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Princess Nine - First Inning (Vol. 1)

Princess Nine - First Inning (Vol. 1)

List Price: $19.98
Your Price: $17.98
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: who said good shows are extinct?
Review: i dont wanna hear anymore moanin from kids sayin there are no good shows out there - princess nine bucks the system! if u wanna see a good, wholesome show about growing up, inner conflicts and issues we have to grow thru and overcoming then this one is for u! the characters, storyline, storytelling and plot all come together unbelievably well. if hollywood got smart n made a movie on this cartoon it be raining money for them! anyway if ur not sure - rent it out first; but be prepared to buy the rest of the volumes after seeing volume 1!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Legend Begins
Review: I have only seen the first volume of this series, and I'm already hooked. The first two episodes were excellent, drawing the viewer in and not letting go. The sports action is obviously anime-fied, but as a baseball fan, I think they did a superb job capturing the feel and excitement of baseball.
The next three episodes (there are five on this disc) were slower, dealing with the gathering of a team, and gradually bringing in the characters. Those episodes weren't terribly memorable, but they were quite watchable, and promise far better to come. If you enjoy anime, you enjoy shows with good character development, and you enjoy baseball, then I can't recommend this series enough.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Legend Begins
Review: I have only seen the first volume of this series, and I'm already hooked. The first two episodes were excellent, drawing the viewer in and not letting go. The sports action is obviously anime-fied, but as a baseball fan, I think they did a superb job capturing the feel and excitement of baseball.
The next three episodes (there are five on this disc) were slower, dealing with the gathering of a team, and gradually bringing in the characters. Those episodes weren't terribly memorable, but they were quite watchable, and promise far better to come. If you enjoy anime, you enjoy shows with good character development, and you enjoy baseball, then I can't recommend this series enough.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Princess Nine is one Grand-Slam!
Review: Just when you couldn't watch another angst-ridden mecha adventure or pouty schoolgirl/vampire killer romp, ADV Films comes along with this sleeper series. From its opening scene, Princess Nine pulls you in with tantalizing tidbits and holds your interest with a great storyline and wonderful characters. However, to say Princess Nine is about baseball, is to completely miss the point. This is young girl's coming of age story that just happens to involve the creation of Japan's first all-girl High School baseball team bent on beating the boys at their own game. The music is another treat of Princess Nine. In an unusual move for an anime soundtrack, the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra provides the music. Even the obligatory J-Pop opening song uses the Warsaw Philharmonic to full advantage and is head and shoulders above most of the stuff out there. As always, there will be purists who insist on only the subtitled version, but for myself, the quality of the dubbed track is what matters. There were no disappointments here either. Hilary Haag's voice just seems to fit Ryo Hayakawa perfectly as does Monica Rial's Izumi Himuro. My own personal favorite, Kelly Manison, gives Kiasaragi Chairwoman, Keiko Himuro just the right mix of sultriness and authority. Add Christine M.Auten's voice as Shino, Ryo's mom, and you've practically got a Knight Sabers reunion. Trust me, Princess Nine will be a series that you'll want to watch again and again and a great addition to your anime collection.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not your typical anime...
Review: My first exposure to this series was through the ADV trailer on the Robotech series. At first glance it seems a far departure from the typical robot/battle/sex/gore fare that gets translated into English, so I had to check it out. Over all, it is a really decent series that doesn't play into any of the typical stereotypes, and becomes a very crafty exploration of Japanese culture and ethics by presenting an all girl's highschool attempting to break tradition and form a baseball (not SOFTball) team to compete against boys schools. There are plenty of complexities within the dynamic between all the players, their pasts and how it all fits together into the present. Perhaps the most refreshing idea of the series is presented through a very simple, elegant subject which means so much to the Japanese- baseball (highschool baseball holds big interest in the Japanese public). The involvement of the visionaries and management of the team adds depth to the stories which play up to the aspiriations of all those involved with the team, and those of the people against the formation of a girl's baseball team.

The first few episodes plod slightly as it reveals the hidden power of the central character, Ryo Hayakawa, a fourteen year old high school girl who is the daughter of a late baseball superstar. The revelations of her father and his involvement in people's lives unfolds through the series. Ryo inherited her father's ability to throw a fast, accurate baseball. She is then discovered by Ms. Himaro, the president of Kisaragi High where she hopes to put together a girl's baseball team, and Hiroki who is a star male high school player. The team's rather slovenly, apparently disorganized, drunken coach Kido reveals his hidden depths as hegets Ryo to use her enthusiasm to lure in other girls from around Japan and gain scholarship to Kisaragi. The second episode has Kido trying to land a wayward athelete whose home is being shattered by divorce. The fourth episode concerns Ryo's unexpected solo aventure to a seaside town where a girl with extraordinary batting abilities is hiding her skills so she can stay with her enfeebled father.

All around, the stories are fun and enthralling once the series gets underway. The video is very good, the audio is fine, and the disk extras are nice additions. The only negative to me is the style of layout and animation- it is the usual flat technique prevelant in the less skilled productions. However, the developing stories, unique characters and complex back story make up for anything the series is lacking. Sweet, aggressive, thoughtful.....'Princess Nine' is a very enjoyable series!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Something different for anime fans
Review: This disc absolutely blind-sided me. I am no fan of baseball, or sports for that matter -- and I'm certainly no fan of the sport subgenre of anime and manga. But "Princess Nine" isn't really about baseball in the first place. Baseball is just the vehicle for a bigger story about striving and making it, delivered with a panache and a style I've not seen in a long time.

The main character is Ryo Hayakawa, 16, living at home with her mother and helping her run the family restaurant. Her ballplayer father died some time ago, but not before witnessing his little girl's brutal fastball. As naturally gifted as Ryo is -- she pitches an impromptu no-hitter at one point -- she's not interested in playing. She wants to help her mother, get good grades, and step out of her father's shadow.

That being said, she's all the more enticing a target for an ambitious woman who wants to start an all-female ball club and send them into the big leagues to compete against the male teams. Ryo is her first draftee, and she hires a down-and-out coach to scout the rest of the team. Some of them are truly odd choices -- the tennis player with the killer backhand smash -- but in context they make perfect sense. And some of them are just plain odd, like the girl who wanders into the clubhouse one day and just starts doing everyone's laundry on a whim.

What makes "Princess Nine" work is the bombast and the gusto with which it tears into its story. The writing and the voice-acting and especially the music (thanks to the Warsaw Philharmonic, which also gave us the amazing "Giant Robo" score) are all pitched at the right level of passion and sly self-knowing -- the show knows when it's being gleefully over-the-top, and celebrates it.

I recently had the displeasure of watching the "Steam Detectives" anime, which trashed Kia Asamiya's terrific manga and made it aimless, lifeless and confused. "Princess Nine" is a great example of how good anime can get, even with a cliched subject.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Something different for anime fans
Review: This disc absolutely blind-sided me. I am no fan of baseball, or sports for that matter -- and I'm certainly no fan of the sport subgenre of anime and manga. But "Princess Nine" isn't really about baseball in the first place. Baseball is just the vehicle for a bigger story about striving and making it, delivered with a panache and a style I've not seen in a long time.

The main character is Ryo Hayakawa, 16, living at home with her mother and helping her run the family restaurant. Her ballplayer father died some time ago, but not before witnessing his little girl's brutal fastball. As naturally gifted as Ryo is -- she pitches an impromptu no-hitter at one point -- she's not interested in playing. She wants to help her mother, get good grades, and step out of her father's shadow.

That being said, she's all the more enticing a target for an ambitious woman who wants to start an all-female ball club and send them into the big leagues to compete against the male teams. Ryo is her first draftee, and she hires a down-and-out coach to scout the rest of the team. Some of them are truly odd choices -- the tennis player with the killer backhand smash -- but in context they make perfect sense. And some of them are just plain odd, like the girl who wanders into the clubhouse one day and just starts doing everyone's laundry on a whim.

What makes "Princess Nine" work is the bombast and the gusto with which it tears into its story. The writing and the voice-acting and especially the music (thanks to the Warsaw Philharmonic, which also gave us the amazing "Giant Robo" score) are all pitched at the right level of passion and sly self-knowing -- the show knows when it's being gleefully over-the-top, and celebrates it.

I recently had the displeasure of watching the "Steam Detectives" anime, which trashed Kia Asamiya's terrific manga and made it aimless, lifeless and confused. "Princess Nine" is a great example of how good anime can get, even with a cliched subject.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This is better than "A League of Their Own"
Review: This one is a keeper, one of those anime DVD's that you can pull out and show to people who claim that anime is nothing more than violence and pornography. There is no "fan service" or anything else to offend.

Princess Nine is the story of Ryo Hayakawa, a 15-year old junior high student who wanted nothing more than to skip high school and stay home to help her single mother run an Udon bar (High school is not mandatory in Japan).

There's just one thing. Ryo's father, who died while she was five years old, taught her how to pitch well. Really well. Well enough to pitch for the neighborhood league team and to strike out semi-professional baseball players. Ryo is handpicked as the core player of a girl's high school baseball team formed with the goal of reaching Japan's national high school championship.

It's hard to describe how complex this story is. Ryo plays baseball in part to maintain a connection with her deceased father. Keiko Himuro, the chairperson of the board of directors of Kisaragi High fights for the right for a girl's team to compete against the boys. Her daughter, tennis star Izumi Himuro, fights for the love and attention of her too-distant mother. Shinsaku Kido, the team's coach, is a drunkard who, I think, will try to redeem himself by coaching this team to victory. There are two potential love interests for Ryo: Her quiet and sort of geeky childhood friend and Hiroki Takasugi, the rising star of the Kisargi boy's high school baseball team. And this is only after five episodes.

Who should see this? Well, everyone, I think, but especially people who like either baseball or inspirational stories about young women. There's a certain energy to Princess Nine that makes me believe that it's going to be a classic of enduring value.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This is better than "A League of Their Own"
Review: This one is a keeper, one of those anime DVD's that you can pull out and show to people who claim that anime is nothing more than violence and pornography. There is no "fan service" or anything else to offend.

Princess Nine is the story of Ryo Hayakawa, a 15-year old junior high student who wanted nothing more than to skip high school and stay home to help her single mother run an Udon bar (High school is not mandatory in Japan).

There's just one thing. Ryo's father, who died while she was five years old, taught her how to pitch well. Really well. Well enough to pitch for the neighborhood league team and to strike out semi-professional baseball players. Ryo is handpicked as the core player of a girl's high school baseball team formed with the goal of reaching Japan's national high school championship.

It's hard to describe how complex this story is. Ryo plays baseball in part to maintain a connection with her deceased father. Keiko Himuro, the chairperson of the board of directors of Kisaragi High fights for the right for a girl's team to compete against the boys. Her daughter, tennis star Izumi Himuro, fights for the love and attention of her too-distant mother. Shinsaku Kido, the team's coach, is a drunkard who, I think, will try to redeem himself by coaching this team to victory. There are two potential love interests for Ryo: Her quiet and sort of geeky childhood friend and Hiroki Takasugi, the rising star of the Kisargi boy's high school baseball team. And this is only after five episodes.

Who should see this? Well, everyone, I think, but especially people who like either baseball or inspirational stories about young women. There's a certain energy to Princess Nine that makes me believe that it's going to be a classic of enduring value.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A quiet treasure
Review: [Review applies to Vols. 1-6; some spoilers. I watch the subtitled version with the original Japanese voice actors. The English dub cast here is OK, but as is almost always true in my experience, the original is better and more enjoyable.]

Princess Nine is a wonderful series, a straight arrow that strikes the heart. If I were older and had a junior high school-aged daughter, I'd point her toward this series in a second.

There are few gimmicks here: no mecha or fantasy, no violence or obvious fan service, and no pervasive self-reference (as in the admittedly excellent mecha series Evangelion and Nadesico, which came out around the same time). It's a story about the ups and downs of a bunch of teenage girls who come together from all over Japan to become friends as teammates on fancy Kisaragi Girls' High School's baseball team. The character designs are bright, honest, and appealing. The background music gains a surprising layer of depth from the use of the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra. The animation is mostly solid, with a few exceptions (e.g. Episode # 19, "Hearts and Diamonds," a great episode full of romantic twists, is marred by some stretches of bad animation). The characters display well-developed, distinct personalities, and while the story arc is familiar to anyone who's seen a classic coming-of-age sports drama, the twists and turns are handled with a deft touch that is rewarding to watch. The series gets better and better as it progresses.

One of the notable things about Princess Nine is how successful the writers are at conveying the _goodness_ of many of the principal characters. We are given several believable, well realized individuals whose most salient trait is their good-heartedness. That includes not only the heroine Ryo Hayakawa herself, but at least two others. One is the gallant Hiroki Takasugi, a star baseball player at Kisaragi (Boys') High who falls for Ryo as soon as he meets her. The third - and one of the secret hearts of the series - is Koharu Hotta, a wiry girl from a fishing village who swings a mean bat for the Kisaragi girls' team and is as unpretentiously kind as the day is long.

(Aside for P9 buffs: is the small fish symbol on Koharu's blue sleeveless T-shirt (over her heart) also a Christian allusion?)

Most of the other team members are also memorable. There is no shortage of fans out there for redheaded Seira Morimura, the bad-girl second baseman ("loser coach!"), or Nene Mori, the team's sweetly spoiled manager. Ryo's rival Izumi Himuro is a prickly, complex creation in her own right.

I'm particularly fond of gabby, grinning Hikaru Yoshimoto, the first baseman. She's a pistol. One P9 fan describes Hikaru-chan as "the evil Punky Brewster," which fails to capture how down-to-earth she is. Her trademark is saying, in her Osaka accent, what the rest of the team is thinking. That the boisterous Hikaru eventually goes sweet on Ryo's shy, scholarly childhood chum Seishiro is a great touch. (OK, I'm also a sucker for ponytails.)

There's real drama here, big ups and downs. You won't find many scenes in anime better realized than the sad, sad vignette between Ryo and Takasugi in the cabin during the rain, in Volume 5. It is intimate, heartbreaking and tastefully restrained at the same time. That was not the only time I teared up watching this series. (Here is another: "Kaze (`wind')...").

Princess Nine will make you frustrated with the state of animation in America. I know that in some ways things are improving - there are some funny US series on at night for slackers, and Cartoon Network has done a solid job of bringing over Japanese mecha, fantasy and action titles for American audiences. But at the level of general, family-friendly animation with integrity, there's not much out there beyond the corporate, smarmy features cranked out by Disney - wherein for some asinine reason, every character from a pelican to an ancient mythical creature is required to talk in 90s slang and crack wise. Spare me. American audiences have fallen before for quietly excellent, slice-of-life TV series like "The Wonder Years" and "My So-Called Life." There's no good reason why a strong animated series like Princess Nine shouldn't be able to find a similar niche here.

There is one other frustrating aspect of watching this series. As many other reviewers have noted, it deserves - it cries out for - a second season. There are so many good characters, so many hooks left open in the first season. But sadly, it appears it's not to be. It's been five years now since Princess Nine ran in Japan. Unless _Zeta Princess Nine_ is secretly under wraps somewhere (anime joke), we'll have to content ourselves with these twenty-six fine episodes.

Kisaragi - Fight! Cue the opening: "Ashita o shinjiruno / Tada sore dake ..."


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