Slayers was a fantasy series of light novels that achieved a notable popularity and became a manga and a cult anime show in the nineties. Created by Hajime Kanzaka, the series followed temperamental and mischievous sorceress Lina Inverse on several quests and exploits in a medieval fantasy world. We already talked about the first season of the series here, so now we are gonna take a look at the sequel series Slayers Next from 1996. Next is a loose adaptation of the second, fourth, fifth, seventh, and eighth novels in the franchise, adapting everything to work as a direct sequel to the original first season. A lot of the crew working on the first Slayers series continued to work on this one, key players being people like director Takashi Watabe, character designer Naomi Miyata, art director Hideto Nakahara or writers Jirô Takayama and Katsumi Hasegawa.
In the series, Lina Inverse and Gaudy reunite with Amelia and Zelgadis to find the Claire Bible, a repository of a great amount of almost secret knowledge (which would be useful to make Zelgadis human again). To that you add the mysterious appearance of a man named Xelloss whose motives and origin seem elusive to all. Most of the series tracks the journey of this campaign across several kingdoms, castles, dungeons and villages up until they reach their destination and the final stretch of episodes focuses on a final battle between a mighty villain and the main crew. Sort of similar to the previous show.
Since the original writers and artists returned to work on Next, the series retains the exact same spirit of lighthearted adventure that made the original show so special. However, it does fall into a more formulaic zone and doesn't truly build anything that is different on top of what was established, having pretty much the same storytelling structure within every episode and in the whole season, at least to a very noticeable degree. I guess you can simply see it as more of that good thing you like, which isn't a negative when the characters and the writing stay top notch and consistent. Next is very good at expanding the universe (a seemingly endless one) with more places, factions, creatures, civilizations, religions and kingdoms than before.
Some people praise Next because characters got more development here, which makes sense since the first show had to establish and introduce the characters and once that's set up there's more opportunity for growth. But none of that changes things to any highly discernable or radical degree. Characters mostly stay the same and the changes are only inferable or suggested than anything else. There's really only brief instances of development, and mostly in the second half of the season, such as in episode 18, which features Lina going into an Empire Strikes Back-like training/revelation sequence (with a Yoda-like wise and crazy old lady included) that puts her abilities to the test and challenges her seemingly static and platonic relationship with Gourry. Something is done in that regard in the finale, but since romance isn't the main focus it doesn't really go anywhere and it relies more on the already mentioned suggestion of a possible attraction rather than a real and concrete feeling one could have for the other.
The new characters are mostly good additions. Before Naga there was Martina, named after renowned tennis player Martina Navratilova, who becomes the main antagonist/comedic rival to Lina and often has several battles or fights with her throughout the season. She is one of those silly/petulant but likable bad guys who you laugh at but sometimes you get surprised at how cunning they can be. Xelloss, the trickster priest, is also introduced this season and he complicates things with his expected trickery and games but often he feels a bit on-the-sidelines of most of the story, only coming out when it's required for certain plot points.
To my surprise, a lot of memorable Slayer moments and episodes come from this season oddly enough, such as the one with the all-female kingdom that features the guys in drag, the one with the magical tennis games, the one with Lina feeling the pain she inflicts on others, the one in the beach, the bath episode and many other funny and memorable misadventures. It's quite insane how nearly every episode feels tight and well structured, effectively mixing comedy, fantasy elements and light drama into every well paced and hilarious episode. Some issues are in trying to fit larger stories from the books into small arcs in multiple episodes but that's not a crucial issue here as it’s decently done at worst.
Highly recommended for anyone who enjoyed the first season and wished to continue the franchise, this is probably the epitome of classic Slayers and one of the best sequel series of its decade.





































































