"Key" by Daisuke Ono
Ending Theme:
"Missing You" by Lisa Komine
release date
Episode titles:
2010-10-03
Psychic Detective Yakumo episode 1.
The Forbidden Room
akazu no ma
開かずの間
2010-10-10
Psychic Detective Yakumo episode 2.
The Curse Of The White Fox
byakko no tatari
白狐の祟り
2010-10-17
Psychic Detective Yakumo episode 3.
The Darkness Of The Tunnel
tonneru no yami
トンネルの闇
2010-10-24
Psychic Detective Yakumo episode 4.
Connecting Spirits ~ Possession~
tamashii o tsunagu mono ~ hyoui ~
魂をつなぐもの~憑依~
2010-10-31
Psychic Detective Yakumo episode 5.
2010-11-07
Psychic Detective Yakumo episode 6.
2010-11-14
Psychic Detective Yakumo episode 7.
2010-11-21
Psychic Detective Yakumo episode 8.
2010-11-28
Psychic Detective Yakumo episode 9.
2010-12-05
Psychic Detective Yakumo episode 10.
2010-12-12
Psychic Detective Yakumo episode 11.
2010-12-19
Psychic Detective Yakumo episode 12.
2010-12-26
Psychic Detective Yakumo episode 13.
Psychic Detective Yakumo 02
http://www.mediafire.com/?896h4axhfi3wfvz
watch Psychic Detective Yakumo Episode 3 part 1
watch Psychic Detective Yakumo Episode 3 part 2
Phantom – Requiem for the Phantom Episode 2
Rating: 4
Review: ...And now the show downshifts. Anyone familiar with Koichi Mashimo's girls-with-guns shows knew this was coming. His previous entries in the genre are justifiably infamous for their deliberate (or pokey if you will) pacing, and Phantom is clearly following in their footsteps. Compared to the measured solemnity of this episode, the easy pace of the first episode seems practically antic. The series’ second episode is fully twenty-five minutes of Zwei training and struggling to come to grips with his murderous new life. The closest it gets to gun-flashing action is one sniper kill and a whole lot of target practice.
Sound boring? For some it will be. This is where we separate the boys from the men, or more accurately, the impatient from the patient. The series sells its secrets dearly, doling out information in tiny particulates, and its characters grow and are revealed at a similarly glacial pace. This is the type of show where an entire episode can be devoted to the poisonous process by which its assassin leads are deprived, not only of their memories, but also their emotions and free will.
It's a slow, cold seduction, driven by atmosphere as much as plot. Rather than push forward, the series takes the time to immerse us in Zwei's alienation and dissociation, preferring that we feel his world rather than understand it. It's at once beautiful and icily hypnotic. The scenes of Inferno executives sitting in Jacuzzis and making cryptic comments disrupt but hardly ruin the atmospheric creep.
The dirty old man in me feels compelled to note that this episode also includes some top-notch Ein fan-service.