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My Hero Academia: Season 2, Part 2 (Blu-ray Details)

Unique ID Code: 0000190522
Added by: Jitendar Canth
Added on: 31/5/2018 16:09
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    Review for My Hero Academia: Season 2, Part 2

    7 / 10

    Introduction


    It hasn’t been too long since the release of Part 1, and already I have the concluding half of Season 2 of My Hero Academia to review. It’s the latest long running shonen adaptation to make waves in the world of anime, but unlike the traditional route taken by shows like One Piece and Naruto, My Hero Academia is being made in seasons, with hiatuses in between, long enough for more manga to be made, and allowing for faithful adaptations untainted by filler. We’ve just had the traditional tournament arc that is de rigueur for a shonen anime, and it took only 12 episodes. Already we’re moving ahead with the story in Part 2. There’s something so refreshing about that.

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    You can call them superpowers, you can call them mutations. In the world of My Hero Academia, they’re mundanely thought of as Quirks. I say mundanely, as some 80% of the world’s population have Quirks, some power or ability that makes them special in some way. Naturally there are people who use their Quirks for selfish, even illegal gain. Standing against them are the heroes, those who use their powers for the common good. From the day Izuku Midoriya saw the world’s #1 hero, All Might in action, he was certain that he too would become a great superhero. The only problem was that Izuku was one of the 20%, born without a Quirk.

    But Izuku’s selfless actions in a crisis situation caught the attention of All Might, who decided that the young boy would inherit his power. Getting used to a sudden new Quirk doesn’t happen overnight, and even with intensive training, Izuku is still playing catch-up when he enters U.A. High School, where the world’s heroes are trained. But he and his class 1-A manage to distinguish themselves when the League of Villains attacks. As this second season begins, the U.A. Sports Festival is about to begin, and All Might’s mission for Izuku is to distinguish himself in front of the world audience.

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    The concluding episodes of My Hero Academia Season 2 are presented on 2 Blu-ray discs from Sony/Funimation.

    Disc 1
    26. Time to Pick Some Names
    27. Bizarre! Gran Torino Appears
    28. Midoriya and Shigaraki
    29. Hero Killer: Stain vs. U.A. Students
    30. Climax
    31. The Aftermath of Hero Killer: Stain
    32. Everyone’s Internships
    33. Listen Up!! A Tale from the Past
    34. Gear Up For Final Exams

    Disc 2
    35. Yaoyorozu: Rising
    36. Stripping the Varnish
    37. Katsuki Bakuko: Origin
    38. Encounter

    Picture


    My Hero Academia gets a 1.78:1 widescreen 1080p transfer on these Blu-ray discs. The image is clear and sharp, the animation is smooth, and there’s no problem with visible compression, and there is only the slightest occasional hint of digital banding. Studio Bones do the honours for the animation, and they have pedigree bringing across Weekly Shonen Jump properties to anime such as Full Metal Alchemist and Soul Eater. It all begs the question as to what happened with My Hero Academia, or whether the quality of the source material is such that there was nothing that Bones could do with it. This is a simplistic animation, with generic character designs, and a basic looking world design. It looks like the kind of show that runs for years and years on a weekly basis as lowest bidder animators churn out their work conveyer belt style. That’s the look of the show, not the actual animation, as Bones takes this basic looking story and animate as much as they can, creating something that is dynamic, vibrant, and of decent quality. But you can’t get away from how basic the show looks. It looks like kids’ TV, which is probably exactly what it is. And then they deliver an amazing fight animation sequence and it’s like you’re watching a completely different show!

    The images in this review were kindly supplied by the distributor.

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    Sound


    You have the choice between Dolby TrueHD 5.1 Surround English and 2.0 Stereo Japanese with optional translated subtitles and signs. I checked that the English dub exists (it does), but stuck with the Japanese for the duration, and was happy with the experience, with the characters suitably cast, and giving the full intensity required for their performances. The action is well represented in the stereo, and the music suits the show well. The subtitles are accurately timed and are free of typos.

    Extras


    The discs present their content with animated menus.

    Disc 2 has the extras, beginning with the Inside the Episodes featurettes, which offers interviews with the dub staff and voice actors about specific episodes. There are also featurettes about some charities that Funimation supported, tying in with the My Hero Academia simuldubs. There are 13 featurettes in total here, running to a complete run time of 107:54. (The final featurette Simuldubs From Beginning to End is a 24:30 overall dub making of).

    There is an interview with two of the voice actors, Chris Sabat and Justin Briner in the San Diego Comic-con: IGN Interview, which lasts 10:46 1080i.

    You get 2 textless openings and 2 textless closings.

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    Conclusion


    There is a filler episode! It’s just one episode, and they call it an anime original episode, but it’s filler nevertheless. I’ve seen two shonen manga adaptations in close order which both look to be more faithful to the original material, easing the burden on the animators by producing series only when there is enough material to adapt. Blue Exorcist’s Kyoto Saga is downright amazing, one of the best such adaptations I have seen. My Hero Academia on the other hand is entertaining, fun, and can quickly draw the viewer in, but it never loses the shackles of the material that it is adapting. It may be down to differences in the source material (Blue Exorcist might blow My Hero Academia out of the water in manga form), or it’s more likely a difference in how the material is adapted.

    Blue Exorcist looks good in anime form as it’s been written, edited and paced for the anime format. It has its emotional beats in the right place, build-ups, crescendos, action and character moments, all perfectly timed for the TV medium. My Hero Academia tries to be more faithful to the source material, and so the ebb and flow of the narrative never has the same kind of pacing. You can have whole episodes which are narrative doldrums before the story picks up again. It’s the difference between a good anime and a great anime. My Hero Academia is merely a good anime.

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    Following the conclusion of the tournament arc, we begin this collection with something of a lull, before the next major story arc. The trainee heroes are about to go on internships, work experience, shadowing actual heroes, and for that purpose they need to come up with their hero names. That’s what the first episode in this set is devoted to, a bit of light comedy before they all go to their new, temporary assignments. Most either get offers from powerful heroes depending on how they performed in the tournament, or they have to apply to hero agencies. Izuku gets an offer from an aged hero called Gran Torino, the man who originally trained the #1 hero and Izuku’s mentor, All Might.

    The next episode is one of those narrative pit-stops I mentioned, as we follow the various trainees and their new mentors, get some idea of what their internships are like, although Izuku does start figuring out how to control and use his quirk All-For-One without shattering every bone in his body. But the real thrust of this arc becomes apparent, as it’s all about Iida and Hero Killer: Stain. At the end of the previous collection, Hero Killer: Stain attacked and hospitalised Iida’s big brother, and Iida is using his internship to find and take revenge against Stain. Given how powerful Stain is, Iida may as well be committing suicide, although fortunately for him, his encounter with Stain coincides with an attack on the city by the League of Villains, and a whole group of heroes converge on the area to deal with the situation. Both Izuku and Todoroki come to Iida’s aid, and he gets a timely reminder as to what a hero should be, a chance to turn away from the dark path he’s on.

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    After this arc, there then follows that filler episode I mentioned, Everyone’s Internships, which you would think would cover what all the other trainees were up to while Iida was having his issues over the past few episodes. Actually it concentrates on just one character, my favourite of the heroes, the frog-girl Tsuyu Asui who has taken the hero name, ‘Froppy’. She has a high seas adventure dealing with smugglers with her sea-power focused hero team. This episode is a useful reminder that sometimes filler can be a very good thing.

    The last five episodes hurtle towards the end of the first semester for the hero students, and final exams. This time it’s a combination of written and practical test, and because of the growing villain situation, the practical is combat against their teachers in teams of two. The students have to either escape from, or capture the teachers, who take on the role of villains. It’s a test of their teamwork abilities, and situational awareness. In other words it’s four more episodes of tournament fighting action, the climax being Izuku teamed up with his eternal rival Bakugo, with both having to face none other than All Might. It doesn’t go well.

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    The final episode is another lull, a shopping trip before summer training camp, which gets serious when Izuku runs into the leader of the League of Villains, Shigaraki, who wants to have a ‘chat’. While My Hero Academia has a lot of fun with the student heroes and their trials and tribulations, it’s also building up the larger picture as well, cutting away to see what Shigaraki and his Nomu minions are up to, how Hero Killer: Stain has an impact on his plans, and the new villains that flock to his banner. At the same time, with the advent of All Might’s teacher, Gran Torino, we also get some useful back-story on the All For One quirk that Izuku has inherited, its origins, and the consequent reveal of the real big-bad villain of the story.

    My Hero Academia has a lot of fun with its characters, and it’s definitely an entertaining watch. But it is hampered by its storytelling format, its uneven pacing, and the sense that it could be even better. Still, it’s setting up plenty of fascinating story threads, and it leaves you hungry for season 3. And Froppy is my favourite hero!

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