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diff --git a/src/anime/review/appleseed-xiii/.gitignore b/src/anime/review/appleseed-xiii/.gitignore new file mode 100644 index 0000000..08d33d4 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/anime/review/appleseed-xiii/.gitignore @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +/document.en.du.xml +/document.it.du.xml diff --git a/src/anime/review/appleseed-xiii/document.en.rest.txt b/src/anime/review/appleseed-xiii/document.en.rest.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..872a94a --- /dev/null +++ b/src/anime/review/appleseed-xiii/document.en.rest.txt @@ -0,0 +1,81 @@ +================ + Appleseed XIII +================ + +A study in equality, unequal to its task. +========================================= + +:CreationDate: 2014-03-19 12:04:18 +:Id: anime/review/appleseed-xiii +:tags: - anime + - review +:rating: 3 +:original: http://www.easternkicks.com/reviews/appleseed-xiii-complete-series-collection + +SHIRŌ Masamune (士郎 正宗) is a well known and beloved mangaka, +although not one of the most prolific: in thirty years he's published +only 8 books (plus many artbooks and some shorts). But most of those +books have had a profound influence in both manga and anime: even if +you've been living under a rock, you have surely heard of at least +Ghost in the Shell. Most of his works share aspects of deep +worldbuilding and thematic complexity, that makes them hard to +transpose to other media: Oshii and Kamiyama moulded GitS to their +views and sensibilities, leaving out a good part of the complexity of +the original. Dominion is probably the most easy to adapt, since it is +essentially a series of visual gags and jokes, if you ignore the +attention to mechanics and weapons. Appleseed, on the other hand, +seems to be the hardest one. + +Appleseed was published in 1985 in four volumes. It's set in a +post-WW3 world, with advanced mechanical and biological technologies +that allowed the creation of cyborgs, semi-autonomous artificial +intelligences, powered suits, and a genetically designed near-human +slave species, the bioroids. The manga (and the extensive endnotes) +detail both the technological and political landscapes, delving into +the goal and struggles of the various national and international +organisations and social classes. All of this while also telling the +story of the two main characters, Deunan Knute (a human woman) and +Briareos Hekatonkheires (a human-cyborg man), who work as part of a +crack para-military team, the ESWAT in Olympus City, to keep the +peace, control terrorist organisations, and occasionally saving +society from the consequence of its own short-sighted actions. + +Appleseed has been adapted to animation three times to date: as an OVA +in 1988 (directed by KATAYAMA Kazuyoshi (片山 一良), who had +previously worked with Studio Ghibli and Studio Pierrot, and would go +on to direct The Big O among others), two movies in 2004 and 2007 +("Appleseed" and "Appleseed Ex Machina", directed by ARAMAKI Shinji (荒 +牧 伸志), who worked on Megazone 23 and later Halo Legends), and this +new series, directed by HAMANA Takayuki (浜名 孝行); none of the +adaptations has been particularly good. + +This series seems to be set after the events of the manga, and uses +the device of international and terrorist intrigue to tackle one of +the big issues in the Appleseed world: bioroids are bred and +conditioned to be guardian slaves, given control of the cities +infrastructure under AI supervision, but considered expendable and not +deserving of basic rights. It could have been great, the mix of +sentient species in Olympus City was written exactly for that purpose, +but sadly the execution leaves a lot to be desired. + +Appleseed XIII feels overly fond of its own gimmicks, from the CGI to +visual effects to the continuous references to Greek mythology. For +example, the first 12 episodes are named after the Labours of +Heracles, and their plots tries to somehow reflect each trial. Don't +get me wrong, Greek myths have always been part of Appleseed, but here +it feels more forced than usual. Another aspect that really hindered +my enjoyment of the series is the visual presentation: low-polygon CGI +without motion capture has never been a good idea, but nowadays it +also looks dated. From the specials included in this release we learn +that each episode was produced by a different company, because no one +wanted to invest the time and money to create the entire show. +Apparently the various companies and studios did not share their 3d +models or animation routines, resulting in subtle (and sometimes +not-so-subtle) differences in the way characters look and move from +one episode to the next. + +Finally, the actual thematic centre of the story, the tension and +contrast between the species, ends up taking second or third place +behind the battles and some lovers' quarrels. + +I think I'm going to re-read the manga, now. diff --git a/src/anime/review/appleseed-xiii/du2html.xsl b/src/anime/review/appleseed-xiii/du2html.xsl new file mode 120000 index 0000000..371d03d --- /dev/null +++ b/src/anime/review/appleseed-xiii/du2html.xsl @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +../../../../templates/du2html-review.xsl
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