Okay that might be a bit too harsh of a summary but this show suffers from numerous issues that really cant be all excused by the year of release. 1996 a pretty bad year for Japanese animation. Sandwiched between the year of GitShttps://anilist.co/anime/43/GHOSTINTHESHELL/ Evangelionhttps://anilist.co/anime/30/ Gunsmith Catshttps://anilist.co/anime/650/ Memorieshttps://anilist.co/anime/1462/MEMORIES/ and the year of Berserkhttps://anilist.co/anime/33/ Perfect Bluehttps://anilist.co/anime/437/PERFECTBLUE/ Princess Mononokehttps://anilist.co/anime/164/ Utenahttps://anilist.co/anime/440/ 1996 doesnt have much to show for and feels pretty awkward with such towering older and younger siblings and the fact that Kenshin is so highly regarded in that same year makes me believe that the situation is indeed pretty dire. Rurouni Kenshin started actually pretty good. In fact all the first part with its presentation and SoL aspect of the series topped with action that certainly reflected the idea of a time during which people strived to maintain a precarious peace after the events of the Meiji Restauration offered a convincing story. Kenshins vow to never kill again more than hinted at a painful trauma but he never outright spoke about it and Yahiko deciding to follow both Kaorus and Kenshins styles in order to master the blade that protects people instead of killing them Sanosukes backstory as one of the many orphans of the conflict and the perilous times of trust and betrayal that had plagued the country for centuries were as many good reasons to be charmed by the series. In fact for all episodic that the first part was it certainly was the most effective at creating both a presentation and buildup which peaked with the very beginning of the Kyoto arc. Until that point Rurouni Kenshin was walking a precarious balance between light and darkness life and death by the sword and Kenshins desire to settle everything without killing something that revengethirsty people like Sanosuke were certainly not used to and had difficulty accepting and the result was certainly a shounen series yes but a shounen series that justified every defeat and every death. While there were already elements of that insufferable anime trope that I hate powercreeping those were very tame and Kenshins strength was mostly used as a means to end the episodes while also bringing in some morale destined to young children: dont let blood get to your temper dont be so swift as to choose violence when words might just be enough dont cheat or lie learn to forgive dont misuse your power or stay silent when facing injustice and so on. Among the highlight episodes I could definitely point out episode 14 which is actually one of the best animated episodes in the series as well episode 31 with Kenshins goodbye scene beautifully shot and worthy of a jidaigeki movie. Its not like the first part is perfect and its not like the second part is really bad. In fact the very beginning of the Kyoto arc promised us a lot with higher stakes a continuous story about a coup dtat that would certainly result in another bloody massacre throughout the country after the political balance is shattered once more and Japan goes back to being a land of murderous conflict and the first part certainly had a few small arc that were of little importance like the island incident. The problem is that the series was limited in its scope due to the demography it was targeting: shounen and that could be seen whenever someone got killed with the way it was all so obviously censored under an obviously poor excuse of visual restraint. What followed the buildup was ultimately nothing more than a tale that was INVADED by tired shounen tropes: the heroes training to unlock their full potential making friends along the way believing in their friends a succession of fights very neatly set up and with very obvious plot armor the villains having their backstory explored during the fights and a terribly drawn out last part that really had managed to burn through the very limits of my patience with the useless fight commentary and an overpowered villain that gets defeated due to sheer arrogance and carelessness. While I did enjoy the aspects that made Shishio and Kenshin so similar and yet so different it was the only aspect I had actually liked during the previous 10 or so episodes and my patience had already run out a long time ago. Regarding the technical aspects I have already hinted at that but this anime is really questionable in terms of character animation: some episodes are better than others and even betray the change in director or artists through slight modifications in the character designs or the presentation but the overall product is sadly what youd expect from a product made in the second half of the 90s: colors with very low saturation which give the anime a very cheap and washed up aspect low effort animation that really hurts the action sequences There were other ways this story could have been done. Maybe by having Kenshin be forced to make a choice like Kiritsugu Emiya had to in Fate/Zero: an ultimatum that would have him kill someone as unwilling as he would have been because there would have been no choice if he wanted to save people dear to him. That brings me back to my initial point: You want a story about a rurouni who wants to escape his past actions and atone for what he did? Just watch Sword of the Stranger instead of Rurouni Kenshin. The themes the presentation the animation the narration... everything is done much better in that work. Youll also save time doing so. Rurouni Kenshin isnt exactly a very bad series but it suffers from too many issues that ruin whatever emotional charge the anime wants to inflict on the viewer. Its definitely too childish: it idealizes the idea of a samurai hero that doesnt kill and protects others and that is too difficult to swallow especially after things really start going south.
55 /100
10 out of 58 users liked this review