Review for Is the Order a Rabbit? Season 2
Introduction
I’m looking forward to Is The Order a Rabbit Season 3, which is an odd way to begin a review for Season 2, I freely admit. The thing is that I got impatient and imported the Region 1 DVDs before MVM announced that they would be releasing Region B Blu-rays. I have yet to see Season 3 of Is The Order a Rabbit, and what I’ve found thus far with my re-watches is that the show doesn’t quite maintain that new show glow. I really want another first time with Cocoa, Chino, Rize, Syaro and Chiya, as I think that I’ll enjoy it more. Then again, my third time with Is The Order a Rabbit?? Season 2 might prove all that a wasted paragraph...
Cocoa Hoto is transferring to a new school and moving to a whole new town in the process. It’s a picturesque, European style setting where rabbits run wild. Speaking of rabbits, she gets lost on her first day, and pops into an inviting cafe called The Rabbit House to rest and get her bearings. It’s pure coincidence that she’s actually found the place where she’ll be living. The Rabbit House cafe is usually run by Chino Kafuu, a young girl who usually has a talking Angora rabbit named Tippy on her head. Cocoa will work in the cafe in exchange for room and board, and seeing the adorable but shy Chino, she decides to be her older sister as well, whether Chino wants it or not. Another waitress in the cafe is Rize, daughter of a military family and skilled in combat techniques. As Cocoa gets to know her new home she also meets waitresses from rival cafes, Chiya, who has a passion for Japanese confectionary, and Syaro a hard-up girl who has to conceal her poverty as everyone thinks she’s a high society princess type.
12 episodes of Is The Order a Rabbit?? Season 2 are presented on two Blu-ray discs from MVM.
Disc 1
1. This is My “Big Sister”: Annoying with All the Smiles and the Flashes
2. Ashen Rabbit and Cinderella
3. Spinning Dance Legend? Duck Squad
4. Cocoa-senpai’s Elegant Tea Party Tutorial
5. With One Bite, I Knew it Had a Normal Chewy Texture
6. Timber-Framed Town: Mission Complete
7. That Spoiled Girl Will Disappear Like a Soap Bubble
8. Sneaking Stalking Stalker Story
9. The Fluffball Launches a Suicide Attack, and a Button is Fired as a Cruel Reminder
Disc 2
10. The Daily Search for E
11. Stardust Mayim-Mayim
12. The Treasure is Your Decisive Moment
Picture
Is The Order a Rabbit?? Season 2 gets a 1.78:1 widescreen 1080p transfer. The image on Blu-ray is an immediate and obvious improvement over the DVD, clear and sharp throughout, with smooth animation and with a minimum of compression, aliasing or banding. Colours are rich and consistent, and detail levels are impressive. The characters follow the usual ‘cute’ aesthetic, with a little infantilism assigned to the designs. The real beauty of the show comes in the location and world design, the European style town with its historic streets and arcades all looking very pleasant and enticing.
Sound
You get a DTS-HD MA 2.0 Stereo Japanese track with player locked English subtitles. The dialogue is clear, and the subtitles are accurately timed and free of typos. The show’s a dialogue heavy, light comedy piece, so it doesn’t exactly set the soundstage alight, while the cast of cute girls get just the sort of voice actor performances that you’d expect. The incidental music suits the faux-European setting well, with plenty of accordion thrown in. The theme songs are an oxymoron, in that that they are catchy and forgettable at the same time.
Extras
You get two discs which present their contents with static menus.
The extras are all on disc 2 and comprise the textless opening, 10 textless closings, and trailers for Gatchaman II, Gatchaman Fighter, My Love Story!!, and Hello!! Kinmoza!.
Conclusion
Ditto. Same again. More of the same. All the tiresome clichés that make writing this review a bit of a chore. If you watched season 1 of Is the Order a Rabbit, and wanted more like it, then season 2 is just what you need, as it features the same characters, more cute girls doing cute things with cute rabbits on their cute heads. Excuse the pun, but you will be a happy bunny if you get the second season. But for me, who enjoyed the first season to a degree, but not without the niggling suspicion that all wasn’t right, I know have to go through the same process of justifying my ‘like’ for the series, while trying to understand why it isn’t ‘love’.
After all, slice of life cuteness is my genre of choice, the sort of anime that I can aggressively relax to. It’s usually better than any massage for easing tension, only this series doesn’t quite work out all the knots in shoulders, doesn’t loosen up my spine the way something like K-On or Non Non Biyori can do.
The girls return, with the outgoing Cocoa still determinedly expressing her big sister credentials on the cute and shy Chino, Syaro having lost some of her uniqueness now that everyone knows her true financial status, Chiya still being oddball, and the militant Rize still revealing unexpected cute weaknesses. We also get to see more of Chino’s friends Megu and Maya this time around, and the seven girls get up to all manner of good natured fun. If there is an arc to the series, it’s that of Chino coming out of her introverted shell and becoming more outgoing.
In these episodes, the girls take photos of each other, tell each other ghost stories, and take ballet lessons. Cocoa’s big sister visits, which throws her own ‘big sister’ equilibrium out of whack, they have a laundry day, they stalk each other, go on vacation to the great outdoors, and even try geocaching. It’s all, fun, inconsequential triviality, and were it any other show, any other cast, I would adore its playful nonsense.
Yet there is something about Is The Order a Rabbit which just doesn’t click with me. Once again, I have to say it’s the characters. The creators are simply trying too hard to create characters that click with the target audience. In terms of character design, in terms of voice actor performances, in terms of how they behave, they’re just painfully obvious about what they are trying to achieve. None of these slice of life characters are ever realistic, but in shows like K-On and Azumanga Daioh, you’d wish that they were. You’d want that kind of cuteness in the real world. If I saw any of the Is The Order a Rabbit characters in the real world, I’d want to get them psychological help.
The sequel is just as watchable, and just as disposable as the first season. I wasn’t quite as poorly disposed to Season 2 this time around despite watching it back to back with K-On!, and the Blu-ray provides the expected image and audio quality. I found the episodes very relaxing, which is what the show is meant to do... even if I relaxed into the land of Nod on a couple of occasions.
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