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The
basic information you need to "sort-of/kind-of"
follow the show is that the central characters (as if...)
are capable of using strange mystical powers to summon Gasaraki,
a monstrously huge force with scary powers capable of bringing about
insurmountable
destruction. There are an unbelievably high number of bad-guy villains
(notice
my distinction) who are determined to utilize the Gasaraki to bring
about the
end of Japan. Can the mecha pilots who have the odd powers that help
them to
call out the Gasaraki somehow work together (and with others) to
protect their
land and ultimately save humanity? That
is the over-riding question
(can humanity be saved?), but there are so many plotlines sitting on
the side
and making the show more complicated to even try and follow. Imagine
the series
as a cross between sci-fi end-of-the-world and standard anime mecha or
something
with too much technical talk that makes little sense (either the
dialogue has
been researched incredibly well or the show's writers are blabbering
character
lines with little idea of what they are talking about), and that makes
it a
strange combination that never manages to click entirely. The
story is way too convoluted to
make much sense out of it. Therein lays the biggest problem with Gasaraki. This series becomes so
confusing at times that to even watch the show feels like something
headache-inducing.
This series is flawed on so many
different levels. Most viewers will feel as though they need a pen and
paper to
jot down notes about the plotting to see if they can even make sense
out of it.
I doubt anyone can fully understand it either, and that ridiculous
notion makes
it even more difficult to imagine anyone sitting through this entire
show. Anime isn't meant to be a chore. The
art form
should be able to entertain, enlighten, and educate... but the point
isn't supposed
to include creating a completely bored and eternally confused audience.
One
of the main issues is that there
are far too many supporting characters. The fact that there is
constantly a new
group of characters being introduced into the multiple plotlines makes
it more
challenging. The obvious issue here is that there are so many
characters being
introduced that it conflicts with an audience member's ability to have
any idea
who the new characters are. I was confused myself, and it was
frustrating. I
was constantly wondering who these characters were and why I should
feel
invested in the storylines if I don't have a clue as to who is who or
what exactly
connected these characters to one of the ongoing plot-lines in the
first place. The
behind-the-scenes featurette on
this release even helps sum up the character issue nicely. Some of the
supporting characters over a short span of episodes are given focus
here by the
character designer, who shows viewers early sketches of the characters.
As the
sketches of supporting-role characters continue to be presented, abundance becomes apparent, which is
something that ends up helping to signify the over-ambitious nature of
the
production. Too many characters might as well indicate too few of them.
In the
long run it equates to meaning the same thing: not enough meaningful
depth has
been given to the characters viewers are expected to get to know by
viewing Gasaraki. When you have upwards of
twenty new characters appearing the show might just need to slow down a
bit and
give time for the other series characters to make an impression. The
writing is a jumbled mess with
too many political undercurrents that seem to lead the show nowhere.
The upside
was the philosophical tones, which were well-developed and quite
worthy. These moments
are not well-divided amongst the episodes though and almost seem to
show up
whenever the random flow of the show's plotlines seems in need of some
added
ideas. While most of the plot-heavy
moments are boring, repetitious, and confusing it was nice to have the
show
question ideas about Animation
found mixed results. The
character designs are pretty strong for the lead characters, but
supporting
roles began to blend together at some point in the series course. There
were
too many characters that didn't seem distinctive enough to tell apart
and it
made it confusing to tell who was who. The
background designs and layout
artwork can have the same effect the character designs had. I was never
impressed
by the art of Gasaraki but it was decent-enough
as far as 90's productions go. The series was produced during a
transitional
period where styles were beginning to change more and feature sleeker
designs. Gasaraki
could
have been a good series. It had some interesting ideas, certainly, but
where it
was unsuccessful was in executing those ambitious ideas. The writing
was poorly
done, except on the rare occasion the focus was on philosophy over
politics or disappointing,
weak characterizations. Most of the episodes were too broad in scope
and the plotlines
felt as though they were adding up to nothing special. The concluding
episodes
did little to sway my opinion of this and that is unfortunate but
unexpected. Gasaraki
simply never works as well as it would have liked to in the end.
The
DVD: Video: Gasaraki
arrives
on DVD with notably dated
but decent transfers. The show is presented in its original 1.33:1
(4:3) full
frame aspect ratio. The colors are dull and muted but the compression
wasn't
terrible - only slightly below average, and it had decent detail. It's
an
underwhelming, uninvolving, and disappointing presentation but the
series holds
up well enough in the picture quality department for something produced
during
the 1990's that hasn't received restoration. Audio: The
audio
quality is average. The series is presented with English and Japanese
language
dubs and both offerings feature sub-par voice-acting and 2.0 Dolby
Digital
presentations that never manage to make the show work any better. These
sound
mixes never add much and are merely capable of delivering decent
dialogue reproduction.
English subtitles are provided for viewing with the Japanese dub and
on-screen
text translations have also been included. Extras: The
only
inclusions are clean opening/ending credits, a brief behind-the-scenes
video focusing on early design artwork, and trailers for
other anime
releases by Nozomi Entertainment.
Final
Thoughts: Gasaraki
was
a muddled mess of science fiction, mecha, existentialism, politics, and
more. It's
ambitious but it doesn't ever grasp what makes good storytelling work.
Instead,
characters are constantly introduced (with little emphasis given to the
supposed leads), and dialogue is quite irritating. This is one of the
most
convoluted anime series I have ever seen. If that sounds like something
you
would like, give it a whirl, but everyone else should consider this one
that has
"unavoidable disinterest" written all over it. Skip It. |