I want you to imagine this. Youre running a fever at a high temperature of 105 degrees Farenheit. Youre trapped in your bedroom draped in your comfortor while your sweat puddles. You decide to grab your remote. Wouldnt it be a good time to catch up on some anime? 220https://files.catbox.moe/0lkmqx.gif You scroll through Hulus oddly expanisive anime selection. Then Netflix. Even the Roku channel for crying out loud. The only thing you can think the whole time is been there seen it dont want to see it and maybe later. You throw on your pirate cap. Well your semilegal pirate cap. Youre no Monkey D. Luffy afterall. You open YouTube and search a simple Anime OVA Playlist. That was my introduction to California Crisis: Gun Salvo. A 360p reupload of the OVA on YouTube with no subtitles while I was sick out of my mind. While this sounds completely unideal I came out the other end feeling extremely charmed by this OVA in a way that I felt I just had to write about. You see I think without subtitles or perfect quality in a humid room with a rampant brain is the perfect condition to watch such an anime. 220https://s4.anilist.co/file/anilistcdn/media/anime/cover/large/nx3127auDAkoqcfjE1.jpg You see recently Ive had a sort of fascination with 80s and 90s OVAs. Especially the grimey almost amateurish feel on a lot of them. Most of them at the time were simply just passion projects that you can feel the love seeping out of. I personally think of OVAs like Tatsuya Okamotos Call Me Tonight and Yasunori Ides Burn Up. Both excellent OVA projects in themselves that I find memorable. Yet not in the way that California Crisis did. https://anilist.co/anime/2147/CallMeTonight/ https://anilist.co/anime/767/BurnUp/ Theres reasons for this. You see I had full context within those OVAs. One of them piqued my interest through a video that Hazel didhttps://www..com/watch?v=mFXaCPqjqE I love her video essays a normal amount and the other one I had accessible subtitles for. California Crisis shot both of those in two. Upon sitting down for my watch I was instantly graced with some of the most memorable artwork Ive seen in anime for a long time. Especially in a time period where mangaka and anime artists were sticking to a classic big bugeyed bishoujo figure. There was a range of art styles at the time but it wasnt as striking as some of the diversities you can find nowadays. Though it makes sense why. It was the staple of 80s anime of course. Present in things like Dragon Ball all the way to Ranma 1/2. The drawn perception of the beautiful lady. The female figure bishoujo was just starting to be shown and fully appreciated through an animated front. 220https://files.catbox.moe/rx1bew.png California Crisis with its characters designed by then 28 year old Matsuri Okuda was strikingly strayed from that look. Characters like the bright and charming Marcia were drawn with an almost humanly anatomical feel. Not those bubbly round shapes you usually see in that afformentioned bishoujo style. The way the colors are bright in contrast to the wild and untamed atmosphere and the sharply defined character style plays a huge role in its artistic vision. 220https://files.catbox.moe/faftuq.gif Even the male characters are fully realized in this style in a way that feels tasteful and cohesive. I found myself falling in love with Okudas artwork and vision here. I implore you all to go check out other works of hers youll end up absolutely charmed by the lady and her clear appreciation for anime as a medium. Another part of why I found this OVA so enjoyable was layed out in the music. Perhaps the most striking aspect of the whole thing. With music directed by Masaki Kurihara and vocal performances by Miho Fujiwara who also worked on Kanon funny enough the soundtrack is breathtakingly good. I found myself spacing in and out throughout my entire watch. Whenever Id snap back to reality Id be greeted with some of the catchiest tunes on this side of the OVA scene. Citypop good enough to knock even the most seasoned listeners out of the park. Even if most of those listeners only consume Citypop through TikTok audios and YouTube livestream radios... 220https://files.catbox.moe/84z58w.gif You can listen to the soundtrack for yourself herehttps://www..com/watch?v=zlrY0jeNZRY. However my favorite song would have to be Streets Are Hothttps://www..com/watch?v=RklrXHgAyPk. Anyway as for the plots sake. Strangely enough I didnt really catch myself up on it. Of course since there were no subtitles and I had very limited Japanese knowledge at the time compared to now I was thrown out into the pihranna lake without any knowledge of swimming. The whole OVA is a fast paced actionpacked work that takes enough of an attention span to pick up on. I found myself doubletaking from scene to scene trying to piece it together. To vague avail. The low picture quality didnt quite help either. However story relevant or not the scenarios and atmospheres in which I was thrown into were nothing short of pleasant. Bars alcohol car chases 80s idealized America provocative women and that SciFi anime flare. It was all apparent. To the point where I didnt even really feel the need to know what was happening. It was like a baby sensory video for me. Jingling keys in front of my face like a toddler. Highly enjoyable stuff. 220https://files.catbox.moe/qic4no.gif The moral of this long winded tangeant is simple. Get sick get dizzy and find yourself a low quality reupload to binge while on the brink of vomiting. Just kidding. My advice to you is not only to watch this OVA but to find yourself trying new things. I probably wouldve never picked this up if not for the circumstances. Put yourself out there dig around and youll likely find something golden. Theres mountains and mountains of anime out there from years and years ago that barely gets any attention at all. Its unfortunate but its not surprising given the landscape at the time. OVAs were usually sent directly to home media release. As studios at the time were much smaller than nowadays and were more into it for the love of the game a lot of passion projects slip through the cracks and find themselves covered with pavement. Seek out things youre unfamiliar with. If youre serious about anime as a medium like I am dig into the history a bit. Prod around with Anilists extremely robust search engine. Explore. Thank you for reading Im on 3 hours of sleep.
78 /100
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