Durarararararararararararara

http://i18.photobucket.com/albums/b118/stipe108/durarara.jpg

It’s taken me some time, but I finally finished Durarara this past week.

I really enjoy this style of opening, where they cycle through all the different characters. The studio Brains Base has done this style before, and I absolutely love it. At no point in the series did I feel the need to skip past this thing.

Heavy amounts of dialogue done in non standard ways. One of the things I think anime does extremely well is handling face to face dialogues. Instead of actually showing the people talking, the camera pans across random static images like a table, doorway, sign, etc. Although the original purpose was to save money by minimizing the number of animated scenes, it’s become somewhat of a trademark and something I really enjoy. In Durara, there is a lot of online/anonymous interaction, and so you get a significant amount of plot and dialogue through forums and chatrooms.

http://i18.photobucket.com/albums/b118/stipe108/durarara2.jpg

The whole story revolves around having an enormous cast of characters living in the same city, and all their separate storylines somehow get intertwined. There’s a lot of flashbacks, hidden pasts, secret identity crap that goes on, and most of the time it works out pretty well. A few characters you see in the openings get very little attention (Shinra’s dad shows up for maybe half an episode, the policeman is there for like 5 minutes, etc) and other main character’s stories seemed a bit rushed.

The ending was a bit anti-climactic, in that nothing really happened. Everyone just sort of went home and lived happily ever after, so to speak. Not to say the ending didn’t make sense, it was just a little bit tame given all the buildup they had.

Overall, I’d put the anime near the top of my 2010 list, and is definitely worth a watch.