USHIO TO TORA (TV)
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
26
RELEASE
December 25, 2015
LENGTH
24 min
DESCRIPTION
Long ago, a ferocious monster terrorized the land, until a samurai, wielding the legendary “Beast Spear”, sealed him away. 500 years later, a middle school student named Ushio Aotsuki accidently uncovers the monster in a hidden cellar under his family’s temple. The unsealed monster and the spear attract many other supernatural creatures to the temple and Ushio is forced to release the monster in order to defeat them. Ushio names the monster “Tora” and unwillingly work together to battle other spirits and demons.
(Source: Crunchyroll)
CAST
Tora
Rikiya Koyama
Ushio Aotsuki
Tasuku Hatanaka
Asako Nakamura
Mikako Komatsu
Hyo
Daisuke Namikawa
Mayuko Inoue
Kiyono Yasuno
Nagare Akiba
Yoshimasa Hosoya
Saya Takatori
Yuuka Nanri
Hakumen no Mono
Reiko Hanyuu
Yui Makino
Shigure Aotsuki
Keiji Fujiwara
Giryou
Mamoru Miyano
Kirio
Megumi Han
Yuu Hiyama
Aki Toyosaki
Sumako Aotsuki
Maaya Sakamoto
Kenichi Masaki
Yuuichi Nakamura
Jie Mei
Kana Hanazawa
Helena Markov
Yuko Tsuga
Tokisaka
Mayumi Tanaka
Tokijun
Mayumi Tanaka
Kyoji Atsuzawa
Masaki Terasoma
Nicholas Koestler
Ikuya Sawaki
Nigira
Hidekatsu Shibata
Hinowa Sekimori
Nana Mizuki
Jun Moritsuna
Ayahi Takagaki
Mikado Hizaki
Fumiko Orikasa
EPISODES
Dubbed
RELATED TO USHIO TO TORA (TV)
REVIEWS
Ciaora39
74/100Two leads carry this show to entertaining heights.Continue on AniListTaking old anime and rebooting them for current anime viewers has not been done before. Many reasons are that the visual quality of the old anime shows, for the most part, has not aged well, especially trying to view a stream of one that is of low quality and bad subtitles. One prominent example is Space Battleship Yamato 2199 in 2013, regarded by many as a suitable remake of the classic space opera from 1974. Here we have Ushio to Tora, a reboot of a 1992 10-episode OVA based on a six year-long manga in 1990. I was not aware of their existence, but this reboot has piqued my interest in the series.
Right when I watched the first episode, one thing that came to mind was the unique art direction of the characters. It was not something that I often saw in the past few years. Not that it looks completely different from your current art style, it is a mishmash of elements from new types of Japanese animation and old ones as old as the 90s. The faces look rough around the edges to emulate the older aesthetics of character designs and the fluidity of a good enough animation budget that was not present in most cases in that era. It is a welcoming addition to the year 2015, where the art direction in most of the shows that year was nothing unique.
How the show is presented in terms of story is a little hit or miss in many cases. At first, it becomes your classic fight a monster in each episode of anime until it gets into a big climactic arc near the middle and 2nd half. The first arcs are fine to let us get to know our two protagonists, Ushio and Tora. We see how their relationship starts and see it gradually grow and give some good individual stories, the one involving Omamori-sama being the highlight of the bunch. I enjoyed the first big arc involving the girls helping out Ushio from his torments because it gave the supporting cast some humanity to them than just the one character that Ushio saves in that particular episode.
However, the plot lost me afterward with the addition of the time travel plot involving a princess of the ancient times in how they present it in a rushed manner. Had they made it longer to develop them further for me to garner sympathy for the princess character and feel the anguish of one character without spoiling anything, I think it could have been great. It just starts to get stale after a while. The last couple of episodes especially feels out of place in how short-lived and underwhelming it felt with bland villains with cliched intentions. It isn’t something that I would call terrible by any measure, but I feel like, had they slowed the pace a little in the 2nd half, it could have worked better in the long run.
As much as the plot does not live up near the end, Ushio no Tora makes up for this with a great cast of characters. I found Ushio and Tora likable in their charm and chemistry as two opposite personalities working together at odds with their intentions; Ushio’s to save the people he loves from evil and Tora to one day eat him when he doesn’t notice. There are points where it might seem a bit silly, but Ushio no Tora is, by and large, a silly show in some cases. Mostly due to the character of Tora, who often has hilarious animation quirks that morphs him from this terrifying-looking monster to a chibi-looking caricature with big cartoony eyes. Many might find this a bit conflicting, but for the most part, the show does balance out the comedy and serious moments well enough that it doesn’t feel distracting. Again, seeing both of these lovely characters bicker at each other is always a comedic splendor and makes them the best duo of the year.
The supporting cast has its fair share of great characters, and at worst, they are average. As I’ve mentioned before, the female characters have some characterization as far as supporting casts go and do things to further Ushio's character progression than be catalysts for one plot arc and nothing else. The villains, however, are nothing special and forgettable as a result. Either their intentions are predictable or don’t come across as intimidating. Not counting the monsters that Ushio and Tora fight, just the villains harm the protagonists. Especially those in the last arc where they felt like they were ripped straight off of another anime involving bad scientists. Nothing straight-up awful, but nothing that will be looked at with admiration.
A good sleeper hit is what I would describe Ushio no Tora. Though it does not gravitate any higher than your typical shounen anime involving supernatural elements, it didn’t need to. It fits all of the aspects that make shounen anime a good treat to see while you leave it in the background every once in a while after watching it. It aims to please the eyes and ears, and that is how most shounen anime succeed in being good but not great. Life isn’t perfect, as they say.
Grade: B
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SCORE
- (3.65/5)
TRAILER
MORE INFO
Ended inDecember 25, 2015
Main Studio MAPPA
Favorited by 559 Users
Hashtag #うしおととら #USHITORA