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Haibane-Renmei: Complete Vols. 1-4 [DVD]

4.0 4.0 out of 5 stars 25 ratings

Additional DVD options Edition Discs
Price
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DVD
October 18, 2005
4
$99.99
Format Box set, Subtitled, Animated, NTSC, Color, DVD, Dolby, Widescreen
Contributor Tomokazu Tokoro
Language English, Japanese
Runtime 5 hours and 25 minutes

Product Description

In a long-forgotten walled town, humans coexist with the Haibane, angelic-like beings of unknown origin. Rakka becomes the newest Haibane after she awakens from a strange dream and finds herself hatching from a massive cocoon. With no memories of her previous life, Rakka struggles to adjust to her new surroundings, however, burning questions remain in the back of her mind. What are Haibane and what is their purpose? What lies beyond the huge, forbidden town walls? Thus Rakka begins her wistful journey of self-discovery and wonderment. DVD Features: Anamorphic Widescreen, Textless Original Opening, Textless Original Ending, Art Gallery, Previews.

Product details

  • Aspect Ratio ‏ : ‎ 1.78:1
  • Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No
  • MPAA rating ‏ : ‎ Unrated (Not Rated)
  • Package Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 7.9 x 5.5 x 2.6 inches; 11.2 ounces
  • Director ‏ : ‎ Tomokazu Tokoro
  • Media Format ‏ : ‎ Box set, Subtitled, Animated, NTSC, Color, DVD, Dolby, Widescreen
  • Run time ‏ : ‎ 5 hours and 25 minutes
  • Release date ‏ : ‎ October 18, 2005
  • Subtitles: ‏ : ‎ English
  • Studio ‏ : ‎ Geneon [Pioneer]
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0009ZE9WQ
  • Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 4
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.0 4.0 out of 5 stars 25 ratings

Customer reviews

4 out of 5 stars
4 out of 5
25 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on September 19, 2007
This show is very interesting if you have the patience and attention span to go through it from beginning to end. warning, if you like  Akira (Special Edition)  (yuck)  Ninja Scroll  (yuck) or any of those super action sex filled movies and shows that have someone dieing every two minutes, you might as well skip this show as no one dies, no one gets their arms cut off, and there are no explosions during the entire 13 episode series, which is just fine with me but may turn the more superficial anime fans off.

the story is mostly about a young Haibane (pronounced Hi-ba-nA) named Rakka who is a new born Haibane who is trying to figure out her place in the world she lives in. the Haibane are an angelic race with seeming less useless wings and halos that hover over their heads making look like biblical angles, but other than appearances, these creatures have almost nothing in common with the angelic being of the bible; instead they act and look just like normal human beings just with a different set of rules and pasts. Nobody really knows what they are, or where they came from, but each has an uneasy feeling that they don't belong, that they came from somewhere else before becoming Haibane. This sense of unease is what drives Rakka for most of the beginning of the series. She tries very hard to figure out who she was, where she came from, and why she is now a Haibane. Sadly, the answers never come to her, but we are given some rather depressing hints on what she was before.

So what is this series about really? What is the plot? Well, that's a little hard to explain. Its not so much what this story is about, it's who it is about. The plot is almost none existent in the first half of the series, and even when it gets more involved it's not really that interesting. No, the plot is not what makes this story good in any way, it's the characters. Each character is very likable and sympathetic. There is no "bad guy" in this series, and there are no "heroes" either. Each character here is a person, with a unique personality and view on life. Each has their own quirks, fears, likes and dislikes. Each is as real as a fictional character can be, and I applauded the writers of this show for achieving this. The depression Rakka goes through half way though the series when she looses her friend is very real, as well as Reki's fear and loneness at the end. They are so real that when they went though pain of any kind, no matter how much or how little, I felt my heart break for them. I felt pain when Rakka's wings burst though her back, I felt sad when a character left, I felt lonely when one of the characters was alone, afraid when they were afraid. So in short, this story isn't really about anything in particular, it's about people. The begining of the series is mostly just a set up, but trust me, once Rakka's wings start turning black, it gets very dramatic.

The animation reminded me a lot of Full Mettle Alcamist and 
Serial Experiments Lain - Boxed Set (Signature Series) . I've never seen a lot of Alcamist, but the backgrounds are very similar, and there is a striking resemblance between Lain from Serial Experiments Lain, and Rakka from this series. Both look young, alone, innocent. The character designs are a notch above average. They aren't eye candy but they do go above a lot of amines I've seen before, and no two characters look alike which makes remember their names a lot easier. The backgrounds are really the eye candy here. It's simply beautiful. I've always love scenery shots of green meadows, or large forests, or a windmill rotating in a gentle breeze. This show is chuck full of such shots. Once again, if you're looking for large cities and fancy sci fi machines, look elsewhere, this show isn't for you. You'd probably just end up being board.

However, it isn't' perfect. There are some things that really got on my nerves. The first thing is that there aren't any male leads. There aren't any dudes in this series. The biggest male role in this whole series doesn't show up until half way though the series and play a lack luster role at that. He shows up on screen at most ten times in thirteen episodes, and even then most of the time he's there for a whopping 1 to 3 minutes. As much as I love female anime characters, there needs to be a guy playing a main role in there somewhere just to get a little bit of a different perspective. They try to make up for this by making two of the girls tomboys, but I'm sorry, tomboys, although cool, do not count as guys. One of these tomboys, Kuu, only dresses like a boy but acts like any other girl. The other, Kana, I actually mistook for a boy at first because she acted so much like a boy her age would, but sadly she turned out to be a girl after all. All I'm asking for is to have a male lead here, instead of just a bunch of girls. Is that so bad? this series could have very easily tuned into just another chick flick, but managed to stray away from that by refusing to be a romance (thank god for that).

The dub may not be the best dub in the world, certainly not up to par with Lain or 
Kino's Journey - The Idle Adventurer (Vol. 1) , but it is passable for the most part. There were times when Rakka's super (and I do mean super) soft voice just annoyed the hell out of me, but most of the time I didn't really notice. The other characters voices were good, especially Kana's, who stole the show with her constant attack on the crows that scavenged though their trash. As for the dialog, the middle part of the series had some really cheesy moments, but only a few, but they were pretty bad. Other than that, it was mostly real and believable.

This show isn't about action and it isn't sci fi. It's a character drama. Its really hard to compare it to other anime when the only other hard character drama's I've seen are 
Now and Then, Here and There (Complete Collector's Boxed Set)  and  Grave of the Fireflies (Collector's Edition) , and this series has none of the horridness situations, nor the anti war themes of those two anime's. If I had to compare it to something, I'd say it has more in common with Miyazaki's  Spirited Away  than anything else but it's really different at the same time.

So, if you are looking for a drama with characters you can love and sympathize with and don't mind a slower pace and lack of action, by all means, pick this baby up and enjoy. but, and I've given you people fare warning, if you are an action junky who needs someone killed or something blowing up every ten minutes just to keep you watching, SKIP THIS SERIES!! I guarantee you, you will not like it. To truly enjoy this series, you have to be able to pay attention to the characters and their emotions because when it comes right down to this, this series is all about them, not you.

Replay value; high.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 2, 2010
Please don't hate me for disliking this anime. I watched it all, and whenever I discuss it with people, they can't believe I 'didn't get it' or was dissatisfied with the 'not-a-real-ending' ending. They tell me it's got nothing to do with Judeo-Christian themes, though the characters live in a monastery environment and have angel's wings and are outcasts (sinners).

You can read the wonderful reviews and get the gushing perspective, or can read mine and see why I think this way. Let's go over the title of this review piece by piece. First it's Slice-of-Life. You won't see any action, or romance, and the pacing is slow. To begin with, I'm not a fan of Slice-of-Life, and I saw all these five star reviews and let someone talk me into watching it. Stop right here if you also like hot-blooded man anime, because this is about as chick-flick as anime can get.

If you have kids, the kids will like it. It does function as good babysitting -- it's a pleasant juvenile moralistic fairy tale. Not so wonderful if you happen to be an adult; at least I didn't find it at the level of Miyazaki or Disney movies, which I always enjoy because they have great dramatic tension.

If you can fall in love with the characters, this won't matter, but if you are like me, and cynically MST3K it in your head because it's boring, thinking 'this is a new fan-pandering direction... loli-angel-furries' then the first episodes will also fall flat with you. If you like anime such as 
Aria the Animation Season 1 , you likely love the show (and you should buy it).

Next we have 'allegorical' and 'fill-in-your-own context.' Haibane Reimei is set in an idyllic 18th century style location (near a large town) with caring people and tons of daily chores. It is wholesome, hearty, and flat out boring. The animation is good, but the story can be a metaphor if you want it to be one. Whatever ideas you have about life-after-death, you can apply them to this show in some fashion and grow quite attached your personal interpretation. I've had people foam at the mouth about how their interpretation makes H.R. such an awesome story, and I'm such a terrible guy for not agreeing with them. I'm not going there, but if you like intellectual anime open to highly subjective philosophy, you'll like this product if you enjoy non-violent slow plotlines.

Finally, what really drove this anime into the 'dislike' category for me was the ending scene. Yeah, it's an end. Some will even argue their interpretation means it's a redemptive end. The type of end it is, well that's not a part of the actual show. My viewpoint demanded more for me to consider the end a real end, and let's leave it at that.

I didn't like the show. If you share my tastes, which I have communicated in this review, you won't either. I concede it is a good production, but I also hate artsy films with high production values, and this anime toed the line between 'boring kid's story' and 'artsy philosophy.' Make of that what you will, and please don't rage-unhelpful this review because you thought the anime was the greatest thing ever. There are plenty of glowing reviews, and I know my opinion is in the minority. Feel free to tell me how my opinion offends you in the comments. Thanks!
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Reviewed in the United States on April 4, 2010
I went into this series knowing very little about it. I knew that it was emotional, and that Yoshitoshi ABe of Serial Experiments Lain fame was involved. That was enough to get me going. In the first few minutes of the first episode an angel-like woman walks down a hallway smoking a cigarette. I found that imagery delicious, and right then I knew that I had to hang around to see how the series would unfold. I'm positive that not everyone will be as easy to hook as me, and unfortunately for them there are very few moments within the first batch of episodes to really hook you. The first half of the series mostly focuses on the mundane lives of the Haibane (the angel-like girls you see on the box,) which doesn't sound very interesting but it only takes a passing interest into the lives of these creatures (people? some would argue) to keep your attention.

This is a very difficult series to recommend because action is pretty much non-existent, and it can be excruciatingly slow for the impatient. One thing that you should be made aware of going in is that the burning questions that you develop as the series progresses will mostly not be answered. The ones on the surface will, such as what happens to the characters, but the deeper questions such as "what are the Haibane?" and "what is beyond the town?" will remain unanswered.

I viewed the show in Japanese and thought that they did an excellent job. Unfortunately I looked into this series a little too late and as of the date of this review Haibane Renmei (and every other show that ABe has been involved with) is out of print in the U.S and has been for some time.
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Top reviews from other countries

J. Forth
4.0 out of 5 stars Haibane box set
Reviewed in Canada on September 18, 2009
Until seeing this I was not a fan of amine at all. I didn't understand the adult fascination with cartoons. The artistry and aesthetic of Haibane Renmei was very beautiful to me. and as a women I felt I could relate to the "girl culture" created and presented in the film. Hope they make more.
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