Akira is one of those movies that I seem to appreciate more and more every time I see it, which isn't as impressive as it sounRAB because I was pretty non-plussed by it when I saw it for the first time in college (my initial reaction as the credits rolled was a much less printable version of "what just happened?"). I suspect part of the reason why is that the new dub/translation is much better than the one I saw (and owned on VHS in a letterboxed version, which was a novel thing back then), but also that I keep finding new things to appreciate about it.
I did spin up the Blu-ray screener before firing it off to Speedy Boris, and was really bowled over by how great the movie looked, to the point where I'm contemplating blowing the extra cash for the disc even though I'm still not a rabid fan of the movie and am perfectly happy with the DTS DVD from Geneon. What really struck me about Akira this time was that it was done well before the age of widespread computer graphics or computer compositing, so I think all the effects on screen were 100% hand-drawn and they still look at least as good, if not better, than a whole lot of feature animated movies, CGI or hand-drawn.
I will differ from Speedy and say that I thought the cpmpanion booklet was a colossal waste of time, full of really strange, overly-praising bloviating from the bits I could stand to read.
According to Bandai, the Blu-ray is already sold out at the distributor, so once the retailers are out of copies, they're going to be out for a few months at least. Subsequent pressings are also not going to include the slipcase or the booklet, although I don't think that's any great loss.