Post by Yadda on Feb 7, 2012 19:13:30 GMT -5
I tried searching to see if there was already a thread about this, but the search feature yelled at me for not having any words longer than 4 characters, so... Here goes.
Anyone here heard of an anime series called 'The Big O'?
It's most easily described as 'film noir Evangelion,' but it's much more intricate than that. The easiest way to explain it would be to lift from the Wikipedia page...
Really, REALLY amazing show. Giant robots, philosophy, giant robot battles, more philosophy, utter mindscrew of Hideaki Anno level proportions... More giant robots... Sentient androids... A villain who claps with his feet... What's not to love?
Oh, and did I mention that the protagonist's mech, 'Big O,' can attack with a piston-powered megaton punch, steampunk-style?
Yeah.
Anyone here heard of an anime series called 'The Big O'?
It's most easily described as 'film noir Evangelion,' but it's much more intricate than that. The easiest way to explain it would be to lift from the Wikipedia page...
Forty years prior to the events of the series, disaster struck. The world was turned into a vast desert wasteland and the survivors were left without memories. The story takes place in Paradigm City, a corporate police state run by the Paradigm Corporation. The town is recognized for its geodesic domes, giant structures that house the richer citizens and segregate the poor.
The Big O deals with the nature of memories. A memory is a record stored in the brain of an organism, but in Paradigm City memories can mean much more. "Memories" (メモリー Memorī?) embody the lost knowledge of its residents, and can take the form of records from before the Event, forgotten artifacts from the previous era or manifest themselves as recollection, hallucinations and recurring dreams.
The first half of the series is episodic. Each Act revolves around different citizens of Paradigm dealing with the resurgence of lost Memories and how they manage to go on living without knowledge of what did or did not happen. The final episodes introduce elements that come into play during season two like the existence of people outside of Paradigm City, the nature of the Cataclysm that destroyed the world and the "Power of God wielded by the hand of man."
The second season takes an arc-based approach. Instead of self-contained stories like in season one, season two features a continuous storyline. The second season makes Alex Rosewater, CEO of the Paradigm Corporation, a direct antagonist to The Negotiator and introduces The Union, agents of a foreign power working within Paradigm.
The Big O deals with the nature of memories. A memory is a record stored in the brain of an organism, but in Paradigm City memories can mean much more. "Memories" (メモリー Memorī?) embody the lost knowledge of its residents, and can take the form of records from before the Event, forgotten artifacts from the previous era or manifest themselves as recollection, hallucinations and recurring dreams.
The first half of the series is episodic. Each Act revolves around different citizens of Paradigm dealing with the resurgence of lost Memories and how they manage to go on living without knowledge of what did or did not happen. The final episodes introduce elements that come into play during season two like the existence of people outside of Paradigm City, the nature of the Cataclysm that destroyed the world and the "Power of God wielded by the hand of man."
The second season takes an arc-based approach. Instead of self-contained stories like in season one, season two features a continuous storyline. The second season makes Alex Rosewater, CEO of the Paradigm Corporation, a direct antagonist to The Negotiator and introduces The Union, agents of a foreign power working within Paradigm.
Really, REALLY amazing show. Giant robots, philosophy, giant robot battles, more philosophy, utter mindscrew of Hideaki Anno level proportions... More giant robots... Sentient androids... A villain who claps with his feet... What's not to love?
Oh, and did I mention that the protagonist's mech, 'Big O,' can attack with a piston-powered megaton punch, steampunk-style?
Yeah.