This is pretty much how I feel about the dub at the moment. After watching the three episodes, I decided to scroll through some of the comments. They didn’t do a bad job with what they were given, but the casting could have been better in my opinion. From the first three episodes alone, I could see that the VAs actually cared about the characters and the world… but that can only get you so far. So here we go:ĭon’t get me wrong, it is a better dub than what Sentai tried to do. By the end of the night, I had watched the first three episodes and I feel that I can give my first impressions of the dub.
#Is gintama over series
Therefore, I didn’t even try the first episode… until last night.Īs a self-proclaimed super fan of the series, I felt that I was doing a disservice to the series if I did not at least watch an episode of the dub.
#Is gintama over movie
I had a feeling it was going to just another Gintama movie horror show. While reading the article, I instantly felt negatively towards it. I knew Crunchyroll had announced that they had plans on releasing blu-rays of Gintama in the near future but this? This was unexpected…. Here I was, just looking at anime news as you do, when I find the news article on Crunchyroll stating “Crunchyroll Adds English Dub of ‘Gintama Season 3’! ” I had to take a double look to check that I was not hallucinating. In fact, I was completely against the series getting the dub. If the video below doesn’t prove my point of this dub being born from the depths of a cruel and evil mind, then I can’t help you.Īfter that movie, I lost all hope of getting an english dub that was decent. I suppose that Shinpachi and Kondo’s VA sort of matched their characters but thats kinda stretching it. Needless to say, it did not get any better. Once I had regained my composure, I turned it back on to see if all the voices were that bad. I turned that crap off immediately! God damn that dub was terrible!Īhem. So I popped the movie in, went to the options and turned on the english dub. I was so excited to see how the series would translate into english. Flash forward to 2012 and surprisingly, Sentai not only decided to release the first Gintama movie on dvd and blu-ray, but also include an english dub of the movie! I’ll be honest, I bought that blu-ray as quickly as I could just to hear the series in English. Well that hope quickly faded as Sentai only released four dvd collections of Gintama with only subtitles. If the series did well enough, I thought Sentai might put in the money to create a dub. When Sentai Filmworks picked up the series for distribution in North America, a little ray of hope emerged. However, the more I watched (and read) I realized that there is so much Japanese cultural references and nuance in the series that it would be fairly hard to dub it, let alone try and replace the jokes for a english speaking audience. When I first really got into Gintama, I wished that some company would make a dub for the series so that more people would learn about the series.
I tend to watch more subs but I still respect all the work that goes into dubbing an anime and this is not suppose to attack or degrade voice actors or the process of dubbing in anyway. Troubles that they of course try to solve, but in reality.*Before getting into this, I have to say that I watch and appreciate both dubs and subs of anime. Wherever they go, all they do is to create troubles. He and his gang, however, are also among the very few who have not forgotten the morale of a swordsman. Gintama is a story of a handyman named Gintoki, a samurai with no respect for rules set by the invaders, who's ready to take any job to survive. All samurais have been disarmed and reduced to temp workers with no skills who just try to make ends meet. The Shogunate has become a puppet of alien occupation armies. Instead of the US fleet, the country is stormed by spaceships coming from four corners of the universe and soon we see it occupied by extraterrestrials. That's what history tells, but in Gintama, that's not what happens. The samurai regime ended its life with the imperial restoration in 1868. In 1853, the US fleet commanded by Admiral Perry forced the doors open, leading to a modernization of the nation's sociopolitical systems and the eventual fall of the Shogunate. In the early 17th century, Japan adopted strict isolation policies and severed almost all ties with foreign countries. In an era where aliens have invaded and taken over feudal Tokyo, an unemployed samurai finds work however he can.