Archive | June, 2010

LOST Last Supper

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LOST: Thoughts From A Messed Up Island – A Banana Review

Posted on 20 June 2010 by Philbert Lui

To supplement my video blog above, I have a few additional thoughts on the LOST series and finale. As said in the video blog, if you were to think in extremes, LOST fans that were more invested in the emotions and drama of the characters would have enjoyed the finale. On the other hand, fans that were more intrigued by the mythology and mystery of the LOST universe would have enjoyed the ending less, much less. But I don’t think this would have been the case if things went as planned.

LOST - The Final Season

AGAIN, SPOILERS ARE UP AHEAD. READ AT YOUR OWN RISK. YOU’VE BEEN WARNED.

Ahem. Originally LOST was supposed to have 7 seasons. If LOST continued on its pace in season 6 and carried it into a hypothetical seventh season, I don’t think fans would be as dissatisfied. With that said, I still enjoyed the unexplained and emotional ending, because ultimately it leaves it open for interpretation much like the entirety of the show. That said again, some things could have used some answers.

I think with TV shows like LOST, there should be a fine balance between what needs to be left for audience interpretation and what needs to be explained. This balance would not have been an issue if there was a seventh season, but sadly there wasn’t one. Of course to be in keeping with the show, even there was a season 7, the series finale would need to leave some things left unanswered.

Ultimately I think LOST was shafted by ABC studios. But this is only my personal self-comforting presumption and theory. Although I enjoyed the finale, I am secretly saddened by the lack of many things (sobs). Maybe due to market research and ratings, ABC could not afford to produce another season (or maybe the more realistic explanation was that the 2008 Writer’s Strike f***ed everything up). In the end, if this was the case, the LOST franchise as a whole will never ever be complete and satisfactory. If ABC forcibly removed a season from the original vision of LOST, the creators of the show are then pressured to rush everything and hopefully come up with an ending that is suitable. Maybe if there was a seventh season the entire concept of the “flash-sideways” might not have existed. Or maybe the ending would justify the flash-sideways to be something more than a possible afterlife.

All in all, a seventh LOST season would have done not only the franchise justice, but also the fans. Maybe like Evangelion somewhere down the line a film, a mini-series, a comic, or even a reboot of the franchise would conclude the series in a less “huh?” fashion.

But I can say this, being fans of this great show, we should always brace ourselves to be eternally and predictably lost in some shape or form.

-phibz.

LOST Last Supper

PS: I was pissed off that Jin & Sun were ****** off in that third to last episode. Just some Asian venting. No mind.

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Fullmetal Alchemist: The Closed Gate – A Review

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Fullmetal Alchemist: The Closed Gate – A Review

Posted on 11 June 2010 by Philbert Lui

Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood poster

As of today, the acclaimed story of the Fullmetal Alchemist has ended with its 108th chapter. The second anime series adapted from the original manga, Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood, will also conclude later this month. Fans across the globe could not ask for a more wholesome and honest ending, without any loose ends or leaving us gut-wrenchingly hanging for a year until a movie is released to give us half-hearted answers. That aside, I would like to take the opportunity to voice a claim I’ve been stating for the past year - Fullmetal Alchemist is the greatest anime-manga franchise of the 2000s.

It is indeed a bold claim. Firstly, even though I am a huge fanboy of anime and manga, I don’t watch or read everything. I am very selective with what I watch and read and only choose those that are critically acclaimed, garnered cult status, and those that have the ability to suck you into their unstoppable universe. This means that my claim is not only bold but also very presumptuous, but I’m sure some people would agree with me. Secondly, this claim originates not from critical analysis alone, but also how I have been relating to Fullmetal Alchemist from a personal level since the beginning. This is mainly my experience and my connection with the franchise, and it will definitely contain biases. Quick example: I love YuYu Hakusho because it was part of my childhood, anybody else would beg to differ (check out Yoshihiro Togashi’s latest series though, Hunter X Hunter is the real deal).

I know some people might inquire about other series being “the greatest of 2000s” such as One Piece or Naruto. I wouldn’t consider them because One Piece debuted in 1997, and Naruto in 1999. Fullmetal Alchemist started in 2001, which goes to show FMA’s resilience even going up against giants such as One Piece and Naruto. Also, I have a shounen bias. This 9-year franchise spawned a manga series, two distinguished anime series, a feature film and other little things such as making single-claps extremely cool. To place FMA up against Naruto for example; a series with a manga, BARELY two anime series (Shippuden is not different, they just grew up), and an excess of annoying filler arcs that depreciates the franchise’s overall quality. I still love Naruto, but I’m saying maybe we should just read the manga. Just saying.

Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood Homunculi

WARNING: THE FOLLOWING MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS TO BOTH THE 2003 FULLMETAL ALCHEMIST SERIES AND THE 2009 FULLMETAL ALCHEMIST: BROTHERHOOD SERIES.

For your sake, I will be limit details regarding Brotherhood and the ending, just in case you want to read on.

To quote James Lipton, “as always, let’s start from the beginning”. I picked up the first FMA series as it was coming to an end. I blazed through all 51 episodes whilst I was in high school, in 3 days, and those were school days. My first impression: Absolute Wonder. In subsequent years I went on to re-watch the series many times because the series finale left me too vulnerable to function. The repetition also acted as a buffer for Conqueror of Shamballa to be available to North America. I ended up watching it illegally, I just couldn’t wait. A few months later, I wrote an essay about the movie in a university film class 6 months before it would be shown in North American theaters. This was borderline obsession, but it was understandable after being deprived of alchemy goodness for over a year.

For the longest time I held the first anime series over the original manga storyline. But looking back, I realized how hypocritical and stubborn that was. Like many others out there, I wholeheartedly believe that anime should be watched in its original Japanese language with English subtitles, or whatever language you are most comfortable reading. Mainly because that is how it was first made, origin had power. No fabrication of voices, tone, and even storyline (Sailor Neptune and Sailor Uranus were clearly lesbians, the Americans changed it, go figure). The original will always better in my opinion, so why did I hold onto the 2003 series so stubbornly? Firstly, it was awesome in its own right. Secondly, it provided nostalgia. Much the same as why I like YuYu Hakusho till this day. One other thing I should have noticed was that even after re-watching the first anime series and movie repeatedly, I still was left unsatisfied. I wanted more. More undersized blonde kids with a steel prosthetic arm fighting sinful monsters with medieval science-magic fusion techniques. More! Which is why I ventured into reading the original manga, and boy was it divine.

Three years later in early 2009, they announced a new Fullmetal Alchemist series that was adapted from the original manga storyline. Cue explosion in my pants. After the first few episodes of the 2003 series, Arakawa-sensei needed more time to develop her vision for her manga, so BONES Studios went on with a different plot, which turned out great as well. Now that the manga storyline is finished, I can consciously and confidently say that it is definitely stronger, more captivating, and more complete than the first anime series. I had to wait until the end of the manga storyline to fully understand that. I now wait for how it would look like animated. It will be nothing less than epic.

The completeness and undivided structure of the manga storyline was key in edging out the 2003 anime series. Although it was refreshing to see the 2003 series venture into realism by creating our Earth as a parallel universe, and also being alchemy’s source of energy, it was ultimately an explanation that fell short especially when the Shamballa came around. The 2003 series also fell short in the back-stories and character design of the seven homunculi. I never figured out why they named King Bradley “Pride”, and Izumi’s kid “Wrath”. Nothing wrathful about that kid, instead he was more envious of Edward. He should have been called Envy 2.0. Then there was Elric’s mother who was “Sloth”, which made even less sense. A beautiful mother figure that can transform and manipulate water, somehow characterizes the sin of Sloth? This was a major downfall to the first series in my opinion.

Criticism aside I still adore the first series and the entire franchise. The key aspects of the series that really got me hooked was the premise and the philosophy (see what I did there?). The premise of constructing a fantasy, science, action hybrid universe out of an extinct medieval magic, was already pretty interesting in itself. On top of that, Arakawa-sensei stylized her world in dated European, Middle-Eastern, and Asian characteristics to have it feel more historical and acceptable, rather than forcing an old science to be a norm in modern times.

What caught my eye even more, and immediately drew me into the series, was the theory of “Equivalent Exchange”. Arakawa-sensei created an omniscient law that not only the science of alchemy, but also the natural flow of the universe, abided by. The weight of this theory may be lost on some less venturous viewers, but it surely stuck with me. She took “no pain, no gain” to a very profound and philosophical level. At first it may seem like an obvious and logical explanation to life, but it exemplified the entire world of Fullmetal Alchemist. Without it, the series, the franchise, the characters, would have been much less triumphant.

The Elric Brothers had to discover for themselves that Equivalent Exchange was not only restricted to alchemy, but to the world and universe that surrounded them. Such as how we as the audience also learned that not only in the world of the Fullmetal Alchemist, but also in real life, where you cannot gain anything without sacrificing something of equal or greater value…

But once you overcome that sacrifice and make it your own, you will gain an irreplaceable fullmetal heart.

A lesson thoroughly learned.

Thank you Arakawa-sensei, from the bottom my fullmetal heart. We look forward to your next masterpiece!

Edward Elric ending

Philbert: @philbertlui
Banana Times: @bananatimes

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