Home :: DVD :: Animation :: Anime & Manga  

Anime & Manga

Comedy
Computer Animation
General
International
Kids & Family
Science Fiction
Stop-Motion & Clay Animation
Serial Experiments - Lain: Knights (Layers 5-7) (Genoen Signature Series)

Serial Experiments - Lain: Knights (Layers 5-7) (Genoen Signature Series)

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

<< 1 2 3 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Outstanding!
Review: A freaky dark sci-fi series. It has a unique art style that I haven't seen before. The voice acting was excellent as well. It earned a 16+ rating due to its dark nature, and earned it justly. It's not a series small children would understand and enjoy. I loved it, though and I highly recommend it

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Reminiscent of The Matrix and The Thirteenth Floor...
Review: But oh, so much more interesting than those films. Keeps you guessing and thinking. I like this kind of anime so much...I can not wait until I get Deus and Reset on DVD. This series is great!!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Still A Very Good Continuation Of The Story
Review: First of all, to those people who give poor rating on this episode, I just want to say something. How can you assume that the story is not good if you start watching the second Disc. My suggestion for you is to get the first disc before commenting on the show.

Now, to my review of the story, I still give this disc a 5 star rating because even though the plot has thickened, there are still some unanswered questions, and better still, there were new confusion added (like what happened to her sis?, Was Lain on the wired or was she in wherever she was?, etc).They began to tell us who or what is "Knight", what they do and what is their plan. Overall, I still think it's a very good disc. I didn't, I don't and I won't regret owning this DVD.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very cool.
Review: I first saw Lain: Navi late at night in the company of several geeks. We were all hooked. In fact, we all went in search of the DVD as soon as possible. And Knights is even better. I think, however, that the absolute best part of the entire deal is the opening credits video. Any art freaks out there? Watch this and just oogle at the symbolism.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "Everything is a prophecy"
Review: If you approach this series expecting the ordinary, or even a somewhat imaginative approach to the theme of where the line between real and virtual are you are in for a shock. There is little about this story that is comfortable, and much that is deeply disquieting. Ryutaro Nakamura is intent in placing the viewer in Lain's experiences, intentionally creating the same perceptual and intellectual confusion.

The question probed in this DVD continued to be who or what is the real Lain. These episodes fracture the appearance of waif-like innocence that Lain wore in the first DVD. Not completely, though. Only enough so that it is clear that a much brasher and more forward young woman exists in the same mind. Even this simplifies her personality boundaries, as her sister is also consumed by the changes within Lain.

Sharing the 'wired' with her are desperate geeks trying to gain admission to the 'Knights,' a closed hacker society that is driven by secret, and perhaps deadly purposes. And in the 'real' world men in dark suits follow her and question her very existence. While her Navi grows into a water-cooled monster that swallows her entire room. Time and again, we have to wonder whose perceptions are we following, as our vision fragments and then heals in kaleidoscopic patterns. Into this strangeness step parents, strangers and friends who seem to only stop by to pronounce philosophically and then vanish back into the surfaces.

The artwork continues to be remarkable. This isn't so much an animated series as it is a designed film. By which I mean that rather than a flow of action, we are presented with images and symbols that glue themselves like wallpaper on the inside of our minds, returning repeatedly to haunt us. This is creative, experimental work, which draws the viewer forward despite forebodings of a final bleak vision that will never leave. This is a demonstration of anime's real potential as an art form, rather than simple entertainment.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "Everything is a prophecy"
Review: If you approach this series expecting the ordinary, or even a somewhat imaginative approach to the theme of where the line between real and virtual are you are in for a shock. There is little about this story that is comfortable, and much that is deeply disquieting. Ryutaro Nakamura is intent in placing the viewer in Lain's experiences, intentionally creating the same perceptual and intellectual confusion.

The question probed in this DVD continued to be who or what is the real Lain. These episodes fracture the appearance of waif-like innocence that Lain wore in the first DVD. Not completely, though. Only enough so that it is clear that a much brasher and more forward young woman exists in the same mind. Even this simplifies her personality boundaries, as her sister is also consumed by the changes within Lain.

Sharing the 'wired' with her are desperate geeks trying to gain admission to the 'Knights,' a closed hacker society that is driven by secret, and perhaps deadly purposes. And in the 'real' world men in dark suits follow her and question her very existence. While her Navi grows into a water-cooled monster that swallows her entire room. Time and again, we have to wonder whose perceptions are we following, as our vision fragments and then heals in kaleidoscopic patterns. Into this strangeness step parents, strangers and friends who seem to only stop by to pronounce philosophically and then vanish back into the surfaces.

The artwork continues to be remarkable. This isn't so much an animated series as it is a designed film. By which I mean that rather than a flow of action, we are presented with images and symbols that glue themselves like wallpaper on the inside of our minds, returning repeatedly to haunt us. This is creative, experimental work, which draws the viewer forward despite forebodings of a final bleak vision that will never leave. This is a demonstration of anime's real potential as an art form, rather than simple entertainment.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Best of the Four - Knights
Review: If you buy only one tape of Serial Experiments Lain(Which is a really bad idea), make this the one. Not only does this raise the most interesting questions, but some of the best plot twists occur here, including what happens to Lain's sister, Mika.

If you want an anime to keep you up at night, either with thought or with chills, make this it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Diving deeper
Review: In this second volume Lain becomes aware of the strange reality of the wired network, which seems to have an existence on its own. As soon as some questions from the first volume are answered, others rise, as we get inside Lain's double life in the real and wired worlds. At the end, you will be longing for the third volume.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Lain Ishakowa
Review: Lain is one of the best experiences with movies I have ever had. It is also my best experience with the subclass of anime cyberpunk and the entire class of anime. It's a superb story giving science fiction one more excuse to frighten us an excite us at the same time. What is the difference between the human mind and a computer? What is the difference between a running program and a personality? What is the difference between an application and a soul? What is the difference between the internet and god? This tempts you to believe the impossible is happening and the possible is all just an illusion. In English trippier than Alice in Wonderland. An amazing exciting epic where finding yourself isn't as easy as it may seem and finding yourself is much more dangerous than trying to kill yourself. If you love good anime, good science fiction, good cyberpunk, or just movies that will twist, strecth, and break your mind, you will LOVE Lain:serial experiment. By the way the best part: no nudity, very little offensive language, unfortunately there is some gore, but not throughout the whole thing just in specific episodes, and only one mention of the idea, it's only implied, of sex. (but note I only watched the subtitled version so I don't know if the english made for America version is any different.) Great Buy!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I see dead people...
Review: Ok, wrong movie-- but regardless whether she is bothered by neck dwelling prickly things or not, after "Navi," Lain is begging to be unraveled. In "Knights," it's seems that we'll finally see Lain's ball of truths untwine. Instead we discover it's loops and knots, all through an unceasing collage of imagery and sound that leaves our senses bruised and us meandering with Lain and her world. Ever get a cut or bruise and wonder how they got there? The answers lie within the layers of the Serial Experiments: Lain series. Not for the attention-challenged.

Technically, there really isn't anything to add that hasn't already been said. Like volume 1, the quality of the transfer, both in video and sound (even if it's only 2.0 DD), once again hold up beautifully. This series is truly a reference piece for Anime on DVD. As before, there are Japanese and English audio tracks as well as English subtitles available. I don't know if it's just my copy, but I picked up two obvious errors (not a translation nit-picking) in the subs that seems to have slipped passed the editors. One is clearly a complete thought in dialogue left incomplete in the subs. The other is completely technical, where the english subtitle falls on top of a sub/caption thats there when sub is off. Oh well, I guess you've seen it all, no big deal.

As for supplements, it may seem lacking, but what _is_ there just makes the great, greater. It might not seem like a big deal but I really appreciate the option to watch the opening intro without the credit text! Also, I haven't watched much anime in a while, but I'm glad to see there are still people who preserve the original work when it makes it overseas. Specifically concerning the soundtrack, wherein some U.S. Anime distributors, who originally have nothing to do with the work itself, decide to take it upon themselves to change this and that, because "it's better this and that way." Since when did idiocy take precedence over the artists original work? 3!


<< 1 2 3 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates