Nel 1614, due clan ninja rivali appoggiano i figli opposti di Hidetada Tokugawa per lo shogunato. Mandano i loro migliori guerrieri a combattere fino alla morte, con il clan del vincitore ch... Leggi tuttoNel 1614, due clan ninja rivali appoggiano i figli opposti di Hidetada Tokugawa per lo shogunato. Mandano i loro migliori guerrieri a combattere fino alla morte, con il clan del vincitore che governa per un millennio.Nel 1614, due clan ninja rivali appoggiano i figli opposti di Hidetada Tokugawa per lo shogunato. Mandano i loro migliori guerrieri a combattere fino alla morte, con il clan del vincitore che governa per un millennio.
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Just when I thought I'd seen the worst anime of all time I try watching this boring, useless, poorly written and sloppy animated garbage. This is truly the worst anime I've ever seen which is saying a lot. Not only is the action not in the slightest bit exciting but there is literally no storyline, no plot, no character development and no clever dialogue. It's got all the making of an award-winning "worst anime of all time" title. DO NOT WATCH THIS GARBAGE!!!
I honestly have to wonder if some of the more negative reviews here are based on the newer iteration of the Basilisk series from 2018, the Ouka Scrolls. That version is honestly terrible, uninteresting, and frankly, not worth anyone's time.
But this version, the 2005 Kouga Scrolls series, is solid. While I wouldn't add it to my short list of exceptional anime series, it is a very good one. In contrast to the later series, this one is absolutely worth the watch. At 24 episodes, it's also not too much of an investment.
The storyline is interesting enough, and marries feudal Japanese history with fantasy elements. The characters each have rather unorthodox ninpou techniques, which you learn as the series goes on. They aren't exactly your typical fighting techniques or scenes, so if you need a typical chanbara anime, you might be slightly disappointed in that regard. But the plot keeps your attention, the characters are interesting, the fighting scenes are worth watching, and the artwork (for the time) can be beautiful. I'm personally a big fan of anime series set in feudal Japan with ninja and/or samurai elements, and this fits the bill for me.
A note - if you're sensitive to rape and sexualization of some of the female characters, there are some elements of this in the series, which may detract from it for you. These sorts of things lessen the experience for me in some shows, but I don't think in this one that it was to the extent that it took away much from me enjoying the show. I would have appreciated a little more development of some of the female characters, as this is something important to me, even when watching shonen/seinen anime. But there is enough there and the majority of the female characters have enough depth to them that I stand by my recommendation.
TLDR; I don't think you will regret watching this if you have any interest in series set in feudal Japan, with ninja and/or samurai elements, that has a thread of romance throughout. There is some implied rape and sexualization of female characters, but this does not, in my opinion, detract from the quality of the series.
But this version, the 2005 Kouga Scrolls series, is solid. While I wouldn't add it to my short list of exceptional anime series, it is a very good one. In contrast to the later series, this one is absolutely worth the watch. At 24 episodes, it's also not too much of an investment.
The storyline is interesting enough, and marries feudal Japanese history with fantasy elements. The characters each have rather unorthodox ninpou techniques, which you learn as the series goes on. They aren't exactly your typical fighting techniques or scenes, so if you need a typical chanbara anime, you might be slightly disappointed in that regard. But the plot keeps your attention, the characters are interesting, the fighting scenes are worth watching, and the artwork (for the time) can be beautiful. I'm personally a big fan of anime series set in feudal Japan with ninja and/or samurai elements, and this fits the bill for me.
A note - if you're sensitive to rape and sexualization of some of the female characters, there are some elements of this in the series, which may detract from it for you. These sorts of things lessen the experience for me in some shows, but I don't think in this one that it was to the extent that it took away much from me enjoying the show. I would have appreciated a little more development of some of the female characters, as this is something important to me, even when watching shonen/seinen anime. But there is enough there and the majority of the female characters have enough depth to them that I stand by my recommendation.
TLDR; I don't think you will regret watching this if you have any interest in series set in feudal Japan, with ninja and/or samurai elements, that has a thread of romance throughout. There is some implied rape and sexualization of female characters, but this does not, in my opinion, detract from the quality of the series.
It is simply an amazing show. Very well written. The story is about two ninja clans, the Iga and the Koga, who are ordered to assemble their ten best warriors to kill each other until only one side lives. Apparently there are two illegitimate heirs to the shogunate and whichever side wins will determine the next shogun. Meanwhile, the plot addresses a beautiful love story that is doomed, politics, martial arts, and philosophy. The artwork is superb. The music is decent. It is very similar to the script of the live action movie called Shinobi that came out not too long ago. It also has an association to the classic Ninja Scroll movie, where there are these ninjas who each have different mystical powers that are unique to them alone. It does great justice to Ninja Scroll, unlike a few other attempts to recreate that great story which is culled from myth. Of course, the myth was created because of the disappearance for many years of the real Jubei Yagyu when no one knew what he did during that time. He was the son of Munenori Yagyu, who was one of two or three instructors in the martial arts to the shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu and his family. Munenori's father Muneyoshi had learned the Shinkage-Ryu or "shadow art" based on psychological martial skills and created the Yagyu Shinkage-Ryu. In roughly the same part of the mountain ranges in the area where the Yagyu village still is was an area that had practitioners of the occult arts or voodoo. Many mythological traditions like to combine the two together because it makes for a wild array of skill combinations one person might have had. These stories are mostly fiction based on myths but they do have connections to real people and real events in Japan's history. Munenori left behind some writings about his art. In his book 'The Life Giving Sword' he says that you must make your mind clear like still water reflecting the full moon so that whatever thoughts are directed at you are reflected back upon the attacker and then you will be able to react with the proper counter measure to anything that comes at you and he says that this concept can be applied to more than just physical combat but also to business and politics and any walk of life. (or something along those lines)
This is a very very good anime that I somehow missed in the mid 00's and only finally caught now, so while my opinion has been somewhat coloured by the history surrounding this anime, it is a very good story on its own, with detailed animation and very interesting depictions of the succession war that happened during the Edo Period.
The problem I have comes from the localisation that has happened, see back in the mid 2000's, companies like Funimation weren't as on the ball with distribution of Anime as they are today and while they created a dub for this, they didn't provide a subtitle for it until more recent re-releases to digital media like Amazon, so the people who were tasked with giving an original version of this were the Fans.
Fan subs were a far more prominent thing until far more recently and there was no need to have any biases placed into the story by people who have political and social agendas, it was purely to provide a good quality version of the story that the fans provided.
And while fans still do this and the sub is a VAST improvement over the licensed versions, there are less of them today than there was 10 to 15 years ago.
With that comes the beginning of the issue with this anime.
If you have gotten this from an official source, the subtitles are not the traditional story, they are a socially injected version by Funimation that detracts from the story's ability to tell itself, by adding issues and changing word meanings around to better fit a "woke" agenda, Funimation have tarnished a decent property of theirs with the disgusting actions of their staff.
That point out of the way where I do hope my opinion has been given (go for fan subs, allow places like Funimation and Crunchyroll to burn themselves to the ground)
Lets talk about the dub.
I don't know what it is with Funimation's staff, but since their inception they have had a core staff of 6 voice actors who can be seen in virtually every piece that they have, one of them being Chris Sabat - a man who has less range in his voice than Wilford Brimley - and no matter the casting or crew working on in...with 1 or perhaps 2 very rare exceptions due to things from Japan being a concern, a Funimation dub will have several very telling signs of its lack of detail.
It will have horrible sound mixing where voices are going to be either too quiet or too loud contrasted terribly with over dramatic musical scores that are rarely faithful to the source material, the level of direction and skill in the voice actors has a massive dip in quality depending on the actual skill of the actor and the voice director. And most telling of all
Funimation refuses to have a scene where there is quietness going on, where there is no talking while a character's face is on screen, I do not understand this and it has never been something they're willing to allow - again, except for rare instances where Funi are having their arms twisted by the studio in Japan.
Basilisk, Kôga ninpô chô is an amazing anime that you can deeply enjoy for its very dramatic and dark depiction of what life was like for small clans in the Edo period of Japan, it doesn't shy away from dirtying up historical heroes like Hattori Hanzo and depicting well know figures like Lady Kasuga (Ofuku) or Oeyo for their involvement in the War. The only downside is that many will watch this in the English and take away from it a negative view due to the terrible localisation in dubbing.
So again
Fan sub is the way to go, do NOT trust the official source if it has Funimation or Crunchyroll in the title.
The problem I have comes from the localisation that has happened, see back in the mid 2000's, companies like Funimation weren't as on the ball with distribution of Anime as they are today and while they created a dub for this, they didn't provide a subtitle for it until more recent re-releases to digital media like Amazon, so the people who were tasked with giving an original version of this were the Fans.
Fan subs were a far more prominent thing until far more recently and there was no need to have any biases placed into the story by people who have political and social agendas, it was purely to provide a good quality version of the story that the fans provided.
And while fans still do this and the sub is a VAST improvement over the licensed versions, there are less of them today than there was 10 to 15 years ago.
With that comes the beginning of the issue with this anime.
If you have gotten this from an official source, the subtitles are not the traditional story, they are a socially injected version by Funimation that detracts from the story's ability to tell itself, by adding issues and changing word meanings around to better fit a "woke" agenda, Funimation have tarnished a decent property of theirs with the disgusting actions of their staff.
That point out of the way where I do hope my opinion has been given (go for fan subs, allow places like Funimation and Crunchyroll to burn themselves to the ground)
Lets talk about the dub.
I don't know what it is with Funimation's staff, but since their inception they have had a core staff of 6 voice actors who can be seen in virtually every piece that they have, one of them being Chris Sabat - a man who has less range in his voice than Wilford Brimley - and no matter the casting or crew working on in...with 1 or perhaps 2 very rare exceptions due to things from Japan being a concern, a Funimation dub will have several very telling signs of its lack of detail.
It will have horrible sound mixing where voices are going to be either too quiet or too loud contrasted terribly with over dramatic musical scores that are rarely faithful to the source material, the level of direction and skill in the voice actors has a massive dip in quality depending on the actual skill of the actor and the voice director. And most telling of all
Funimation refuses to have a scene where there is quietness going on, where there is no talking while a character's face is on screen, I do not understand this and it has never been something they're willing to allow - again, except for rare instances where Funi are having their arms twisted by the studio in Japan.
Basilisk, Kôga ninpô chô is an amazing anime that you can deeply enjoy for its very dramatic and dark depiction of what life was like for small clans in the Edo period of Japan, it doesn't shy away from dirtying up historical heroes like Hattori Hanzo and depicting well know figures like Lady Kasuga (Ofuku) or Oeyo for their involvement in the War. The only downside is that many will watch this in the English and take away from it a negative view due to the terrible localisation in dubbing.
So again
Fan sub is the way to go, do NOT trust the official source if it has Funimation or Crunchyroll in the title.
So I've been wondering for a long time if I should buy Basilisk or not. Well I finally bought it and have now seen it and I am very disappointed. Why?
First of all there are so many characters to keep track of and get to know in such a short time that you end up not giving a rats ass about any of them. They are all shallow and one dimensional.
Second reason is that its just plain boring. It keeps the same pace throughout pretty much the whole series, and that is a slow and undramatic one. witch doesn't always have to be a bad thing but here it is.
The good things I guess is the animation which are fluid and nice in general. Some of the ninjas technique are awesome.
But overall I thought basilisk was a pretty mediocre and impersonal anime series. And I don't recommend it.
First of all there are so many characters to keep track of and get to know in such a short time that you end up not giving a rats ass about any of them. They are all shallow and one dimensional.
Second reason is that its just plain boring. It keeps the same pace throughout pretty much the whole series, and that is a slow and undramatic one. witch doesn't always have to be a bad thing but here it is.
The good things I guess is the animation which are fluid and nice in general. Some of the ninjas technique are awesome.
But overall I thought basilisk was a pretty mediocre and impersonal anime series. And I don't recommend it.
Lo sapevi?
- ConnessioniEdited into Basilisk: The Beginning (2006)
- Colonne sonoreKouga Ninpou Chou
(Opening Theme)
Performed by Onmyo-za
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- Basilisk: The Ouka Ninja Scrolls
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione25 minuti
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What is the French language plot outline for Basilisk: Kôga ninpô chô (2005)?
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