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Blue Giant
Rated: PG-13 - Teens 13 or older
Status: Finished Airing
Source: Manga
Score: 8.39
Rank: 202
Popularity: 3916
"I will definitely become the world's best Jazz player!" Blue Giant follows Dai Miyamoto, who is a member of the basketball club. While attending junior high school one day, a friend takes him to a live jazz performance, which inspires him deeply. Thereafter, he begins practicing the tenor saxophone by himself, without the ability to read sheet music. Rain or shine, day or night, Dai continues to practice. During his first performance, he is criticized by the audience, however, Dai passionately blows away at his saxophone. A tale of reaching his goal recklessly and sincerely begins. (Source: MAL News)
Miyamoto, Dai
Main
Yamada, Yuuki
Sawabe, Yukinori
Main
Mamiya, Shoutarou
Tamada, Shunji
Main
Okayama, Amane
Akiko
Supporting
Kinoshita, Sayaka
Amanuma, Kousei
Supporting
Kiuchi, Hidenobu
Review
BassistUnited0
From the perspective of a professional jazz musician, Jazz has been a part of my life for the better part of 8 years now and no piece of media, art or animation has ever captured the passion nor love that I have for jazz more than this movie. I watched it on the plane ride to Japan …. AND the plane ride back. This was because on the way there I didn't have an adapter for my nicer headphones so I had to use the provided one. Thus, to me, nothing was more logical than watching the movie properly again on the way back. It's thatgood. This isn't a review from someone who watches anime often. I'm sure there are multiple plot holes, also after reading the manga, this is comparatively rushed, the use of CGI in some of the scenes felt off BUT NONE OF THAT MATTERS. The best part of this movie is thankfully the most important part, the music. One thing of note is that the songs and the type of Jazz that Dai and his trio play is not “pure” or conventional Jazz, it’s unbelievably energetic and passionate and is in a subset of its own in this oversaturated genre. I recently talked to a well established composer about the film and even he said it's unlike anything he's ever heard. Hiromi, the composer for this movie, is someone who I have admired for a long time, and I can’t believe I’m saying this but SHE IS A BETTER COMPOSER THAN SHE IS A PERFORMER … If you understand the magnitude of that statement then I salute you. Our main character Dai is technically a "newbie" to Jazz having started his passion for Saxophone quite late compared to others. Yet it is his passion and personality that allows him to perfectly capture the ethos of Jazz and make him the most "developed" character musically. The movie constantly uses him as a anchor for the other two band members to latch onto and grow from. Thus slowly but surely, their sound changes, their feelings and expressions change and the music eventually becomes one big juicy amalgamation of bliss. The cast of musicians in this film is also brilliant beyond belief. Obviously, Hiromi is on piano and you can hear that in the sheer energy of the piano as with the absence of a bassist, she has to do the role of two musicians not one. The saxophone is done by Tomoaki Baba, who is mostly unknown even among musician circles, heck I didn't even know who he is and that is exactly what makes his sound mind blowing. His sound represents the potential of Jazz, and with Hiromi providing the canvas for his solos, hoooooboy was he absolutely ON FIRE. The drummer, Shun Ishiwaka has to mimic someone who was never exposed to Jazz, however has been completely devoured by it as they can't help but want to play despite their overwhelming lack of experience. It's very endearing to see the drums slowly improving in quality as the movie progresses until the final performance in which things get REAL. Thus the three characters represents musicians at different stages in their journey, with the Pianist Yukinori growing up with music since a young age, Dai at the peak of his determination to succeed and the Drummer Shunji obsessing over his new passion. When there is no CGI (Thankfully there is not a lot or it's done well in some part), the animation goes unbelievably hard. It's a chaotic, ebbing and flowing, never ending cluster of flashing colour. At some point the saxophone doesn't even look like a saxophone anymore and the music can literally be seen. I wish, and I mean I REALLY wish I saw this on a better screen because god is the animation good during the performances. The way they portray the audiences reactions to the music is exactly the kind of facial expressions I would've liked to have made if I wasn't sitting in economy class next to 5 people. Anyways I could talk about this for days but I'll leave it here as YOU SHOULD WATCH IT IF YOU HAVEN'T. The movie will release internationally at some point hopefully and I'll probably have to watch it... again. You probably won't enjoy it nearly as much as I did, but I really do hope you give it a try as I wish for more people to exposed to proper Jazz. By that I mean music that embodies the fundamentals of Jazz philosophy and thinking, not some cookie cutter standard or Bossa Nova piece. Hope this review helps ;).
HaiKaneDesu
Blue Giant has just set the standard for music Anime. Post high-school, a lot of us feel lost in life, not knowing what to work on or aim for in the future. Many keep studying at Uni even when it's dull and boring because people assure you that 'you'll have a good future'. BG blows this fear and uncertainty away and illustrates an amazing adventure the band JASS advances through to reach for their ultimate goal. Protagonist Dai in particular is very ambitious and commits himself to become a musician, leaving his hometown Sendai to walk down a treacherous path to make it big at thecapital of Japan. Because of the fact that it is set after high-school, its always frightening to think that one mistake could end their careers with nothing else as a back-up - a harsh reality of being a musician. His bravery and willpower to keep moving forward is what made him incredibly inspirational, making every moment of Blue Giant so special. Their stories make you feel so attached like a fanboy - always reassuring to see the character's success and the band striving towards their dreams despite it being so gruelingly hard. This feeling and the dazzling passionate jazz combines to make an thrilling yet elegant performance that makes you be on the edge of your seat! Animation for the concerts were on par with demon slayer, ignoring the CGI. Never before was there a performance that makes you immersed within the blazing sparks of heated jazz along with the eloquent sakuga blooming the instruments to life. It truly was a magical experience. Five fantastic music gigs for ten dollars. 100% worth watching.