can be", that people deserve second chances, and that families form when people care about each other strongly enough, regardless of whether they're blood-related or not, also provide an appealing heart underneath all of the sci-fi/fantasy trappings and explosions.
Art: Quality ranges from C to B.
Story: B+ Conceptually, there is little that is original about Nanoha (like most shows), but through some kind of alchemy...
Overall: its elements coalesce into a winning formula. For me, at least. A
Woot, StrikerS!
ReplyDeleteThat show made me rethink the lines of "Magical Girl Beams..."
It was great seeing Nanoha, Hayate, and Fate all older and mature. I gotta say, Fate....DAMN! I also loved the Mama Fate and Mama Nanoha dynamic when it came to Vivio. In way, they kind of switched roles...(personal opinion) Nanoha was all like, "She fell but she's gotta get back up on her own, she can do it." however...Fate was so motherly to Vivio that it was damn near adorable. Not to mention, how they treat each other...its so sweet. I believe in the subtext between the two! I can't help it!
The newbies that came up definitely held their own, I liked Subaru most...though I never did understand much about her skates, it was still awesome to see though. Teana was pretty likeable too even if I felt she was TOO serious but it works in comparison to Subaru. Caro and Erio...SO CUTE! I loved how Caro was like..."Leave my home alone...SUMMON THE DRAGON!" If I saw any 10 year old kid pull that out of a some sort of magic dimension, I'll let her have the planet. Great fight scenes...though the animation did kind of range to great to...lackluster. Overall, I loved every minute of it!
My one question has always been..."What the F happened to Nanoha's family?? What did they just suddenly die off somewhere??"
I loved the Mama Fate x Mama Nanoha dynamic also. X3 I believe in the subtext as well, comrade! *waves yuri flag*
ReplyDeleteMy explanation of their different parenting styles (yes, it was adorable to see them gently bicker about it): Because Precia was such a rough, terrible parent (if she can even be called that) to Fate, Fate is more prone to being hesitant towards being strict, hence her being extra-coddling towards Vivio. :-) (Same with how she had a soft spot for Caro and Erio and became their guardian.) Nanoha always had a bit of a hard-edged streak in her befr- I mean, fighting style, which served her well in whipping her students into shape. Her parenting style takes after what she has found effective in helping her students grow (albeit to a less extreme degree).
I liked all of the newbies, too. As for Nanoha's family...I guess they're still running that café on Earth? (Mebbeh? >__>;)