These days, anime seems to follow a set pattern. If you have a successful series, you follow it up with a recap film. Most of the time, these films have something new in themânew footage, new characters, a new side storyâbut not Yamato 2199. It is completely unnecessary in every conceivable way.
Last year I reviewed the 26-episode anime series Yamato 2199. As a series, it succeeded on nearly every level. It took one of the classic 70s anime, Space Battleship Yamato (called Starblazers in the West), and brought it to a new generation by adding new characters, a deeper story, and stunning visuals. The film adds absolutely nothing to this; instead, it takes away much of what made the anime so excellent.
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Yamato 2199: The Voyage of Reminiscence clocks in at about two and a half hours. As the full series is around nine and a half hours in length, this means nearly three-fourths of the story ended up on the cutting room floor. Whatâs left is only the most bare-bones version of the overall story, tied together by occasional bouts of narration. The characters lack any and all development; they never evolve in any meaningful way and their backstories are never mentioned (unless they are a vital part of the main plot). While some anime recap movies I have reviewed in the past have benefited from a few cuts here or there, that is not the case for Yamato 2199. When it comes to the story, it is a pale shadow of the seriesâ epic space opera goodness.
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The makers of most recap movies I have reviewed before have attempted to keep their films interesting by adding something new to the mix. The Anohana movie had a prologue and epilogue added to it; and Macross FB7âterrible though it wasâat least had a lot of new content in the form of the Macross Frontier characters watching Macross 7. Yamato 2199 adds practically nothing. The only new content I noticed in the film were the still frame sketches during the ending credits and the trailer for Decemberâs new Yamato 2199 filmâone which will be completely new in terms of content. So as I left the theater, I felt like I had just spent $15 to see a trailer I could have seen online for free.
However, recap anime movies are able to draw in viewers for one other reason: a chance for fans to see their favorite characters and scenes on the big screen and in higher quality. However, there is one major problem for that argument when it comes to Yamato 2199: In order to avoid many of the costs that come from airing an anime on TV, Yamato 2199 was originally released in theatersâmuch like Gundam Unicorn and Ghost in the Shell: Arise. Moreover, the quality of the art in the original release was already amazing and was left more or less untouched for this film.
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Yamato 2199: The Voyage of Reminiscence was released in Japanese theaters on October 11, 2014. There is currently no word on a Western release.
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