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18 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Addictive (to me anyway),
By Days2Daze "Daze2Days" (Michigan) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Kenichi: The Mightiest Disciple - Season One, Part One (DVD)
Kenichi the Mightiest Disciple is a simple action comedy that is very entertaining. The character himself is the nice guy underdog who is completely isolated at the beginning. Since his strength is lacking and he has no friends he is often mocked at the very least and beat on the very worst. I don't want to talk about key points in the plot but its engaging to see Kenichi evolve to become both physically and emotionally stronger. His training and the various interactions between characters are quite humorous and the fights are well done.
When he fights a tough opponent it is plausible he is able to be a contender because his training is not only sadistically harsh and long but also he learns counter moves. They go into great detail about the fighting styles in this anime. What they are used for, their strengths and weaknesses, and how they are learned (performed). I hope my review was helpful and I hope enough people enjoy (purchase) Kenichi that funimation will license the rest of the show (they licensed 26 out of 50 episodes to test the product.) This DVD Contains 13 Episodes and B will have 13 Since Funi only licensed the first 26. Trailers and clean opening/ending are the only special features included here... standard/generic special features only. Total Run time for the 13 episodes is 312 Minutes. Edit: Part Two is Available Now.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the anime I think would make a good USA tv series.,
By Courtland J. Carpenter (Fort Wayne, Indiana United States) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Kenichi: The Mightiest Disciple - Season One, Part One (DVD)
Ever wish you bought Microsoft back in 1992, sometimes I remember thinking about it then. When I do, I realize if I had I'd have become seriously rich, and could do lots fo things like finance a movie or a TV series. After saving Firefly, the Joss Whedon series, the next thing I think I'd want to finance would be History's Strongest Disciple. Yeah, I know that's not the US title of this, but it's still the one I know it by. Kenichi was not received as well as it could have been by fan groups cause many of them were expecting a straight martial arts show. Kenichi is more of a comedic series with an interesting martial arts twist. The martial arts part is blown up to be a bit larger than life, but it works on both a comedic and an action level. The character development in Kenichi is stellar and that's why I think it would make a good live action series as well as anime. Not that far into the series, we all seem to have a handle on his family, his school friends, his enemies, and the mystical dojo that houses six masters of various martial arts.
The plot is simple, I'm not really sending spoilers by saying Kenichi is a wimp who wants to be more than that, and gets his wish with the chance meeting of a new girl at school Miu. They have met before a long time ago, but only Miu puts it together at their first meeting. It is through her that Kenichi gets his opportunity to change himself. There is a subtle point which was meant to preserve the comedy and perhaps prolong the series early on. To explain that I'll go to the manga series, of which there are two. In the first the plot is different and Kenichi becomes a fighter for different reasons and gets stronger much sooner. After about 40 chapters or so they scrapped that story, and started a new one from scratch. In the new version which echos the anime, Miu is the one who drives Kenichi more, and in this case involves him in something the masters would have spared him from. While this is a small spoiler, I'll tell you it cause it can be missed if you don't pay close attention. Kenichi, like most people wants to get himself out of a bind, but he would never have chosen the path he took had he known what it implied. The bind he was in involved the Karate club, where he is challenged by a much larger new member who plans to beat the crap out of him, and force him to leave the club. After Miu gets Kenichi involved with the masters, a funny enough introduction in it's own right, they train him with harsh conditioning methods. Miu, feeling sorry for him, and overhearing the person he's going to fight boast about the beating he'll get, teaches him an advanced technique. In the end he wins, but the move is illegal, so he leaves the Karate club, but not without attracting some attention from the upperclassman in the club. You see the thing the masters knew, that Kenichi and Miu did not, was that if he was conditioned and had no knowledge of technique, a person with no natural martial arts aptitude like himself, would survive the beating. He could then go on with his everyday life mostly unfettered. Unfortunately, since Miu teaches him an advanced technique, now stronger and stronger fighters will now come at him till he'd finally completely defeated, or he has to get stronger to beat them. What he finds out is he'll now likely spend the rest of his life battling new challengers. What makes Kenichi so funny? It's often in the crazy training techniques, like the squid dance where Kenichi is hung on a spit over an open fire fanned by one of his masters, and has to keep twisting back and forth to keep from getting fried. This helps develop the abs, rather quickly I would assume, or he might be giving the master a ride by pulling him on a tire. He once asked if there was a faster way to get in shape while doing this, and the master said their was... Kenichi waited to hear about it, whereby the master produced a whip, then told him to pull him on the tire faster! Other funny scenes involve Kenichi's father and his pet shotgun Sebastian, his busybody sister, who thinks Kenichi, (and she may be right) has been seduced away to this dojo by Miu's large chest. There is humor in the foes he fights as each one has his share of quirks, from a cat loving female kick artist, to a crazy aristocrat, who composes and hears music in his fighting. There is humor in the interaction between the masters, composed of a childlike monster who can't control his power, to a female master of weapons who is constantly fighting the perverted attempts to photograph her by the Chinese master, a drunken Karate master who says he refuses to take disciples, and Kenichi's philosopher, artist, and mentor who constantly tricks him into getting stronger. There is humor in Kenichi's forked tongued, alien like, or demon like friend, who plans to use him to conquer the world, and then lead it himself. Kenichi generally can become serious enough when the fighting starts, but is more often humourous when there is not a battle going on. It's been a couple years since the series aired, and they do not seem to be interested in making more at this time. This is unfortunate because the manga has material to do three times or more the number of episodes they've produced. The manga is on it's 353 chapter as I write this. This is the first part of season one, and officially there was only one season of 50 episodes. Funimation has only half that season licensed, so hopefully they will pick up the second half. The stories a somewhat episodic so this is a fair way to release them, but it would be nice to collect the entire season. As for me, I'm still thinking who I'd cast in the parts fo the various characters, who knows, I might win the lotto one day, and I'd love to make this into a hit live action series in the states.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
GERONIMO!,
This review is from: Kenichi: The Mightiest Disciple - Season One, Part One (DVD)
An anime series about a boy learning martial-arts from a gang of masters sounds... kinda boring. Fortunately it's anything but -- "Kenichi: Season One, Part One" is a solid start to this deliciously oddballish series, with plenty of gutsplitting comedy, explosive action, a hint of romance, and extremely eccentric martial artists. And the "weak knees" main character makes it easy for you to root for him.
Throughout his school life, Kenichi Shirahama has been weak, bullied, friendless and nicknamed "weak knees." He enters the high school karate club to become stronger, but quickly finds himself at the bottom of the food chain -- and challenged to a match by a big muscled thug. But his life is unexpectedly saved by the new transfer student Miu, who can beat down an entire street gang. She guides him to the Ry'zanpaku dojo where she lives... and where five great martial arts masters currently reside, each at the peak of their skill and strength. Unsurprisingly Kenichi joins up with the hope of becoming stronger, but he soon discovers that their methods are kind of brutal (think racing around the city pulling jiujitsu master Akisame in a tire!). With the strength training -- and a little help from Miu -- Kenichi pulls off a miraculous victory. Unfortunately, his martial-arts win only leads to more trouble. First he attracts the attention of the cruel Tsukuba, foremost karate fighter at the school; and then he unwittingly gains the attention of Ragnarok, the strongest street gang in the city. While Kenichi tries to keep his life as normal as possible, his new fame as a fighter only causes more chaos for him, as Ragnarok's boxer Takeda and cruel Shinnosuke challenge him to fight. "Kenichi: Season One Part One" is a strong start to the anime series -- it quickly introduces us to the characters and scenario, then plunges right into the world of martial arts training. But on a deeper level, "Kenichi" is also about a young man who gains not only physical strength but mental endurance, and how his innocent quest to be strong rapidly escalates into something far more life-changing. And.... it's funny. REALLY funny. Every episode is packed with slapstick, insane training (the Great Leg Divide -- a sort of medieval torture device), eccentric characters ("Riiiiiise, SEBASTIAN!"), and tsunamis of hormones whenever Kenichi gets within two feet of Miu. All this humor keeps the series from getting too deadly serious. There's also a lot of action that twists through the various episodes, as Kenichi is confronted by all sorts of opponents -- karate, boxing, street fighters, knife-wielding thugs -- and has to use different techniques to defeat them. Lots of special punches, low kicks, pivots, body-weight throws and other fun techniques. But Kenichi himself is a strong point -- he's a likable and earnest kid who hasn't been soured by his constant mistreatment at school, and who just wants to be strong enough to defend himself and other people. And it doesn't go to his head, since he shows immense compassion towards the people he defeats. Miu is also an excellent female lead in the vein of Tite Kubo's Orihime -- busty, friendly, industrious, naive, and just a little bit weird. And the supporting characters have a brilliance of their own: there's Miu's imposing grandpa, the rough and blunt Sakaki, the silent sword-swinging Shigure, the lecherous Kensei, and the vast and deadly child-man Apachai ("Only limit is limit of fear!"). And while we haven't seen much of him yet, Takeda the Puncher is a promising rival/buddy for Kenichi. "Kenichi: Season One Part One" is a solid start to a thoroughly enjoyable series, crammed with martial-arts fighting and loads of comedy. A fun, wild little anime series that deserves immediate watching! Apapapapa!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Kenichi the Mightiest Disciple part 1,
This review is from: Kenichi: The Mightiest Disciple - Season One, Part One (DVD)
It's been some time since a decent martial arts anime came out and finally one has arrived. Kenichi has everything a guy could ask for; hot babes, and great fights. An absolute must add to any anime collection.
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the best animes starring a funny and endearing hero,
This review is from: Kenichi: The Mightiest Disciple - Season One, Part One (DVD)
I like anime, although I haven't watched a lot of it, and my tastes are for anime with humor as well as action. (My favorites include "Inuyasha" and "Full Metal Alchemist") Well "Kenichi, The Mightiest Disciple" fills the bill. Often the Japanese sense of humor one finds in anime doesn't translate well for us Americans, but "Kenichi" is a happy exception. There is a lot of well-done slapstick in this anime, primarily having to do with martial arts training and Kenichi's (the boy hero of the title) innate timidity and clumsiness. Kenichi himself is a triumph of a character - yes, he's the hero and yes, he does a lot of "kung-fu fighting" (not to mention a dash of ju-jitsu, boxing and other martial disciplines), but he's hardly Naruto - in fact, if anything, he's the anti-Naruto. He has no natural martial-arts talent whatsoever (as his masters constantly - and somtimes painfully - remind him), but manages to survive mostly on stubborness and determination. He doesn't learn his lessons in the hope of becoming great, but so he can protect others; ego has nothing to do with his ambitions. And he takes a lickin' and keeps on tickin' - he's put through a great deal of pain, which he protests loudly (and hilariously) and while he whines about his training a lot, it just makes him more believable and lovable. It's refreshing to see a character in anime who's genuinely funny and not just weird; Kenichi is an everyman that everyone in every country can identify with and care about.
The supporting characters in this anime are solid and add to the humor and drama significantly. They are a collection of "types" - tough guy, philosopher, sullen silent warrior, big lovable lug who doesn't know his own strength, and big-breasted bimbo - yet they have a depth that saves them from being dull or annoying. The "bimbo" is a character named Miu, who befriends Kenichi early on and becomes his love interest (a development she seems mostly ignorant of), and it's fun to see Kenichi's innocent lust over her, (although it's a big startling when he springs a nosebleed whenever he becomes aroused...apparently, that's a traditional Japanese-manga expression of sexual desire, weird huh?) and his eternal frustration is yet another aspect of the character that makes him so endearing. Best of all, Miu's a really a likable character, and the pair make a truly appealing couple. As for the martial arts aspect of the series, the fights and descriptions of the various fighting techniques are involving and interesting. There is a battle at one point between Kenichi and a character named Hermit that displays some spectacular animation that really blew me away. "Kenichi" is an anime that's safe for kids and enjoyable for older kids (like me). It's really one of the best humor animes to date, and I highly recommend it. Seasons 1 and 2 are out now. Here's hoping for a season 3!
5.0 out of 5 stars
deeeep,
By
This review is from: Kenichi: The Mightiest Disciple - Season One, Part One (DVD)
It was very well put 2gether.. learned alot of discipline practicals... funny,with deep insight and good fight scenes
5.0 out of 5 stars
Funny,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Kenichi: The Mightiest Disciple - Season One, Part One (DVD)
This is a common theme in many Anime. It is a martial arts in school series that has comedic moments through the show. It doesn't contain any nudity but it does have jokes about the co-star's large breasts however. It reminds me of the original Karate Kid, only with the female star being more skilled than the protagonist. Overall I would recommend this product to anyone that finds martial arts interesting and is looking for a good laugh.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best Anime Series I've Ever Seen!,
By
This review is from: Kenichi: The Mightiest Disciple - Season One, Part One (DVD)
The characters are robust and dynamic and usually always come back in play later in the series. If you have a good sense of humor you can laugh each and every episode without any problems.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great series,
This review is from: Kenichi: The Mightiest Disciple - Season One, Part One (DVD)
"History's Strongest Disciple Kenichi" or just "Kenichi" one of my favorite anime/manga series of recent years. Kenichi has been bullied all his life and has no friends but everything turns around when he meets and befriends Miu. Miu's a beautiful girl who just transferred to his high school who happens to live at her grandfather's old dojo with several martial arts masters.
Kenichi's story is one of a coward who breaks free of his destiny to be picked on his entire life and decides to become strong to defend the weak (and mostly defending Miu who really doesn't need protection). Kenichi mixes comedy, action/fighting, with a bit of romance very nicely. It doesn't go overboard with the fighting unlike most anime fights these days; no kamehamehas or super-human power-ups. Instead it opts for a more realistic approach detailing forms of Kung Fu, Jujitsu, Muay Tai, and Karate. The closest similar series I could compare it to would be Hajime no Ippo (or "Fighting Spirit" it's english title). I definitely recommend Kenichi.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
AWESOME!,
This review is from: Kenichi: The Mightiest Disciple - Season One, Part One (DVD)
Funi has done it again. A really Great Hilarious Dub. I've seen the Japanese and i wasn't that fond with it (ALTHOUGH I LOVE WATCHING AND HEARING JAPANESE VOICES IN ANIME AND FILMS). They Had Mius seiyuu who does Soi Fon in Bleach. Also Mamiko Noto playing Shigure which made me watch the Japanese version just i wanted wait for Funis Dub. I only seen Two Jap episodes and i have the box set and I'm glad. Its worth it. I already pre ordered the second part
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Kenichi: The Mightiest Disciple - Season One, Part One by Monica Rial (DVD - 2009)
$49.98 $25.00
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