Conclusions

Jul. 8th, 2011 02:27 pm
frustratedpilot: (Default)
[personal profile] frustratedpilot
Today, I came to the end of a very long and drawn out process in an attempt to acquire something that had some otaku significance but still hadn't made it to America.

Space Gundam V, the South Korean knockoff anime based around the Valkyrie fighter from Macross. Somebody made a torrent available a few months ago, and I got to download it in pieces over the course of the past month or so, and took final delivery overnight.

This program is worse than I imagined it could be. It's even worse than the Digiview content, which I would have found hard to believe if somebody told me so. The visual narrative is a mess, which probably means whoever made this was likely under pressure to get it done quickly and just threw it together. There is far too much cliché physical comedy, the kind you see more often in American and Western cartoons. (If the Filmation people who worked on the Archie cartoons of the Sixties and Seventies did a giant robot show, it would probably be a lot like this--but maybe better!)

The story is pretty much like Fight! Iczer-1 in that an evil alien being is terrorizing Earth with awful monsters, and a good alien being from the same race is a mission to stop him. When a young man heroically fights a great white shark to save his kid sister and friends and gets badly hurt doing so, the good alien does the Ultraman Bargain with him, "synchronizing" and possessing his body so the alien can live among Earthlings and do his work.

He/they go to the shore and retrieve the Valkyrie fighter there just in time to intercept a raid by...an enormous rat. There is a scene in which the good being tries to talk the bad being into giving up his stupid--I mean, nefarious enterprises, but of course, it fails.

And then a giant spider and a Breetai-sized demon show up, and the Valkyrie (and the silly mecha of the silly sidekick character who makes Hayao Kakizaki/Ben Dixon look like Isaac Newton) fight them. The Earthlings trick the demon into killing the spider, and then, after an embarrassing scene of Head Lasers to demonic groin, it is revealed that the demon is actually a bio-mech piloted by the villain, who, through the use of a droid, has kidnapped the kid sister of the possessed hero. It eventually takes an over-the-top Lucasesque Jedi Force fight showdown to resolve the issue, which makes you wonder "if the aliens had these powers to begin with, why did they need giant robots?"

I've probably made it sound more interesting than it is. When I first learned about this program, I'd thought about redubbing it into English as a Robotech tribute/parody, but I'd have to edit it a lot to do that.

FP

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Stephen R Bierce

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