Review of Naruto: Shippuuden #6

Reevothemusefan

Vampire Ninja
<img src="http://www.animeuknews.net/img/uploaded/2011-06-2919511301_300x300_1.jpg">

<b>Review of Naruto: Shippuuden #6 by Reevothemusefan</b>

Continuing from&nbsp;where we last left off, we find&nbsp;out that the Grave Robbers are known as Furido's 4-Man Team and are currently on a mission to destroy the Hidden Leaf Village to rebuild the Land of Fire to its former glory. It doesn't look too good for&nbsp;our heroes; the whole village has been sealed off with a jutsu, Furido has revived four of the Twelve Guardian Ninja to perform one of the most powerful lighting attacks called Limelight, and the Leaf Shinobi must defend the village&nbsp;against the undead - although this isn't Naruto Shippuden: Zombie box-set edition (even if it sounds cool).

As you can&nbsp;tell, this arc has built up a really big climax for itself and I was expecting a really epic battle to go down but sadly as episodes went by, my enthusiasm slowly faded away, and the problems were resolved too quickly, making me feel less satisfied then I should. As for the final part of the arc, we get some surprising revelations on Furido and Sora and a very promising action sequence, but they&nbsp;are too stretched-out in the last episodes, making them feel boring. I do feel disappointed that this grave robber arc&nbsp;was not exploited to&nbsp;its full potential -&nbsp;but on a positive note, it&nbsp;dovetails into the&nbsp;next arc quite nicely.

Next, we are introduced to the Akatsuki members who have been chasing the two-tail jinchūriki for their secret plans: Hidan who is obsessed with religion, and&nbsp;Jashin who&nbsp;is loud-mouthed and disrespectful to all the people he meets. His partner Kakuzu is a more sinister and ill-tempered character who cares more about money rather than the Akatsuki ideals. Both partners don't get along, but you can&nbsp;see why they have been teamed up; their powers aren't&nbsp;discussed in this box-set.

Naruto begins the next phase of his wind chakra training which leaves him out of the action for a while and supports most of the comic relief, at times it's good&nbsp;but some are downright bad (Naruto's favourite Ramen restaurant has turned into a tsukemen shop causing him to rant to the owner daughter, this was unfunny and got annoying very fast).

The most interesting character in these episodes&nbsp;is Azuma (the teacher of Shikamaru, Chōji, and Ino) one of the Twelve Guardian Ninja. His past is more developed in the anime than the manga, so&nbsp;he steals rather more of the spotlight in these episodes than Naruto, which makes a good change. Again, the episodes end on a&nbsp;cliffhanger that leaves&nbsp;you eagerly anticipating&nbsp;the next box-set.

Both the themes remain the same, the opening "Blue Bird" is starting to feel quite repetitive now but I always enjoy watching and listening to "Nico Touches the wall - Broken Youth" closing when that comes around.

Extras remain unchanged.

In Summary

After feeling disappointed in the Grave Robber arc, I'm glad to&nbsp;report that&nbsp;the introduction to the new Akatsuki members and a well-placed cliffhanger make this box-set worth the purchase.<br>
<b>Final score: 7 out of 10</b>

<b>Additional screencaps</b>

<img src="http://www.animeuknews.net/img/uploaded/screens/2011-06-29vlcsnap-2011-06-29-20h24m12s53.png">

<img src="http://www.animeuknews.net/img/uploaded/screens/2011-06-29vlcsnap-2011-06-29-20h31m31s87.png">

<img src="http://www.animeuknews.net/img/uploaded/screens/2011-06-29vlcsnap-2011-06-29-20h32m48s128.png">
 
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