Alternative Titles
Synonyms: Baoh, Baoh Caller
Japanese: バオー来訪者
More titlesInformation
Type:
OVA
Episodes:
1
Status:
Finished Airing
Aired:
Sep 16, 1989
Licensors:
AnimEigo
Studios:
Pierrot
Source:
Manga
Demographic:
Shounen
Duration:
46 min.
Rating:
R - 17+ (violence & profanity)
Statistics
Ranked:
#90902
2
based on the top anime page. Please note that 'Not yet aired' and 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity:
#4985
Members:
20,935
Favorites:
50
Resources |
New Interest Stack
Interest StacksAfter watching just about all of the OVAs released in the 1980s, these are the ones I rated 6, meaning I consider them to be decent. The new anime release format that appeared in the mid-80s brought new opportunities for studios and various works began to be released on videotapes. Some of them were frankly terrible, but some became classics with a recognizable style and aesthetics. I bring to your attention works worth viewing. Decided to make a stack for the OVAs and movies you used to be able to find on Blockbuster shelves or on late-night TV anime blocks right before infomercials or softcore porn. Behold, hyper-violence, bad animation, paranoid politics, incomprehensible writing, awful dubs, gratuitous nudity, and that special something that makes bad things great sometimes. Some anime OVAs dating back to this time, with not many movies included. Kick back with your choice of inebriant or lack thereof and have some fun watching action heroes battle it out with all sorts of weapons, explosives, superpowers and machines. OVAs aren't usually very long so you don't even need to commit. You don't need to think too much and don't take it so seriously. These shows are all about having a good time and maybe some laughs along the way. The criteria here is simple: Anime released in 2001 or earlier, with under 25,000 MAL Members, and which I've rated a 6 or higher. A subgenre of science fiction that focuses on biotechnology. Includes anime with biotechnology even if it isn't a primary theme. Do you like watching trashy 80/90s OVAs and movies that are violent, stupid, and nonsensical? Well this list is for you. Some of these are pretty famous in the community like Violence Jack and M.D. Geist, but I made sure to really dumpster dive for some obscure trash for all of you garbage connoisseurs out there. Anime series that covers all of the original source they're based on, with some notes. Before the likes of Saint Seiya, Dragon Ball Z and Pokemon conquering the kids in the west, it was actually Akira that opened the door and made people realize that the cartoons coming from Japan weren't what you would expect from Disney or your TV channels. Anime from the list of cyberpunk animation and comics compiled by fan Andrew Stoker in the early 2000s. Every cinema or direct to video anime film that came out in 1989. Anime that have similar characteristics or that resemble American superhero comics or that are influenced by Tokusatsu shows. A mix of 80's & 90's ova series that I have seen. Short form anime series on this site can often be underappreciated. In the same way poetry is radically different from fiction novels, which are radically different from screenplays and so forth, I view shorter series, typically OVAs, in the same way. Too frequently they're compared to TV series, and there will be many comparative allusions roughly paraphrasing, "You can't expect much from the story/characters because of how short it is", or other similar comments. The value of the efficacy of the presentation in both shorter and longer series are for the most part incomparable to each other. They both strive to do very different things through very different means despite the shared medium of "anime". Of course, what constitutes the differences or goals of a creator is quite vast, but the point is that from my personal view, because the context of the existence of shows that would either be shorter in length or longer are so different and require much different means for communicating the information that they present, I think they should be judged by different standards. How a person judges them is up to themselves, but I do believe short series are worthy of the praise that many would only attribute to more lengthy series. What I want to do is give reverence for the fun-sized length series I have come across and enjoyed to some degree. |