Red Garden Vol. 5: Love Lies Bleeding

Red Garden Vol. 5: Love Lies Bleeding Review



Overall 5.00 of 5 (by 1 user)
 




2008 Advisor
scorpioeyez
Warrenton, OR

Preparing For A Showdown in New York

5 star rating

a fan of clever plots, Anime Geek, Sucker For Cute Girls, A Professional Geek
Pros

    Suspensful, Supporting Cast Gets To Do Stuff

Cons
    Extra Cursing in Dub Track is Wasteful

DEC
24
2008
To read this review in its entirety please visit otakureview.net

            In episodes sixteen through nineteen, all four of the girls have a brand new reality to deal with. Herve has told the truth to Kate that if the two cursed books are brought together all of them will lose their memories of everything essentially erasing them. They won’t remember who they are or even who their friends and family are. All of them deal with this in various ways. Kate and Claire become more philosophical as they think about the little things that they will miss. Rachel withdraws more and more and Rose spends more time with her estranged father.

 

            Meanwhile during these episodes, the police investigation into the missing girls intensifies. As the two detectives learn more about the missing girls, their lives will be put on the line as they search for the truth.  

 

Good and the Bad

 

            The idea of the girls losing all of their memories is really hit hard on this volume. Repeatedly hard to be honest. All throughout these episodes, the girls will almost always be dealing with this reality in one way or the other. Some will go visit family; some will spend time with friends or just think really random things out loud. But the bottom line is that this plot point is obviously deeply important, if not to the audience than the staff.

 

            The supporting cast is really well used in this volume as well. While Lula tends to sink into the background, Emilio and Herve are well purposed. The story of Lise and the continuing investigations finally see some well deserved screen time in these episodes. While Red Garden has never done a lot with the detectives and their investigation into the girl’s suicides, this volume finally gives them something to do and makes their scenes completely worthwhile.

 

            Then again, some of these supporting characters come across as awkward on this volume. Paula is the best example of this with the scene she shares with Kate late in the volume. In this scene, Paula comes across as nothing like she’s been in the past. The dialogue here is a little awkward at best and you’re never quite sure how far the staff is going to push it before it finally ends.

 

            The animation in this series continues to look amazing even after nineteen episodes. While in previous volumes Red Garden has used a variety of scenes to highlight the animation, the girls’ interactions with scenes and backgrounds really are well highlighted here. A late night visit to Lise’s grave segues easily into a very nice scene with the girls standing in the snowfall. The perspectives shown during this scene were really well chosen with a great view of the snow falling down onto the girls from below. All of the elements that made up this scene really put together really well creating a very memorable scene.

 

            The pacing of the volume starts very slow but gradually speeds up quite well. The first half of episode sixteen really drug by as Kate and Claire open up the volume. Gradually though Red Garden finds its footing again and keeps the audience moving right along with the action of the series.

 

Music

 

The real saving grace (no pun intended) to Paula’s big scene with Kate is the background music that plays with it. The music continues to come across clearly with no drops in sound quality. The music is still one of the more powerful aspects of this series. The instrumental tracks are all so powerfully composed that it would be hard to imagine this series without them.

 

Dub vs. Sub

 

            One big change that fans may notice is that Jose Diaz is replaced on this volume by Quentin Haag in the role of Herve. While I’m not familiar with the details behind why Jose exited the cast, Quentin does a great job stepping into the role. The change wasn’t even something that I noticed as I continued to watch through the series. It will be interesting to go back later and further nitpick the two performances though and see what subtle differences I can find. 

 

Extras

           

            Clean animations.

 

Overall

 

            While the cynical members of the audience are going to worry about the ending not living up to the hype, the rest of the audience has every reason to be excited to see the final episodes. The characters have all had their chance to express how they feel about where they’re headed and now it’s time to get there. In the final three episodes, it will be time for Red Garden to answer all the questions that fans have. This is a series that continues to get better and will be hard to let go of when it ends.

 




I_thumb_up Red Garden Vol. 5: Love Lies Bleeding is recommended by scorpioeyez

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