While I had initially conceived of Demo Disc to be a way for me to cover anime that I normally wouldn't be able to properly review in full, one idea wound up being a decent alternate definition of this column: Pilots. Starting with Volume 9 in 2017, I've occasionally returned to the idea of using Demo Disc to cover initial pilot versions of various anime, namely Volume 13 in 2018, Volume 15 in 2019, & Volume 19 in 2021. While not exactly making anywhere near a majority (or even a plurality), with this fifth pilot-focused volume of Demo Disc that you're now reading, that now means that a little over 1/5 of Demo Disc has been dedicated to this subject and once things finish up with Volume 27 (whenever that happens...) it'll only be slightly less than that fraction. Now, sure, there are technically other pilots I could one day return to, but I think five sets of anime pilots, totaling 20 different pilots, is more than enough of these to have covered for Demo Disc.
Also, fittingly enough, while the majority of the pilots covered for Demo Disc originated from shonen manga, this time around they're mostly originated from shojo manga!
The Vengeful Sorceress
Running from 1993 to 1996 in Kodansha's Nakayoshi magazine for six volumes, Magic Knight Rayearth is often cited as one of the most iconic creations of the mangaka collective known as CLAMP, alongside the likes of X & Cardcaptor Sakura. Unsurprisingly, this would lead to not just one anime adaptation, but two. The first was a TV anime that ran for 49 episodes (split into two seasons) from 1994 to 1995, while in the second half of 1997 a three-episode OVA reimagining was made, both of which were animated by TMS & directed by Toshihiro "Toshiki" Hirano. TMS felt that the TV anime had tons of potential outside of Japan, so some time in the 90s (1995 seems to come up the most often) the studio teamed with The Ocean Group in Canada to produce an English dub test pilot for Magic Knight Rayearth, with apparently hopes of getting it aired on Fox Kids. This dub pilot wouldn't go anywhere, and a second attempt with Summit Media Group had an ambiguous result (there's word that 13 episodes were dubbed this time around, but no proof of the dub itself seems to exist anymore), but eventually Rayearth would finally receive a complete English dub via Media Blasters' release of the series, this time being dubbed by Bang Zoom! Entertainment; technically, there's a fourth dub for this version of Rayearth, but that was solely for Working Designs' release of the Sega Saturn video game. For the longest time it was thought that both of the old dubs for Magic Knight Rayearth TV were lost with time, but when Discotek Media license rescued the series for release on DVD & Blu-Ray in early 2017 it actually managed to find a copy of TMS & Ocean's original dub pilot & included it as an extra, so let's see how the earliest attempt to dub this iconic CLAMP series holds up, just in time for the anime's 20th Anniversary this year.