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En el año 2199, el acorazado espacial Yamato se embarca en un viaje al planeta Iscandar, para recuperar un dispositivo que rejuvenecerá una Tierra devastada por la guerra.En el año 2199, el acorazado espacial Yamato se embarca en un viaje al planeta Iscandar, para recuperar un dispositivo que rejuvenecerá una Tierra devastada por la guerra.En el año 2199, el acorazado espacial Yamato se embarca en un viaje al planeta Iscandar, para recuperar un dispositivo que rejuvenecerá una Tierra devastada por la guerra.
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10uraki05
If you were a fan of the original series (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0140644/), the 2199 series will be a nostalgia filled experience. There have been a number of updates as other reviewers have posted. The end result is that 宇宙戦艦ヤマト2199 is overall a richer experience and up to par with today's expectations. If you are someone who has never seen the original, this is an exceptional piece of work and fully stands on its own without need for prequel.
If you're a fan of the original soundtrack, you're in for a special experience as the most familiar melodies are there and unchanged. You will also find a plethora of new material that blends well with original 1970's compositions.
The animation is clean and crisp, but full of detail. Typically not what you'd expect to see in a weekly televised series. Due to the unique method of release (episodes grouped and released to theaters first and shortly after broadcast episodically), the production values are very high.
Again for those familiar with the original series, everything is updated but familiar. Nothing went through a redesign so drastic that it would not be recognized. Character designs are updated to more contemporary appearances. The mechanical side of the designs benefit most from the improved animation technology available today. Some elements and characters are new, mostly done to complete the story or add depth. The story is now deeper without becoming mired in its own twists and turns hopefully allowing the viewer to become more emotionally invested with at least a few of them.
The end result is a remake that does not need to rely on nostalgia but embraces and honors its past all while bringing the animation, sound, and story into a more contemporary era.
If you're a fan of the original soundtrack, you're in for a special experience as the most familiar melodies are there and unchanged. You will also find a plethora of new material that blends well with original 1970's compositions.
The animation is clean and crisp, but full of detail. Typically not what you'd expect to see in a weekly televised series. Due to the unique method of release (episodes grouped and released to theaters first and shortly after broadcast episodically), the production values are very high.
Again for those familiar with the original series, everything is updated but familiar. Nothing went through a redesign so drastic that it would not be recognized. Character designs are updated to more contemporary appearances. The mechanical side of the designs benefit most from the improved animation technology available today. Some elements and characters are new, mostly done to complete the story or add depth. The story is now deeper without becoming mired in its own twists and turns hopefully allowing the viewer to become more emotionally invested with at least a few of them.
The end result is a remake that does not need to rely on nostalgia but embraces and honors its past all while bringing the animation, sound, and story into a more contemporary era.
If you're a fan of the original Starblazers, you owe it to yourself to watch this series in its subtitled glory. It may not entirely have the same voice-acting nostalgia you grew up with, but characters you know and love are still there.
The character designs are not exactly the same either, but it borrows aspects of the original art style so that the characters are recognizable. Everything looks and feels fresh, crisp, and new. But the beauty of this re-make is they've kept all the things that make Starblazers/Space Battle Cruiser Yamato the same...the sound effects from the original series are still intact, as well as re-recorded versions of the classic music. C.G. is added to good effect for the actual ship, without sticking out like a sore thumb (*cough*evangelion*cough*).
I just started watching and I'm instantly hooked. ^_^ Anyhow, this review, work in progress, since I just started watching. And I have to get to sleep soon. So, to be continued...
The character designs are not exactly the same either, but it borrows aspects of the original art style so that the characters are recognizable. Everything looks and feels fresh, crisp, and new. But the beauty of this re-make is they've kept all the things that make Starblazers/Space Battle Cruiser Yamato the same...the sound effects from the original series are still intact, as well as re-recorded versions of the classic music. C.G. is added to good effect for the actual ship, without sticking out like a sore thumb (*cough*evangelion*cough*).
I just started watching and I'm instantly hooked. ^_^ Anyhow, this review, work in progress, since I just started watching. And I have to get to sleep soon. So, to be continued...
I'm rating it 9/10 but personally for me its 10/10 because of the nostalgia factor.
This is a remake of the mid 70's Space Battleship Yamato which was released in the US as "Star Blazers" and dubbed into English. It was so popular in Japan that there was a musical tour of the music from the show. It was equally popular among American children of the 70's and 80's.
This is an excellent remake. They kept what made the series great in the 70's and of course the animation and general picture quality is vastly superior.
This is a remake of the mid 70's Space Battleship Yamato which was released in the US as "Star Blazers" and dubbed into English. It was so popular in Japan that there was a musical tour of the music from the show. It was equally popular among American children of the 70's and 80's.
This is an excellent remake. They kept what made the series great in the 70's and of course the animation and general picture quality is vastly superior.
As someone who hasn't watched the original Yamato series from the seventies, I cannot compare the two. However, it is easy to see that quite a few things were kept the same, even though they now appear outdated.
The premise and general setup are typical for a soft SciFi space opera: After evil aliens have attacked and devastated Earth, the Space Battleship Yamato must leave on its great voyage to the faraway Iscandar to retrieve a device that will return Earth to its former beauty.
The SciFi part itself is fairly soft, not too dissimilar from, say, Star Wars. There's a magical gizmo that allows FTL travel, artificial gravity is an unexplained thing, and occasionally the dialogue mentions a technical term (like 'interstellar medium') that the writers have no idea about. That's pretty much par for the course for almost every SciFi show, but still something that should be easier to avoid now that one can look things up on the internet.
The Yamato and spaceships in general have a charming naval theme going on, where destroyed ships are called 'sunk' and dimensional submarines are a thing and fighter carriers look quite a bit like aircraft carriers. It's a bit silly but works very well.
What definitely has been stuck in the seventies are some gender-specific thing. I'm not really someone who notices these things but, uhh, when the men wear sailors' uniforms and the women skintight, high-heeled bodysuits, it's a bit on the nose. It doesn't help the primary female character regularly plays the damsel in distress, and even the secondary female character (who is quite kickass most of the time) runs away in tears when she sees her crush talking to another woman.
Generally, the characters were a bit forgettable to me, though that's likely due to the amount of them. The Yamato's important crew is comparable in size to that of various other space shows (think the various Star Treks or Battlestar Galactica), but with only 25 minute segments it's a bit difficult to give all of them enough screentime. Still, by the end of the show, I felt for most of the characters. There're some pretty cool antagonists and occasional side characters, too.
The plot... mhh. As said before, it's typical space opera fare that must've seemed new and daring in the seventies. Today, we're just used to other stuff. To be honest, it's almost campy at times: the evil aliens are basically space nazis that look like humans with blue skin. The good aliens are beautiful blonde women that look so much like humans that they even get confused. The wildest thing you'll see is someone with greyish skin and pointy ears, so... But still, the story works out. I didn't much like the first few episodes; they felt a bit bland to me and I hadn't yet liked the characters. I'd say that the story turns for the better in episode ten, and the last ten or so episodes are absolutely marvellous. If it were only for the first half of the show, I'd give it a 7 at most, but in total it's definitely worth an 8.
As for the production values, the soundtrack is fairly good but gets repetitive. If you binge this series, you'll probably get sick of the same five themes repeating ad absurdum but in small doses they're very catchy. The graphics are fantastic: a perfect blend of CGI and traditional cel animation. The (Japanese) voice acting is solid as always. I'd say the direction and editing is nothing to write home about, but I'm not really someone who notices that stuff.
Also, perhaps important to note is that there is pretty much no fanservice, so you can safely watch this with your kids or parents or whomever.
The premise and general setup are typical for a soft SciFi space opera: After evil aliens have attacked and devastated Earth, the Space Battleship Yamato must leave on its great voyage to the faraway Iscandar to retrieve a device that will return Earth to its former beauty.
The SciFi part itself is fairly soft, not too dissimilar from, say, Star Wars. There's a magical gizmo that allows FTL travel, artificial gravity is an unexplained thing, and occasionally the dialogue mentions a technical term (like 'interstellar medium') that the writers have no idea about. That's pretty much par for the course for almost every SciFi show, but still something that should be easier to avoid now that one can look things up on the internet.
The Yamato and spaceships in general have a charming naval theme going on, where destroyed ships are called 'sunk' and dimensional submarines are a thing and fighter carriers look quite a bit like aircraft carriers. It's a bit silly but works very well.
What definitely has been stuck in the seventies are some gender-specific thing. I'm not really someone who notices these things but, uhh, when the men wear sailors' uniforms and the women skintight, high-heeled bodysuits, it's a bit on the nose. It doesn't help the primary female character regularly plays the damsel in distress, and even the secondary female character (who is quite kickass most of the time) runs away in tears when she sees her crush talking to another woman.
Generally, the characters were a bit forgettable to me, though that's likely due to the amount of them. The Yamato's important crew is comparable in size to that of various other space shows (think the various Star Treks or Battlestar Galactica), but with only 25 minute segments it's a bit difficult to give all of them enough screentime. Still, by the end of the show, I felt for most of the characters. There're some pretty cool antagonists and occasional side characters, too.
The plot... mhh. As said before, it's typical space opera fare that must've seemed new and daring in the seventies. Today, we're just used to other stuff. To be honest, it's almost campy at times: the evil aliens are basically space nazis that look like humans with blue skin. The good aliens are beautiful blonde women that look so much like humans that they even get confused. The wildest thing you'll see is someone with greyish skin and pointy ears, so... But still, the story works out. I didn't much like the first few episodes; they felt a bit bland to me and I hadn't yet liked the characters. I'd say that the story turns for the better in episode ten, and the last ten or so episodes are absolutely marvellous. If it were only for the first half of the show, I'd give it a 7 at most, but in total it's definitely worth an 8.
As for the production values, the soundtrack is fairly good but gets repetitive. If you binge this series, you'll probably get sick of the same five themes repeating ad absurdum but in small doses they're very catchy. The graphics are fantastic: a perfect blend of CGI and traditional cel animation. The (Japanese) voice acting is solid as always. I'd say the direction and editing is nothing to write home about, but I'm not really someone who notices that stuff.
Also, perhaps important to note is that there is pretty much no fanservice, so you can safely watch this with your kids or parents or whomever.
First off, thank you Bandai and the production team for bringing this back.
I watched the original when I was 10-12 years old, so on a personal level it was nostalgic. That being said, the story has been modernized in a very technical way to add "onion like" layers to the level of realism.
The combat scenes were the finest space battle scenes I have ever seen in live action or Anime, in their detail, Better than the New Battlestar Galactica IMHO. The CGI and 2D animation was blended masterfully.
The Story has been updated in a way to fill in the realism gaps without stepping on the Original. The Characters have real and individual motives and the antagonists are no exception.
You do not have to have watched the original, the movie, or even anime, to thoroughly enjoy this series.
I watched the original when I was 10-12 years old, so on a personal level it was nostalgic. That being said, the story has been modernized in a very technical way to add "onion like" layers to the level of realism.
The combat scenes were the finest space battle scenes I have ever seen in live action or Anime, in their detail, Better than the New Battlestar Galactica IMHO. The CGI and 2D animation was blended masterfully.
The Story has been updated in a way to fill in the realism gaps without stepping on the Original. The Characters have real and individual motives and the antagonists are no exception.
You do not have to have watched the original, the movie, or even anime, to thoroughly enjoy this series.
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- TriviaThe first two episodes of the TV series (which is the same as the OVA series) were pre-aired on the Family Gekijou cable and satellite channel on 6th and 7th of April, 2012. The rest of the episodes was aired on MBS & TBS beginning April 7, 2013.
- ErroresSeries canon is that Gamilan biology is identical to human biology in every way except skin color. Despite this, the Gamilans also have a different blood color, which is a major biological difference.
- ConexionesEdited into Uchû senkan Yamato 2199 (2012)
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By what name was Uchu Senkan Yamato 2199 (2012) officially released in India in English?
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