Ayahatori Shoukanjou http://www.mangafox.com/manga/ayahatori_shoukanjou/
Otherwise the plot continues to lumber towards its conclusion with all the urgency of a turtle out for a stroll. It so delights in being obtuse that, even with only a handful of episodes left, it still continues to throw out more questions than it answers. Some may still find the plot about the Proxies and Vincent's lost memory worth watching, and the whole business with the possible second Re-l should raise a few eyebrows, but at this point the main reason to stick with the series is to see what cute thing Pino will do next, and to a lesser extent to watch sexy Gothish chick Re-l. With five volumes now socked way, the verdict on Vincent is final: he's just dull, and all the build-up about his search for identity and powerful alter ego can't change that.
The one place where these episodes strike new and different artistic ground is in the Smile Land content in episode 19, where Manglobe does a fair adaptation of classic footage of Walt Disney speaking and drawing the characters he made famous. The AutoReivs of Smile Land get designs and an animation style more in line with classic old-school American animation than any anime influences, which certainly distinguishes them against the dreariness of the rest of the series' look. Otherwise this volume maintains the visual strengths and weaknesses of previous volumes: excellent background art, sometimes inconsistent quality on character art. What little action these four episodes offer looks good.
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