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Lupin III: The Secret of Twilight Gemini

Rating: 3 stars
"An enjoyably light, action-oriented entry in the series."

Summary Information

(cover from Amazon)

US Release:
FUNimation

Genre: Action
(Caper Action-Comedy-Drama)

Suggested Age/Content Guide:
15-up" / V2 N3 M2 L2

Series Type: TV Movie

Length:
90 minutes

Production Date:
1996-08-02

What's In It

Categories:

Look for:
Gentleman Thieves
Gruff Gunmen
Ultra-Cool Samurai
Bumbling INTERPOL Agents
The Middle East
Freedom Fighters
Fujiko Fanservice
Gunfights
Cross-dressing Villains

See Also

Sequels/Spin-offs:
Lupin III: The Fuma Conspiracy
Lupin III: The Castle of Cagliostro
Lupin III: 2nd TV Series
Lupin III: Voyage to Danger
Lupin III: Dragon of Doom

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Original Title: ルパン三世 トワイライト☆ジェミニの秘密
Romanized: Rupan San-sei - Twilight Gemini no Himitsu
Literal:

Plot Synopsis

As with all Lupin III movies, this one revolves around a caper of the master thief himself, backed up by the gunman Jigen and samurai Goemon, and of course followed along the line somewhere by Fujiko. In this particular outing, Lupin is given half of a huge diamond--the Twilight--by an old man who took a liking to him. The diamond is supposed to be the key to a treasure left to a small group of native people fighting for their homeland in Morocco, but only if Lupin can find the other half. And, of course, Interpol Inspector Zenigata is hot on their trail. When the chase gets joined by a bunch of very well armed bad guys with the same goal as Lupin, and then Lupin runs across a beautiful young freedom fighter working for the very people whose treasure he's after, things get plenty interesting. Throw in a cross-dressing, whip-toting villain, and lots of action, of course, ensues.

Quick Review

Rating: 3 / 5
Reviewer: Marc
Review Date: 2006-08-20

Twilight Gemini is more classic Lupin III fun. This particular entry is on the light, action-oriented end of the spectrum--plenty of fun (and at least reasonably exciting) action, plenty of Lupin shenanigans, and a solid (if straightforward) globe-spanning adventure plot. It's also a little more sexually charged (and Fujiko fanservice-heavy) than average, but nothing drastic. The only downside is that the character designs on the main cast are sub-par for the series. The movie also has a rather classic look--stylistically it looks about a decade older than it is--but that mostly adds to the old school flavor of this classic series.

In all, an enjoyable romp in the light, action-oriented end of the Lupin III continuum. Not a particular standout in the series, but plenty of fun for fans.

US DVD Review

Funimation's DVD is a solid production. It includes all the basics: Decent if unimpressive video, Japanese and English audio tracks, and subtitle tracks that cover both a transcript of the dub and an actual subtitle track (the dialogue is quite a bit different, so this is nice). On the "nice touch" department, if you play the feature in Japanese, you get the credits and title screen as they were originally--in Japanese; if you're playing it in English, you get an alternate video track with an English title screen and credits. Nice. Extras consist of brief character bios and quick bios for the English dub cast. In a final nice touch, the disc is region 1, 2, and 4 (the Americas and Europe/Japan). Why, I'm not sure, but it's nice to see a less restrictive release whatever the reason.

Note that there's also an edited version available on DVD, but I haven't seen it to compare what's different.

Content Guide

Funimation calls the uncut version 15+, which is about right on account of the nudity and sexual themes. One assumes the edited version is acceptable for most viewers.

Violence: 2 - Relatively violent, but not graphic at all.

Nudity: 3 - Several scenes.

Sex/Mature Themes: 2 - Not directly visible, but there is some hanky panky.

Language: 2 - Some strong language.

Notes and Trivia

The eighth in an ongoing series of TV specials, Twilight Gemini is a made for TV movie. This is the fourth appearance (relatively early; preceded by two OAVs and the previous TV movie) of Kanichi Kurita as Lupin's voice.

Yasuo Yamada, the actor who had given Lupin his distinctive voice since the beginning (24 years in total), died suddenly of a brain aneurism in early 1995 at the age of 62, just before starting the voicing on the "Die! Nostradamus" OAV. Fortunately for Lupin fans, Kanichi Kurita had made a career as a skilled impersonator, and one of his best impressions was of Lupin. As such, he was the perfect choice for the role when Yamada died, and immediately took over, at first as an emergency stand-in, but he has voiced Lupin in all subsequent performances.

In a bit of trivia, this film is one of the few in which Lupin appears in a white coat in addition to his trademark red jacket.

For those unfamiliar with Lupin's backstory, the character is based loosely on Arsène Lupin, the gentleman thief who appears in a series of French novels by Maurice Leblanc. Published between 1907 and 1939, these novels were tremendously popular (and remain so), producing many spin-offs, film adaptations, and parodies. Among these is Lupin III, ostensibly "the third" because he is the grandson of the original. Copyright issues over the name with the Leblanc estate are among the reasons Lupin III was slow to make it to the US, and (apparently) why in the original Streamline release of Castle of Cagliostro he was renamed "Wolf," and was referred to as "Rupan" in the two films translated by AnimEigo.

The character of Lupin III was originated in a serialized comic series in 1967 by Kazuhiko Katou (better known by his pen name "Monkey Punch"). It was wildly popular and quickly spiraled into a massive franchise that continues today.

Availability

Available in the US from Funimation on bilingual DVD in both edited and uncut form. Was previously also available on dubbed VHS, also in "clean" and uncut versions.

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