I haven’t seen the DVD yet, so this review is based upon my having the Japanese laser disc as well as seeing the world premiere in Meguro Public Hall in Tokyo Japan wait on in July 1987.
Buy,Download, Or Stream Urusei Yatsura OVA, Vol. 1: Inaba the Dreammaker! Click Here
Although released in video as an OVA, it was originally shown in film to members of Kitty Animation Circle who went to the 1987 KAC taikai. It tells the Inaba-kun tale in the manga, and is a prequel to the “Boy Meets Girl” chronicle in the final manga volume, which was subsequently titillating as “Urusei Yatsura Kanketsuhen” (”final sage) .
I hope that this DVD contains the uncut version shown at the KAC taikai; the LD release had several scenes carve and consequently was several minutes shorter.
Buy,Download, Or Stream Urusei Yatsura OVA, Vol. 1: Inaba the Dreammaker! Click Here
Here’s a brief summary of the sage that I wrote in 1987:
Shinobu, Ataru, and Lum find alive to with what appears to be a man in a rabbit suit, named Inaba-kun (”kun” is a man’s word, like “san” but less formal) . They destroy up in location surrounded by many doors. Each door is a possible path of fate. They all scatter to catch their ideal fate, but their hopes are dashed.
In one fate, Ataru marries Shinobu and fathers Kokeru, Lum marries Rei, and Ran is even more irritable and corrupt than before. In another fate, Rei and Ran are married, but Lum marries Mendou and Ataru is his servant. etc. etc.
Inaba-kun offers to let them effect their ideal fates by creating their bear door-knobs to as yet incomplete doors. Shinobu’s is heart-shaped, Lum’s has a tiger pattern, and Ataru’s has a star (Moroboshi = “all stars”) . Before they can consume them, they are captured by the other rabbit people, who prepare to boil Inaba-kun alive for letting mortals control fate. They reckoned without Shinobu’s strength when mad, and the gang escapes.
They immediately witness to try their knobs, but they are again ambushed by the other rabbit people, and Lum’s knob is lost. Ataru escapes with his knob, and uses it. He sees himself surrounded by every girl he has ever wanted, all in fervent attendance upon him. All except Lum — he forgot to include her in his “ideal” fate! He sees his older self in tears at not having Lum. Ataru flees the scene, removes the knob, and discards it.
We survey Shinobu’s ideal fate; an older Ataru is level-headed chasing after girls, and an older Lum (dressed like Lum’s mother) is pursuing him with lightning bolts. In other words, Shinobu’s ideal fate is for nothing to change, and she expresses complete satisfaction with it. She is a sensible girl.
Meanwhile, Lum is inflamed at Ataru and is chasing him around the doors of fate. The rabbit people are trying to salvage the gang, but only extinguish up getting fried by one of Lum’s lightning bolts. They are getting truly pissed! Finally, they send a hail of doors at the gang, who ruin up getting buried under the rubble.
They eventually acquire out, and we discover yet another fate; it is outside a church, and all the Tomobiki people are there to be at Lum’s wedding. The groom is clearly Ataru, but we never spy his face… This fate is also destroyed by the rabbit people
Presently, the gang is on the race again from the rabbit people, and Inaba-kun pushes them relieve through the door to Tomobiki and seals it. Evidentally, he makes his peace with the rabbit people, because the last scene is of him relieve at work, maintaining the doors of fate. He sees something; it is Lum’s lost doorknob. He picks it up, puts it on a door, and walks on.
In the KAC magazine shortly thereafter, a Japanese reviewer criticized the film, saying that the producer did not truly understand the like between Ataru and Lum. Specifically, in the scene fair after the door with the marriage of Lum and Ataru is destroyed, Lum and Ataru honest absorb themselves, suggesting that their esteem is ordinary; but if it is ordinary, why do they quarrel so great and why would Ataru give up his dream of a harem? The reviewer felt that this was an inconsistency and not in accord with the recent author’s intentions.
I loved this, but even though I would give it 5 stars, it deserves 4, because Lum was called a BITCH of all dirty things! I assume they could have made something better! A rated 12 and up!