BUNGOU STRAY DOGS 4TH SEASON
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
13
RELEASE
March 29, 2023
LENGTH
24 min
DESCRIPTION
The fourth season of Bungou Stray Dogs.
No longer concerned with military affairs, Yukichi Fukuzawa intends to act as a lone bodyguard-for-hire, making use of his deadly swordsmanship. However, things are not going as planned for his freelance business, and that is when he crosses paths with a mouthy boy named Ranpo Edogawa. While their initial interactions are intertwined with a bizarre murder mystery, the aftermath prompts the formation of the Armed Detective Agency.
Presently, Ranpo finds himself chasing down a gifted individual with the dangerous ability to execute the perfect crime. But as the great detective unravels the case, he soon discovers an elaborate plot to obliterate the Agency in its entirety.
Although forewarned of the trap, the Agency continue their pursuit of the criminals, only to end up framed for the crime themselves. Now branded as wanted terrorists, the remaining members must find a way to prove their innocence—even if they must turn to sworn enemies for assistance.
(Source: MAL Rewrite)
CAST
Ranpo Edogawa
Hiroshi Kamiya
Atsushi Nakajima
Yuuto Uemura
Yukichi Fukuzawa
Rikiya Koyama
Osamu Dazai
Mamoru Miyano
Chuuya Nakahara
Kishou Taniyama
Akiko Yosano
Yuu Shimamura
Sakunosuke Oda
Yuuto Uemura
Kyouka Izumi
Sumire Morohoshi
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Akira Ishida
Doppo Kunikida
Yoshimasa Hosoya
Lucy Montgomery
Kana Hanazawa
Kenji Miyazawa
Hiroyuki Kagura
Edgar Poe
Toshiyuki Morikawa
Nikolai Gogol
Takehito Koyasu
Sigma
Shouya Chiba
Gin Akutagawa
Shiina Natsukawa
Junichirou Tanizaki
Toshiyuki Toyonaga
Ougai Mori
Mitsuru Miyamoto
Tecchou Suehiro
Youhei Azakami
Michizou Tachihara
Yuu Hayashi
Francis Fitzgerald
Takahiro Sakurai
Saigiku Jouno
Yuuki Kaji
Ango Sakaguchi
Jun Fukuyama
Karl
Mushitarou Oguri
Takeshi Kusao
EPISODES
Dubbed
Not available on crunchyroll
RELATED TO BUNGOU STRAY DOGS 4TH SEASON
REVIEWS
Mcsuper
83/100A Thrilling Ride, And The Best Season To DateContinue on AniListAfter watching the first three seasons and movie recently, along with this fourth season, I can tell why the Bungou Stray Dogs franchise is so big in Japan, albeit a bit less popular overseas due to it being more of a seinen series. The cast is quite unique, there is a solid balance between humour and serious moments, and the presentation is very well done. Without a doubt, Season 4 of Bungou Stray Dogs has been the best installment in the series thus far, as it was definitely the most thrilling and consistent of all the seasons.
Since Season 2, each season kicked off with a flashback that focused on certain characters of the show, and the flashbacks usually ended up being the best part of the season itself. However, this time around, I was thoroughly impressed by the fact that the events flashback sequence related to the events in the present quite a lot, and built upon them effectively, which was what was lacking in Season 3. I felt the present arcs were even better executed than the flashback, which was great.
The fundamental reason why this season worked better than the previous three in my opinion is that the stakes felt higher than they’ve ever been, and I genuinely felt worried for some of the characters, fearing they would meet their demise. Each episode was filled with twists and turns, which made it all the more thrilling, and the episodes just flew by every week. The sense of mystery felt stronger than it ever has been. You thought you knew what was coming, and then another twist happens. What’s more, the twists for the most part, didn’t feel forced at all, and were executed very nicely.
The cast of characters felt even more fleshed out this season, with Ranpo and Yosano really taking centre stage for a few of the episodes, and I’m glad they focused on characters other than Dazai and Atsushi, and gave more balanced development to each character of the Detective Agency. Some mature themes were present in their backstories, and I grew to appreciate their characters much more with the events that transpired in the past and future surrounding them. It felt like much needed information on their character was delivered, and it was delivered well.
The animation and designs continued to be consistent throughout, meaning that the production was probably healthy, and the staff finished the episodes ahead of schedule. Good job by Studio Bones here as usual. The soundtrack was good as always, capturing the mysterious and darker tones of the series. OP and ED were great as well.
Here's an example of some great direction from this season:
I have virtually nothing but praise for this season of Bungou Stray Dogs, and aside from a few powers that felt a bit over the top, it wasn’t much of a problem for me personally. Overall, just a very solid, thrilling season that was a pleasure to watch every week, and the best season of the series to date. With Season 5 coming in summer of this year, you bet I’m excited for what’s to come.
R2R
80/100A review about my appreciation to this franchise (so far).Continue on AniListhttps://anilist.co/anime/141249/Bungo-Stray-Dogs-4/ It's been more than 2 years since I first watched BSD (along with Saiki K) and it's one of those Anime where I don't really look forward to new installments, but I'll never get bored watching it telling it's own stories with & for different characters, using it's own gimmicks and just being an overall fun show.
"The Night is Real/The Day is a Dream" One of the best things about BSD is its back stories. Excluding S1, which was just a setup, all seasons of BSD follows a backstory of a particular character with Dazai as a focal point. This season, however, takes a different approach and follows Fukuzawa partnering/parenting Rampo during their black & white days, and another backstory exploring Yosano in her innocent days (Fuck Yeah! Finally!) without Dazai.
Rampo's flashback scene really deserves some praise, especially the color shift to portray the change in Rampo's view regarding the world and it's people, which worked really really well.And probably, the most emotional moment of the season is seeing Akiko finding a place, where she's needed, and not for her ability. This episode really brought a tear to my eye, and I was honestly waiting for a separate backstory for Akiko since S1. Glad to see her getting one.
In my opinion, these back stories are way better than whatever the main conflict is, as it gives more depth to its ensemble cast, it's the best in it's drama. A primary problem with having an ensemble cast is unable to give more characterization to every character, ultimately their characters are basic traits and stereotypes. BSD takes its time to expand on its characters, as in the quantity and quality, so it excels at it.
Recurring storyline These back stories and character backgrounds culminate into the main conflict of the series. Each season has its own conflict, and the stakes only get bigger as the story progresses. S1 is about saving a single character, S2 is about saving a city, S3 is about saving Japan, and S4 is about saving the entire world & it ends on a cliffhanger. The plot structure is pretty similar, however.
Let's introduce a scenario where the ADA will get caught in a fucked up state. Let's bring Dazai every God damn time because he's a fan favorite, but also remind people that the main character is actually Atsushi and not Dazai.
This is basically what happened in the main conflict past 3 seasons. S4, however, took a different approach where it left Dazai and Fyodor backstage as puppet masters, while the story progressed the same but now, with Rampo getting some spotlight.
I hate to break this but, at this point, Atsushi is a really weak main character surrounded between characters who have more interesting stories to tell. It's kind of ironic that his conflict is about self-worth, finding purpose despite being rejected, yet he's the least among them all. He has, however, interesting moments when he's facing Akutagawa, who constantly stands in his way. Their rivalry makes them interesting, but sadly Aku got no show this season. He literally has 0 screen time, if you exclude the appearance in the opening (the OP is pretty lit btw. ED... I still think "Lily" is the best BSD ED).No-Face Monsters Look. I know that corner cutting is a thing, and I'm completely fine with overworked employees doing that, but, these faceless monsters really haunt through the entire season. There's at least one scene where two or more faceless characters talk to each other, and the weird thing is they don't even have mouths drawn. It's a real turnoff. It's something I remember happening in previous seasons too but this season really outdid them all.
A Small Analysis Excluding that, the fight choreography is pretty good. Apparently, it's an animation style called the Kannada Style, where the power is visualized by air bursts at the point of impact, and the pacing of an action scene is determined by the decreasing frames, in-between animation etc. It's an effective cost cutting technique and it works. The action is definitely pretty good for its short while.
And there are some interesting uses of shot composition that add extra detailing in a few scenes. For instance;#####This shot goes in contrast with a similar shot from the previous episode. In episode 1, Rampo wins the scene as he clearly deducts Fukuzawa's profession, and the background writing "The Night is Real/The Day is a Dream" with Fukuzawa facing "The Day is a Dream" part and Rampo facing "The Night is Real" part because Rampo saw through the reality that Fukuzawa wants to forget as a dream.
Then in episode 2, they swap places, because now Fukuzawa sees through Rampo's dream(/delusion) and opens his eyes into reality.
And the scene after that, is God damn brilliant. And the music... The new OST (which I can't find the name) which consists of muffled voices adds a specifically suspenseful sensation into the scene it plays. The rest of the OST was alright but I was pleasantly surprised upon hearing Eye of the Tiger at the end, as Dazai explains to Fyodor how wrong he characterized God to be.Miscellaneous - Though I already highlighted, I just love the small details the show adds. For instance, Edgar Allan Poe's ringtone is the cries of a Raven, one of Poe's famous poems.
- BSD characters are generally an encyclopedia if you want to find about classic literature authors, and their best works. The Anime is really an homage to all the great people in literature history and you can certainly find someone you can get invested in in their works.
I currently read a few of Edgar Allan Poe's short stories & poems, reading Fyodor Dostoyevsky's Crime & Punishment, read Usamaru's manga adaptation of No Longer Human, and planning to read something by Yosano Akiko.
Conclusion At the heart of all,
Bungou Stray Dogs is not about the overall story or mystery, it's not about the homosexual tension between hot dudes, or it's not about me mindlessly simping over a crazy doctor.
It's about Kafka Asagiri's appreciation to all the great authors & writers through his imagined personifications of them, in these characters. And a director who understands it.I don't think this is a great story, but I still love these characters.
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SCORE
- (4.2/5)
TRAILER
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Ended inMarch 29, 2023
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