A Wind Named Amnesia -dub- ★

Dylan Tully’s performance is the most debated element of the dub. His voice is not the typical heroic tenor one expects from 90s anime leads (like a Spike Spiegel or a Vash the Stampede). Instead, Tully’s Wataru is nasal, soft, and perpetually bewildered. He sounds like a college student who just woke up from a hundred-year nap—which is exactly what the script demands.

Critics often label Tully’s delivery as "flat" or "monotone." However, defenders argue that this flatness is genius. Wataru is a man rediscovering shame, war, and love from first principles. His awkward pauses and lack of rhetorical flourish sell the tragedy. When he screams in frustration late in the film, the crack in his voice feels earned precisely because he was quiet for the previous hour. A Wind Named Amnesia -Dub-

The Wind Named Amnesia is a masterpiece of slow, sad science fiction. The English dub is not a masterpiece of voice acting. It is clunky, underfunded, and sometimes mismatched. But it is also sincere. In an era of ironic detachment, Dylan Tully and Kimberly Prause commit to the material with absolute seriousness. Dylan Tully’s performance is the most debated element

Don’t let the title fool you. This isn’t a simple action movie. A Wind Named Amnesia is a sobering meditation on what makes us human. He sounds like a college student who just

Fans of Casshern Sins , Ergo Proxy , Girls’ Last Tour , and anyone who enjoys anime that feels more like a tone poem than a plot-driven thriller.