"Visions" is back with nine more shorts, working with mostly the same Japanese studios that produced the first season that premiered back in 2021. Three of the new shorts are direct sequels to previous "Visions" installments, and I'd say that the quality is more consistently good this time out. Without further ado, find my thoughts on each short below, ranked from best to least. I watched the English language versions of all the shorts.
"The Duel: Payback" - Easily the best of the collection, as the Ronin teams up with a Twilek Sith, and fights a seriously warped rogue Jedi. The combination of Japanese brush illustrations, feudal era aesthetics, and Star Wars concepts remains fabulous to look at. Even the Ewok bits! This has the best action and fight scenes of this season of "Visions" by far, and characters I'd love to get to know better.
"BLACK" - The shortest short is a psychedelic, violent "Star Wars" tribute that plunges us into the midst of the endless battle between the Empire and the Rebellion, with a snazzy jazz soundtrack. This feels more like a combination of "Star Wars" and "Heavy Metal" than "Star Wars" and anime, though I appreciate the willingness to get experimental. It's the most un-Disney piece made for Disney+ yet.
"The Song of Four Wings" - This is one of the more visually impressive shorts, though there isn't much of a story to speak of. The heroine, Princess Crane, rescues a little war orphan and the two of them and the Princess's loyal droid spend the rest of the short battling the Imperials, getting into chase and fight sequences, and making some really pretty explosions. Bonus points for the X-wing transformation.
"The Bounty Hunters" - The visuals here aren't the best, but the characters and story won me over completely. We've got an anti-heroine with a heart of gold (voiced by Anna Sawai!), an assassin droid with two personalities, and a jerk of a villain who needs to be taken down. It's zippy and fun, the humor works, and it's definitely a "Star Wars" story, focusing on the scruffier side of the universe.
"The Lost Ones" - This is a sequel to the first season's "The Village Bride," following the further adventures of the wanderer F as she tries to help out refugees on a different world. This is a much more action-oriented story that delves in the background of F and gives her a worthy adversary. There's nothing too fancy going on with the visuals or presentation, but it's all flawlessly executed.
"Yuko's Treasure" - Here's another one from Kinema Citrus, about a little girl named Yuko who is protected and looked after by a big, cuddly bear droid named BILY. It's a story aimed at smaller kids, or those who like to watch cute kids doing cute things, but the execution is solid. I especially appreciate the kawaii design work that adapts "Star Wars" elements into much friendlier anime forms.
"The Smuggler" - Studio Trigger's contribution this year is a very charming little adventure story where a smuggler helps out a prince in disguise. I like the Jedi who shows up in this one, but otherwise the "Star Wars" imagery here is just for window dressing. As a fan of older anime, the style was very nostalgic. "The Smuggler" can't hope to match up to the more ambitious shorts, but I enjoyed it for what it was.
"The Ninth Jedi: Child of Hope" - Naoyoshi Shiotani replaces Kenji Kamiyama as director for the follow-up to "The Ninth Jedi." However, this one is much less interesting that the first installment, focusing on the character of Kara for what amounts to a generic kid-and-droid story. It doesn't help that the English dub is pretty hard on the ears, with a squeaky heroine and a goofy droid that speaks in the third person.
"The Bird of Paradise" - I'm not a fan of the hybrid animation style, the immature protagonist, the awkward story structure, or the English language dialogue. There are some lovely visuals, but often this feels more like a tech demo than a proper short film.
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