Anime Catalogue
Ah My Goddess TV Series Volume 5 
Details
Director: Hiroaki Goda
Catalogue Number: MVD2157
Certificate: 12
Date Released: October 1st 2007
Screen: 4:3
Languages: Japanese; English
Subtitles: English
Duration: 100 minutes
Synopsis
Ah! My Goddess is a story of a typically reserved engineering
student who unwittingly acquires his very own sex goddess after mis-dialing
a number for takeout, this anime series comes from the long-running manga
of the same name.
For those dwelling within the Morisato household, it is a turbulent time
filled with many changes in Ah! My Goddess: Volume 5. First Belldandy
has a sudden change of attitude, going from perfectly innocent to the
perfect opposite. A tragic little magic accident gives Keiichi's gender
a change of its own. Changes are in store for Urd when she walks away
from her job in an attempt to save her sister's life. She is punished
by having her powers revoked, and she must unleash "the Devil in
Miss Urd" to get them back.
Episodes Comprise
19 - Ah! Please Don't Look at Me Like That!?
20 - Ah! If You're a Real Man, Save the Goddess?
21 - Ah! What Wouldn't I Give for an Angel With White Wings?!
22 - Ah! The Devil's Whisper Coming from an Urn?
Cover

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Review
For anyone who’s been waiting impatiently for Keiichi
and Belldandy to get it on, this volume finally delivers. Sort of. Meanwhile,
Urd’s lost her goddess license, and Marller’s latest plan
doesn’t work out quite as she expected it to…
Audio:
Audio for this release is provided in Japanese and English 2.0 stereo
- I listened to the Japanese track for this review. The soundtrack is
clear, with dialogue being easy to pick out over the background effects,
and good use is made of the soundstage to give direction to speech. There
were no obvious encoding problems.
Video:
Video is presented in 1.78:1 anamorphic widescreen, and after the disappointing
quality of the OVA's release is a joy to watch. The quality of the animation
is high, with good use of colour and detail to give a very vibrant feel
to the series. The encoding does justice to the source material, too,
with no noticeable problems to spoil one very good-looking release.
Menu:
A flurry of feathers brings the main menu into view, with an image the
Belldandy and Keiichi with their crash helments taking centre stage and
a series of clips from the show drifting past in bubbles. Submenus are
provided for Setup and Extras - these are each static screens, with Belldandy
featuring on the Setup menu. Options are also provided for Play All and
for direct access to each episode.
Extras:
Another volume with not many extras on offer - another screenshot gallery
and a line-art gallery are all you get.
Content: (please note that content portions of a
review will contain spoilers)
The lack of any real progress between him and Belldandy is beginning to
get to Keiichi - and he's not the only one. In fact, the only person who
seems happy with the way things are going (or not, as the case may be)
is Skuld. Once again, Urd takes it upon herself to try and move things
along - but when Skuld finds out she's up to something, she takes her
own steps to ruin Urd's plans. They don't quite have the desired effect,
though, as Belldandy suddenly becomes a lot more forward with Keiichi.
Later, Marller's braves the underworld in search of a legendary urn,
which she hopes will be of use in getting her own back on Urd & the
others. She manages to retrieve it, too - although not without having
to make an effort - and sets about unleashing its power on an unsuspecting
city. The first evidence that something's wrong: a string of bad luck,
seemingly affecting everyone Keiichi knows. Usually it falls to Urd to
deal with Marller's plans, but since her operating license has been temporarily
revoked by the Almighty, she's stuck on the sidelines – and the
lack of magic leaves her open to temptation. If getting her magic back
means turning to the Darkside, so be it - the Lord of Terror has an opening…
A firm emphasis on comedy this volume, with all sorts of mayhem from
Keiichi being turned into a woman (and suiting a school uniform scarily
well), to Belldandy becoming a bit of a harlot and Urd facing the lure
of her demonic side. There are a few serious moments thrown in for good
measure, but they’re on the sidelines of all the fun. The problem
is that, while all that comedy is certainly enjoyable to watch –
I don’t think anyone could call these episodes bad, by any stretch
of the imagination - they just don’t really advance the main event
(the Keiichi / Belldandy relationship) by all that much.
The best moments here belong to Urd, who gets a lot of the attention
through a look at her past and some of the consequences that’s having
on her present. Let’s just say that she’s susceptible to the
lure of evil in episode 22 for a reason. She’s probably got the
most personality out of the three goddesses, so having her be the focus
of the show for pretty much two full episodes is no bad thing –
her mayhem pulls attention away from the fact that nothing’s really
happening between the lovebirds (that isn’t prompted by magical
influences, anyway), and her antics are enjoyable to watch, whereas Skuld’s
are just annoying. There’s just something about her whole driven-by-jealousy
attitude that rubs me up the wrong way.
Unlike most discs, where each story more-or-less stands on its own, this
disc ends on a clear cliffhanger, with Marller being close to achieving
her goal of ruining Belldandy’s day – although her plan still
isn’t playing out quite how she’d like it to, she’ll
take whatever victories she can get. It’s a good place to leave
the story, as for once I’m now quite eager to get my hands on the
next volume to see what happens next, which isn’t a feeling I’ve
had about the previous volumes. I do enjoy Ah! My Goddess, but while it
always brings a smile to my face, it does also have a few niggling faults
that stop it from being a must-see release.
In summary:
More of the same from Ah! My Goddess in a lot of ways, then, but the disc
is saved by a heavy serving of Urd and her antics, and some good comedy
moments that almost make you forget that Keiichi and Belldandy still aren’t
making any romantic progress. No matter how much you realise that they
never will, it’s still a frustration that they don’t just
get on with it – but these things were sent to try us. Overall,
plenty here to enjoy, despite the failings, and if you’ve enjoyed
the previous volumes then this one won’t disappoint either. (Mania)
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