• Tech News
    • Games
    • Pc & Laptop
    • Mobile Tech
    • Ar & Vr
    • Security
  • Startup
    • Fintech
  • Reviews
  • How To
What's Hot

Elementor #32036

January 24, 2025

The Redmi Note 13 is a bigger downgrade compared to the 5G model than you might think

April 18, 2024

Xiaomi Redmi Watch 4 is a budget smartwatch with a premium look and feel

April 16, 2024
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest VKontakte
Behind The ScreenBehind The Screen
  • Tech News
    1. Games
    2. Pc & Laptop
    3. Mobile Tech
    4. Ar & Vr
    5. Security
    6. View All

    Bring Elden Ring to the table with the upcoming board game adaptation

    September 19, 2022

    ONI: Road to be the Mightiest Oni reveals its opening movie

    September 19, 2022

    GTA 6 images and footage allegedly leak

    September 19, 2022

    Wild west adventure Card Cowboy turns cards into weird and silly stories

    September 18, 2022

    7 Reasons Why You Should Study PHP Programming Language

    October 19, 2022

    Logitech MX Master 3S and MX Keys Combo for Business Gen 2 Review

    October 9, 2022

    Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen10 Review

    September 18, 2022

    Lenovo IdeaPad 5i Chromebook, 16-inch+120Hz

    September 3, 2022

    It’s 2023 and Spotify Still Can’t Say When AirPlay 2 Support Will Arrive

    April 4, 2023

    YouTube adds very convenient iPhone homescreen widgets

    October 15, 2022

    Google finishes iOS 16 Lock Screen widgets rollout w/ Maps

    October 14, 2022

    Is Apple actually turning iMessage into AIM or is this sketchy redesign rumor for laughs?

    October 14, 2022

    MeetKai launches AI-powered metaverse, starting with a billboard in Times Square

    August 10, 2022

    The DeanBeat: RP1 simulates putting 4,000 people together in a single metaverse plaza

    August 10, 2022

    Improving the customer experience with virtual and augmented reality

    August 10, 2022

    Why the metaverse won’t fall to Clubhouse’s fate

    August 10, 2022

    How Apple privacy changes have forced social media marketing to evolve

    October 16, 2022

    Microsoft Patch Tuesday October Fixed 85 Vulnerabilities – Latest Hacking News

    October 16, 2022

    Decentralization and KYC compliance: Critical concepts in sovereign policy

    October 15, 2022

    What Thoma Bravo’s latest acquisition reveals about identity management

    October 14, 2022

    What is a Service Robot? The vision of an intelligent service application is possible.

    November 7, 2022

    Tom Brady just chucked another Microsoft Surface tablet

    September 18, 2022

    The best AIO coolers for your PC in 2022

    September 18, 2022

    YC’s Michael Seibel clarifies some misconceptions about the accelerator • DailyTech

    September 18, 2022
  • Startup
    • Fintech
  • Reviews
  • How To
Behind The ScreenBehind The Screen
Home»Tech News»Inu-Oh review: A visually inventive anime rock opera
Tech News

Inu-Oh review: A visually inventive anime rock opera

August 13, 2022No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Inu-Oh review: A visually inventive anime rock opera
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Rock musicals admittedly aren’t one of the things that fans of the genre typically watch anime for. However, even though director Masaaki Yuasa’s (The Tatami Galaxy, Ping Pong the Animation) Inu-Oh won’t be taking the spotlight off other conventional movies coming out this year, like Dragon Ball Super: Super Hero or One Piece Film: Red, it’s certainly one that deserves the attention of anime enthusiasts.

Inu-Oh is an artistic, creative, and stylized tale of alternate history, and while its story isn’t heavily dialogue-driven in a typical sense, the blend of the rock opera musical genre, the 14th-century setting, and animation studio Science SARU’s mesmerizing art direction come together wonderfully to present some resonating themes and emotional resolutions.

Saying more with less

Inu-Oh is an adaptation of author Hideo Furukawa’s novel Tales of the Heike: INU-OH, and its combination of revisionist history and rock operas prove to be one of the most ingenious premises in an anime release this year. It follows the story of Tomona, a young man and biwa player blinded as a child who loses both of his parents. He goes on to meet the titular Inu-Oh, another young man born of severe deformities as a result of a cruel curse. Together, the two go on to countrywide stardom as they combine their musical talents and penchant for theatrics.

The movie isn’t heavy on dialogue, but the story speaks volumes without being too overt or melodramatic — something that anime is occasionally guilty of. And, as one would expect, a lot of the story and world-building is presented through rock musical numbers. However, the cast up and down does excellent work of conveying charged emotions in the character interactions.

See also  Legacy UK customs system stops accepting registration requests

It’s a sort of story within a story, as the vehicle for the plot centers around speaking the truth through storytelling in the face of authoritative suppression. Its socially conscious themes of giving a voice to the marginalized, embracing change while rebelling against rigid tradition, and how history is “written by the winners” are impressively poignant.

Watching Tomana and Inu-Oh perform with such passion makes the movie as a whole feel like a thunderous anthem and rallying cry, drawing meta parallels with the world today. And even with those larger societal topics touched on throughout Inu-Oh, it also doesn’t lose sight of the personal journeys of its two heartfelt protagonists breaking down social norms.

Hypnotic art direction and animation

Inu-Oh with Tomona and their troupe performing.

In addition to the writing and directing being narratively efficient, studio Science SARU’s (whom Yuasa has also worked with extensively before) work on Inu-Oh was the other crucial half of telling a story that heavily emphasizes visual presentation. The studio’s animation and overall art direction is something akin to what fans of their work on Ping Pong the Animation would be used to.

The style is hypnotically surreal and unique when compared to other anime TV series or movies, especially for how it balances that surrealism with a somewhat grounded setting. Both of these artistic styles were important to mesh together effectively, since this revisionist history story/rock opera has an essential element of fantasy and magical realism embedded into it.

The cruel world that Tomona and Inu-Oh have to wade through and the unfair circumstances of the lives they lead are what bring about the movie’s more colorfully vibrant aspects. From their perspectives, that vibrancy is in perfect contrast to the comparatively dreary and gray world stuck in place on the outside. It’s all in all an impressive feat of visual harmony.

See also  Whirlpool W Collection WQ9I FO1BX UK fridge freezer review

Likewise, how well the animation of facial expressions is done can’t be stressed enough. Especially during the musical segments, the animation perfectly conveys a spectrum of emotions in excruciating detail, from anger to passion to apathy and sorrow, which is incredibly fitting in a story that’s ultimately about rebellion, truth, and emotional expression through music.

Refreshing originality

Tomona and Inu-Oh performing in full wardrobe in anime key art.

Anime like Dragon Ball, One Piece, Jujutsu Kaisen, and other similarly action-focused shōnen anime understandably take the lion’s share of the limelight in this genre. Some of those are admittedly beloved for flipping certain demographic tropes and/or immersive storytelling and world-building, but anime like Inu-Oh are great palette cleansers for how conceptually inventive and down-to-earth they feel.

With its strangely seamless combination of anime, historical fiction, fantasy, and rock opera genres, Inu-Oh injects an exciting and refreshing dose of originality into a segment of the entertainment industry that, as with several others, sometimes feels like it’s too saturated and spreading itself thin creatively.

It isn’t a massive franchise/IP endeavor meant for mass-market appeal, but everything down to the direction, cast performances, and otherworldly animation looks lovingly made.

And, as an anime movie specifically, it does a great job of standing on its own as a complete story that is uncompromising in presenting its vision. Even though it might have afforded to pad out its runtime slightly to expand on the main and supporting characters’ lives more, the brisk pace and colorful depiction of history are effective enough to overlook this flaw.

Inu-Oh also succeeds in being one of those select anime that audiences otherwise uninitiated in the genre could watch and appreciate on its own artistic merits. All the movie’s moving pieces work together to visualize a world that’s creative, immersive, thematically rich, and aesthetically unique. It isn’t your typical anime fanfare, but that’s for the best in this case, as Inu-Oh does well to stand apart in a densely packed genre.

See also  Samsung Galaxy Book 2 Pro review

Director Masaaki Yuasa and animation studio Science SARU’s Inu-Oh is playing in theaters starting August 12.

Editors’ Choice











Source link

Anime InuOh inventive Opera Review rock visually
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Cosori TurboBlaze Air Fryer review

April 15, 2024

Fentgo hair dryer review

April 5, 2024

Bissell CrossWave HydroSteam Pet wet and dry vacuum review

March 29, 2024

Ugreen Revodok Max 208 Thunderbolt 4 Docking Station review

March 23, 2024
Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Editors Picks

Tesla to extend price of FSD beta software program past its $12,000 price ticket – DailyTech

July 21, 2022

Supply‑chain attacks: When trust goes wrong, try hope?

July 7, 2022

Akamai curbed a new record DDoS attack against one of its European customers

September 16, 2022

China efficiently launches Wentian module as area station nears completion

July 25, 2022

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news and Updates from Behind The Scene about Tech, Startup and more.

Top Post

Elementor #32036

The Redmi Note 13 is a bigger downgrade compared to the 5G model than you might think

Xiaomi Redmi Watch 4 is a budget smartwatch with a premium look and feel

Behind The Screen
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Vimeo YouTube
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2025 behindthescreen.uk - All rights reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.