Forgotten Anime #60: “College Supergirls” (1991)
After five years, I am retiring this column. It’s my 210th weekly column here. It’s been fun, but – for me, at least – it’s time to move on.
After five years, I am retiring this column. It’s my 210th weekly column here. It’s been fun, but – for me, at least – it’s time to move on.
Taiman Blues was a motorcycle-gang manga by Yū Furusawa that was divided into two short OAV series: one about the boys’ gangs, and one about a girls’ gang.
Grey began as a futuristic war manga by Yoshihisa Tagami, reprinted in the U.S. as a high-quality American comic book, with an introduction by Harlan Ellison.
They Were 11 was originally released theatrically by Toho Films. Based on a prestigious manga novel, a skillful blend of science-fiction and mystery.
This sequel to the first Rikki-Oh OVA offers a totally different story, one that doesn’t seem to make any sense; although its “post-apocalyptic” setting fits better here.
Riki-Oh, adapted from the manga by Masahiko Takajo and Tetsuya Saruwatari, is a super-violent martial-arts thriller about an unjustly-imprisoned young martial-arts master