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7.6/10
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El joven Allen Walker, un exorcista, lucha contra Akuma para salvar el mundo.El joven Allen Walker, un exorcista, lucha contra Akuma para salvar el mundo.El joven Allen Walker, un exorcista, lucha contra Akuma para salvar el mundo.
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After a promising start, the plot has become more and more confusing as if it doesn't know where to end. Nice graphics department and characters. It could have been much more but in the end the series was cut short by the hiccup continuation of the manga that literally ended the plot.
It is amazing in every way, only complaint is that it doesn't hav as many episodes as the manga. I have started reading the manga, I personally dont like manga but I loved the manga. Both the source material and anime are flawless, once manga I'd complete I hope the anime gets a reboot that far exceeds d gray man Halloween.
No spoilers - Only the first two seasons of this anime have been dubbed in English by Funimation, an excellent organization that does quality work bringing anime to American audiences, but sadly, those two seasons of the four that were produced by Dentsu and TV Tokyo, are nowhere near as well done as the last two.
The first two seasons, which this review addresses, loosely follow the manga, but include extras and filler that don't have the clarity or maturity of the source material. These extras may come from other peripheral publications that this reviewer hasn't seen, but they bog down and trivialize the story almost to the point of making it boring. I've now seen all the anime and read the available manga (which continues the story long past what has been animated) and the shortcomings of the first two seasons of the anime are GLARING.
D. Gray-Man, seasons 1 & 2, are worth watching if only for the wonderful dubbing work that Funimation does, but their only real purpose is to set up the situations, characters and storyline for the third and fourth seasons. It's a shame that Funimation has not bought the rights to these subsequent seasons, partly because of a lack of enthusiasm for the first two (which is, IMHO, warranted) but also because Dentsu is asking (so I am told) a great deal for the rights to the later seasons, because if the first seasons of DGM had followed the manga as closely as the third and fourth seasons have, I believe it would have been a smash hit.
I find the first seasons watchable, but only once. While I'll go back time and again to watch episodes from the third and fourth seasons, the only episodes from the first two that I can watch again are the ones that most closely follow a chapter in the manga. The fillers bore me silly.
This series is worth a watch, but if you want to do the world a favor, add your voice to the people asking Funimation to buy the rights to and dub the later seasons. I call the first two seasons of this series a 7, but the last two are 12's!
The first two seasons, which this review addresses, loosely follow the manga, but include extras and filler that don't have the clarity or maturity of the source material. These extras may come from other peripheral publications that this reviewer hasn't seen, but they bog down and trivialize the story almost to the point of making it boring. I've now seen all the anime and read the available manga (which continues the story long past what has been animated) and the shortcomings of the first two seasons of the anime are GLARING.
D. Gray-Man, seasons 1 & 2, are worth watching if only for the wonderful dubbing work that Funimation does, but their only real purpose is to set up the situations, characters and storyline for the third and fourth seasons. It's a shame that Funimation has not bought the rights to these subsequent seasons, partly because of a lack of enthusiasm for the first two (which is, IMHO, warranted) but also because Dentsu is asking (so I am told) a great deal for the rights to the later seasons, because if the first seasons of DGM had followed the manga as closely as the third and fourth seasons have, I believe it would have been a smash hit.
I find the first seasons watchable, but only once. While I'll go back time and again to watch episodes from the third and fourth seasons, the only episodes from the first two that I can watch again are the ones that most closely follow a chapter in the manga. The fillers bore me silly.
This series is worth a watch, but if you want to do the world a favor, add your voice to the people asking Funimation to buy the rights to and dub the later seasons. I call the first two seasons of this series a 7, but the last two are 12's!
I love this show, it has even got me to start reading the manga. This show presents an amazing story with character development and growths that aren't ridiculous. Further more it doesn't rely on the sexualisation of females for popularity, even the Noah for lust isnt. I like this because it shows the characters individually and doesn't rely on their bodies for them to be captivating. My only complaint is Lulubell attacks arc, I hate it personally and juts isnt that good all round. But other than that this show is a master piece and has received amazing treatment.
It came with to much drama and feelings, less in managing to actually feel something deep in the story.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe "D" in D.Gray-Man stands for dear.
- ConexionesFollowed by D.Gray-man Hallow (2016)
- Bandas sonorasInnocent Sorrow
Performed by Abingdon Boys School
Written by Takanori Nishikawa
Composed by Hiroshi Shibasaki
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 30min
- Color
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