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Darker Than Black Season 2 Dvd





Express Edition Combo / Blu-ray + DVD FUNimation Entertainment | 2009-2010 | 1 Season, 1 Movie | 400 min | Rated TV-MA | Nov 08, 2011

Video
Codec: MPEG-4 AVC
Resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
Original aspect ratio: i.78:1

Audio

Japanese: Dolby TrueHD ii.0
English: Dolby TrueHD 5.one

Japanese: Dolby TrueHD 2.0
English: Dolby TrueHD v.1
 (less)


Subtitles

English


Discs
Blu-ray Disc
V-disc set (two BD-50, 3 DVDs)
DVD copy

Packaging
Slipbox
Reversible cover

Playback
2K Blu-ray: Region A, B

(C untested)

Toll
List price: $64.98
Used from: $158.99
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Buy Darker than Black: Season 2 + OVAs on Blu-ray

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Television show rating

33

 ratings.

14%
popularity



Darker than Blackness: Season 2 + OVAs

 (Tv) (2009-2010)

Darker than Black: Season two + OVAs Blu-ray delivers stunning video and great audio in this enjoyable Blu-ray release

The intrigue and danger continues in Darker Than Blackness: Gemini of the Meteor. Hei - aka the masked killer, BK-201 - encounters Suo, a young Russian daughter whose life changed the night a shooting star fell to Earth. With Contractors attacking from all sides and the mysterious organization Section 3 endmost in, Hei must fight to keep Suo alive.

For more about Darker than Blackness: Flavour 2 + OVAs and the Darker than Black: Season 2 + OVAs Blu-ray release, meet Darker than Black: Flavour two + OVAs Blu-ray Review published by Jeffrey Kauffman on October 15, 2011 where this Blu-ray release scored 3.5 out of 5.

Director: Tensai Okamura
Writers: Tensai Okamura

, Shotaro Suga
Starring: Jason Liebrecht, Brina Palencia, Hidenobu Kiuchi, Misato Fukuen, Masaru Ikeda, Nana Mizuki

» Meet full cast & coiffure

Darker than Black: Season 2 + OVAs Blu-ray Review


Starlight, starbright, you lot're a faux star, aren't you?

Reviewed past Jeffrey Kauffman, October 15, 2011

William Shakespeare gave Cassius in Julius Caesar one of his most iconic lines, one which seems to make a case for personal responsibility and which argues against whatsoever all-decision-making fate or destiny determining the course of an private's life:

The mistake, dear Brutus, in not in our stars,
But in ourselves, for we are underlings.

Now of form, as with merely near whatsoever phrase culled from Shakespeare, there are manifold levels to ferret through to fully understand (or at least try to understand) what The Bard might have meant. In this particular instance, Cassius is trying to persuade Brutus that Caesar is just an ordinary homo, like other men, certainly non a God, and one whose ambitions to become a God-like Emperor must be thwarted. But if the fault is indeed not in the stars but ourselves, how are we "underlings"? That seems to imply an overarching power which may in fact determine what causes united states to do certain things or act in certain ways. These are some of the questions that are at to the lowest degree part and parcel of the intriguing anime Darker Than Black, an intentionally dense and convoluted thriller-esque outing that combines elements of spies, scientific discipline fiction and (equally weird every bit it may sound) the dialectic between doing one's duty (and/or job) and what one may feel on a personal level might be correct. The whole issue of what the stars may or may not control is a major subplot of Darker Than Black, for in the present day alternate universe Tokyo that is the setting for this anime, the real stars take disappeared due to some sort of cosmic cataclysm, replaced by imitation stars that seem tied on an individual basis to mutants of a sort who reach supernatural powers. These mutants are known every bit Contractors and they each have their own false star associated with them, with the connexion existence so consummate that the mutant actually becomes known by the star's official Messier number.


Darker Than Black is manifestly intentionally obtuse, only that makes for some pretty catchy viewing, especially for those joining this second season as newcomers. The basic plot of Darker Than Black deals with the sudden appearance of a miracle known equally Hell's Gate, a bizarre occurrence that devastated Tokyo while replacing the existent nighttime sky with a imitation one, one plainly tied to the sudden appearance of the mutants known as Contractors. The series is largely focused on one of these Contractors, Hei, a young man who appears to normal humans to only be a typical Chinese exchange pupil, but who possesses the ability to conduct electricity. Hei is unusual in the world of Contractors in that he actually seems to still possess a modicum of human emotions and a conscience, making some of the things he ends up doing in his guise as a Contractor problematic for himself. Hei is aided past a sort of zombie-like automaton spirit known every bit Yin, a blind "Doll" (as her kind is referred to in the series) who is able to perceive entities through h2o. The second flavour actually begins with a cursory introduction to the Pavlichenko family. Under a imitation-starlit night, Dr. Mikhail Pavlichenko debunks some ancient folklore about making wishes on falling stars when he's asked nigh it by his daughter Suo and her twin brother Shion. A devastating explosion accompanies this idyllic family scene and we're told via Suo's narration that that was the dark her brother Shion became a Contractor.

The trouble with an outing like Darker Than Black is that because information technology's obviously geared toward a more mature audience, the creative squad perhaps tries too difficult to stuff too much into the series, without ever giving enough solid answers to satisfy at least some fans. (You might call it "The Lost Syndrome"). There's no denying that this is a frequently compelling series with some very intricately motivated characters, but there'south also no denying that Darker Than Black is just plain disruptive at times, with story arcs that don't really seem to add up to much when they're viewed in hindsight and several major questions which remain unanswered or at the very least ambivalently answered as the series draws to a close.

While the basic idea behind Darker Than Black is the attempt by various forces to figure out what's going on with Hell's Gate, what its appearance means and how it'due south connected to the rise of the Contractors, in that location are perhaps as well many subplots introduced, many dealing with various subterfuges and competing agencies, every bit well as not enough backstory given to the major characters to assist the viewer feel an emotional tether to annihilation that transpires. This becomes especially credible in the denoument (such equally it is�it's never a good sign when a bunch of late arriving answers play out speedily over the closing credits) when a supposedly heartstring tugging sequence with Suo and Shion feels largely listless and flat The serial is oddly reminiscent of a combination of Hanna and The Bourne Identity, and for those who love labyrinthine plots filled with lots of covert action, at that place's probably more than plenty in Darker Than Black to recommend it, despite the fact that many will no dubiety be at least fitfully confused equally to what exactly is happening at whatever given moment.

Darker than Black: Season ii + OVAs Blu-ray, Video Quality

4.5 of 5

Darker Than Black: Season Ii and OVAs is presented on Blu-ray courtesy of FUNimation with an AVC encoded 1080p transfer in 1.78:1. This is one of the more elegant looking animes to come out of Bones, which is really saying quite a bit, and it sparkles with beautiful detail in this new high definition presentation. In that location's a lot of care taken throughout this 2d season to render gorgeous backgrounds along with very nicely nuanced character designs, and those all popular really well here. There's too a consistent employ of something akin to the old Disney multi- plane technique, and so that a quasi-3D element is present in many shots. Colors are beautifully saturated, though the series tends to exist intentionally muted in terms of palette a lot of the fourth dimension. Line particular is crisp and very well delineated and the serial actually shines brightly on this Blu-ray set up.

Darker than Black: Season 2 + OVAs Blu-ray, Audio Quality

4.0 of 5

Someone somewhere merely slightly missed the gunkhole with regard to the two lossless audio options on this Blu-ray. While we're granted the original Japanese language track in a nice Dolby TrueHD two.0 mix, the first copy I received for review purposes had a bizarre authoring fault, leading me to believe they forgot to add 1 trivial element�namely, English subtitles! A terminal retail version had no issues and subtitles were present on the Japanese mix. Both of these tracks offer excellent fidelity and the English dub is quite proficient with the usual assortment of FUNimation voice talent involved. Environs action is rather consistent, peculiarly in the activeness sequences, which are plentiful. Dialogue is clear and cleanly presented, and the series' rather nice score also sounds groovy in the v.1 mix. While discrete aqueduct utilization is perhaps a bit sparser than might be hoped for, there are enough decent furnishings included on this outing to remind listeners that they're hearing a environs mix.

Darker than Black: Season two + OVAs Blu-ray, Special Features and Extras

2.0 of 5


  • Episode 4 Commentary features Zach Bolton (ADR Managing director), Alison Viktorin (Suo) and Kate Oxley (Misaki). This is a fairly pointless exercise, too chatty and self-indulgent, though Bolton does attempt to extract a bit of information from the vocalism actors, talking about the changes from Season i to Flavour ii (at that place was patently a several year interim in between the recording sessions for the kickoff and 2nd seasons in English).
  • Textless Opening Song "Tsukiakari no Michishirube" (Hard disk drive; 1:32)
  • Textless Closing Song "From Dusk Till Dawn" (HD; one:32)
  • OVA Part One Commentary is another too "inside jokey" for its own good, featuring Brina Polencia (Yin), Jason Liebrecht (Hei) and Zach Bolton (ADR Director).
  • Trailers for other FUNimation Releases

Darker than Blackness: Season two + OVAs Blu-ray, Overall Score and Recommendation

3.5 of 5

It's hard non to give Darker Than Blackness considerable props for trying something really complex and convoluted, but it's but as hard not to take the series to job for not fairly tying up loose ends or providing a really satisfying conclusion (see higher up for my cocky-proclaimed "Lost Syndrome" analogy). The series is visually extremely impressive, certainly one of the all-time looking animes yet to come out of Bones, only that visual ingenuity is sometimes wasted on storylines that never really go anywhere or amount to all that much. Still, for those who like spy dramas infused with a touch of science fiction, Darker Than Blackness is frequently intriguing, if never completely compelling. Recommended, with the caveats noted in a higher place.

Darker Than Black: Other Seasons


Blu-ray
Flavor 1
3-disc fix

Blu-ray
Flavour 2
5-disc set

Blu-ray
Flavor 2
five-disc set up

Blu-ray
Flavor 2
5-disc set

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Darker than Black: Flavour 2 + OVAs Blu-ray, News and Updates

• Darker than Black: Consummate Season 1 Blu-ray

- March 9, 2015

FUNimation has detailed the Blu-ray edition of the previously unreleased Darker than Black: Complete Flavour 1. The anime distributor is besides re-releasing Season 2, via an BD/DVD Anime Classics Edition combo pack. Produced by Basic and written and directed by Tensai ...

• FUNimation: 4 Anime Titles in May - February xx, 2013

FUNimation Entertainment is releasing four anime championship on Blu-ray in May: Sekirei: Complete Series, Darker than Black: Complete Flavour 2 and Tenchi Muyo: War on Geminar Function 1 and Part two. All four sets are BD/DVD combo releases.

• Darker than Black: Season 2 + OVA Blu-ray - August 23, 2011

This October, FUNimation has indicated that it will bring Darker than Blackness: Season 2 + OVA to Blu-ray. This season of the anime picks upwards two years later on Hei and Yin's escape from the Syndicate; their story grows intertwined with a young Russian girl and her family, ...

» Prove more related news posts for Darker than Black: Flavor two + OVAs Blu-ray

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