Review for Non Non Biyori Repeat - Season 2

9 / 10

Introduction


The summer of Non Non Biyori continues in the UK, as MVM now bring the first sequel series, Non Non Biyori Repeat out on Blu-ray. Experienced anime fans will not have been surprised by the barebones nature of Non Non Biyori Season 1, which came with the episodes and not much more. That is how we get most anime in the UK aside from the Collector’s Editions, which add physical extras rather than on disc goodies. Extras are the exception rather than the rule, so you wouldn’t normally say that Non Non Biyori Repeat’s cornucopia of extra features make up for the lack of extras with Season 1, but I’m going to say it anyway.

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It could have been a painful culture shock when Hotaru Ichijo’s father got transferred out of Tokyo for work. Taking a city girl and putting her in the middle of the countryside is isolating enough, but 5th year Hotaru’s new school is small! It takes place in one classroom combining Elementary and Middle Schools, and has just four other students, siblings Natsumi, Komari and Suguru Koshigaya, in 7th, 8th, and 9th years respectively, and young Renge Miyauchi is a first year. Renge’s oldest sister Kazuho is their teacher. It could have been a big shock, but in Renge, Natsumi and Komari, Hotaru’s found her best friends. Non Non Biyori covered a whole year in the life of the four friends. Non Non Biyori Repeat comprises more adventures that took place during that same year.

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12 episodes of Non Non Biyori Repeat plus extras are presented across 2 Blu-rays from MVM.

Disc 1
1. I Became a First Grader
2. We Went to Watch the Stars
3. I Got Motivated During the Consecutive Holidays
4. I Made a Teru Teru Bozu
5. I Ate Okonomiyaki
6. I Became Closer to Hotaru
7. I Boldly Leapt In
8. I Was In Charge of School Lunch
9. We Went Moon Viewing Together

Disc 2
10. I Practiced Very Hard
11. I Became a Pampered Child
12. One Year Has Passed

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Picture


Non Non Biyori Repeat gets a 1.78:1 widescreen 1080p transfer on these discs, and it offers smooth, clear and vibrant animation. The image is clear and sharp, compression is minimal, and the colours are bright and vivid. The character designs are appealing, and friendly, but the world design, the rural setting really makes the show warm and nostalgic. Studio Silver Link do the honours, and they present an expressive and character focused animation. And as you would expect from the Blu-ray, it is a significant uplift from the DVD when it comes to clarity, richness of colours, and detailed line art and animation.

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Sound


The audio comes in DTS-HD MA 2.0 Stereo Japanese flavour, with player locked English subtitles. The dialogue is clear, and the sound comes across without any glitches or dropouts. The subtitles are accurately timed and free of typos. The show gets some really nice music, a nano.RIPE opening theme, and the voice cast supplying the end theme in character, while the show’s incidental music suits the rustic feel perfectly. The voice acting too is perfect, great performances that really engage the audience with the characters.

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Extras


You get two discs in a BD Amaray style case, with one disc on a centrally hinged panel. MVM offer a reversible sleeve if you don’t like BBFC ratings logos. The discs boot to static menus and each episode is followed by a translated English credits scroll.

The first season was a bare bones release with not even the commentaries that the Japanese got. The second season redresses that balance with a whole third disc devoted to more extras.

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Disc 1

There are three Japanese audio commentaries on this disc, the first on episode 1 features, Kotori Koiwai (Renge), Ayane Sakura (Natsumi), and Kana Asumi (Komari), the second on episode 3 sees Kaori Nazuka (Kazuho Miyauchi) join Ayane Sakura and Kana Asumi, the third on episode 6 has Rie Murakawa (Hotaru) with Ayane Sakura and Kana Asumi and the one on episode 7 features Misato Fukuen (Hikage) alongside Kotori Koiwai and Rie Murakawa.

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Disc 2

Two more commentaries here, the one on episode 10 features Kotori Koiwai with Rina Satoh (Kaede), and Ryoko Shintani (Konomi), and finally episode 12 has all four principal actors, Kotori Koiwai, Rie Murakawa, Kana Asumi, and Ayane Sakura.

Dagashi is Japanese for candy, and given that the characters spend quite some time in a candy store in the show, this little bit of nonsense reflects that, by having the four main voice actresses have some fun with sweets and snacks. There are six segments with a total run time of 62:47.

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The Cast Panel Video has the actors again, this time on stage at a pre-screening event. This lasts 31:53.

You get several Japanese promos for the show, the textless opening, and two textless closings.

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Conclusion


I absolutely adore Non Non Biyori and given that there is another series and a feature film after this, I’m not the only one. It seems audiences can’t get enough of the inconsequential antics of these four friends in a quiet, rural setting. I fell in love with the show with the first series, and I have to admit that the second season is even better than the first.

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In many ways, Non Non Biyori Repeat offers more of the same. Indeed, the title briefly had me suspecting that the run would merely be a re-run of the first season (as has occasionally happened with shows like Gintama), and I would have been happy with that; any excuse to re-watch it. But this second season slots in amongst the episodes of the first. These are stories that take place within that same year, and you could conceivably watch the show alternating season 1 and season 2 episodes.

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After all, it does have the same light, slice of life antics to it, devoting half an episode to an ‘invented’ ruler and desk game, an episode of school homework during the holidays, taking care of tadpole shrimps, a day spent cleaning the school pool, working up the courage to jump off the bridge into the stream, and many, many other small adventures for the four friends. What make the show special are the characterisations, Komari’s aspirations to be a normal, upstanding school girl, Natsumi’s rambunctiousness, Hotaru’s cute obsession with Komari, and Renge’s odd perspective on life. That combined with the interactions between the characters, has the effect of making every second of the show un-missable.

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The thing about the first season was that it took the show mostly from newcomer Hotaru’s perspective, or big sister Komari’s perspective, and it revelled in interactions between the four, leaving the other characters very much as a supporting cast. The second season changes things up a lot in the way it tells the stories, mixing and matching character combinations, so you might get half an episode of Hotaru hanging out with Natsumi, or an episode devoted to Renge alone (her first day at school for example). More significantly, Non Non Biyori Repeat makes the other characters much more integral to the stories. You see more of the Candy Shop owner, Kaede, Renge’s sisters Hikage and teacher Kazuho, and Natsumi and Komori’s neighbour Konomi. They’re no longer just the supporting cast, and far more integral to the stories. Fleshing them out as characters and having them interact with the main quartet makes the anime a lot richer and involving as a result. You begin to see a continuity, and a mirror of experiences when the show occasionally flashes back to Kaede, Konomi, and Hikage all going to the very same school, getting up to the same kind of antics, having a similar friendship.

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When the anime world is as replete with slice of life shows as it is these days, it takes something special to really stand out above the crowd. Non Non Biyori does it simply by being the best at the purest form of the genre. There’s no major plot, no gimmicks, and no little twist to make it seem different. It’s just the exemplar of good character writing, and the second season, Non Non Biyori Repeat is where it perfects its art. And now that we in the UK have it on Blu-ray, I can say that the DVDs were brilliant, but it’s even better in HD!

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Non Non Biyori Repeat Season 2 is available direct from MVM’s webstore, Anime Online, from United Publications, and from Anime Limited, as well as mainstream retailers. (Note that Amazon has been misspelling Biyori as ‘Byori’ if you’re using their search.)

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