Bleach Review
By az0k
Bleach Review
Kubo Tite
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- Comments
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- Reviews
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Plot Synopsis
The series begins in the human world, with the sudden entry of a stranger into Ichigo's bedroom. This stranger is Rukia Kuchiki, a Soul Reaper (in the Japanese version, a shinigami, literally God of Death). After an ensuing conversation, Ichigo and Rukia are forced into combat against a hollow (evil spirit). Rukia is disabled, and forced to transfer her power into Ichigo, transforming him into a Soul Reaver. As it turns out, Ichigo is very powerful, and even has a semi-unique zanpukat�? (sword that is his primary weapon, it is much larger than most). Ichigo makes quick work of the hollow, and Rukia leaves.
The next day, she shows up in his classroom, apparently a normal human student. It turns out that Ichigo has completely absorbed her abilities, and she must recover them by using a temporary human form, Gigai. It is later revealed that the Gigai she entered was specially designed by Urahara and given to her. In the mean-time, Ichigo must take over her job, cleansing the hollows in the region.
As Ichigo get involved in a closer friendship level to Rukia, Ichigo got more to know about Shinigami life and its issues.
Credits: niomea
Story & Characters
Last time I gave Naruto a 1/10, and some people was offended. So this time Iâm giving Bleach a 4.2. Before you guys call me an idiot again, let me just say that the highest score Iâll ever give to a Shonen work is 5. Therefore, 4.2 is like a 84%. I also want to say that I feel bad for Kubo the mangaka. This guy has the skills, yet he chose to go for Shonen and by doing so Bleach lost a lot of its potentials. The last thing I want to mention before getting into the review is that this might be my last long-a$$ review on Shonen works therefore Iâll use it to explain why I despise Shonen in general.
Same as last time, this review will focus mainly on the manga since I only watched the first 10 episodes of the anime but Iâm still following the manga. Besides, everyone knows that the manga is better than the anime. Iâll start with the storyline first. Even though the series is not finished yet, the story itself is nicely divided into two major arcs. The first arc is the Soul Society arc (the SS arc), and the second arc, which is still ongoing, Hueco Mondo arc (the HM arc) which will be considered to start right after the SS arc in this review. The SS arc is where Bleach shines the most because of its originality. Most Shonen stories are about a group of teens either starting a journey for stupid reasons (like Battle B-Damanâ¦I feel embarrassed even mentioning its nameâ¦) or beating endless bad guys to save the world. Not for the SS arc. The story is straightforward: Rukia was about to get executed by her comrades and Ichigo tried to save her by going into the society and challenging all the Shinigamis. There is no âgrowing-upâ journey, there is no world to save, yet to me saving a dear friend is more captivating and realistic than all the other Shonen stories Iâve encountered. The best part is that Kubo is able to create about 180 chapters for this arc and the word âconfusionâ is nowhere to be found. This is what I call a good story planning. A good mangaka knows how to plan ahead and knows, even before he/she starts the first chapter, where the story should go for the next 179 chapters. Allow me to take you through what happened in this arc. It started off with Ichigo absorbing Rukiaâs Shinigami power due to an accident which Iâm sure you are all familiar with. The subsequent few chapters served as fillers and were mainly revolved around Ichigo helping Rukia to kill off Hollows since she lost all her power. The purpose of the fillers is clear: to introduce the world and all the main characters in the heroâs group. The fillers didnât last very long, which is very good for a Shonen manga, and the main storyline soon kicked in. Byakuya appeared and Rukia was taken back into the Soul Society. The real arc started from here. Ichigo decided to go into the Soul Society and to save her. Once he was in the main city, Kubo prepared four fights for him: first with Ikkaku, then with Renji, then with Kenpachi, last with Byakuya, each one stronger than the previous. Now Iâm not here trying to praise on how great or how complicated this story is. You have to realize Bleach is still a Shonen, it is no E7, and the story IS pretty simple. What Iâm trying to get here is that the story is laid out in a very organized manner. Instead of dragging the story on and on and on like Inuyasha, Kubo clearly knows where he wants the story to go and he loyally followed his plan. And the story flows beautifully accordingly. This is no easy task if one really thinks about it. The story itself is not some typical Shonen stories you can drag on forever. We are talking about Ichigo challenging the entire SS, thatâs it. How to keep the story going for 180 chapters, at the same time not to bore the readers a bit, requires a lot of creativity and planning ahead. You have to give credits to Kubo at least for what he did with the SS storyline.
Then comes the HM arc, where the series started going downhills. Seriously, if Bleach ended right after Rukia was saved, I might have given it a higher score say 4.5. It would be a great saga about friendship packed with not the best but still very very good actions. Instead Kubo decided to prostitute himself, and we have the HM arc. Now what else can I say about HM arc except itâs a rip off of the SS arc? Sure, the action is getting more intense, and Ichigo is getting stronger and stronger. But it is still the same story, with Ichigo trying to save another friend of hisâOrihime this time. The group is also going into another foreign land, this time instead of the Soul Society we have HM which hasnât been mentioned at all prior to the arc and I was like âhuhâ¦why would hollows have a mansionâ¦?â. What about Ichigoâs fights? Well, so far it is still pretty similar to what we had in the SS arc. The first fight he had in the SS was with Ikkaku, the third seat in the 11th division, in other words a weakling. So now in the HM arc he fought with a loser from the 3-digit division first. The second fight he had in the SS was with Renji, Lieutenant of the 6th division. The second fight he had in HM is with Grimjow right now, the 6th espada. I bet the next fight is going to be him Vs. Ulqi, because the third fight he had in the SS arc was with Kenpachi, not the strongest but still very very strong. Then Ichigo is going to fight with the top espada who corresponds to Byakuya in SS arc and then finally Aizen. Also note that in both arcs Ichigo always had a traitor beside him. In the SS arc was the guy from the 4th division and now we have the little hollow. Thus basically itâs the SS arc all over again, and at least for me, Iâve lost not all but most of my interests in Bleach these days. The only thing that still keeps me going is that I like the hollow Ichigo character and would like to see him fight again. I also like Orihime but for different reasons (see the character discussion part). Besides that, I donât really give a sh1t about whatâs going to happen next.
Another thing Iâd like to comment on is the change in the fighting styles going from the SS arc to the HM arc. Itâs not really included in the storyline but I donât know which aspect this thing belongs to so Iâll just write it here. I mean, the best action scenes to date are still those in DBZ. So nowadays what people usually do is to avoid whatâs already been done in DBZ and think about other ways of physical fighting. Sure itâs not going to be as spectacular as DBZ but what it lacks it makes up with innovation. Kubo did a good job in Bleach, at least in the SS arc. The most important aspect of the actions in the SS arc is that different people have totally different forms of power, which is demonstrated in the various Bankai releases. For example, Ichigo can either have superior speed or superior power but never both at the same time in his Bankai (Iâm not talking about HM arc here). Byakuyaâs bankai is more focused on ranged attack and cookie cutters with speed. Sure there might be some overlap but overall each character has his or her own distinct skills. All these are lost in the HM arc. In this arc, power and speed is everything, which basically contradicts what had been set up in the first arc. Tell me one thing that is unique about Ichigoâs Vizard state except itâs faster and has higher raw power. The most ridiculous thing in Bleach was when Ichigo outsped by Grimjow yet Ichigo was supposed to be the fastest in his Bankai form, at least thatâs what I got from reading the SS arc. I mean, I donât mind Grimjow beating Ichigo, but surpassing him in speed just doesnât make any sense to me after Ichigo spent all that time finally achieved his Bankai state. These days in Bleach, speed and power have become the only determinant on who is stronger. With the loss of the variety of the skills, the fights themselves are getting more and more boring because we already have this in DBZ with much better actions. Also speaking of the similarity between HM arc and DBZ, doesnât Grimjowâs released form look a lot like SuperSaiyin 3 in DBZ, with the eyes and the long hair and everything? I was practically laughing when I saw him like that.
One more thing before going into the characters. The power of the arrancars seemed to be a little too strong. The non-espada arrancars are OK. It makes sense that only the Shinigamis with Bankai are able to kill them since they are indeed transformed from Menos which are usually handled by captains. Iâm talking about Espadas here, especially from Ichigoâs perspective. During the SS arc, Ichigo defeated Kenpachi in his normal state. When faced with Byakuya, he still did very well in the beginning, and he only lost that battle (yes he did lose that battle, no question there) because at that time he couldnât last his bankai very long. The conclusion is that if Ichigo can manage to increase his Bankai duration, he should be able to defeat Byakuya, who was portrayed as the final boss of the SS arc and the strongest Captain. However, Ichigo got his ass kicked by Grimjow even in his Bankai form during their first battle, and GJ didnât even release. Later on Ichigo became a Vizard and greatly increased his power, and itâs true that he was stronger than released GJ in this form, but only a little as shown in Chapter 256. Therefore I wonder if SS even stands a chance against Espadas. Ichigo can beat Byakuya in his bankai form, yet he barely beat the 6th Espada in his Vizard form. There seems to be a huge power gap between the captains and the Espadas. Iâm sure Byakuya, Kenpachi, and Hitsugaya will make their appearances later on in the series due to fansâ demand, most likely fighting an Espada as well, but how is Kubo going to pull it off when the Espadas are already being portrayed this strong?
Now characters. This is what sets Bleach below 5/10 and is the main reason why I despise Shonen in general. To create characters with a certain depth, one must have a lot of life experience in order to understand the meaning of life, at least to some extent, otherwise you end up with Naruto. As I said many times already in this review, Kubo is no 20-year-old amateur mangaka. This guy has the skills to portrait realistic characters. You can tell that he really wanted to add real souls into his characters, yet these characters donât fit in the Shonen genre so he basically gave up. Same as the storylines, Iâll discuss the two arcs separately because there are some changes in the characters between the two arcs. For the SS arc, all of the characters are still very close to the stereotypical Shonen characters that are not even worth discussing because there is nothing to talk about. We have a male lead who always makes rash decisions. We also have a cutie who has a good heart but kinda slow (Orihime in case you donât know). The male lead has a rival too, who competed with him for cheesy reasons. The problem with all these characters, and this is also what I meant by characters with no depth, is that they often have less than five personal traits. The excessive appearance of this type of characters in Shonen works is because the mankaga wants to make their characters more heroic and more appealing to younger readers. Whatâs lost in doing so is the human touch which is what connects the characters with readers like me. I hate to reiterate this again and again, but if we canât see ourselves in the characters and the things he/she does, then we wonât be able to make that connection. What makes us human is that we have a full range of emotions, and by having a character with only a few personalities, the connection is lost. Now the characters in Bleach are not the worst Iâve seen, but itâs nowhere near good. For example Ichigo, he makes rash decisions and sometimes behaves irrationally, he cares a lot about his friends and family, he is also arrogant, and thatâs probably all there is to this guy. See what I meant by ânothing to talk aboutâ? I would love to go deep into the characters and talk about their personalities but I just canât do it with Shonen. Kubo did try to make him more realistic using all the fillers, you have to give him credits for at least trying. But he failed. The personalities that are supposed to come out of those fillers donât have anything to do with the Ichigo later in the series, and I feel really sorry for Kubo because some of the fillers actually have some great potentials. For example, one filler chapter introduced Ichigoâs past and how he lost him mom. This one actually touched me a little considering it is a Shonen work. Ichigoâs fear of facing his past and him blaming himself for his momâs death is well portrayed. Yet Kubo decided to drop this, along with other traits in those filler chapters. Indeed, we never see his connection with his mom ever again, and itâs such a good story to explore. Iâll tell you why Kubo did this though. He wanted to add depth into his characters, but he is afraid that by going too deep the readers wonât be able to understand whatâs going on (thanks to the general stupidity of todaysâ anime fans btw). So he hesitated, and ended up with these half-a$$-developed characters.
However, there is one person in Bleach who does seem to have a soul and who
started to shine right after the SS arc. I was really surprised by this,
considering her role in the SS arc was her big breasts and her stupidity, and I
already stated that I donât really like the whole HM arc. I guess you
readers have already figured out who I am talking about here. Thatâs
right, this special person is Orihime. In the HM arc, Kubo did a very good job
in portraying Orihimeâs feelings towarda Ichigo yet not begging for
sympathy. And this time, he didnât hesitate on adding depth. Orihime
clearly loves Ichigo, yet she is too shy to confess. More importantly, Ichigo
obviously cares about Rukia a lot, and Orihime is afraid that she might ruin the
relationship between Ichigo and Rukia by revealing her feelings, which again
illustrates how much she cares about Ichigo. Yearning for love yet afraid to
love, this is her role in HM arc, and a great personal conflict this is. From
the look on her face when she was healing Rukia and seeing how worried Ichigo
was, to her confession to the unconscious Ichigo on the night before she went to
HM (perhaps the most touching moment in Bleach, I almost cried when she
didnât kiss Ichigo), Kubo has certainly shown that he does have the
skills to develop realistic characters. The reason why she appears so real is
that Kubo used a completely different approach to develop her character compared
to all the others. No flashback, no inner world, but all from her facial
expressions, her decisions, her thoughts, her behaviors, and her dialogues. And
really, thatâs how we get to know another person in real life. Rarely do
we know a personâs past or his/her inner world, yet by observing the
personâs appearance we start to make connections. However, this is why I
hate HM arc. We have such a beautiful and well-developed character here, yet the
story is not even focused on her. I mean, if I were Kubo, the relationship
between Ichigo and Orihime would be the central theme of HM arc. Then Bleach
would probably become the greatest Shonen work in history, or maybe even go
beyond the Shonen genre. Iâm not saying to turn Bleach into a romance
story, fights should be retained, but more importantly the emphasis should be
place on the charactersâ emotion and interactions. Yet besides these
shining scenes reserved for Orihime, the entire arc so far seems to be
irrelevant to her at all. The focus of the HM arc is still about
Ichigoâs group and all these mindless fightings. What I canât
accept even more is that we still donât know how Ichigo feels about
Orihime. Just exactly why is he going through all these troubles to save her,
and donât tell me itâs for the same reason when he tried to save
Rukia. I can tell you guys right now there is absolutely nothing going on
between Ichigo and Rukia, they are just good friends, even a blind guy can tell
this. Yet Kubo still hasnât revealed any of Ichigoâs feelings or
thoughts toward Orihime. It would suck major a$$ if it turned out to be a
one-sided love as a conclusion because not only all the effort on developing
Orihime but also the only potential of HM arc will be ruined.
- Rating
- 4 (below average)
Art
The art style is pretty decent in the manga. True, itâs not the best one Iâve seen. It also lacks some details in terms of shadows and textures. What it lacks in details it makes up by offering a very crisp style which I find enjoyable. For anyone wishing to go into the anime/manga business, the art style in Bleach is certainly a good place to start imitating. The anime somewhat lost this crispness. The graphics isnât that good either. Some details in the background are missing. The characters sometimes seemed to be moving on a still hand-drawn background too. It also seems that they tried to integrate some 3D cells into the background design but the thing with 3D is that it can look amazingly good in a proâs hand, but it can also look awkwardly uncomfortable if the person is not a pro. And whoever doing the background design for the anime is certainly not a pro. However, I only watched the part before they entered the soul society and I did hear the graphics was getting really good later on. Therefore I wonât judge this work in terms of its anime graphics.
- Rating
- 7 (above average)
Sound
No comment, same reason as for graphics.
- Rating
- 4 (below average)
Presentation
Other technical stuff about Bleach. First the humours. I donât find the ones in Bleach as annoying and disgusting as that in Naruto. However, they are still not very funny to me. I can tell that Kubo does try to make the humours more mature, but since he chose to create a Shonen work, inevitably they still belong to those traditional Shonen gags. Examples include Orihime sometimes talking like a 2-year-old, Hiyoriâs beating on Shinji, Ichigoâs spontaneous and rash decisions in the beginning of the series, etc. The good thing about these gags in Bleach is that they are not as exaggerated as in other Shonen works such as Slam Dunk or Dragon Ball, which helped to keep the characters more realistic and which also shows Kubo is doing his best to keep Bleach as mature as possible even in Shonen genre. The dialogues are definitely another shining spot. Some of the lines are really beautiful and actually have a certain depth in them, which are rarely found in this genre. The one I liked the most is the one about how people are similar yet dissimilar, and he used the analogy of magnets and water. Orihimeâs confession in front of the unconscious Ichigo is also touching too. The problem with these lines is that they donât really fit in with the characters because the characters still belong to those stereotypical Shonen types. Sometimes it feels a little fake seeing these lines coming out of those charactersâ mouths. However thatâs the problem with the characters. The lines themselves are perfectly fine.
Overall, Bleach is a good Shonen work. The SS arc is certainly very intereting
and even though it is getting more and more boring , also more and more
repetitive these days, it still beats other Shonen works out there. Some depth
can also be associated with this work thanks to Kubo. I will follow Bleach to
the end, and if you are into this genre, Bleach is definitely something you
should check out.
- Rating
- 3 (poor)
Final Verdict
4.17 (below average)
Reviewed by az0k, 33wk 2d ago
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Well, I can see why you think that Bleach deserves such a low score. However, I think that your review is largely subjective, because some of the things you find not interesting, disturbing or annoying are precisely what makes the series popular with other fans.
What I would like to say, however, is that you can't judge an anime just by reading the manga. For instance, following the manga for the past half a year has been hell for me [a former avid fan] because of the battle that seems to be dragging endlessly, with enemies popping out one after another... Still, in the anime, the pace is much more dynamic and the battles are more enjoyable, at least in my opinion.
Another point I disagree with is the sound... I'd give it at least a 7, because it certainly shines with some tracks.
...But... everyone has their opinion, and I certainly wouldn't call you an idiot for stating your own [and giving lots of arguments on top of that].
I seem to have to say this alot lately, but if you already have that bad of an attitude towards that genre altogether you probably shouldn't be reviewing it (same goes for people that are Obsessed with it, too!). This has a tendency to keep people from making objective choices about the good and the bad, and when what they are saying has merit and when they are merely ranting about things they dislike, which is not the purpose of a review (you can go to the forums for that). But even so, name calling is never excused either, because it is very hard to not give personal opinion at all in a review, and you deserve respect even when people disagree (unless you say things like "You SUCK for watching this!", in which case you kinda deserve what you get, people).
I do have to agree with Odeena, a lot of what you hacked on were things that people who like that genre really like, and that goes back to my point in the earlier paragraph. I'm not saying you're wrong or that I disagree for that matter, but a better way to look at reviewing would be "How does this compare with other shows/manga in the this genre? What is there that is good (even if I personally don't like it", and so on. If you find there's almost nothing that you like in the series and you don't like that sort of thing in ANY series, think again about reviewing it.
Actually I praise bleach for its well-planned story. I'm also curious about what you consider as subjective in my review.
...That's kinda what I meant to say
ArtificialRaindrop seems to have said it more explicitely though.
I gave the Bleach Animation an 8.
I give the Manga a 6.5, in perspective, since I always prefer live action (unless the manga artist is very good, especially with detail).
There's something about the Vaizard Matter. On Ichigo, there's no problem regarding POWER. He has it. Speed? No, he has it. Instinct? Not either, he got it too.
It's TIME. Comparisons with Dragon Ball Z and Bleach regarding time is very big. A compelling yet rather basic, Bleach seems to utilize time, for example: Rukia's execution, the awakening of the Hougyoku, and Ichigo's Vaizard State. Time has been used very well (but rather abused). Come to think of it, you mentioned power when the fight with Ichigo and Grimmjaw stated. Remember the part when Ichigo trashed Grimmjaw in 11 secs? If that has been expanded to, for example, 30 secs, Ichigo will win smoothly. This part, I think, you missed.
Besides, Dragon Ball Z is somehow masochistic while Bleach displays both man and woman near-equal in terms of being an intelligent being. Don't use DBZ, I suggest Yu Yu Hakusho, and in the long term, you'll prefer Bleach.
I like the way you reviewed this, with some flaws. I suggest that you re-read Bleach again. Shonen is for basic entertainment, anyway.
...By the way, where's your Naruto review? I can't seem to find it on the site and you've made me curious...
Wow i guess the anime really is viewed is differently from each person. The final score can already be concluded after your first 5 lines in the review, you hate shonen so the rest of the review is going to be biased. Anyway when you actually said something good about orihime having a 'soul' i disagreed
.
shes cute but anoying, this review should'nt affect anyone who is a true fan to
the series. I take it you hate deathnote aswell.
p.s. I hate naruto now so thx for thats score, it was the best! then fillers... then shippuden just lost itself.
Why am I getting the feeling Odeena is the only one who gets what I'm talking about?
You obviously missed my entire post or neglected to read it. Actually, I think you missed the entire point of your own first two sentences. And you just commended and condemned in the same post for the same thing. I severely dislike Naruto as well, but neither of you seem to be able to give it an objective view, and your thanking him for the low score just lowered the credibility of your beginning argument.
And going by context clues, I really don't think masochistic is the word you are looking for in that statement... (look it up and you'll see what I mean)
I'm not sure if I should post my naruto review here since i already posted it on another site. Actually I'm not even sure if I should post this one since it's on that site too. I only tried to use minitokyo because I can get some feedbacks (you can't comment on a review on that site). I heard theres some internet etiquitte against it or am i just mitaken?
PS masochistic~~~lol~
is this anime has the manga?
It's kind of sad that you limit yourself to a top rating of five for a shounen manga. I realize that, in practice, this rating system is probably rather accurate, but to just make a blanket dismissal of the genre as a whole kind of rubbed me the wrong way. Yes, poor Kubo has sacrificed a lot of potential to operate within the shounen construct, but it doesn't automatically make it bad.
I like Bleach a lot, but it's very self-referential and self-derivative. It's kind of hard to avoid when you've got to crank out twenty new pages a week. It's yet another drawback of the genre, but he could be doing worse. I know Bleach would be serialized for the rest of my life if it were published monthly, but even bi-weekly would afford Kubo the time he requires to bang out a superior chapter.
I think he tries, moreso than other artists, to make his characters not only unique looking, but unique acting. Orihime shouldn't be written of as a ditz. Renji shouldn't be written off as a hothead. Byakuya shouldn't be written off as an iceblock. Rangiku shouldn't be written off as a lazy bum. His characterizations are better than, say, Naruto, but as you don't seem to like that series, I guess that's not saying much. I still don't think he's lost the human touch with them.
I wish you would have gone into more depth when reviewing sound. I know you supplied a sentence, but it doesn't seem proper justification for giving it a four and pretty much saying "yeah, just look up there and it says why." Be more specific. The category is there for a reason.
I'd probably give Bleach an eight. It's good, not perfect, but it's a well done series by someone who has talent. He's organized (more than Kishimoto) and that's perhaps the most important thing to appreciate in all this. I'm not disagreeing with everything you say, but you have to take it in context, and automatically knocking off five points isn't being very mature or enlightened about it. You go in with a mindset of justifying a poor rating, and in doing so, look only for ways to back up that assumption.
I'm sure you've heard this, but this review is ridiculous and irrelevant. Not many will enjoy reading a review about your opinion and your opinion only. You do have lengthly review, but it's obsolete if you start off offending everyone, and only continue to do so.
You need to look at all objectives, and not only what you think is good or bad. You have a narrow view point that does not work for reviews. Read around other reviews, like Shinesengumi's reviews, and get a taste of what a good review is.
Also, review your grammar for a more efficient review!
I've an advice for you:
Change your style when writing reviews.
I agree with you that Bleach stinks -
but tone it down.
There are nicer, gentler, and less bloodcurdling ways to say what you want to say, without being too subjective or too rude.