October 4, 2007

Heroic Age Review - 73/100


Heroic Age has definitely been the show with one of the most ambitious premises of the past season. While other series have dealt with the fate of the universe before, no other series does it with such a massive scale, no other series has armies as massive as with Heroic Age, and no other series has characters as powerful as some of the ones we see in here. This truly is a space-epic. The story tells of a Golden Tribe which once existed in this universe. They had the power to foresee the past and the future, they could create planets and stars, and sent out a message to the different tribes and races that populated the galaxy. Three races responded: the Silver Tribe, the Bronze Tribe and the Heroic Tribe. Then, as the Golden Tribe was about to leave the galaxy, a fourth tribe responded: humans, or the Iron Tribe.

Well, it was a nice idea. The creators got a bit too enthusiastic, and shot themselves in the foot. The major part of the plot doesn’t go anywhere, and consists out of overblown fights that take up several episodes at the time, yet resolve nothing and end up with all parties retreating with no major casualties.

This would have been okay if the characters were interesting to watch, but alas: they’re just too focused on the story. They either spend all of their time worrying or fighting, and the illusion of “depth” quickly vanishes from this series after a bunch of episodes. To add salt to the wound, nearly every member of the main cast is a teenager, eliminating any sense of realism this series already had, but worst of all, the male and female main characters have some major annoyances: they’re too perfect. The only flaw of the main female is that she’s too angsty and the main male just doesn’t have any flaws at all. This quickly becomes rather one-sided. The side-characters could have saved them, but a lot of them just lack development. Especially the Silver Tribe: they hardly get fleshed out at all as a race, we never learn their customs, heck all we get to see is their three most important leaders. That’s all.

But lo and behold: this is one of those flawed series that manages to redeem itself in the end! Around episode seventeen or eighteen, the writers turn up the pacing three gears, and the plot finally starts getting interesting as it develops in the right way, into a finale that doesn’t disappoint and turns out quite touching, even if it may have been a bit too much focused on a happy ending.

Sure, the first half is boring, but it does build up for the much better second half. While the last part was nowhere near the best part of the season, at least it managed to redeem the lacklustre first part. At least it’s not the opposite way. The soundtrack for this series is also epic, and the use of CG is excellent, even though the character-designs look very sloppy and uninspired. I guess you’ll like this one if you like epic science-fiction stories, because things can’t get more epic than this series, not necessarily in the good ways, but neither in the bad ways.

Some quick first impressions: Gambling Apocalypse Kaiji, Dragonaut the Resonance and Goshushou-sama Ninomiya-kun

Gambling Apocalypse Kaiji

The first episodes of the series I’ve seen thus far in this season haven’t been exactly intelligent, the closest would probably be Suteki Tantei Labyrinth, but both series don’t really have a plot that requires you to think. Because of this, I was pleasantly surprised by this series, when the young adult Kaiji gets mixed up in a huge plot of the Yakuza. Even though I didn’t understand the rules perfectly, this series does have some definite potential, and even though we’ve yet to see the characters actually gamble, this episode felt very tense. I also really like the character-designs: they may look unorthodox, but they fit the series perfectly, along with a pretty nice soundtrack. I’m going to hope that this series gets subbed soon, as following this series raw with my skills of Japanese is probably going to be impossible.

Dragonaut The Resonance

Oh boy, this series sure has its work cut out. There were so many annoyances in this episode, it’s going to take a lot of effort to make everything believable again. Our main character is in a spacecraft which just took off from the surface, it gets hit by a blazing fireball, explodes but it doesn’t even burn one bit. The main character just flies out of the blast without any scratches whatsoever. Also, where did the fireballs come from? The guy also has a best friend at that point, who actually witnessed the crime but we never see the guy again for the rest of the episode. Furthermore, every single female with a huge bosom (and believe me, there are quite a few of them) has the need to show it off to everyone in a quite revealing outfit. The creators also seemed to have introduced monsters and people who can survive an exploding truck, thrown on top of them without even getting one scratch. I dislike these kinds of things. Sure, they can be explained and all, but if an exploding truck can’t hurt them, the only thing that probably will is overblown and overpowered energy-waves. It’s hard to really come up with a good strategy for these. The plot has potential, but if this series wants to succeed, it needs to put a LOT of work into its setting to fill up the plot-holes.

Goshushou-sama Ninomiya-kun

Ooh… the pain… the horrible, horrible pain! If you thought Myself; Yourself was bad: it’s NOTHING when compared to this… “thing”. Not only is the entire plot basically one huge excuse for fanservice, the main character is loved by all females AND males in his school, he ends up in all kinds of fanservicy-situations with a girl who despite being awfully shy and afraid of men dresses like a girl from the red-light district. I think we’ve found our worst series of the season with this one. At least, I hope so, because I don’t want to watch anything that’s even worse than this piece of garbage…