Battle Royal High School (Video 1987) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
3 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
"The Time to fight has come"!
lost-in-limbo19 February 2019
Okay... if I found the story of "Blood: The Last Vampire" to be slight and straight-forward, I was in for a surprise when later that night I followed it up with "Battle Royale High School". Okay... talk about being at the other end of the spectrum. I think(?) I do understand what was going on, just don't ask me to thoroughly explain it. Honestly I was under the impression I was getting what the title was selling, nothing more than a basic fight tournament of demons and students, but I got a lot more than just that! Forget about any sort of tournament, hell, even the poster artwork is somewhat misleading. Anyway what occurs is hyperbolic. It throws one plot development, or twist after another without really establishing the one before it, while tonally jumping back and forth between dopey humour, an ancient prophecy, serious psychonetic mumbo-jumbo, mysterious vortex merching and ultra-violence. Loved the music score too, typical fluff but fitting to the on-screen action.

The narrative had many distorted, and kitsch elements to soak-up ranging from dramas of a brash, self-centred karate champ student Ricki (who doesn't wear the leopard mask enough), demon masters from another dimension - a mega dark realm lord and a fairy master, demonic fairy minions, slimly monsters, demon slayer and a space time continuum enforcer (I know a mouth-full) trying to install the power of balance that's been disrupted by all of this commotion. I hope I haven't lost you. It can be talky at the beginning, sort of puffed up with characters detailing their schemes. However when all of these delirious ingredients come together it truly kicks into gear. Making sense of it maybe not, but excitement levels no question about it.

Fight after fight after fight with moments of bloody voilence, wicked looking monster designs and it only grows weirder, and fierce when these forces come to blows like the reconstruction of life scene. When it came to the ending, everything is wrapped up, although I wouldn't call it overly convincing. But hey, it was a ride from start to finish.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Wild
Jeremy_Urquhart28 February 2024
I had no idea what was going on in Battle Royale High, and the version I found had an English dub that wasn't very good. But those aren't really complaints, because sitting back and trying to process what was happening here was kind of entertaining on its own. There is something of a story here, but it feels like it was written by someone with next to no attention span, as very few scenes feel connected to each other in any discernible way. It gets progressively gorier, sleazier, and sillier as it goes along, which adds something to the entertainment value on offer, all the while making this more incomprehensible. Would recommend you watch this if you want a strange trip of an anime that doesn't waste too much time.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Teens and demons mix it up in occult anime spectacular
BrianDanaCamp26 October 2004
"Battle Royal High School" is a one-hour OAV (original animated video) from 1987 based on a manga entitled "Legend Of The True Demons" (which appears on screen as part of the title here). It has no connection to the live-action Japanese film, BATTLE ROYALE (2000), or the novel on which it's based, about a class of ninth-graders sent to an island and forced to kill each other. Instead, this one is about high-schoolers embroiled in a dizzying whirl of warfare between different demon factions, a demon-slayer and an interplanetary space cop. Blood and gore fly, monsters attack, teens are possessed, clothes are stripped off, profanity is hurled (on both the English and Japanese soundtracks), fights are furious, and a good time is had by all who enjoy over-the-top high school occult combat, despite the fact that way too much detail is crammed into one hour's time.

Riki Hyoudo is a lone wolf karate student who suddenly finds himself possessed by Master Byoudo, "ruler of the Dark Realm," who's come to Earth to fulfill some kind of ancient prophecy. When Byoudo finds that Kayn, the blue-skinned female "Demon Master of the Fairies," has betrayed him in an attempt to spread evil fairies amongst the humans, he asks Toshimitsu Yuuki, a handsome demon slayer newly arrived on the scene, to ally with him against Kayn. Meanwhile, Zankan, the young Space/Time Continuum Inspector, beams down from an orbiting spaceship to investigate a perceived break in said space/time continuum. All the while, young Ryou, a female classmate of Riki's and a fellow karate student, gets involved as well. In the course of it all, Riki still has to attend classes and student council meetings. The big battle comes when Ryou is trying to find Riki to drag to a meeting. As Riki/Byoudo, assisted by armor-suited Zankan, takes on the Kayn-possessed Yuuki and assorted grotesque creatures, they completely tear the school apart, in a scene sure to excite high-schoolers everywhere (although no one at this school actually seems to notice).

As a product of the late 1980s, "Battle Royal" boasts the distinct design touches of the Japanese anime of that era, particularly the bold lines and bright colors of hand-drawn cell animation. The character designs (by Nobuteru Yuki) are nice and sleek, with good-looking faces and the big expressive eyes with minutely detailed pupils that were a characteristic feature of the era. The imaginative demonic trappings resemble some of the other occult-themed anime of the time, including "The Dark Myth" and the early "Peacock King" volumes (one of which, "Castle of Illusion," was directed by this film's director, Ichiro Itano, and is also reviewed on this site).

The big problem with this one, of course, is that it's so short. After a lengthy (and exciting) build-up to a big confrontation, it then cuts short the climactic battle. This could easily have been expanded to feature-length or extended to another whole episode. Why they felt they had to condense a long-running manga into a single hour is something only the producers can tell us, although this was not an uncommon practice of the era.
7 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed