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Review

Sakura Wars

Review:
Sakura Wars VHS
If you are into video games at all, you've probably heard of the Saturn Role-playing game Sakura Taisen. An enormous success in Japan, this female interaction/battle simulation never made it to the United States for some reason (most likely because of Sega USA's inept marketing -- the system was already dying at that point), but somehow managed to get the attention of industry followers.

This is for good reason. Featuring character design by Kousuke Fujishima (Oh My Goddess!, You're Under Arrest), the game was absolutely charming, and had more funny little side-games than Final Fantasy VII could ever dream of.

...Which is why this OAV series is so disappointing.

In 1919, Japan is still recovering from the first Demon War (obviously a parallel with World War I), and it's betting its hopes on Kanzaki Heavy Industries, who have developed the ultimate fighting mecha. (This IS 1919, after all). The problem is that they have to find the pilots with enough mental ability to use them, and that won't be easy.

So, several young women with especially powerful psychic abilities from around the world are chosen to pilot them. They aren't really getting along too well together, but at least they're assembled. Sakura, the series' namesake, is just getting her training together, and she's the last to come to the group.

There's nothing wrong with the story itself... Hey, it carried the video game rather well. The problem is the inept story-telling. Sakura Wars drags on so long setting itself up (for what, I'm not sure), that it's exhausting to watch. It's only a four-part OAV series, and in the two presented here, the main character of the game hasn't even been introduced yet!

Worse yet, the characters pretty much fit into nice little stereotypes. There's the boyish jock, the prissy little girl, the tough business-like Russian woman, the bitchy rich daughter of the boss, the nerdy Chinese inventor, and the simple, trained country girl. None of the characters are memorable, and watching them bicker and argue is simply mind-numbing. (ADV dubbing them with bad accents didn't help this any, although the dub is adequate overall.)

Having watched Sakura Wars, this tape is going to be one that will sit in the inner depths of my cabinet for a very, very long time.
Grade:
Overall : C-
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Production Info:
Director: Takaaki Ishiyama
Series Composition: Satoru Akahori
Screenplay: Hiroyuki Kawasaki
Storyboard:
Takaaki Ishiyama
Kouno Kamori
Toshiya Shinohara
Episode Director:
Tatsuya Ishihara
Toshiya Shinohara
Hideki Takayama
Yorifusa Yamaguchi
Music: Kōhei Tanaka
Original creator: Ouji Hiroi
Character Design:
Kousuke Fujishima
Kazuya Kuroda
Hidenori Matsubara
Art Director: Yukihiro Shibutani
Animation Director:
Masakuni Kaneko
Yasuhiro Takemoto
Minoru Yamazawa
Shinichi Yoshino
Mechanical design:
Hitoshi Fukuchi
Eiji Ishimoto
Shin Matsuo
Gorō Murata
Hiroshi Ogawa
Mecha design: Futoshi Nagata
Sound Director: Toshio Sato
Director of Photography:
Toshiaki Yamaguchi
Mitsunobu Yoshida
Executive producer:
Kenichi Satō
Yutaka Takahashi
Shigeru Watanabe
Producer:
Kazumi Kawashiro
Yasuaki Nagoshi
Emi Sasaki
Masaki Sawanobori
Licensed by: ADV Films

Full encyclopedia details about
Sakura Wars (OAV)

Release information about
Sakura Wars (Dub.VHS)

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