Iria: Zeiram the Animation
- Minissérie de televisão
- 1994
- 2 h 42 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,1/10
987
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Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA monster hunter goes after a beast that could be her brother.A monster hunter goes after a beast that could be her brother.A monster hunter goes after a beast that could be her brother.
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It was back in 1994 when I first laid eyes on Iria, and ever since then I've been in love with the movie. I don't consider myself an anime expert by any stretch, but I've seen enough to know what's good and what's not. There isn't a whole lot about this movie that I don't like, with the exception of some of the voice acting, but that's to be expected with translation. The action is spectacular, the characters are likeable, and the animation is beautiful. I think the thing about Iria I like the most is the villain, Zeiram. The way that he's so emotionless and tenacious is something that you don't see very often with bad guys. He doesn't talk or brag, so you don't get the run of the mill psycho or typical villain. The story holds up througout the entire movie, and moves at a very good pace, especially the action sequences. All in all I would rate Iria: zeiram the animation an 8 out of 10.
This 1994 animation has a retro sound and look - anime's structure, sound, and feel changed very little in the entirety of century-20. Iria is a prequel to the live-action film Zeiram. Just 6 short episodes, it's worth watching this b@d@$$-in-the-making for even the casual anime fan.
Iria is wrapping up her bounty hunter apprenticeship. She's out on a mission with her brother, Gren, when things go horribly wrong. Gren and his partners went after their target, Zeiram, who was surprisingly impervious to their weaponry. Now Gren is missing and presumed dead, though Iria is determined to find him. Gren's partners, Fujikuro and Bob will help her, though a grumbling Fujikuro sometimes claims that he won't. Post Zeiram mission, Bob is reduced to a consciousness existing on a computer, which was the only way he could survive the mission. They want to find Gren, and they want to kill Zeiram - if he can be killed.
Iria has a Cowboy-Bebop-Vibe without the sexual content and the humor. It predates Cowboy Bebop by at least 4 years and seems to have influenced CB. Ed, from CB and Kei, from Iria, are particularly similar. Kei is not unlike Iria, herself. I suspect a cloning program to keep gingers in space! Most of Iria takes place on a planet (Myce) with a landscape very much like Tatooine from Star Wars. I could feel the SW residue, sans the Jedi... or the cuteness - Iria is edgy. Iria, herself, is a cool, brave, talented, and bold lil' sis. She sports a proceed-with-caution beaded hairdo - It's awesome. Iria is not a feel-good show, but it is good ol' Sci-fi. It is smart and direct, like Iria herself.
As of today, Iria is available on Hidive. Some dubbed titles worthy of a visit of Hidive are: Maid Sama 10, Made in Abyss 9 (currently the 3rd movie and S2 are not dubbed. Per Hidive: "Since MADE IN ABYSS: Journey's Dawn... and MADE IN ABYSS: Wandering Twilight... are compilation movies, you can either watch MADE IN ABYSS season 1 or just the two movies before moving on to the MADE IN ABYSS: Dawn of the Deep Soul..., the third movie is NOT optional "); Parasyte the Maxim 8.9, The Eminence in Shadow 8.8, No Game No Life Zero 8.8, RahXephon 8.6, Akame ga Kill! 8.6, Princess Principal 8.6, Chihayafuru 8.5, Girls Last Tour 8.5, CR Chaika The Coffin Princess 8.4, Love Chunibyo And Other Delusions 8.4, Special A Class 8.2, Food Wars 8.2, Land Of The Lustrous 8.1, Girls Und Panzer 8, Land Of The Lustrous 8, Reincarnated as a Sword 8, My Teen Romantic Comedy SNAFU 8, Gate 7.9, Ice 7.8, Ao-chan Can't Study 7.8, Beyond the Boundary 7.8, You're Under Arrest 7.8, Pet Shop of Horrors 7.8, Hakkenden 7.7, Monthly Girls Nozaki-kun 7.7, Is It Wrong To Pick Up Girls In A Dungeon? 7.7, Flowers of Evil 7.7 (not dubbed), Farming Life in Another World 7.7, Princess Resurrection 7.6, Akiba Maid War 7.5, Real Girl 7.5, School Live 7.5, Kokkoku 7.5, Needless 7.5, Senryu Girl 7.5, D4DJ 7.5, Iria 7.5 Kokoro Connect 7.4, Aura Battler Dunbine 7.4, Pet Girl of Sakura Hall 7.3, After the Rain 7.3, BToom! 7.3, Armed Girl's Machiavellism 7.1,
Honorable Mention: Wasteful Days of High School Girls, Blue Seed, Patlabor, Get Backers, Clannad, Tsurune, Tada Never Falls in Love, Kino's Journey, Lupin III.
〰🖍 IMHO
🎬7.5 📝7.5 🎭7.5 🌞5 🎨7⚡7 🎵 7.5 😅3 🤔6 🔚8.3
Age 13+ feeling up breasts, underwear joke - mild; Hot shower scene, we see a taught backside and the side-boob. Iria has a rocking hard bod with full udders.
Re-📺? Possibly.
Iria is wrapping up her bounty hunter apprenticeship. She's out on a mission with her brother, Gren, when things go horribly wrong. Gren and his partners went after their target, Zeiram, who was surprisingly impervious to their weaponry. Now Gren is missing and presumed dead, though Iria is determined to find him. Gren's partners, Fujikuro and Bob will help her, though a grumbling Fujikuro sometimes claims that he won't. Post Zeiram mission, Bob is reduced to a consciousness existing on a computer, which was the only way he could survive the mission. They want to find Gren, and they want to kill Zeiram - if he can be killed.
Iria has a Cowboy-Bebop-Vibe without the sexual content and the humor. It predates Cowboy Bebop by at least 4 years and seems to have influenced CB. Ed, from CB and Kei, from Iria, are particularly similar. Kei is not unlike Iria, herself. I suspect a cloning program to keep gingers in space! Most of Iria takes place on a planet (Myce) with a landscape very much like Tatooine from Star Wars. I could feel the SW residue, sans the Jedi... or the cuteness - Iria is edgy. Iria, herself, is a cool, brave, talented, and bold lil' sis. She sports a proceed-with-caution beaded hairdo - It's awesome. Iria is not a feel-good show, but it is good ol' Sci-fi. It is smart and direct, like Iria herself.
As of today, Iria is available on Hidive. Some dubbed titles worthy of a visit of Hidive are: Maid Sama 10, Made in Abyss 9 (currently the 3rd movie and S2 are not dubbed. Per Hidive: "Since MADE IN ABYSS: Journey's Dawn... and MADE IN ABYSS: Wandering Twilight... are compilation movies, you can either watch MADE IN ABYSS season 1 or just the two movies before moving on to the MADE IN ABYSS: Dawn of the Deep Soul..., the third movie is NOT optional "); Parasyte the Maxim 8.9, The Eminence in Shadow 8.8, No Game No Life Zero 8.8, RahXephon 8.6, Akame ga Kill! 8.6, Princess Principal 8.6, Chihayafuru 8.5, Girls Last Tour 8.5, CR Chaika The Coffin Princess 8.4, Love Chunibyo And Other Delusions 8.4, Special A Class 8.2, Food Wars 8.2, Land Of The Lustrous 8.1, Girls Und Panzer 8, Land Of The Lustrous 8, Reincarnated as a Sword 8, My Teen Romantic Comedy SNAFU 8, Gate 7.9, Ice 7.8, Ao-chan Can't Study 7.8, Beyond the Boundary 7.8, You're Under Arrest 7.8, Pet Shop of Horrors 7.8, Hakkenden 7.7, Monthly Girls Nozaki-kun 7.7, Is It Wrong To Pick Up Girls In A Dungeon? 7.7, Flowers of Evil 7.7 (not dubbed), Farming Life in Another World 7.7, Princess Resurrection 7.6, Akiba Maid War 7.5, Real Girl 7.5, School Live 7.5, Kokkoku 7.5, Needless 7.5, Senryu Girl 7.5, D4DJ 7.5, Iria 7.5 Kokoro Connect 7.4, Aura Battler Dunbine 7.4, Pet Girl of Sakura Hall 7.3, After the Rain 7.3, BToom! 7.3, Armed Girl's Machiavellism 7.1,
Honorable Mention: Wasteful Days of High School Girls, Blue Seed, Patlabor, Get Backers, Clannad, Tsurune, Tada Never Falls in Love, Kino's Journey, Lupin III.
〰🖍 IMHO
🎬7.5 📝7.5 🎭7.5 🌞5 🎨7⚡7 🎵 7.5 😅3 🤔6 🔚8.3
Age 13+ feeling up breasts, underwear joke - mild; Hot shower scene, we see a taught backside and the side-boob. Iria has a rocking hard bod with full udders.
Re-📺? Possibly.
I highly enjoyed Amemiya Keita's live-action 'Zeiram' films, two terrific blasts of genre fare that also boasted outstanding practical effects and otherwise visuals. The second maybe wasn't as strong as the first, but more than anything else that speaks to how excellent the progenitor was. It's only fair to wonder how an OVA might compare to Amemiya's works, not least when it notably does not have the same cast and crew that both live-action flicks did. However, in no time after we start watching it becomes evident that such questions of comparison are beside the point: in any medium the franchise is nothing if not an opportunity to blend together science fiction and action with a little humor and horror on the side, and 'Iria: Zeiram the animation' easily holds its own. As far as I'm concerned this is fantastic!
The anime occupies an interesting point of both serving as a prequel for the movies - providing a backstory for bounty hunter Iria - and to some small degree reimagining the story of the movies, especially since Iria is shown here as encountering Zeiram earlier in her career. With that in mind, one is maybe best served by thinking of this not strictly as an addition to narrative canon, but as another interpretation of these characters and their universe. There are perhaps additional minutiae one might nitpick, but I think the one other most salient point to raise is that the visuals are surely more visceral in their live-action format, particularly when it comes to any creatures. That is in no way a reflection on the quality here, but I think it's simply a matter of the vibrancy of something we could theoretically touch for ourselves versus the vibrancy of a purely two-dimensional representation. And still, all this is just rumination on where these six episodes fit in alongside their full-length kin; one way or another, the OVA is really fun, and well worth checking out on its own merits regardless of our relationship with the features.
Him and haw as we may about the particulars - as we usually and rightly anticipate of Japanese animation, the artists turned in phenomenal work in shaping the look and feel of the series. Every facet of the visuals are rich with superb detail and imagination, from backgrounds and settings including landscapes and outer space, building interiors and even more so the exterior of structures, and hardly any less so the active animated elements. Iria and Zeiram mostly retain the same appearance as in the live-action pictures but are also tweaked here; from weapons and sundry items, to vehicles and other characters, and not least the gnarly creature designs, everything looks superb and it's clear how much effort went into making this worthy of the medium at large, and the composite genres, and its longer brethren. Action sequences and effects are exciting and invigorating, and there are plenty of nice little touches everywhere in the animation to grab our eyes even beyond the foremost spectacle.
To my pleasure, that latter phrase quite extends to the writing as well, a credit to director Amino Tetsuro, and colleagues Arakawa Naruhisa and Matsumoto Hajime - with Matsumoto, as Amemiya's co-writer, being the one link on the production side of things between the live-action flicks and the anime. Tiny odds and ends populate each episode that are gratifying for how they demonstrate the intelligence and care of all involved; whether providing fuel for the animators, enriching some aspect of the writing, or both, there's much to get our attention all throughout. The plot in each film was relatively simple and straightforward, mostly just serving as a platform for the romp to follow, but in this rendition considerable welcome thought was poured into a bigger overarching narrative that's solidly engaging and compelling in its own right, with admirable themes and ideas, and a definitive progression as the saga unfolds and expands from one half-hour to the next. In tracing Iria's early days as a bounty hunter we've also given a tale of corruption, malfeasance, conspiracy, and shortsightedness, and even on paper this has us locked in for the ride as the saga eventually comes full circle. The characters are fleshed out more, with Iria certainly being given more complexity (and broadly made genuinely more interesting in the process), and fine dialogue adds to both the flavor and the plot development across sharp scenes that are themselves ably engrossing.
Even with the action violence and darker genre facets the overall vibe is surely lighter than what we got in the movies. I say this not least as a couple supporting characters, including a kid, are written if not for outright comic relief, then to further humanize a protagonist that we previously have known chiefly as a skilled warrior. Animation also allows for otherworldly settings that innately offer more of a sense of whimsy, contrasting with the predominantly urban, industrial, or otherwise realistic settings in the films that automatically lend themselves to a measure of grit. Then again, those settings and even those youths fit into a story that gets decidedly more grim and violent in the back half, most notably in the fourth and fifth episodes which Matsumoto had written where horror very emphatically and dramatically rears its head. To that same end, while the opening and closing themes are very catchy, easy on the ears, and upbeat - I could easily listen to Goto Yayoi's "At the end of the melting dream" and SAEKO's "Although the dream is far" on repeat - Yoshikawa Yoichiro's score, itself a swell complement, also grows more somber and pensive in the last three episodes. There is a real, meaningful progression from start to finish, and I really appreciate that.
Capped off with top-notch direction, great and expressive voice acting, and marvelous sound effects, this really is very well done all around. I assumed I'd enjoy it, but particularly between the strong writing and visuals, I'm so very pleased with just how good the OVA turned out to be. Whether one is a fan of Amemiya's 'Zeiram' and 'Zeiram 2,' a fan of anime generally, or just looking for a good time with sci-fi action, I think most anyone could sit to watch this three hours and step away entertained and satisfied. I wouldn't go so far as to say it fully demands viewership, but if you have the chance to see it then I'm happy to give 'Iria: Zeiram the animation' my high recommendation!
The anime occupies an interesting point of both serving as a prequel for the movies - providing a backstory for bounty hunter Iria - and to some small degree reimagining the story of the movies, especially since Iria is shown here as encountering Zeiram earlier in her career. With that in mind, one is maybe best served by thinking of this not strictly as an addition to narrative canon, but as another interpretation of these characters and their universe. There are perhaps additional minutiae one might nitpick, but I think the one other most salient point to raise is that the visuals are surely more visceral in their live-action format, particularly when it comes to any creatures. That is in no way a reflection on the quality here, but I think it's simply a matter of the vibrancy of something we could theoretically touch for ourselves versus the vibrancy of a purely two-dimensional representation. And still, all this is just rumination on where these six episodes fit in alongside their full-length kin; one way or another, the OVA is really fun, and well worth checking out on its own merits regardless of our relationship with the features.
Him and haw as we may about the particulars - as we usually and rightly anticipate of Japanese animation, the artists turned in phenomenal work in shaping the look and feel of the series. Every facet of the visuals are rich with superb detail and imagination, from backgrounds and settings including landscapes and outer space, building interiors and even more so the exterior of structures, and hardly any less so the active animated elements. Iria and Zeiram mostly retain the same appearance as in the live-action pictures but are also tweaked here; from weapons and sundry items, to vehicles and other characters, and not least the gnarly creature designs, everything looks superb and it's clear how much effort went into making this worthy of the medium at large, and the composite genres, and its longer brethren. Action sequences and effects are exciting and invigorating, and there are plenty of nice little touches everywhere in the animation to grab our eyes even beyond the foremost spectacle.
To my pleasure, that latter phrase quite extends to the writing as well, a credit to director Amino Tetsuro, and colleagues Arakawa Naruhisa and Matsumoto Hajime - with Matsumoto, as Amemiya's co-writer, being the one link on the production side of things between the live-action flicks and the anime. Tiny odds and ends populate each episode that are gratifying for how they demonstrate the intelligence and care of all involved; whether providing fuel for the animators, enriching some aspect of the writing, or both, there's much to get our attention all throughout. The plot in each film was relatively simple and straightforward, mostly just serving as a platform for the romp to follow, but in this rendition considerable welcome thought was poured into a bigger overarching narrative that's solidly engaging and compelling in its own right, with admirable themes and ideas, and a definitive progression as the saga unfolds and expands from one half-hour to the next. In tracing Iria's early days as a bounty hunter we've also given a tale of corruption, malfeasance, conspiracy, and shortsightedness, and even on paper this has us locked in for the ride as the saga eventually comes full circle. The characters are fleshed out more, with Iria certainly being given more complexity (and broadly made genuinely more interesting in the process), and fine dialogue adds to both the flavor and the plot development across sharp scenes that are themselves ably engrossing.
Even with the action violence and darker genre facets the overall vibe is surely lighter than what we got in the movies. I say this not least as a couple supporting characters, including a kid, are written if not for outright comic relief, then to further humanize a protagonist that we previously have known chiefly as a skilled warrior. Animation also allows for otherworldly settings that innately offer more of a sense of whimsy, contrasting with the predominantly urban, industrial, or otherwise realistic settings in the films that automatically lend themselves to a measure of grit. Then again, those settings and even those youths fit into a story that gets decidedly more grim and violent in the back half, most notably in the fourth and fifth episodes which Matsumoto had written where horror very emphatically and dramatically rears its head. To that same end, while the opening and closing themes are very catchy, easy on the ears, and upbeat - I could easily listen to Goto Yayoi's "At the end of the melting dream" and SAEKO's "Although the dream is far" on repeat - Yoshikawa Yoichiro's score, itself a swell complement, also grows more somber and pensive in the last three episodes. There is a real, meaningful progression from start to finish, and I really appreciate that.
Capped off with top-notch direction, great and expressive voice acting, and marvelous sound effects, this really is very well done all around. I assumed I'd enjoy it, but particularly between the strong writing and visuals, I'm so very pleased with just how good the OVA turned out to be. Whether one is a fan of Amemiya's 'Zeiram' and 'Zeiram 2,' a fan of anime generally, or just looking for a good time with sci-fi action, I think most anyone could sit to watch this three hours and step away entertained and satisfied. I wouldn't go so far as to say it fully demands viewership, but if you have the chance to see it then I'm happy to give 'Iria: Zeiram the animation' my high recommendation!
Viewed on Retro Crush.
An OVA miniseries (6 episodes) that follows a futuristic bounty hunter named Iria whom gets embroiled in a conspiracy involving a suspicious mega corporation & a nearly indestructible hostile alien lifeform called "Zeiram", after being sent out on a mission to rescue the crew of a ship that has sent out a distress signal.
It clearly owes it's core concept to "Alien", however it does enough of it's own to justify it's existence. The conflict between Iria & Zeiram becomes personal in a way that it's inspiration wasn't, and Zeiram itself has an eye catching design (a theme that carries over to the series as a whole, it mixes sci-fi grandeur with traditional Japanese/Asian aesthetic influences much like other sci-fi anime of the time like "Tenchi Muyo!" & "Outlaw Star"). Not the best thing ever, but I liked it more than I had imaged I would going in.
An OVA miniseries (6 episodes) that follows a futuristic bounty hunter named Iria whom gets embroiled in a conspiracy involving a suspicious mega corporation & a nearly indestructible hostile alien lifeform called "Zeiram", after being sent out on a mission to rescue the crew of a ship that has sent out a distress signal.
It clearly owes it's core concept to "Alien", however it does enough of it's own to justify it's existence. The conflict between Iria & Zeiram becomes personal in a way that it's inspiration wasn't, and Zeiram itself has an eye catching design (a theme that carries over to the series as a whole, it mixes sci-fi grandeur with traditional Japanese/Asian aesthetic influences much like other sci-fi anime of the time like "Tenchi Muyo!" & "Outlaw Star"). Not the best thing ever, but I liked it more than I had imaged I would going in.
Basically about this bounty hunter/ gun for higher crew that take on a mission that goes awry when they encounter a nearly immortal alien being and the rest of the episodes are basically this one gal's quest to ( you guessed it) try to destroy it.
They story is nothing special. The mechanical designs and world building are specifically very un-special. It's trying to do cross between woodlands and sci-fi. Think the whole Ewok sequence in Star Wars or a way lesser Tenchi Muyo. The animation has it's moments where it shines with all it's retro charm, specifically the last episode. But I really couldn't get over how boring the weapons and creatures were.
They story is nothing special. The mechanical designs and world building are specifically very un-special. It's trying to do cross between woodlands and sci-fi. Think the whole Ewok sequence in Star Wars or a way lesser Tenchi Muyo. The animation has it's moments where it shines with all it's retro charm, specifically the last episode. But I really couldn't get over how boring the weapons and creatures were.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe prequel to the Japanese live-action sci-fi thriller Zeiramu (1991)
- Versões alternativasThe English dubbed version doesn't include the stronger language found in the Japanese version.
- ConexõesFeatured in Akira VHS the Best of Japanese Animation Series Commercial (1990)
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