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Blue Gender Box Set (Viridian Collection)
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Blue Gender Box Set (Viridian Collection) | DVD

Starring: Artist Not Provided

List Price: $49.98  
Price:  $44.99
You Save:  $4.99 (10%)
Available:  Usually ships in 24 hours

Binding:  DVD
Rating:  Unrated
Run Time:  750 minutes
Format:  Animated, Color, DVD, NTSC, Subtitled
Studio:  Funimation Prod
Number of Discs:  9
Aspect Ratio:  1.33:1
Release Date:  March 04, 2008
Sales Rank:  41,174st


EDITORIAL REVIEWS


Description
"Big bugs, big bots, lots of character conflict and a little romance - what more could you ask for?" --- Animerica Imagine waking after spending more than two decades in suspended animation. You awaken to a world more terrifying than your worst nightmare. A world where human beings are hunted down by giant insect-like creatures called the Blue. Welcome to Earth in the year 2031…a time when the planet is no longer ours. Earth’s very survival now rests in your hands.The Blue Gender Box Set contains the Complete 26 Episode Series and "The Warrior" Feature-Length Movie at a price that can't be beat.


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.0 based on 7 reviews)

Love the series....and it's at a good price by T. Austin (North Dakota) 4 Stars
August 30, 2009
This was one of the first animes I ever watched. I had been looking for this anime to watch for the longest time but could never find it till I saw this. The whole series comes at a low price for an anime. It's a simple anime with a mixture of mechs, love, and the classic apocalypse theme. I'd would recommend getting this series if your looking for a new anime to watch. The first few episodes can be a little boring and awkward at first but it starts to get really interesting at episode 6 or so. The ending is about a 4 out of 5 and we all know an anime is noting without the ending. The movie that comes with this isn't that great it just sums up the whole series in an hour in a half, it changes the story a little at first to speed things along but as you get near the end it takes a completely different twist for an ending(it's not that great but a lil funny). You can choose to watch it if you want when you're bored just to see an alternative way things could've gone but for the most part you're not missing much if you choose not to watch it.

Big bugs attack by E. A Solinas (MD USA) 3 Stars
July 02, 2009
In the future, civilization has collapsed, because the earth is infested by big, big bugs. It sounds like the stuff of utter mind blowing disaster, but thankfully "Blue Gender" succeeds in being a fairly intelligent, intricate sci-fi anime. Lots of horror, giant bugs and a fish-out-of-water hero who manages to be fairly interesting as he becomes a seasoned warrior, but the characters develop by leaps and bounds -- and the ending is completely out of left field, apparently in an attempt to be bleak and "deep." Yuji Kaido was an ordinary teenager in the not-too-distant future, until he came down with a strange disease. The only hope for a cure is to be put into cryogenic sleep. A few decades later, he awakes to a whole new Earth -- sparsely populated, civilization overturned, and with every continent overrun by hideous enormous insects called the Blue. Then two enormous mecha piloted by humans appear, and after many dangers Yuji is taken by a chilly soldier named Marlene to Second Earth, a space station where humanity is organizing a fight against the Blue. But Yuji soon learns that life is dangerous -- not just because of the Blue, but because of the militarized humans on Second Earth, who see him just as a sample to be used. After Yuji vanishes, Marlene begins a desperate quest to find him, even if it gets her in hot water. And when she does find him, they both discover the secret of Yuji and the Sleepers, and why they may be the key to destroying the Blue once and for all. Except of course things aren't that simple. "Blue Gender" has a pretty generic sci-fi concept behind it, the sort of thing you'd probably see on a Sci Fi original movie. Fortunately the actual series is much better than you'd think -- a vivid cocktail of action, conspiracy-laden suspense and science fiction in equal measure, but with the occasional pauses injected between the action and suspense sequences, where the writers can focus on the characters and what they feel. Along the way, there's lots of grotesque, vaguely Freudian megabugs that have swarmed all over the globe, and whose origins are explored even as they eat people and overturn large machines. Lots of splattered gore, enormous insects that almost look real, and big industrial-looking mecha. But as the series winds on, there's an increasing emphasis on what the humans are doing as well, and their desperation to defeat the Blue -- and there are some surprising plot twists thrown into the mix. The biggest weak point? The ending is a disaster that throws out most of what comes before it, in the name of a bizarre pseudo-environmental message that just explodes out of the, ahem, Blue. It feels like the writers couldn't come up with a suitably epic ending, so they went for the most bleak and "deep" finale they could. Yuji is a bit of a pain at first, since he does nothing but scream and panic over the first few episodes. But after a little while, he decides to become master of his own fate, and his story arc shows him turn from a nice ordinary guy to a hardened soldier. On the flipside, Marlene starts as an ice princess, but we see her gradually thawing under Yuji's influence until she has become more like he once was, and vice versa. Most of the secondary characters die off or vanish pretty quickly, but they're well-drawn as well. This box set also contains "The Warrior," which basically takes the whole movie and whittles it down to movie length. It's sort of "Blue Gender: The Cliff's Notes," and it's a severely mixed bag. "Blue Gender Box Set" is a solid sci-fi/action anime with plenty of giant bugs and military attacks, but the ending entirely spins out of control.

Big Guns, Big Bugs, and Even Bigger Ambitions by ONENEO (Buffalo, NY) 3 Stars
June 24, 2009
If there's one thing that drives me mad, it's the idea that I've somehow missed out on something great. For the past couple of years, the hype surrounding Funimation's sci-fi epic, Blue Gender, has been one such property. Amazon reviews, message boards, even the print rags seemed to all have a lot of good to say about this tale involving incurable diseases, alien invaders, and my own personal beloved anime element: mecha. Better still is I discovered a boxed set release of the show known as the Viridian Collection which takes and combines all 26 episodes of the series, "The Warrior" OVA, and a host of extras (including English actor commentary over one of the episodes, character profiles, textless songs, sketch collections, cast bios, and trailers). Coming in at a total runtime of 750 minutes, The Viridian Collection spans 9 discs that come packaged in a really cool cardboard flipbook which itself slides into a cardboard outer slip case. Additionally the show wears a very generous TV PG (13+) rating considering that it runs the gambit of animated versions of what would certainly be Rated R material in a live-actor film: Female topless nudity, some foul language, and lots of blood and guts. Language options are standard sub & dub fair with original Japanese dialog option or a solid English dub (with English subtitles available with either selection). The story goes something like this: In the near future, an unknown disease begins to plague mankind in the form of a cellular mutation called "B-Cells". Those infected are given the option to be put into a chrio-sleep (tube and all) until research could yield a successful cure to the condition. Yuji Kaido, one of the infected, chooses this option. The show literally opens with his rude awakening as in a sudden and sickening yank from his slumber through a bitter firefight between mechanized humans and what appear to be giant bugs. It turns out that while he slept (22 years despite the fact that he was only supposed be under for 2), an aggressive species of insect like creatures (the Blue) have appeared on and taken over the Earth. Most of mankind has apparently been decimated by these terrifying life forms and those who haven't given up the ghost are forced to live within the confides of a space station (known as Second Earth). Yuji finds himself awakened by a forward-advance/ scouting military unit sent to the bug-infested earth from the space station. Encounters with the Blue are literally immediate and become increasingly violent as the team makes its way across Japan to the awaiting military base/ spaceport The majority of the story actually follows this team as they make their way across the barren lands that were once the earth we currently know. Encounters (violent battles) with the Blue are frequent and definitely welcomed considering the slow plodding of the back-story. The team of rough and tumble soldiers are picked off one at a time (kind of like in the classic Schwarzenegger action flick, Predator) until all that remains is the male (Yuji) and female (Marlene) leads in their struggle to get off the planet before the Blue turn them into a green ball of fertilizer. On the surface, comparisons to American sci-fi franchise staples like Aliens & Starship Troopers (or more accurately, Roughnecks) abound but are not entirely accurate. Sure it's the military versus giant bug invaders theme that makes such associations possible, the truth is that pacing and a hidden agenda actually pull Blue Gender off into a tangent that really works only in the anime medium. Let's discuss the pacing first, which is not entirely as consistent as it should be. A majority of the story plays off the survival element as witnessed through the lead characters in their near real-time trek across the scorched earth. While there are action sequences to tide over even the most easily bored viewer, there are long periods where seemingly nothing actually happens. Worse still is that to break up the monotony of these sequences, the show's writers decided to work in some tangents and side quests that literally go nowhere. Examples include their teaming up with but never again encountering the energetic rogue Dice and Yuji's brief foray (and love interest) into a nomadic tribe of humans yet living on the blue planet. These little fillers would be a lot more justifiable if only they were revisited by the show's conclusion. The second part of the grand story arc moves along at a much quicker clip than the first and takes place once the protagonists finally make it into space. Here the realities of a brittle pseudo-military outfit come on so strong that you may actually find yourself rooting for the bugs! Additionally and like countless anime titles since, Blue Gender takes a stab at the ideal that humanity is the real villain against the earth itself (environmentalism). This would all be fine except for the simple fact that the show is a bit too ambitious in terms of magnitude than its own silly timeline can deliver. In the end what we're looking at is the evolution of an entirely new species, the near-complete annihilation of humanity, an exodus into space, then the extinction of said species within a span of 22-years. From a geological scale, this is comedic at best. Perhaps our hero Yuji should have been comatose for two thousand or even two-hundred-thousand-years instead of twenty-two. Finally there is a creepy man-love angle that the show builds from whenever Yuji thinks back to his life prior to going under. Granted you can certainly tell the show's writers did what they could with the dialog (things like "we'll cruise the world looking for girls") to salvage the lead character's heterosexuality, the truth is that these sequences are enough to make anyone wonder what's really going on between these "friends". Small complaints aside, the show does manage to tell a pretty dramatic (grand) tale without being forced to introduce the viewer to dozens of locales and hundreds of characters. Much of the bigger conflict taking place is told through the background while the lead characters seem to be meandering around. The soundtrack is spectacular, especially the closing theme which is presented in a wonderful English rendition in the dub... one of few times in history that the English vocalist puts the original lyrics to shame. The dub work itself a far above average with a vocal performance solid enough to warrant going back through the show once you've enjoyed the original Japanese dialog track. Clearly special attention was given to the sound effects themselves, especially the ambient noises (there's a slightly askew (and eerie) version of cricket chirping that can be heard at all times on earth to remind the viewer that there are terrifying giant insects all around). In all this is a show that may actually suffer from the hype surrounding it. Due to the ongoing rave reviews I fear I came in with expectations so high that no show could possibly live up. This is solid sci-fi entertainment at an absolutely unbeatable value. I will be going back through Funimation's entire library in effort to buy up every Viridian Collection they've offered.

Captivating Story. by J. McGinn (Portland, OR) 5 Stars
April 27, 2009
Blue Gender is truly a remarkable anime. It takes the end of the world anime type that is getting a little over used and takes it in a whole new direction. It surpasses all the other ones I've seen before. There are many things that takes Blue Gender beyond all the other world ending anime. First the story, which adds many twists. How far would we as humans go to survive, and what we would be willing to do to each other. The cost of war is up front, and doesn't pull any punches. The action is great, a relief from the endless giant mecha these type of anime. The anime is great, a different style from most anime, that works great. The two main characters: Yuji Kaido and Marlene Angel bring life and hope to this grim anime. As the anime progresses you how the story takes it's tole and them and how it changes them and you feel it as well. Overall Blue Gender is a classic anime, that change your view of the world. A must see for everyone who is 16 or older.

Great great anime series by Daniel O'brine (USA!) 5 Stars
April 14, 2009
Well, I was browsing a website years ago searching for yu-gi-oh! (I was a stupid kid at the time!) And happened upon a series called "Blue Gender" Looked good, but didn't have the money, so I just forgot about it, a couple years later, I was at my public library and saw the first DVD, I knew I had to pick it up. I watched it over and over again, it was the only fix of blue gender that I had, but eventually it had to be taken back. A couple years later again, and I had cash, I bought the other collection (Which I hear surpasses this one. I cannot comment on the quality of the set, only the anime) this story is INCREDIBLY engaging. You NEED to pick this up if you get a series, this was may favorite for years, and I've recently watched Gundam seed, so until I watch this again,this anime has gone down to second place... but still, buy it. buy it NOW!

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