When Daphne in the Brilliant Blue first appeared on the fansub circuit, there were a few comparisions to Stellvia thrown around (the big difference being space -vs- waterworld). While I got to finish Stellvia - and loved it - the small matter of licensing got in the way of being able to give Daphne a good run for its money. Thanks to Geneon,
though, the DVD release is finally here - so I have a new chance to
check out how it lives up to its admittedly low-key hype...
1 - Maia's Longest Day (Part 1)
Take a young girl, send her wreck-diving, and you've got the start of Daphne.
Meet Maia Misuki, 15 years old, who's in the middle of a practical exam
- recover an item from a undersea wreck in the quickest possible
time.
It's part of her attempts to join the Ocean Agency - her dream job, and
something she's been working towards for a while. While
waiting for her test results, she's caught up in some sort of
bounty-hunter chase - it's her first contact with Rena, who'll soon
come to have a lot of influence over her. Unfortunately, her
dreamed-of
career with the Ocean Agency is a no-go, as she fails the entrance
tests - leaving her out of a job & out of a home, too. A
run-in
with a pickpocket doesn't help matters, either. Maia needs to
find a
job & somewhere to live, quickly - but being shot ends her day on
the worst possible note...
2 - Maia's Longest Day (Part 2) Maia
wakes up in the office of Nereids (the company of bounty hunters who
shot her previously), where Rena has plans to make use of her to catch
some criminals she's been after. Maia's naturally reluctant to play
along, until Rena makes her an offer she can't refuse - there's a job
& place to live on the line for her. Rena's plan goes wrong,
leaving Maia in the hands of the gangster she was meant to help
catch. Rena initally doesn't plan to
do anything to get Maia back, until the gangster involved threatens to
turn the incident into some bad publicity for Nereids. Worried
about getting a bad rap, Rena finally secides to take action, and
somehow, following
her rescue, Maia manages to end up working for Nereids...
 
3 - There's No Business Like Nereids Business?
Maia's new job isn't going too well - she's getting all the menial
stuff, and even then isn't coping too well with it. So when a new job
comes in - track down a large amount of stolen money, within a week -
no-one's more surprised than Maia when she's given the job, especially
when Shizuka's the one who volunteered to take it. Maia's first clue to
the identity of the thief comes when she finds a rent-defaulter she's
been chasing has left - with just the amount of money they're looking
for. Once they know that, tracking him down isn't too hard, but events
start to run out of hand...
 
4 - Chaka Chaka Bang Bang
Introducing Gloria, who's something of a rival to Rena. A false
call-out brings the Nereids girls to a rich suburb of town, where Gloria has
set a trap for Rena. Seems she owes Gloria some money, and she's not
leaving until she gets it back. Her being a member of staff ('leader',
even) only makes it more difficult to get rid of her. Just to really
ruin Maia's day, Gloria decides the rookie could use some company for a
while, and tags along with her. Meanwhile, a case of mistaken
identity leads to Rena being kidnapped by a group who were really after
Gloria...
 
Pretty much all set-up in these first few episodes - with a full 26-episode series to play with, Daphne's
producers decided to take things slowly and give the Nereids crowd a
proper introduction. Except for the branch manager, who always
seems to get a bad rap. A word to the wise, though - before you
assume that this is going to be a simple girls-with-guns show, take a
while to think about just how Maia managed to fail the Ocean Agency
entrance exams - while I haven't seen past episode 5 myself, I have it
on good authority that some seemingly throw-away scenes in the opening
two-parter to point to events later in the series. You now know
as much as I do. :)
Knowing something bigger is going on (even if I don't know what)
does make the apparently standalone, shallow nature of these episodes a
little bit harder to deal with, though. Girls-with-guns is fun
and all, but it's not exactly original, and even their combat costumes
(which have got to take the award for "Skimpiest Outfit in a
Non-Hentai Show") don't quite raise the interest level past 'midly
curious'. The characters are interesting, if sterotyped, and the
show is set in a world not unlike Agent Aika's (where water plays a greater part than it does in today's world), but there's nothing mind-blowing yet.
I'll keep watching, of course, as I want to see how things turn out - Daphne
is alleged to have one of the better ending in recent times - but as an
introductory disc, this could have done a little better. Try
before you buy.
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