Reptileenbu
Did you people see the same film I saw?
Portia Hilton
Blistering performances.
Janis
One of the most extraordinary films you will see this year. Take that as you want.
Delight
Yes, absolutely, there is fun to be had, as well as many, many things to go boom, all amid an atmospheric urban jungle.
Sabre_Wolf
I watched this while in the middle of reading Negima and really I found the anime to be quite irritating because I didn't care too much for how they portrayed everyone particularly Negi and Asuna.The final episodes were the most annoying and the plot lines just even more stupid because even the main adult characters got annoying because of their indifference and hypocrisy not to mention Negi himself.In fact the whole anime was very, very, very, very badly written and the manga really is better. While I do admit there have been anime that were actually better then the manga that inspired them but Negima is not one of them at all.
rp_tara
I absolutely love Negima. I mean it made you laugh, cry, and say huh? which i believe all anime should have. Though i must admit the last episode was kinda confusing, but you start to identify with at least one of the characters. The Characters most focused on were: Negi Asuna Konoka Setsuna Nodoka ...Eh How about i just say Most of the characters are focused on, But I believe the main are Nodoka, Asuna, Negi, {At the end a lot of Setsuna and Konoka}, and this stupid perverted gerbil. Woo Negima! Can't wait till the English version comes out. {Btw if most of you don't know, Negima was written by the popular writer of Love Hina, which also has great results}~*Konoka & Setsuna*~
Sam Callahan
Well, I have to say, this is one of my favorite anime series. The plot balances absurd with serious very well. Also it is a very harrowing task to create a class of thirty-one girls, and manage to cover almost each one (well, mostly, but there are rumors of a season two, which could help with character development). Anyway, onto a plot summary. Negi Springfield is a genius child, to say the least. He is only ten years old, and yet he has become the teacher of a middle school class in a foreign country (he is from England, he teaches in Japan). Even more so, the teaching job is really just extra training for him. He graduated top of his class at magic school, and is now going through more training to become a Magister Magi (Latin for Master Mage). Negi is not the only oddity in 2-A though. There is also a robot, a ninja, a vampire, and a ghost (and the oddities only begin there). I really recommend this series for anyone who can appreciate some good comedy (though it is a little perverse, I must admit).
slg34
I describe Negi to my friends as a 10-year-old Welsh mage who's assigned to teach English to middle school students in an all-girls boarding school. This is one of the shows that the audience needs to be patient with, though. It seems like it's all fluff if you watch the beginning episodes (not that it's a bad thing, because the early episodes are funny, and Negi is just so incredibly glompable), but it does eventually develop a serious plot. I'm glad, though - twenty-six episodes is a long time to go just on fluff... Also, one of the things I'm really impressed with is that the writer managed to address every girl in the class. It's often difficult to balance such a large number of characters. Aside from that, the series has fun opening and ending themes. I highly recommend it!