Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Destiny
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuTwo years after a war, tensions rise again. Shinn, whose family died, is haunted. Athrun tries to protect Cagalli while preventing conflict as ZAFT's new mobile suits are stolen.Two years after a war, tensions rise again. Shinn, whose family died, is haunted. Athrun tries to protect Cagalli while preventing conflict as ZAFT's new mobile suits are stolen.Two years after a war, tensions rise again. Shinn, whose family died, is haunted. Athrun tries to protect Cagalli while preventing conflict as ZAFT's new mobile suits are stolen.
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Both Seed and Seed: Destiny take place in the "Cosmic Era", as opposed to the original series' "Universal Century". Still, despite the imposition of *this* universe's legal and creative realities, the CE draws much of its appeal from a similar vein as the UC.
To my mind, the Seed series has brought back much of what made Gundam a legendary franchise in the first place: technical realism (within its own framework, of course - I unfortunately still cannot buy my own Quebeley or Freedom); fun, interesting characters and attention to their development; and the underlying obscenity of war. (but mostly I just like the floating pink robot with funny semi-random phrases)
Bind this up in a glossy, model selling package, complete with newfangled animation techniques (a little cg, some cool motion effects and camera work), bitchin' JPop goodness and a commanding budget, and Seed and Destiny have brought Gundam BACK.
At the time of this writing, just over half of Destiny has aired:
Destiny picks up a few years after Seed. It wastes no time in establishing a new protagonist, but also re-acquaints us with old friends.
There are those who have complained that Gundam Seed moved too slowly. (please, kids, take your Ritalin. It's called a 'story'.) Destiny has a quicker pace; the action to episode ratio seems to have increased.
While the underlying story may seem painfully familiar at first, it does gain intriguing (and addicting) twists along the way, and the new faces keep you watching.
While it remains to be seen if this sophomore series will truly live up to Seed or its Universal Century predecessors, it's off to a damned fine start - and I'm glad to know that there are still producers and directors who care enough to *try*.
Gundam SEED retained elements from the older, more war oriented Gundam series, which made it easily watchable and quite entertaining if you could get by the re-use of the same frames. But SEED Destiny became a "super robot" show in which the main characters suits could easily take out an entire fleet without getting a scratch. The new suits, while flashy, are just blatant copies of UC suits. Pumping up a Zaku and giving it a huge backpack doesn't mean you've created a new suit.
Destiny had the potential to be as good as SEED, but it ended up destroying itself by becoming a super robot show filled with Gundams.
I give it 3 out of 10 stars, because it did have a good start.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThis series is the sequel to the hit Japanese animation series, Mobile Suit Gundam SEED. This gives the Cosmic Era the distinction of being the only AU Gundam Timeline to have more than 1 TV series in it.
- Zitate
Gilbert Dullindal: [to Athrun Zala] But the things you are capable of doing, and the things you want to do... You should be the one who is most aware of the answers to those.
- VerbindungenFollowed by Kido senshi Gandamu shido desucha Final Plus: Eraba reta mirai (2005)
- SoundtracksIgnited
First Opening Theme (Episodes #1-13)
Written by Akio Inoue
Composed and arranged by Daisuke Asakura
Performed by Takanori Nishikawa (as T.M. Revolution)
(Epic Records Japan)
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