Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueTired of his mundane life, Mikado Ryugamine decides to move to Ikebukuro, a district in Tokyo, when a friend invites him. Ikebukuro is full of connected mysteries where people's pasts intert... Tout lireTired of his mundane life, Mikado Ryugamine decides to move to Ikebukuro, a district in Tokyo, when a friend invites him. Ikebukuro is full of connected mysteries where people's pasts intertwine with the present.Tired of his mundane life, Mikado Ryugamine decides to move to Ikebukuro, a district in Tokyo, when a friend invites him. Ikebukuro is full of connected mysteries where people's pasts intertwine with the present.
- Récompenses
- 3 nominations au total
Parcourir les épisodes
Avis à la une
10paz0905
I love the first opening and lost myself completely in the huge durarara universe while looking. Awesome
Durarara stands up against non-anime just as well as it stands against anime. Narratively ambiguous and ambitious, the story combines what is kind of an adaptation of the Romance of the Three Kingdoms with the technology and internet-enabled present, mixed with a classic gang war story with a slight hint of real-world folk-tale inspired fantasy, all while keep the genre flowing. At times, its got hand to hand action, at others its got meditative drama, others use interesting methods to subvert typical action and favor social manipulation.
Mikado Ryuugamine moves from the countryside to the Ikebukuro district of Tokyo to be in high school with his childhood bestfriend, Masaomi Kida and meets Anri Sohonara, a classmate, as well as a cast of oddball characters including the pacifistic Russian hawker for a Russian owned sushi parlor, frighteningly strong Shizuo Heiwajima, reliable young adult Kiyohei Kadota and his manga or Idol obsessed friends, Walker, Erika, and Saburo, and the one person Kida told Mikado to avoid at all costs, Izaya Orihara. Eventually, Mikado also meets the mysterious and mythical Celty Sturleson, better known as the Black Rider and her partner, blackmarket doctor Shinra.
Mikado is essentially the dominant point of view in what is a third person omniscient ensemble story. Various episodes or post-credit scenes elucidate on other characters in deeper ways to show their depth and/or machinations towards the climax of the story.
What follows is a slow drip of revelations about each character and their motives. Two main factions are present (The Yellow Scarves and the Blue Squares), with a third shadow faction (The Dollars), a shady pharmaceutical company is kidnapping immigrants for study, and one character manipulating all sides to their benefit, and it all comes together in a very interesting way that subverts most modern fiction. Its not too hard to follow, but it IS a web of things for you to piece together and for you to try and predict or solve yourself beforehand.
An interesting motif is a running "anonymous" chatroom between Mikado ("Taro Tanaka"), Izaya ("Kanra"), and Celty ("Setton"). Its clear basically from the beginning that Izaya knows who the other two are, but as the series goes on, the other two begin to suspect whos whom, but instead of outing each other, keep the anonymity alive for potential new members.
The only cons are typical to the anime medium: lengthy (but solid) opening and closing songs, episodes tend to remind you about last episode in the first few minutes, spotty animation quality, spotty localization, no translation for written Japanese, etc.
I do think this series works remarkably well in English and the dub is solid for the time. Notable actors include Yuri Lowenthal (Spider-Man in the PS4 and PS5 games), Steven Blum (Spike Spiegal, TOM, i guarantee you've heard this guy somewhere), various Critical Role VOs including Matt Mercer, Laura Bailey, Sam Riegel, and Liam O' Brien, plus many others. The cast are all talented.
Mikado Ryuugamine moves from the countryside to the Ikebukuro district of Tokyo to be in high school with his childhood bestfriend, Masaomi Kida and meets Anri Sohonara, a classmate, as well as a cast of oddball characters including the pacifistic Russian hawker for a Russian owned sushi parlor, frighteningly strong Shizuo Heiwajima, reliable young adult Kiyohei Kadota and his manga or Idol obsessed friends, Walker, Erika, and Saburo, and the one person Kida told Mikado to avoid at all costs, Izaya Orihara. Eventually, Mikado also meets the mysterious and mythical Celty Sturleson, better known as the Black Rider and her partner, blackmarket doctor Shinra.
Mikado is essentially the dominant point of view in what is a third person omniscient ensemble story. Various episodes or post-credit scenes elucidate on other characters in deeper ways to show their depth and/or machinations towards the climax of the story.
What follows is a slow drip of revelations about each character and their motives. Two main factions are present (The Yellow Scarves and the Blue Squares), with a third shadow faction (The Dollars), a shady pharmaceutical company is kidnapping immigrants for study, and one character manipulating all sides to their benefit, and it all comes together in a very interesting way that subverts most modern fiction. Its not too hard to follow, but it IS a web of things for you to piece together and for you to try and predict or solve yourself beforehand.
An interesting motif is a running "anonymous" chatroom between Mikado ("Taro Tanaka"), Izaya ("Kanra"), and Celty ("Setton"). Its clear basically from the beginning that Izaya knows who the other two are, but as the series goes on, the other two begin to suspect whos whom, but instead of outing each other, keep the anonymity alive for potential new members.
The only cons are typical to the anime medium: lengthy (but solid) opening and closing songs, episodes tend to remind you about last episode in the first few minutes, spotty animation quality, spotty localization, no translation for written Japanese, etc.
I do think this series works remarkably well in English and the dub is solid for the time. Notable actors include Yuri Lowenthal (Spider-Man in the PS4 and PS5 games), Steven Blum (Spike Spiegal, TOM, i guarantee you've heard this guy somewhere), various Critical Role VOs including Matt Mercer, Laura Bailey, Sam Riegel, and Liam O' Brien, plus many others. The cast are all talented.
This is a series where the creators attempted to do a lot, and they shouldn't have - they did too much. There are many things happening, many characters with many backgrounds that have many problems, and the series is just incapable of resolving them all. Making a story with this many diverse elements in it is a problem because in order to make sense out of everything - why are the people like that, why do they do what they do, where is this all gong - you have to tell much more story, develop the characters much more deeply, and let the viewers get attached to those characters and what is happening in the storyline. They didn't do that here, and gave us lots of characters, plots, motivations, & actions - basically a city of people interacting - so that what you get is a hodgepodge of elements occurring that are painted broadly and lightly, without the time it would take for the viewer to care about what's going on or to know the characters well enough to become emotionally involved with them.
The characters don't ever really get deeply involved with each other, but occasionally the authors ATTEMPT to have them do that, sort of promising that, but they never truly get there. In having so many stories revolving around each other, none of them is ever explore adequately, and we are always left hanging with "almosts." It's as if the creators are are afraid to have their characters bond with each other and show those powerful emotions that would be normal in situations like that.
The animation is fair, certainly not overwhelming, the artwork & coloration okay, & the music inappropriate, like something out of a "Peanuts" cartoon, all of this giving us this once-upon-a-time random cityscape of young characters.
So, in the whole, as an animated piece which generally & sparsely depicts some occurrences in this particular city, it has some interest; but, too much talk, too many side issues which take away from having a main story, & too little character development to get one emotionally involved. Watch it, but do so lightly.
The characters don't ever really get deeply involved with each other, but occasionally the authors ATTEMPT to have them do that, sort of promising that, but they never truly get there. In having so many stories revolving around each other, none of them is ever explore adequately, and we are always left hanging with "almosts." It's as if the creators are are afraid to have their characters bond with each other and show those powerful emotions that would be normal in situations like that.
The animation is fair, certainly not overwhelming, the artwork & coloration okay, & the music inappropriate, like something out of a "Peanuts" cartoon, all of this giving us this once-upon-a-time random cityscape of young characters.
So, in the whole, as an animated piece which generally & sparsely depicts some occurrences in this particular city, it has some interest; but, too much talk, too many side issues which take away from having a main story, & too little character development to get one emotionally involved. Watch it, but do so lightly.
Amazing anime with really good action scenes. The humor is just a plus but the story itself is amazing and everything is tied in even though how different the characters are from each other.
This anime is like a puzzle when all the pieces come together you feel a sense of accomplishment and it just feels so right but seriously this anime is awsome and makes you really think and make theory's and they don't always tell it in order but all in all it's a very good show with good characters and good character development
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIsaac Dian and Miria Harvent from Ryôgo Narita's previous series Baccano! (2007) make an appearance in the eleventh episode of the series.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Animax: The Other English Dubs (2023)
Meilleurs choix
Connectez-vous pour évaluer et suivre la liste de favoris afin de recevoir des recommandations personnalisées
- How many seasons does Durarara!! have?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée24 minutes
- Couleur
Contribuer à cette page
Suggérer une modification ou ajouter du contenu manquant