Blassreiter Suddenly Gets Depressing

Posted by Demian @ 4:47 pm, July 23rd, 2008

This post contains a ton of spoilers for Blassreiter up to episode 15.

The first half of Blassreiter has been fairly intriguing at best, featuring some pretty cool fights marred by a lot of melodrama and the poor video quality I am forced to watch. So as the mid-season mark approaches Blassreiter follows the iron rule for most tokusatsu (and mecha) series: time for some pruning and a complete change of pace. So the show kills off most of its cast and introduces a tragic background for the rest. And by tragic, I mean incredibly horrible deaths involving many children. I’ll explain.

First off, Wolf finally goes full Demoniac and betrays all of XAT be infecting all its members, except Hermann and Amanda who were in solitary confinement. The new Demoniacs precede to rampage across the city destroying everything. Brad, Al, and the other infected but still human members of XAT fight to get Hermann and Amanda out alive, and the two manage to escape in a helicopter. Everyone else is killed by Demoniacs or Wolf. The worst part of this is that Wolf tries to use Brad’s love interest Lene, who was just introduced a couple episodes earlier, to kill Brad by taking over her Paladin, a transforming motorcyle/robot. Instead of turning her into a Demoniac and saving her Brad instead shoots her in the head with the special bullet he received from her on their first mission. He is then gutted by Wolf. That’s just the beginning.

Elsewhere, Meifing, a minor character so far, reveals she is a double agent with the real organization Zwolf, for which XAT was just a public front (it’s basically the SEELE of Blassreiter, german and all). With her high-tech jet she decides to nuke the city to kill Wolf, not even trying to save the friends she had been working with. Hermann and Amanda’s helicopter is damaged in the explosion and Hermann forcibly ejects Amanda in her own Paladin, while he dies when the copter crashes. A now alone Amanda finds Jacob again and learns his back story.

Joseph was an orphan raised by a church that helped Outsiders, outsiders being any undesirable peoples that are treated like shit. Apparently world war 2 never happened in Blassreiter cause everyone in Germany is still racist. Not the most accurate or flattering depiction of the country. As a boy Joseph allows himself to be beaten up all the time by these really evil kids just so their families will donate money to the church orphanage. Even when a wandering pastry chef tries to help Joseph the kids push the pastry chef into the river with his cart falling on top of him, putting him in the hospital. They then push the blame onto Joseph. If ever there were people you wanted to physically reach into the screen and strangle, it’d be these kids.

Later on Joseph meets Xargin while helping an Outsider community displaced by a flood and also meets his sister he never knew about, Sasha, who originally made the blassreiter nanomachines. Everything is good until the kids in the community get scarlet fever. They have no money for antibiotics so Joseph and Xargin go to steal some and are caught by the police, but let go due to Sasha’s research. While this is going on the kids find out that they’re parents are starving themselves to feed their kids. The kids feel terrible about this and sell the antibiotics for food. Of course, the scarlet fever comes back and since the kids sold the medicine they all die. Yes, every single kid dies. They even show them all being carried away in caskets. Oh, and Sasha is beaten to death by a mob for being an Outsider.

This all drives Xargin crazy, so he takes the nanomachines, blows stuff up, infects Joseph, and then leaves to destroy the world. This leads us to the modern day. The series now takes place with both Amanda and Joseph working for Zwolf. Zwolf has three super high tech mecha, Meifing’s jet being one of them, all piloted by cyborgs. One of the cyborg’s just happens to be Joseph’s sister Sasha, who didn’t actually die. She convinces Joseph to go through excruciating torture so he can get his mid-season powerup. She also promises to kill him after Xargin is dead. And the best part is that Zwolf is actually a modern day incarnation of the Knights Templar, so now we got religious fanatics fighting against Xargin, a religious fanatic himself who is trying to bring about the apocalypse and recruit his own four horsemen.

So, I think Blassreiter succeeded in its change of pace. It will be interesting to see how Joseph evolves now since he’s basically being made to lose control of his blassreiter form. There’s also Zwolf, who definitely have an alternative motive behind everything their doing, so I wouldn’t be surprised if they turn out to be the big bad boss at the end, with the Director transforming into a hulking monstrosity per tokusatsu tradition. And there’s even more CG galore now, so anyone who couldn’t stand the first episode probably should still stand away. Aside from that Blassreiter is a pretty entertaining, if very pulpy, sci-fi adventure. Can’t wait to see where it goes from here. I did prefer the old OP, though.

And this is a pretty cool MAD featuring clips from the first half of the show. The song is White Night, the OP to Nitroplus’s early game Vjedogonia, which is very similar to Blassreiter:

The Emperor’s New Groove

Posted by Demian @ 9:15 pm, July 21st, 2008

Is it possible to love a show just for one man’s voice? Cause I tell you Norio Wakamoto just made this episode perfect. The Emperor had more lines this episode than the rest of the show combined, and they were all so awesome. I don’t know how Lelouch plans to defeat the Emperor when all he can do is cower like a little school girl before his awesome, powerful voice. LE-LOOOOSH!

It’s also perfectly normal to freak out after killing the man you’ve been meaning to kill for 39 episodes, instead of, say, dancing a little victory jig over his corpse.

I have no idea why C.C. needs to be naked in this scene, but I’m not complaining. There’s probably still more to the Geass mystery (oh look Jupiter’s hanging out in the sky), but with C.C. all amnesiafied we won’t find out anything more for a while. Code Geass now returns you to your regularly scheduled political thriller, and I use political lightly.

The Despair Continues Forever

Posted by Demian @ 5:32 pm, July 21st, 2008

Another season under my belt just in time for the special episodes being released with the manga. Then again, who knows when we’ll see those. I think I understand what I really enjoy about Sayonara Zetsubou Sensei now. It’s not the retro-avant garde art style courtesy of Shaft, though the animation certainly is nice. It’s not the great characters everywhere (Komori is the best hikikomori ever). It’s not even the insanely awesome OP’s. It’s that the show can bring up the most random topic or observation and I immediately think it’s true.

Take for instance the “maybe, maybe fraud” of episode ten. It’s all about how when one person says a ridiculous idea might work everyone else thinks it will too. As the episode went on I realized “hey this is completely true. I see this all the time!” SZS has the perfect way of satirizing society in the most insane ways possible, but no matter how weird it gets there’s still the ring to truth to it. Even the downright bizarre Zetsubou Fight segment from episode nine, the weirdest segment the show has ever done, has some depressing truth in it (which basically says we’re all going to kill each other).

SZS is probably the weirdest, most experimental anime to come out in years. I don’t know if it can be enjoyed by everybody. You’ll probably want to start with the first season, though, since technically I am reviewing the second season. For everybody else who already watched and enjoyed the first season, then what are you waiting for? Zoku Sayonara Sensei is even more spastic, ludicrous, and surreally great comedy that is unlike anything else being done today.

Honey & Clover on NPR?

Posted by Demian @ 7:22 pm, July 19th, 2008

NPR did a short segment on the amazing popularity of graphic novels, and of course manga is featured as an integral part of that explosion. There’s nothing really new or interesting to the segment, but about halfway through a line from an anime is played, and as soon as I heard it I swore I had heard it before. Lo and behold, it was a line from Takemoto of Honey & Clover. He always did have such unique ways of speaking. But the interesting thing is, where did they get a recording of Honey & Clover when the anime isn’t out in the US? Is there some secret otaku out there in the NPR offices? You can listen to the segment here.

Magical Girls Have Left Me In Despair!

Posted by Demian @ 5:57 pm, July 18th, 2008

I actually stopped watching Zoku Sayonara Zetsubou Sensei at episode 5 back when it was airing (shame I know) due to - what else? - lack of subs. But now I’m finally getting back to it and finishing it off. Episode 7 really is the most experimental one so far, what with the channel changing segment and the differing animation styles at the end. The clay animation part was particularly surreal, even somewhat disturbingly so. Komori with an older brother was the best joke. I don’t think I’ve ever heard that much emotion from her voice. And like most random things featured in ZSZS, I kind of want a Lily Cure anime now.

I’m Embarking on the Greatest Journey a Man Can Take

Posted by Demian @ 10:47 pm, July 16th, 2008

Watching Legend of the Galactic Heroes

Two episodes in and I love it. There’s no more dynamic an opening than a giant space battle. I find it rather funny that the opening narration of the very first episode of a show about war basically says how war is meaningless and will ultimately be forgotten. Even Yang Wenli and Reinhard seem to know that, Yang probably more so, but the battle at the moment is more pressing.

LOGH immediately sets itself with two very different sides at war. In one corner it’s the Space Prussians - is there a better kind of prussian? - better known as theGalactic Empire. They have snazzy uniforms, cool german names (cause german is the most badass language ever), and everything from their ships to their houses possesses a unique 18th century austerity.

In the other corner there’s Democracy InAction, or the Free Planets Alliance. They wear french caps (yay revolution), have garish mechanical design (boo capitalism), name their ships after ancient greeks (yay oligarchy), and use fighters called spartanians. Probably trying to evoke the image of Sparta defender of Athenian democracy from the Persians, rather than the Sparta that fought meaningless wars for a century that led to Greece being conquered.

LOGH is one of the fews anime I’ve seen that actually feels like a proper space opera, partly because classical music is the soundtrack. But there’s also the distances involved, the grand movements of people, and the death star-like Iserlohn, covered in a sea of molten metal with its own patented planet smasher, Thor’s Hammer (yay norse mythology). Of course, LOGH is still a 110-episode OVA with multiple movies and side-stories, so this may be quite a long journey.

This Is The Real Reason I Watch Macross Frontier

Posted by Demian @ 4:53 pm, July 16th, 2008

Upgraded nukes.

Honestly I’d be perfectly happy with 25 episodes of massive space battles, badass gay guys piloting HUEG transforming battle ships, crazy 3D graphics that keep blaring warnings, and lines like “THIS IS THE FINAL DEFENSE LINE! MACROSS GUN MAXIMUM POWER! BY SPECIAL EXEMPTION OF THE NEW U.N. CHARTER WE MUST DECLARE ALL OUT WAR! DIE BUGS DIE!”

Now that’s a show.

In actual events it’s too bad Luca’s one moment of badassness ended with him being owned. Hopefully the little guy can properly declare his lust love for Nanase’s boobs next time.