KUROSHITSUJI
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
24
RELEASE
March 27, 2009
LENGTH
24 min
DESCRIPTION
In Victorian-era Europe, a young boy loses everything he once held near and dear to a vicious plot. In his moment of death, he strikes a deal with a demon: his soul, in exchange for revenge. Ciel Phantomhive is now the head of the Phantomhive corporation, handling all business affairs as well as the underground work for the Queen of England. His new partner is a demon butler, Sebastian Michaelis, whose powers as a butler is only surpassed by his strength as a demon.
The story follows the two along with their other servants, as they work to unravel the plot behind Ciel's parents' murder, and the horrendous tragedies that befell Ciel in the month directly after.
CAST
Sebastian Michaelis
Daisuke Ono
Ciel Phantomhive
Maaya Sakamoto
Grell Sutcliff
Jun Fukuyama
Undertaker
Junichi Suwabe
Mey-Rin
Emiri Katou
Finnian
Yuuki Kaji
Elizabeth Midford
Yukari Tamura
Soma Asman Kadar
Shinnosuke Tachibana
Bardroy
Hiroki Touchi
Agni
Hiroki Yasumoto
Tanaka
Shunji Fujimura
William T. Spears
Noriaki Sugiyama
Lau
Kouji Yusa
Ran Mao
Sayuri Yahagi
Angelina Durless
Romi Park
Pluto
Takafumi Yamaguchi
Drocell Cainz
Anri Katsu
Vincent Phantomhive
Kazuyuki Okitsu
Ash Landers
Satoshi Hino
Aleister Chamber
Tatsuhisa Suzuki
Angela Blanc
Aki Uechi
Fred Aberline
Hisayoshi Suganuma
Paula
Yui Itsuki
Rachel Phantomhive
Kana Uetake
Meena
Yuuko Gotou
EPISODES
Dubbed
RELATED TO KUROSHITSUJI
REVIEWS
Calxylian
65/100Black Butler as a touch of shounen-ai in a supernatural victorian setting.Continue on AniListBlack Butler is full of supernatural characters in another context in a luxurious Victorian setting. However, it is very strange when the anime demographics its audience more like a shounen. To emphasize it even more, the series is better said to be shounen-ai than shounen itself. However, it is not important because that is not the main point of the series. The story of the series begins with a slight horror atmosphere. The first sequence shows a ten-year-old boy who trades his soul for a demonic butler to help take revenge against those responsible for his parents. Jumping to two or three years later, they are still together. Ciel Phantomhive is now 12 years old and head of the house company, accompanied by Sebastian Michaelis, a demon butler who can do anything. Together, they work for Queen Victoria in solving mysteries. At the same time, the audience is also trying to find out about Ciel's past.
At first glance, Black Butler becomes a good story the first impression. However, it is not because of the many filler episodes that have been injected. The most logical reason is the lack of material that comes out of the source, confusing certain episodes. For fans of the series, it leaves many questions and a lot of disappointment. When following the three-episode rule, the series is spectacular. Instantly, the mysterious aura became very good throughout the series as well. However, when it gets to the sixth episode and above, it starts to get a little tiring with all the goals the characters have to do.
To go through all that tediously honestly, how about the next half? The series is completely filler, not only ending up being a mysterious anime that is very ambiguous but also being a slice of life that didn't intend to be such a genre. Most of the second half's story doesn't make much sense when reviewing it through the source. For example, the audience never knew how Sebastian had suddenly disappeared, considering that in the first place, the audience knew he had made an unbreakable contract. It is unrealistic that he leaves Ciel, a not allowed personality, and commits such an act. The plot twists also come out of nowhere, from character motivations to antagonistic justifications. After all, the bad writing spoils half of the ending of the series.
Sebastian is one of the most admired characters throughout the series when it comes to characters. He is a great butler who acts as an anti-hero for Ciel. When Sebastian arrives just in time to save Ciel or even uses "sexual" tactics to get information to the nun, it's great to know how the audience never expected such a character. On the other hand, there's Ciel, who, of course (people prefer to call him the "spoiled kid") talks a lot of bullshit about why he does everything. The crew of the series practically used his character as a doll to model the century's fashions, of course, Victoria.
However, such factors do not save them from a highly biased two-dimensional character. Sebastian can be similar to Edward Cullen's vampire with good-looking guy trope or other supernatural vampire series. He is a perfect being with no flaws at all. His handsome face that is evil, cold, yet cunning is impossible. In essence, he does not contain such realism in himself as the fantasy of a perfect character trope. On the other hand, he also has a sense of humor, even though he doesn't seem to have any intention of being funny at all. Unfortunately, the fanservice of cross-dressing or mass production of childlike male character fans is suppressed so deeply that the audience sometimes can't take it seriously.
The animation flows beautifully where the production depicts a thick setting from the Victorian era. The mega houses and the clothes are all intricately designed. In fact, in some action scenes, the studio still has an animation that continues. It never lets choppy animations ruin the flow. Gothic is very thick here as a whole. Not only through design but through taboo themes that were thick in that era. However, as the audience has realized from the start, the nuances of fanservice are what causes the series to be so difficult to take seriously. Black Butler is not an anime where the audience is always looking at the clock and thinking whether this is over or not. However, the series is very good at responding to a feature with a fairly boring execution. The pandering of fan nonsense does not only sell the audience themselves through the source's main story. However, the audience, especially those who have never read the manga at all, is what happens in the final scene in the last episode.
branules
55/100Black Butler: Worth a first-time watch? Probably not, unless...Continue on AniListIs Black Butler worth a first-time watch today? Probably Not, Unless…
Disclaimer where one is due: This is review is much more subjective than it is objective. My approach to recommendations is based on personal experience and how much I enjoyed a work rather than a critical rating. This review is also less about analyzing specific qualities so much as outlining what to expect from Black Butler for the uninformed. Anyway...
Overview:
To me, Black Butler will always be the epitome of a "middle-school anime," a show that is easily digestible enough for a younger audience, while "darker themes" serve as a point of intrigue. The ideal time to watch Black Butler is as a young teenager with chipped black nails and a plastic choker. All that is to say that any present-day enjoyment of Black Butler has much to do with indulging nostalgia. I feel that the modern culture around anime has grown past this silly show as the anime community expects media that is not only entertaining, but a genuinely good story besides. Black Butler is much more the former than the latter. This is not a show I would recommend to anyone looking for something substantially meaningful. If you start with high expectations, you will be thoroughly disappointed. But I can't, in good conscious, fully disparage Black Butler without outlining why I will still find myself sneaking in rewatches like a midnight cookie.Problems:
Black Butler is a ridiculous show, and it knows it most of the time. I would call it campy if it did not, in the same breath, want me to take seriously some truly outrageous melodrama that resorts to child sexual abuse to shock the viewer. Oh yes, that is indeed here, though much more egregious in later seasons than the first. Black Butler has a habit of using shock value, both in gore and abuse. This is not to say those things can't exist in shows and be portrayed well, but Black Butler is not that show. Even if its handling wasn't so clumsy, the abrupt tonal shifts of the cast's looney-tunes antics would give the watcher a whiplash like no other. Black Butler has no shortage of slapstick humor and the like on the other end of this show's spectrum. This is no problem on its own but, as stated before, can be a bizarre dissonance. One of Black Butler's most significant objective flaws is the Flanderization of its cast. Many side characters introduced with intrigue - Grell being a prime example - are later relegated to these one-note gags stuck on repeat any time they are on screen. It is not nearly entertaining enough to not get old and could potentially bastardize characters you might want to care about. If you think this would bother you, Black Butler is not your show.
The series also has an often...uncomfortable portrayal of adolescent boys, with Ciel the shining star. We all know that anime has its problems with sexualizing very youthful characters. Black Butler teeters on the knife's edge of what could be seen as "acceptable." This does not even have to do with Ciel's penchant for gothic-lolita-like fashion and crossdressing - I couldn't care less - instead, the show lives on its boys-love baiting between Ciel and his very-adult demon butler. Prepare for plenty of scenes like Ciel Phantomhive in his barely butt-length nightshirt being tucked into bed or a gag where we're shown a close-up on Ciel moaning Sebastian's name only to pan out and see him struggling with a tight corset. I am far from a prude, but I think it's important that prospective viewers know about this aspect of Black Butler before they watch it. There is, of course, the part of Black Butler's audience that lives for this sort of thing, but I would rather not think about them. If you think this would bother you, Black Butler is not your show.
Black Butler is also not a very narratively-complex series. I would best cast it as a hot-topic victorian-England soap opera given anime form. It is some of the hottest trash out there, but you might enjoy this particular strain of garbage if it's to your tastes. You're not going to get anything beyond a demon butler and the boy of English nobility who bosses him around, the cults they dissect, and the different supernatural beings they face. No battle hype, no breathtaking animation (the quality is like downright cardboard sometimes). The premise is, to be fair, decently intriguing, one about a child orphan forced to grow up too fast and a demon preying on that vulnerability by becoming a servant in exchange for consuming his soul after death. But if you want to see his concept at its full potential, you will have to imagine it yourself. It often amounts to not much more than set dressing.
Now, For What Black Butler Does Right:
If you are someone who enjoys watching something stupid and comfortable with this stupidity, Black Butler might be for you. It's low-brow anime edge at its finest, but with a certain je ne sais quoi that sets it apart. Somehow, its iconically eclectic cast, baffling tonal whiplash, peculiar alternate history, and occasionally genius art direction have, by working together, endured to me what would otherwise be just a bad show. I can't help but feel affection any time I see Ciel or Grell out in the wilds of the internet or a fourteen-year-old in a busted Sebastian cosplay at an anime con. Black Butler's charm is linked with nostalgia, yes, but that nostalgia would not exist in the first place if there wasn't a little something to earn it.
Final Note:
In my opinion, the ideal watching experience would consist of nothing beyond the first season and, if you truly want more, perhaps the Book of Atlantic movie, which gives a lot of love to the often-neglected side characters such as the Shinigami, and even beyond that is a lot of dumb fun for anyone who ever wanted to see what would happen if there were zombies on the Titanic. Yes, the actual Titanic. What did I say about guilty pleasure? I absolutely mean it about not touching the later seasons, though... I would mark those as the point where Black Butler's flaws far outweigh its charms.Thank you for reading! This is my first review on this site and it's a bit all over the place, I know. All the same, I hope it could be helpful.
TheRealKyuubey
70/100It may be an unholy mess, but it's still one hell of a fun series.Continue on AniListAt first glance, the last surviving member of the Phantomhive bloodline doesn’t leave much of an impression. Stoic and humorless, brooding and pretentious, it’s easy to write him off as a misanthropic youth going through a phase of ennui, and yet there’s so much more to the Earl of Phantomhive than meets the eye. After he nearly lost his life alongside his late parents, Ciel quite literally sold his soul to the devil, promising his life as payment for a powerful demon to protect and serve him until the day that his revenge for the slaughter of his family is complete. This demon, who has pledged to remain by his side until his earthly business is sorted out, goes by the name Sebastien, and he is one hell of a Butler. To realize his ambitions, Ciel will work directly for the queen, investigating the London Underworld to solve any number of disturbing paranormal mysteries, as he inches ever closer to his goal... And to the end of his life.
Black Butler was one of the earliest projects by A1 Pictures, an underdog studio at the time that has never stopped growing in popularity since. I’ve seen plenty of their catalogue, at least enough to say that Black Butler is by no means an outlier to their more common trends. In particular, A1 rarely ever strikes me as the kind of studio that has a massive budget to work with... Yes, I’ve seen a few titles of theirs that looked absolutely lavish in terms of production values, but they’re the exception rather than the rule. A1 is generally really good at managing anime with limited funds, they know how to use clever and conservative direction to save money for where it’s needed, but things can still go off the rails whenever a story requires any kind of excessive high-frame-rate action, at which point they’ll often rely on some pretty damn ugly frame-breaking runny eggs shit to make ends meet, yes Sword Art Online, I’m talking about you. Thankfully, this never happens in Black Butler, and while it’s fairly obvious throughout the series that a large budget was never on the table, it never feels cheap or stilted as a result.
Part of this is due to the fact that, design-wise, Black Butler is drop dead gorgeous. Gothic aesthetics have always paired well with the setting of Victorian England, adding a sort of tragic beauty to the dark and dreary atmosphere, so it’s beyond natural that the results would look so attractive here. The characters are well proportioned, with each of them given the exact amount of expressiveness to match their demeanor; Characters like Ciel and Sebastien always have really subtle countenances, allowing them to tell you a lot about what they’re thinking while saying very little, while the more comedic characters are more likely to go over the top. The clothing is beautiful as well, and while I am mainly referring to all of the imaginative dresses, flowing gowns and cultural apparel, even the simplest black suit is anything but generic. The color palette mostly sticks to black, red and purple, and while there are obvious exceptions to this, characters who deviate from the palette are allowed to do so in ways that underline just how much they stand out from the characters around them. The pink clad Elizabeth, for example, always feels kind of alien on Phantomhive property, as I have to imagine was intended. I can’t imagine the thrill someone would feel at being a superfan of this show, and putting together a good cosplay from it.
The music is mostly forgettable... It’s not bad, but it blends into the story so well you won’t remember it unless you actively seek it out. A few exceptions to this are opening and closing, both of which are pretty addictive, and weirdly enough, the bumper music. I don’t know why, but I love the bumper music.
The English dub, on the other hand, is far from forgettable, as Funimation pulled out all the stops with this property. As with most anime that take place in western countries, Black Butler sounds a lot more natural in English than it does in Japanese, especially because it gives Funimation’s famous voice actor stable a chance to flex their accent muscles. A few of these were allowed to just go over the top, such as Monica Rial, Jason Liebrecht and Ian Sinclair in the roles of Ciel’s estate staff, and all three of them sound like they are clearly having the time of their lives doing it. Jerry Jewel and Trina Nishimura, again, play the only asian characters in a sea of white people, something they both get typecast as weirdly often. Cherami Leigh sounds sweet and wholesome in an English accent that kind of reminds me of Laura Bailey’s turn as Evangeline in Negima... That is a good thing, for those of you who don’t get the reference... And Daniel Frederick pours everything he has into the foppish Grell.
Since Alexis Tipton, Chuck Huber and Colleen Clinkenbeard give really good performances that I can’t really talk about for spoiler reasons, I guess it’s time to talk about the two leads. J Michael Tatum is the star of this dub, and there’s an argument to be made that Sebastien is possibly his best individual performance to date. His smooth voice and perfect posh accent is captivating... Seductive yet dangerous, cocky yet humble, duplicitously conveying two conflicting emotions at once, one on the surface and one lurking just below. On the other hand, Brina Palencia’s performance as Ciel is a bit of a disappointment... She’s the kind of actor who can lose herself in a dark and brooding voice, and she can act with a lot of depth and complexity, but she sometimes struggles to do both at once. This kind of happened in Hell Girl, and it happens here as well, because while she nails the tone and accent of the character, it feels so flat and shallow at times that his dialogue can occasionally come off as laughably pretentious. Thankfully, John Burgmeier’s adaptive script does what it can to minimize the damage.
Getting old sucks. I was originally planning to start this paragraph by bitching about certain aspects of pop culture in the late 2000s and early 2010s that I didn’t like, but let’s be honest, as you get older, every generational trend that you didn’t personally experience is going to activate your boomer switch. I fully understand my own bias here, but I really did not enjoy the rise of emo culture. I didn’t like any of the emo guyliner bands, I openly mocked Twilight and the slew of paranormal romance books that followed it, I made fun of every wrestling RPer who made their own Undertaker rip-off, and while I didn’t hate Black Butler upon my first viewing, I’m willing to admit in retrospect that since it came out around the peak of this trend, I didn’t have it in me to fully appreciate it either. I liked some things about it, but I still had that voice in the back of my mind whispering “look at this emo trash” the whole way through. But hey, the trend petered off almost ten years ago, and I’ve found a lot of my opinions at the time don’t really hold up. I read the first Twilight book, and while it's not GOOD, it’s not THAT bad either. I can name at least half a dozen Stephen King books it’s better than. I like a few MCR songs. So eventually, I’ve understood for quite some time that, eventually, I was going to have to give Black Butler another shot.
Watching it again in 2022, divorced from all that baggage, is it better than I thought? Is it worse? Well, kind of both, but it is honestly more on the better side. I’ve already praised the production values of the series, and while I was a fan of the aesthetic and visual designs even back then, the animation is overall better than I remember. I have slightly more complicated feelings about the writing, though. There are two sides to Black Butler, those being the dramatic and the comedic. Yes, you could say that about most stories, but it feels especially important here, because the two don’t mix very well, and I do feel that disconnect damages the series in a lot of ways. For starters, Black Butler has a really strong premise. Ciel’s backstory is very dramatically compelling, and upon hearing it, you’ll instantly want to see where this young man’s quest for revenge... Which he is not only willing to die for, but has already sold his soul for... Is going to go. There are so many possibilities, it’s positively salivating to think about the depths of tragedy that it promises... So it’s kind of a problem that the comedic side of the anime is about a million times stronger than the dramatic side.
I’m not saying that’s necessarily a bad thing, mind you, because this show is funny as fuck. The jokes aren’t constant, but when you do get them, they land at least eighty percent of the time, often with really smart timing and execution. There’s an element of slapstick that’s mostly attributed to Ciel’s three servants, and while they may be annoying at first, they’ll grow on you with a vengeance. They are genuinely funny characters, with a strong dynamic not only between each other, but in their relationship to Sebastien, who operates as their cold-hearted no-nonsense boss. They also occasionally provoke a funny reaction out of Ciel, and considering how one-note he can be at times, these are some very welcome interactions. There’s also a strong element of LGBT representation, and his name is Grell, the grim reaper who was iconic before being iconic became a thing. He does kind of fall into that ‘predatory queer’ trope, which is usually highly problematic, but seeing how his target is Sebastien, I don’t mind so much. Not only does Sebastien need a foil to balance him out, but I mean, he’s a fucking demon. You can get away with a lot in a story if the victim is a demon.
The only comedic aspect I didn’t like was Pluto, the aptly named dog spirit who can transform into a man... A naked, muscular albino man who still has the mind of a dog. And when I say muscular, I mean Tommy Wiseau potato body muscular. I hate his design, I hate his concept, he is the worst part of every episode he’s in. I know this show likes to be campy, appreciate these levels of camp, but the dog man shit is just downright embarrassing. I’ve heard he wasn’t in the manga, and that definitely tracks. But still, aside from this one character, Black Butler has a really wicked sense of humor that makes it a genuinely fun series to watch... I just wish they would have spent more time on the dramatic side of things, because seeing the writers meander their way through such a strong concept is a huge let down. My first time through the series, I kind of hated all of the little episodic msadventures, including some pretty ridiculous side quests like a town being haunted by a ghost dog, an ice sculpting competition, a fucking curry making competition... Watching it now, I do see the subtle ways these episodes tie into the greater plot, so they’re not nearly as bad. At least not on their own.
The problem, ultimately, is what all of this does to Ciel. Even on my second viewing, with my mind more open and with a better understanding of the overall plot, it takes a really long time to get invested in him. His entire character is his backstory and plot, and you don’t learn about those things right away. The first time we get into serious details about his past in any meaningful way, it’s not for his benefit, it’s to explain the motivations of his aunt, whose story arc was too rushed to feel impactful in the first place. Ciel doesn’t become interesting until the final quarter of the series, up until then he honestly just feels like a killjoy who’s only along for the ride in his own story. The writers spend a lot of time up until then milking the dynamic between him and Sebastien to tease the fujoshi crowd, but they don’t spend nearly enough time endearing him to anyone else. Sebastien is really likeable. He’s an amazing character. He’s capable of doing practically anything, but because he does it with the attitude of someone who’s painfully overqualified for his dead-end job, it’s too funny to ever call him a Mary-sue over it. Also, again, Grell helps. I don’t know, maybe there’s something I’m missing about Ciel, but it feels like a failure of the writers that he just isn’t as strong a protagonist as he should be.
But while I’m talking about Ciel and Sebastien, and their problematic relationship with fujoshi, I guess it’s time I addressed the elephant in the room. A few months ago, when I finally reviewed Loveless... Another title that had been on my backlog for God knows how long... My main goal was to see if it had any redeeming factors outside of it’s objectively pedophilic premise. I believe there’s nothing wrong with enjoying problematic media, as long as you’re not enjoying it for problematic reasons, and for that particular anime, I could not find any non problematic reasons. I was then accused of not knowing the difference between reality and fiction because I made the mistake of calling a fictional pedophile, le gasp, a pedophile. Well, considering Black Butler’s less than savory reputation, where does this show fall on the same scale?
First of all, unlike Loveless, I can picture several perfectly legitimate reasons a person might enjoy it. Hell, if you actually wanted to see Ciel and Sebastien play hide the sausage, you’re gonna be disappointed, as any ship baiting between them is kept strictly to the subtext, and even then it’s entirely a matter of interpretation. Yeah, the undertones are there, and I wouldn’t blame you for finding them a bit on the uncomfortable side, but I never once genuinely believed Sebastien was interested in any part of Ciel aside from his soul. Hell, the amount of times he went out of his way to reiterate their connection via contract, I constantly found myself feeling entirely convinced that once Cel’s quest for vengeance was over, Sebastien wouldn’t think twice about disemboweling his master and making snow angels in his blood. Their dynamic can be slightly flirtatious at times, but never in a straightforward way. It’s played for laughs more often than not, and like I said before, this show does have a great sense of humor. The infamous corset sight gag will never not make me laugh. I might be proven wrong on all this when I finally watch seasons 2 and 3, but for now, Black Butler is just a fun, campy title that looks pretty damn cool.
Black Butler was originally available from Funimation, but has since gone deeply out of print. and has become unreasonably difficult to find at a reasonable price. Further seasons and OVAs have also been released by Funimation, and have entered varying levels of availability. The series has been so popular in the states that a live action movie from Japan has been dubbed and released by Funimation as well, and if that’s not insane enough for you, there was also a stage musical that you can still find clips of on Youtube. The original manga is available stateside from Yen Press.
From the beginning, there have been two main issues holding Black Butler back. First, it came out in an era where more than a few people had a knee-jerk reaction to anything smelling like tween girl fodder, and while emo culture probably did contribute to it’s meteoric rise in popularity, it also directly contributed to the cultural backlash against it. Second is a lack of focus, as it treated what could have been a really strong plot as an afterthought, prioritizing humor and campiness at the expense of the protagonist’s development. I haven’t gotten into any other related material yet, the manga and sequels and whatnot, so I know I’m missing some potentially important context, but judging the first season on its own, as an island, by its own merits, I like it. I think it has a lot to offer, especially in today’s market. Unfortunately, as many cool puzzle pieces as Black Butler may have, it wasn’t able to put them together, and I’m not entirely convinced that it tried to. It’s an unholy and unfocused mess, but it’s still a really fun series to watch.
I give Black Butler a 7/10.
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Ended inMarch 27, 2009
Main Studio A-1 Pictures
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