Blue Remains (2001) Poster

(2001)

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Juvenile Fantasy is a poor man's Final Fantasy
FilmFlaneur31 August 2003
Warning: Spoilers
(Some spoilers)

Amamiku is the young daughter of two environmental scientists with a mission to rejuvenate a nuclear war-ravaged Earth. As they arrive from space however, a new conflict is in progress and, fatally affected by contamination, Amamiku is placed in suspended animation under the sea for decades until she is awoken by her ship's supercomputer and takes up the task of finally seeding the planet. She is discovered and helped in her projected 'terra homing' by some survivors, a mechanised dolphin called Kail and three good super-mutants. At the same time the evil super mutant Glytofane Sex, obsessed with ridding the Earth of humans once and for all for the benefit of `pure will and pure soul', unleashes his killer aquatic robots, the Gadoms...

Blue Remains (or 'Remans' as IMDb have it) is a juvenile CGI science fantasy made in 1999 for the approximate equivalent of the Okinawan Tourist Board. It apparently was shown once and then, until resurfacing on DVD, sank without trace. This is peculiarly apt, for not only has Blue Remains (in the words of the DVD's commentary) already become a `strange curio', but most of its narrative takes place underwater, and carefully placed in the Okinawa area at that. One reason for this submersed setting was undoubtedly to fit into the tourist board's brief to the makers - to show scenes most relevant for promoting a seaside resort. As it happens this is a happy choice as, for technical reasons, it is much easier to computer animate figures and movement underwater, where sharp edges are blurred and slow movement is commonplace. Unfortunately, even with this helping hand, CGI techniques have moved on apace since Blue Remains was completed, and for those adults familiar with Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within (2001) a lot of Blue Remains will seem a little clunky, especially in the depiction of the human. Out of the water, people here tend to move a little clumsily, facial expressions are wooden, reactions lethargic. Neither is the film helped by a script sometimes at odds with logic, and which spends too little time setting up any real tension or dramatic dynamic on the the way to its fantasmogorical conclusion..

On the plus side, Blue Remains does a reasonably good job of depicting an acquatic environment, although sea life remains resolutely limited to a single dolphin and small fish..Watching the film. one is reminded of the tremendous impact that Cameron's The Abyss (1989) and then Titanic (1997) made in Japan. There are also one or two specific lifts from The Matrix (1999), while the underwater battle sequence, which takes up almost 10% of the film's 75 minute running time, is well staged. With its strong environmental message and youthful female protagonist, Blue Remains is a fair snapshot of what second rank animation was up to at the time.

Interestingly the most memorable characters in the film are those of the mutants, notably the monomaniacal villain Glyptofane Sex. He and the others are shown as disembodied brains, eyes on stalks, suggestive of The Brain from Planet Arous (1957) or Fiend Without a Face (1958). This conscious or not resemblance gives a frisson of recognition for genre fans that's less hand-me-down than some of the other plot elements, such as tentacled villains and the appearance of a 'tree of life'. A lot of the film is taken up with issues of generation, environment, and the succession of the human species. The three good mutants, Adenine Unum, Mymine Duu and Cytosine Tria have names taken from the combinative structure of DNA - a theme continued at the plot's climax at Sinerik Sanctuary, where a transformed Glyptofane is confronted around a structure which resembling a double helix. The final scenes of the film include some of the best animation although its symbolic climax arguably reveals the maker's game design-sensibility, rather than the dramatic movement required for film narrative.

Clearly aimed at younger viewers, this is the sort of film which cries out for an English language dub, unfortunately not offered by the otherwise excellent DVD edition. Still, if you enjoy undemanding fare of this sort, and enjoyed the more impressive Final Fantasy, this is worth checking out.
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7/10
A decent story with environmental themes
Rokk300016 December 2013
Warning: Spoilers
FilmFlaneur's review contains many inaccuracies. For one thing, the movie was not made for promoting Okinawan tourism. And the movie was not second-rate animation at the time it was made. It was also not just shown once and then forgotten until the DVD release Also, the DVD contains an English dub. I should know; I own it.

For a brief summary of the movie, in a world laid waste by nuclear war, Amamiku guards the seeds that hold the genetic code of the planet and can be used for its rebirth. Living underwater and protected from the radioactive atmosphere above, she impatiently waits for the earth to be ready for the seeds to germinate.But when her existence is discovered, it sparks a frantic race between the remains of humanity struggling for survival, and the disembodied brain, Glyptofane. This fanatic being, who sees mankind as a plague, has programmed his robotic army to destroy them.

Glyptofane is just one of three beings who oversee the world's evolution. The other two disagree with his extreme methods and try to protect humanity and allow them and the world to be reborn. In the end, they, with Amamiku, some humans who survived on Earth, and Amamiku's AI friend/guardian, are successful in reseeding life on Earth. Glyptofane is eliminated in the final battle.

For those who dislike reading subtitles and who are not proficient in Japanese, the English dub is fairly decent. It's a shame that FilmFlaneur couldn't be bothered to check out the facts on the movie and the DVD.
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