| Index | 4 reviews in total |
21 out of 21 people found the following review useful:
Road racing anime series is surprisingly gripping, 4 September 2004
Author:
Brian Camp from Bronx, NY
"Initial D: First Stage," which first aired in Japan in 1998, is a
consistently exciting and compelling anime series based on Shuichi
Shigeno's popular manga (comic book) about downhill mountain road
racing in Japan's Gunma Prefecture. The protagonist is high school boy
Takumi who, unbeknownst to his classmates and buddies at the gas
station where he works, has been honing his downhill driving skills for
the past five years by speeding up and down Mt. Akina making early
morning deliveries for his father's tofu shop. When Takumi just
matter-of-factly beats an area road racing star on an impromptu
downhill race, he finds himself thrust, somewhat reluctantly, into the
world of "touge" (mountain) racing and the various teams from
neighboring mountains. His close buddies, Iketani and Itsuki, who are
tied to the local Akina Speed Stars, are stunned to learn of Takumi's
secret skills and are somewhat infuriated by his nonchalant attitude.
Takumi's single father, once a downhill champ himself, has made a point
of nurturing this attitude by guiding his son, not by example or
instruction, but by letting him find his own way.
Once the secret is out, as quick as you can say, "Draw!," Takumi finds
himself challenged by an increasingly sophisticated group of rivals and
also finds himself attracting the attentions of Natsuki, a girl at
school who has secretly been involved in a bit of "subsidized dating"
with an older man. Much attention in this series is paid to the
characters, their development, and their sometimes turbulent
interaction with each other. We care for these kids because, quite
simply, they're believable human beings.
The look of the series draws closely on that of the manga with somewhat
simple, almost cartoonish (but surprisingly effective) design for the
characters, created in 2-D animation, contrasting noticeably with the
technically detailed look of the cars and races, which are recreated
with 3-D CGI for the anime. While the integration of 2-D and 3-D is
somewhat awkward in the early episodes, it improves greatly as the
series progresses. The character design gets better also, with more
detailed, expressive facial features becoming quite evident by the
fifth volume in the series (eps. 16-18).
The races are edited and designed with great skill and thought. These
sequences are genuinely exciting even to those of us who never followed
any kind of auto racing outside of "Speed Racer" and action movie car
chases. And, besides, the technical aspects of this form of racing,
particularly the all-important practice of "drifting," are adequately
spelled out for novices--to the point where the series might even be
called educational.
The music track deserves singling out for its lively collection of
pulsating, catchy songs in the "Eurobeat" style popular in Japan (a mix
of rock, hip hop, and techno). The songs come into play in the opening
and closing credit sequences and during the racing sequences (where
they work perfectly). The instrumental tracks during the quieter scenes
are expertly done as well. (Warning: the English dubbed tracks on the
U.S. DVD releases have completely new music soundtracks. Stick with the
"Classic" version option.)
As anime series go, at least for fans in the U.S., this one is quite
unlike any other this reviewer has come across in the U.S. (after a
decade of reviewing anime) and has proved to be among the most
rewarding. This review covers the first season (First Stage), which was
followed by a second series (Second Stage), a movie (Third Stage), and
yet a third series (Fourth Stage). There are also video games based on
the series. Let's hope it all continues.
6 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Pretty good series, though English dub scrapped its Eurobeat music :(, 12 May 2006
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Author:
jedi787plus from United States
I like the series ever since I was a freshman at college. Students
involved in anime stuff brought different series every week to my
college's student center, and one evening I was studying for some exam
until I heard some J-pop music; then I peeked at the big screen there
and saw some anime figures and then a super-realistic image of a 1983
Toyota Corolla GTS liftback. I thought to myself: What is this thing
about? Then I saw further into the series and saw drifting cars. But
the most outstanding thing was that the cars appeared photo-realistic,
when I then realizes they were relying on 3D graphics to simulate the
cars. That's what got me into Initial D. I attempted to rent it at my
nearest Blockbuster but found it always missing (or rented out), so I
never got a chance to rent it on my own until I went to Dallas TX on
some coop practice and subscribed to Netflix. Then I really got my
chance to rent Initial D.
But then I discovered an awful thing: The English dub by Tokyopop got
rid of the series' Eurobeat-style music by m.o.v.e and instead inserted
its own local crappy hip-hop by some unknown DJ Milky with no known
album on the market. Solution: Whenever you start playing any episode,
set it to Japanese audio to listen to m.o.v.e's awesome opening; then
when the opening's over, switch back to English if you want to listen
to the dialogs without having to read subtitles. Then when the
episode's over and the credits are about to start rolling, switch again
to Japanese to listen to m.o.v.e (eps 1-13) or Galla (14-26), then back
to English to listen the next ep's preview, then repeat the same cycle
for the next episode(s).
5 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Now THIS is how yer 'sposed ter drive ;), 11 May 2007
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Author:
hm25332 from Weert, Netherlands
It's a bit strange being a car freak and NOT having seen much of
Initial D until recently. Still, I already knew quite a lot of it,
thanks to the manga issues I scrounged up. Really amazing what one can
achieve with my old car. That's right, I've been a lucky sod who drove
a "Hachi-Roku". The car was a Red and Black Toyota Sprinter Trueno
AE86, badged as Corolla GT-S. I acquired it in Belgium. Actually, I was
looking fer the Sedan version, which was quite common there. But I just
HAD to try out that little souped up hatchback and I was won over
immediately. As I live in a region with a lot of twisty backroads and
hills, (alas, no mountain pass here :( ) I had a lot of fun with it for
a few years. Then a friend came over with a tape he bought (yes we're
talking nineties here folks) "Isn't that your car?" he said, while
showing me a vicious race between a Honda Civic (beg ya pardon, an EG6)
and Takumi's AE86. The CGI action, the races, the music by M.o.v.e. All
excellent! "Then how could you be so stupid and FORGET ALL ABOUT IT!?"
Itsuki would ask in his overacting voice. I really don't know that. But
after I coïncidentially saw the reasonable Chinese live-adaptation, I
decided ter go look for it again. As with Zipang, one of my other
favorite Manga/Anime's, I got lucky: I found First, Second and Extra
Stage in Japanese language with English subs and that fantastic
Eurobeat soundtrack. I'm still looking for the rest, which is a bit
harder, because I'm trying to avoid all the dub overs with those
slipshod hip-hop-songs DJ Milkyway (or something' like it ) cooked up.
It might be a bit older now, but First Stage is still a lot better then
all the F&F movies together.
Oh, and what did I do with my "Hachi-Roku?" After 5 years of service it
was traded for a black front-wheel driven Corolla AE92 GTS, which also
was a lot of fun, but I'll always have fond memories of that little red
and black hatchback. Even now, while I drive a MINI Cooper.
A must watch even if you're not an anime freak., 11 May 2012
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Author:
abhay-unrated from India
It's the story of a high school student, Takumi Fujiwara who works as a
delivery boy in his father's Tofu Shop. Every morning he makes his
deliveries, in his father's Ae86 ( Toyota Corolla ) passing through Mt.
Akina's full of hairpins track. In the process of making his
deliveries, he becomes a skilled driver and Mt. Akina his turf. Those
who see him call him the ghost of Akina. When racers from other regions
make an expedition to Mt. Akina, they come to know about this ghost.
The Racers start to challenge Takumi and how he deals with each
challenge and in the process becomes a legend is what Initial D is
about.
Visuals/Graphics: 10/10
Apart from the races it's just like what you'd expect an anime to be.
The races have been done in 3D which really adds to the thrill. With
each and every season the graphics have gotten better, stage Four being
the best.
Story: 9/10
The story is simply about the journey of Takumi from an ordinary High
school kid to a legendary street racer and how he meets other racers
who help him achieve it in the process.
Screenplay: 9/10
There are a few flashbacks but apart from that the anime proceeds in
one direction only. Nothing unnecessary has been done, making it an
easy to watch experience.
Initial D is a must watch, even if you're not an anime freak. You don't
have to be ! It's much better than the Fast 'n Furious movie series,
where they pull off stunts defying the laws of physics. This anime
actually bothers to explain how the machines are working. Trust me, if
you watch this you wouldn't be disappointed. The best thing is it has
also been dubbed in English so you won't have to stress reading
subtitles.
Overall: It's a 10/10. Watch it !
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