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Namu Amida Butsu! Rendai Utena – Series Review

4.8/10

Namu Amida Butsu! Rendai Utena

Season Number: 1

Airdate: 04/08/2019

Genre: Action, Fantasy, Slice of Life

Status: Finished

Recap

All beings, whether they are animal, human, or deity, carry within their hearts earthly vices. Should a being lose themselves to their vices, they can become a destructive monster. Recently, the divine warriors, Taishakuten and Bonten, have been summoned down from heaven to join forces with the legendary Thirteen Buddhas. But as it turns out, sometimes great myths can be a lot more laidback than expected.

Review

Series Positives

In a single word, Namu Amida Butsu! Rendai Utena (NABRU) can be described as boring. But before things get out of hand, we need to acknowledge a few points.

First, no, I did not care for this series.

Second, although NABRU wasn’t great, I can’t pretend I hated it. In fact, on more than one occasion, this series was pretty neat.

Also, this series was extremely well-animated. From the character designs to the locations and settings to the fight scenes, everything looked fantastic. That was why it was a shame these outstanding visuals were often wasted on substance-less nonsense.

Fortunately, that wasn’t a one-hundred-percent constant.

We can break NABRU into two categories – a light-hearted slice-of-life narrative and a fate-of-the-world-on-the-line action show. Of those categories, the action side of this series was its stronger part. Albeit, there was one complication.

NABRU, from what I can tell, based its characters on specific teachings of Buddhism. Our two leads – Taishakuten and Bonten – were assisting the Thirteen Buddhas to protect humans from succumbing to their most basic vices. That’s about as far as I’m willing to explain because providing any more details with my severe lack of knowledge on the subject will only increase the chances of me saying something ignorant.

But in terms of NABRU’s story, there were a bunch of good looking guys with god-like powers trying to stop an evil deity from bringing about the end times. Simple enough, I can get behind that. When the series decided to feature this aspect of its narrative, we had the basis for a serviceable (but not necessarily memorable) action anime. The problem was, this plotline wasn’t, or at least, didn’t feel like it was the primary goal of the show.

NABRU had other things on its mind.

Series Negatives

First and foremost, NABRU was a slice-of-life anime. Nevermind the fact it was centered around Buddhist deities. This was, without a doubt, a pure as can be, slice-of-life story.

As such, what do all slice-of-life stories need to have to succeed? They need to have good characters, and that was where this series stumbled.

  1. The problem was two-fold:
  2. There were too many people.

The people NABRU took the time to focus on weren’t particularly interesting.

There were fifteen characters at the main temple alone. Given the amount of time this show had and the sheer number of individuals there were to get through, NABRU simply had to rely on one-note personalities.

Of the Buddhas, there was:

  • The pun master
  • The hot head
  • The flamboyant one
  • The feminine one
  • The person who couldn’t be bothered to do anything
  • The clingy younger brother
  • The clingy older brother
  • The one that looked like a kid
  • The one with the glasses
  • The sleepyhead
  • A bird
  • Number twelve

Also, pardon the lack of a better term, the thirteenth Buddha was basically God.

I will say this, NABRU did try to have everyone play some role somewhere during its limited run. However, there’s only so much a show can do to ensure everyone has sufficient screentime, as well as still tell a story about good fighting evil. And that was another issue.

The slice-of-life side and the action side of this series did not mix well, mainly because there was never much of a threat.

For example, the ending was utterly tensionless.

Now, out of fairness, this is a SPOILER WARNING. If you really – and I mean, if you really – care about NABRU spoilers, please stop reading here.

For the 99.9% of you who decided to keep reading: Shaka Noyorai, the one I referred to as God, was “captured” by the main villain. The word “captured” was put in quotes because it was pretty damn obvious Shaka Noyorai wasn’t even trying to fight back. After all, he was capable of turning on actual God-mode, and that was what happened.

Besides, the other Buddhas weren’t pushovers either. For instance, one of them was the embodiment of the entire cosmos. I imagine that person could take care of themselves in a fight.

So, although the action side of NABRU was the more interesting side, what was the point of it exactly?

In conclusion, what we had here was a series with way too much going on. With so many ropes pulling in multiple directions, NABRU was never able to make any forward progress.

Final Thoughts

This show was boring, but it wasn't boring throughout.

What trapped this series was too many characters, a non-threatening dark side, and overused narrative tropes. At least it all looked very nice.

In the end, Namu Amida Butsu! Rendai Utena is entirely skippable.

Namu Amida Butsu! Rendai Utena – Series Review
  • Writing - 4/10
    4/10
  • Plot - 4/10
    4/10
  • Character Development - 4/10
    4/10
  • Production - 7/10
    7/10
  • Music - 5/10
    5/10
4.8/10
User Review
5 (1 vote)
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