"Bitch Flash" (ビッチフラッシュ, Bicchi Furasshiyu) is the eighth and final short from the Panty & Stocking with Garterbelt OVA, Panty & Stocking in Sanitarybox.
Synopsis[]
Panty and Stocking's transformation scene is altered with Flash animation.
Plot[]
Everyone dancing together.
The short starts with Panty and Stocking on their transformation scene stances, complete with the head shots.
But, soon after, they start dancing like puppets. Stocking dances with candies while Panty dances and, at the same time, has sex with a white male, a black male, and a brown male. Brief, Garterbelt, and most of the cast joins in in the puppet dance.
However, after a few seconds, Panty pulls a cord and water comes out from the ceiling, breaking her apart. All the other characters break into pieces as well. A giant broom appears and sweeps the pieces of the characters, and along a dust pan, dumps the pieces into a sanitary box.
Features[]
Characters[]
Music[]
- "Fly Away" - Transformation sequence and everyone dancing
- ''Theme For Panty and Stocking'' - Conclusion and fade out
Trivia[]
- The animations that are used in this episode were previously used in "Excretion Without Honor and Humanity", "The Turmoil of the Beehive", "Catfight Club", "The Diet Syndrome", "If the Angels Wore Swimsuits", "Panty + Brief", "Heroine Interview", "Geek of the Dead", "Map of the Daten City", and "District B".
- This is the only short in the OVA that the Daemon sisters appear in.
- This is also the last episode of Panty & Stocking to use the original voice cast by Funimation/Crunchyroll before they were replaced by the new voice cast by Pixelogic Media.
Cultural references[]
- The short's title is a reference to the 1983 American film, Flashdance.
- The scene where Panty pulls a cord to drop a deluge of water on herself is also a reference to one of the film's iconic moments.
- In the English dub, during the title card, Panty and Stocking sing the 1983 song, "Flashdance... What a Feeling", which is a song that appears in the film.
- The giant broom appearing and sweeping the pieces of the characters may be a reference to Monty Python.