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4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Digital effects overwhelm latest anime from Leiji Matsumoto, 22 August 2002
Author:
Brian Camp from Bronx, NY
"Cosmo Warrior Zero" (2001) is the latest animated work from the pen of
pioneering Japanese manga artist Leiji Matsumoto, creator of "Galaxy
Express
999," "Captain Harlock" and "Queen Millennia." In a future era where
humans
and "mechanoids" (machine people) co-exist in an uneasy peace after a
devastating war (won by the mechanoids), Captain Warrius Zero is given a
mixed crew of humans and mechanoids to stop space pirates from preying on
Earth Federation transport ships. He gets an official blessing right at
the
start from none other than the legendary Captain Harlock himself, the dean
of space pirates, who, after a brief confrontation which Zero is fated to
lose, declares respect for his opponent's courage and leaves the scene of
battle. Zero's assignment is then to pursue Harlock throughout the
galaxy.
Much of the action, at least as seen in the first four episodes of this
13-part TV series, focuses on the conflicts aboard Zero's aging
battleship,
the Karyu, and the insecure Zero's attempts to calm tensions developing
among the disparate elements among his crew and the attractive, if
hard-nosed, First Officer, Marina Oki, who bears an uncanny resemblance to
Zero's late wife who was killed during the war. In one intense face-off,
gunfire is even exchanged between humans and mechanoids. At times, the
action resembles a serious replay of the hijinks aboard the Soyokaze in
the
comic anime space opera, "The Irresponsible Captain Tylor" (1992).
The script has Zero facing a number of moral dilemmas involving the issue
of
preferential treatment for humans. In the third episode, a ship of
self-proclaimed human rebels fires on a mechanoid-run space station and
Captain Zero has to intervene. His ethical imperative is to ignore the
rebel
captain's appeals to his humanity and defend the space station. Things are
made tougher by his own crew members' pleas to side with the rebels. In
the
fourth episode, Zero is compelled to apprehend a human mercenary waging a
one-man war against a mechanoid regime on a remote planet.
One of the problems in adapting Matsumoto's works to anime in the modern
era
is the comparative failure of digital animation to capture the stark,
dramatic imagery that dominated such past Matsumoto series as "Galaxy
Express 999" and "Captain Harlock." The baroque look of such series was
enhanced by the flowing, organic linework and the warm, hand-painted
colors
that shifted as the drawings sped past the eye. The settings were
stylized,
but always somewhat dark and oppressive, with great shadows and clouds, as
they reflected the bleak future awaiting humans in a machine-dominated
era.
The artist's vision was so strong, it was as if Matsumoto himself drew
every
cel, even though he often had little participation after contributing the
original story. Computer-created digital animation, however, has the
unfortunate effect of flattening the colors, making them uniform in
texture,
and smoothing out all the rough edges in the design. Everything's just a
little too bright and colorful to convey the emotional undertones and
essential loneliness of the characters in Matsumoto's universe.
This is particularly a problem with "Cosmo Warrior Zero" where the
linework
is too thick and the design inconsistent, with Zero overly detailed while
his human crewmen are much too simply drawn. The computer-generated
character movement is often awkward and sloppy in a way that was not so
glaring in the more deliberately limited character movement of the
hand-drawn era, when a simple closeup of Harlock standing still on a
desolate planet, with his hair flapping in the breeze, was enough to
convey
worlds of feeling.
Of the four New Wave all-digital Matsumoto works--including QUEEN
EMERALDAS
(1998), HARLOCK SAGA (1999), and MAETEL LEGEND (2000)--this series is
arguably the least successful in terms of animation and visual look. It
does, however, tell a gripping, well-written story that differs
significantly from Matsumoto's earlier works by presenting a hero who is
not
a loner, rebel or romantic outsider, but a duty-bound military officer who
is flawed and, sometimes, ineffectual, but has made peace with the
mechanoids despite his own personal loss in the war. Perhaps it represents
a
softening of Matsumoto's cosmic view, a willingness to compromise as the
technological upheavals of the 21st Century become seemingly
inescapable.
In any case, something significant in the appeal of Matsumoto's work is
missing in the digital era. I would urge anime fans to seek out his
earlier,
similarly-themed works, most notably the two GALAXY EXPRESS 999 movies
(1979
& 1981) and the one earlier Captain Harlock film officially available in
the
U.S., ARCADIA OF MY YOUTH (1982).
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Uneven and low budgeted Harlock story, 29 February 2004
Author:
Chung Mo from NYC
The major problem with this 13 episode series is the same that plagued the
Harlock "Ring"
series. There are major plots holes that just possibly might pass if you
saw
this on a weekly
basis but when it's all together in a 4 DVD set, yikes! One example of the
poor planning is a
sequence that is supposed to take 40 seconds lasts 5 minutes (it even
starts
with an on-
screen countdown)! I am not familiar with the manga that the story came
from
so it hard to
say if the problems originated there.
The animation is wildly uneven and looks like it was rushed out by several
different
animation studios. They experiment with a thick line brush look on some
shots but then cut
to the same character drawn in the most crude and scratchy G.I. Joe
cartoon
way. The
extensive use of video effects to assist the animation doesn't work
either.
This is not to say that there are not good portions to the series.
Episodes
5 and 6 on the Gun
Frontier planet work really well. And there are some classic Matsumoto
moments sprinkled
throughout. The contrast between Zero and Harlock creates some interesting
scenes.
Unfortunately the attempted story is too big for the limits of this
particular series and the
whole thing
runs out of steam before the finale. As usual, the subtitled version is
much
better than the
English dubbed version.
If you manage to find the four DVD set at a rental store, check out the
two
"special episodes"
on disc 4. These are true gems of the "Zero" series. These seem to have
been
done at a
different time and the budget is good on these episodes. The artwork is
well
done and the
story is very good.
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