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The Big O

  • Série télévisée
  • 1999–2003
  • TV-PG
  • 25min
NOTE IMDb
7,5/10
2,5 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
4 586
7 810
The Big O (1999)
Home Video Trailer from Bandai Entertainment
Lire trailer1:07
1 Video
36 photos
Animation dessinée à la mainAnimeMechaActionAnimationAventureMystèreScience-fiction

Dans une ville futuriste aux souvenirs perdus, un négociateur expert combat les menaces qui pèsent sur la ville avec l'aide d'un androïde et de son propre robot géant.Dans une ville futuriste aux souvenirs perdus, un négociateur expert combat les menaces qui pèsent sur la ville avec l'aide d'un androïde et de son propre robot géant.Dans une ville futuriste aux souvenirs perdus, un négociateur expert combat les menaces qui pèsent sur la ville avec l'aide d'un androïde et de son propre robot géant.

  • Création
    • Kazuyoshi Katayama
    • Keiichi Satô
  • Casting principal
    • Mitsuru Miyamoto
    • Steve Blum
    • Akiko Yajima
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,5/10
    2,5 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    4 586
    7 810
    • Création
      • Kazuyoshi Katayama
      • Keiichi Satô
    • Casting principal
      • Mitsuru Miyamoto
      • Steve Blum
      • Akiko Yajima
    • 15avis d'utilisateurs
    • 11avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Épisodes28

    Parcourir les épisodes
    HautLes mieux notés

    Vidéos1

    The Big O
    Trailer 1:07
    The Big O

    Photos36

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 29
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    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    Mitsuru Miyamoto
    • Roger Smith
    • 1999–2003
    Steve Blum
    Steve Blum
    • Roger Smith
    • 1999–2003
    Akiko Yajima
    Akiko Yajima
    • R. Dorothy Wayneright…
    • 1999–2003
    Motomu Kiyokawa
    • Norman Burg
    • 1999–2003
    Tesshô Genda
    Tesshô Genda
    • Dan Dastun
    • 1999–2003
    Lia Sargent
    Lia Sargent
    • R. Dorothy Wayneright…
    • 1999–2003
    Peter Lurie
    Peter Lurie
    • Dan Dastun
    • 1999–2003
    Emi Shinohara
    Emi Shinohara
    • Angel
    • 1999–2003
    Wendee Lee
    Wendee Lee
    • Angel…
    • 1999–2003
    Unshô Ishizuka
    Unshô Ishizuka
    • Alex Rosewater
    • 1999–2003
    Michael Forest
    Michael Forest
    • Alex Rosewater
    • 1999–2003
    Alan Oppenheimer
    Alan Oppenheimer
    • Norman Burg
    • 2003
    Milton James
    Milton James
    • Norman Burg
    • 1999–2000
    Jamieson Price
    Jamieson Price
    • Big Ear…
    • 1999–2003
    Shinpachi Tsuji
    • Big Ear
    • 1999–2003
    Ezra Weisz
    • Additional Voices…
    • 1999–2003
    Hôchû Ôtsuka
    Hôchû Ôtsuka
    • Jason Beck
    • 1999–2003
    Issei Futamata
    Issei Futamata
    • Alan Gabriel
    • 2003
    • Création
      • Kazuyoshi Katayama
      • Keiichi Satô
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs15

    7,52.5K
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    Avis à la une

    MovieCriticMarvelfan

    Big O is a big success by this great critic

    Big O 2001 by Sunrise and Bandai Entertainment who brought Gundam Wing, and who made the Macross and Gundam games is one of the greatest cartoons I've seen in the year 2000.

    This is a great series, one of the newest Japan Anime in 2001 and surely one of the best cartoons out there.

    American animators cannot emulate the Japan Anime cartoons and Big O is proof.

    It's gritty, romantic, touching, action packed and full of stories, and that is in every episode!!

    The star is Roger Smith who is the head negotiator in breaking or sealing criminal cases or any cases where the police or military is afraid to get involved in.

    He lives in Paradigm city, a dark city that has been torn by crime, military action and corruption.

    In only his first days on the job, he catches the idea of an attractive and elegant young lady called "Dorothy".

    Dorothy is not you're average woman, she is a whiz on the piano and has a certain way with people. Oh yeah Dorothy is a robot.

    She is virtually indestructible,yet her softness in characters reveals she is not made entirely of metal.

    Dorothy is cared for by her Grandfather. The Grandfather knows Dorothy is a robot but he protects her like his own daughter.

    A hoodlum by the name of Beck Gold plots to steal Dorothy and Smith (having suspicions about Dorothy) tries to intervene. Dorothy's Grandfather is shot and Beck kidnaps Dorothy .

    Smith rescues her eventually and they develop a mutual friendship between man and machine.

    The series works because of it's likeable characters, musical soundtrack which uses the piano to produce a feeling of what's going on in a scene,and above all incredible animation. The musical scences with the piano also convey a soothing feeling to a long day.

    Smith controls an undercover machine knows as "Megadeus" which is Big O.

    The series reminds me of Voltron because Megadeus fights many bosses in every episode in spectacular fashion.

    The series has been dubbed in English and currently showing in Cartoon Network's lineup.

    The dubbing is amazingly good. It's one of the best dubbing jobs, I've seen so far. David Lucas (Roger Smith), Lia Sargent(Dorothy) lend their great voices to this anime.

    Made through Bandai and Sunrise which produced Gundam Wing and Macross, these guys just keep making the hits.

    Take it from this great critic, Big O is a big success.
    Fury9033

    Great but Short Series

    This series is extremely well crafted. They have commented on Cartoon Network that this show is mix of Batman: The Animated Series and Blade Runner.

    It is, but more. This show showcases true hardcore Science Fiction world, with mysteries, drama and element of imagination that hasn't been seen in rather long time. Dark look on the future, what may happen.

    Also resurrects old Giant Robot theme, which has virtually disappeared from American Television.

    However, the show as it show now, in April, is lacking in only one thing.

    A ending.

    The show was released without any additional episodes. Only 13 and blunt and sudden ending. We can only hope that more episodes will released soon.
    10redcarpetroom

    Red Balloons and Red Tomatoes

    Big O is not like any other show I have ever seen. The writers clearly have extensive knowledge concerning Greek mythology and even Christianity. It is a cartoon sure, but the depth of the show is very subjective. The show itself gives the viewer just enough clues to allow one to believe that all of the other unending parade of questions will somehow be answered, but apparently, they won't. The show walks a profound balance of story and probability and divine vagueness.

    I saw a few episodes of this show and became hooked like no other show I have ever seen. The overall themes are far from light. Two of them being memories and ultimately attempting to define life. What is the value of one's life without memories? What separates humans from androids in a futurist world without knowing which actually came first? And that is assuming who and what each character actually is, which is far from a given. My obsession with the show did eventually wane, largely because the show itself is rather slow at times. There are plenty of action scenes with enormous robots, also representing something I'm sure, to balance the pace, but those battles rarely excited me.

    The truly strange aspect of this show is that the majority of it for me is window dressing. It's the symbolism that is scattered throughout each episode that elevates this show to atmospheric levels. This show is just smart enough and just open ended enough for each little mysterious detail to have some profound meaning. This show has everything within it to be the basis of a new religion in and of itself, seriously. The fact that all the answers can plausibly be answered, but aren't, makes Big O that much more life-like in nature.
    jrae1122

    I love Big O

    I was up watching Cartoon Network late one night and came across this show. I've been hooked ever since! It comes on EXTREMELY late where I am, but it is definitely worth me getting up at 5 am to watch, take another 1 hour nap and get up for work. I'm not a big Anime person, I'm a 33 year old professional female with no kids, yet the characters are extremely engaging and I love the ending credit song. I've been trying to find out how to actually get it on my Ipod. I don't know much about the difference between the version from Japan and that in America, yet whatever I have been watching in the US has been excellent! I hope everyone tunes to Cartoon Network to watch!!!
    8RoninDeVamas

    Sweet...

    I am a fan of the Cartoon Network anime lineup, and by far this is the best show out of them all.

    Unlike the other, more 'famous' anime shows (hence the Dragonball series), this show actually has realism in it. It isn't all action-packed. The show mostly surrounds negotiator Roger Smith uncovering information related to the jobs that his clients often give him or uncovering deep secrets about the forgotten past, in which an event forty years ago erased everyones' memory. It's pretty much talk, but it's interesting talk, because the talk that goes on throughout the show really relates to real-life situations--political corruption, the love for lost ones, and the desire to know the truth. Though this would bore an adrenaline-junkie, it would catch interest to those that I'd like to call 'down-to-Earthers', especially with the most wonderful music that is just too good to be put in a cartoon series.

    But that doesn't mean that there isn't action. The battles that premiere in the series have enough action to supply that adrenaline junkie with all the sweat he needs (and all within just about five minutes, too).

    Big O is by far the most successful amongst the dying robot-themed shows. Though the Transformers series seems to be long-lasting, it too is dying out as animators grow tired of constantly putting in the details of machinery and head to using computers as a way to 'build' the robots and give them movement. This type of animation doesn't blend in with the rest of the animation, thus fails (as seen in Transformers Energon).

    Which brings up another point. Notice how the animation throughout the entire series remains constant. Sure the lighting changed, but the animation overall has remained the same. It shows that the people who drew up the series were determined to have the animation remain constant and nearly flawless (unlike in the Dragonball series when different animators draw separate episodes). This (especially when having giant robots battling) requires a lot of patience and loyalty.

    And let me assure you that they have not gone unappreciated for their loyalty to the animation. Kudos, animators!

    Overall: life-like characters that grow throughout the series; life-like situations; incredible animation; dazzling battles; and (most importantly), the most wonderful music for a cartoon ever.

    Rating: 10 out of 10. The battle music still makes my neck hair stand up...

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Originally a thirteen-episode series, positive fan response internationally resulted in a second season co-produced by Cartoon Network, Sunrise, and Bandai Visual. The full 26-episode series re-aired from the beginning starting October 1, 2002 in Japan.
    • Citations

      Roger Smith: We have choices. Some people like to stand in the rain without an umbrella. That's what it means to live free.

    • Crédits fous
      During the closing credits at the end of the first episode, Roger is shown sitting alone on a large hourglass. After R. Dorothy joins his household, subsequent episodes show them sitting together.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Toonami: Advanced Robotics (2001)
    • Bandes originales
      BIG-O!
      Opening theme (first season)

      Performed by Rui Nagai

      Lyrics, music and arrangement by Rui Nagai

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 13 octobre 1999 (Japon)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Japon
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Japonais
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Big O
    • Sociétés de production
      • Animaze
      • Bandai Visual Company
      • CTV Television Network
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 25min
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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