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IMDbPro

Texhnolyze

Original title: Tekunoraizu
  • TV Series
  • 2003
  • 12
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
3.5K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,729
418
Texhnolyze (2003)
Adult AnimationAnimeCyberpunkDystopian Sci-FiHand-Drawn AnimationPsychological DramaTragedyAnimationCrimeDrama

In a man-made underground society, descendants of a banished generation vie for control of the crumbling city of Lux. Ichise, an orphan turned prize fighter, loses a leg and an arm to satisf... Read allIn a man-made underground society, descendants of a banished generation vie for control of the crumbling city of Lux. Ichise, an orphan turned prize fighter, loses a leg and an arm to satisfy an enraged fight promoter.In a man-made underground society, descendants of a banished generation vie for control of the crumbling city of Lux. Ichise, an orphan turned prize fighter, loses a leg and an arm to satisfy an enraged fight promoter.

  • Creator
    • Yasuyuki Ueda
  • Stars
    • Liam O'Brien
    • Patrick Seitz
    • Michael Forest
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    3.5K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,729
    418
    • Creator
      • Yasuyuki Ueda
    • Stars
      • Liam O'Brien
      • Patrick Seitz
      • Michael Forest
    • 18User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes22

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season2003

    Photos32

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    Top cast42

    Edit
    Liam O'Brien
    Liam O'Brien
    • Haruhiko Toyama
    • 2003
    Patrick Seitz
    Patrick Seitz
    • Keigo Onishi
    • 2003
    Michael Forest
    Michael Forest
    • Bunken Kohakura
    • 2003
    Shizuka Itô
    Shizuka Itô
    • Ran
    • 2003
    Carrie Savage
    Carrie Savage
    • Ran
    • 2003
    Justin Gross
    • Ichise
    • 2003
    Satoshi Haga
    • Ichise
    • 2003
    Taliesin Jaffe
    Taliesin Jaffe
    • Inui
    • 2003
    Jason Charles Miller
    Jason Charles Miller
    • Shinji
    • 2003
    Victoria Harwood
    Victoria Harwood
    • Doc…
    • 2003
    JB Blanc
    JB Blanc
    • Keitaro Mizuno
    • 2003
    William Morgan Sheppard
    William Morgan Sheppard
    • Hiroshisa Goto
    • 2003
    Kirk Thornton
    Kirk Thornton
    • Akihisa Sonoda
    • 2003
    Sam Riegel
    Sam Riegel
    • Kazuho Yoshii
    • 2003
    Yûko Kaida
    Yûko Kaida
    • Youko
    • 2003
    Steven Bendik
    • Zushi
    • 2003
    Wendee Lee
    Wendee Lee
    • Mana Onishi…
    • 2003
    Gina Grad
    • Michiko Hirota
    • 2003
    • Creator
      • Yasuyuki Ueda
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    7.53.4K
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    Featured reviews

    Twinsen61

    Anime as art

    Lux ... the underground city of dark imagination where philosophies clash in form of mob-like gangs. Are you a free spirit, religious or do you fancy a well-structured leadership similar in a way to most current governments? Or maybe you do not care for any of these? A traveler descends into this dream-like world in order to find an intensity of life that is missing from his existence. A professional fighter has to find his path after a very violent incident makes him unable to continue his job. A mysterious young girl is able to see the future or rather a possible future. Their paths cross in unexpected ways and their destinies are difficult to fathom.

    Texhnolyze has a really special atmosphere, with shots carefully composed and beautifully drawn. It's by no means a fun or fast-moving anime. It includes plenty of violence and some mechanized robots and body parts but the focus is definitely not on getting things blown up but rather on the psychological side. You have to be prepared to give it your full attention in order to understand the sinuous story and visual metaphors. Most important you need at least a minimum affinity to the stylish dark atmosphere because every episode is imbued with it. For those who can feel it and maybe understand it, Texhnolyze will prove one of the most rewarding experiences. It may well be the most mature and artistically valid anime series ever made.
    10duboreedas

    Expand Your Mind

    My first review on IMDb, Hiroshi Hamasaki's Technolyze has been so far (in my viewing experience) the most effective way to understand moral ambiguities of the human spirit. Juxtaposing art, architecture, science, psychology and a fair bit of body horror rendered in surreal animation, this series is everything an entire generation of storytellers could want to tell, perhaps, without being able to.

    The first episode has exactly five lines of dialogues, the most provocative sound design and surreal animation that can either put you off it or make you bend your knees in awe. From there on, the world of Lukuss takes over, in vivid and astonishing detail.

    The denouement is especially haunting and much will depend on your own perceptions. Unless you decide to hanker over the internet trying to find a singular meaning. Which will not be very satisfying. Re-watching this series is going to be my gamble.

    I believe Texnolyze is more of an impression. An evolving thought in the minds of Konaka and Hamasaki. And therefore it has movement and fallibility. Sometimes, that is exactly what defines true expression.

    Watch it only if you are patient. Or you enjoy art.
    8thisisforspam579

    the only anime I would ever recommend in public

    Have you ever watched something so good it made you want to throw up?

    I am being completely serious - Texhnolyze, as well as being less than intuitive to spell, is nauseous in all the right ways. The grotesque, bewildering, horrifying and utterly despairing all have their place.

    Don't let the first few episodes put you off. At first I kept watching for the style alone (no point bothering with the details but there's some crazy and better yet successfully experimental art/sound/space/editing stuff going on), but far better things grow out of it. The last few episodes, for instance, are honest-to-god one of the most jaw dropping sequences I have ever watched. What happens in between is also great, but fuck me, the end of it..

    Lots of anime claims to think. Usually that means half-arsed monologues by side characters that either don't make sense or are completely irrelevant, trying to pass as philosophy by using lots of big words and being boring. Here's one that actually does.
    8Tweekums

    A bleak and sometimes violent dystopia

    Having really enjoyed Haibane Renmei I was interested to see another film from its creators. While this series is very different; it is slower moving, much darker in tone, violent and has a much bleaker look to it, however the animation is of an equal standard and the backgrounds are very detailed. The series is set in a bleak underground city were various groups are in conflict. As the story begins it is hard to tell who the protagonist will be; there is Kazuho Yoshii a visitor to the city who at first appears to be a tourist but soon starts to stir up trouble, then there is Ichise a young man who is violently attacked in the opening episode and ends up having his severed arm and leg replaced by cybernetic parts, and finally there is Ran a mysterious girl who is frequently seen around the others. As the series progresses we gradually learn more about these characters and others while the situation for them and the other people of the city gets more dangerous. As to the title; Texhnolyzation refers to the process where some people have body parts replaced by cybernetic parts; some people just have one or two parts others are almost entirely mechanical.

    For the first few episodes I wasn't sure what to make of this series; there was very little dialogue and what there was didn't make it that clear what was happening; some viewers might find it boring but I found it gradually drawing me in to the lives of the characters. The animation looked good if a little bleak; the bleakness was increased as several scenes the picture contained static like you would find on a television with less than perfect reception. The regular bloody violence means that this series isn't suitable for younger viewers although I suspect the slow pace would put children off watching anyway.
    10dee.reid

    Pretty hard to follow, but it keeps you watching...

    "Texhnolyze" (pronounced "Techno-lyze") is a compelling and pretty hard-to-follow Anime' series. The plot is very indirect and slow-moving; it's obvious that a lot of thought went into building its story and characters. The first episode is pretty unique because over 10 minutes go by before a single word is uttered by anyone.

    In the presumably distant post-apocalyptic future, years have passed since an unnamed calamity forced much of the human population to abandon Earth's surface and settle into the underground city of Lux. Many humans have undergone "Texhnolyzation" - exchanging organic body parts for prosthetic ones. Lux, meanwhile, is the center of a three-way power struggle by those looking for ultimate control of the city: the Organos, led by Onishi, who all appear to be Technolyzed in some way or another, more or less; the fanatical populist movement the Salvation Union, who are radically opposed to Texhnolyzation; and the Racans, a gang of adolescent street punks.

    Thrown into the chaos is Ichise, a prize fighter who is brutally dismembered - his unwise provocation of a ruthless fight promoter's wrath costs him an arm and leg, quite literally - and he is put back together again like the Six-Million-Dollar Man by the beautiful mad scientist Doc. Another wrinkle comes from Ran, a young girl who has the ability to see the future of anyone she comes into contact with. Needless to say, her prophetic warnings to Ichise about his future have horrifying implications not just for him, but for everyone in Lux.

    This is an extremely difficult and frustrating Anime' series to try to wrap your head around. I'm not even going to try to decipher what the Japanese artists were trying to convey with this series. Maybe it was mankind's insatiable quest for power? The obsessive need for human perfection by exchanging organic limbs for artificial ones? I have no idea. I do know that this is an unusual science fiction series - definitely not one for the kids, if any are around, since there is plenty of graphic bloody violence, nudity, and some colorful language.

    There is also an atmospheric score and soundtrack by Keishi Urata and Hajime Mizoguchi, with songs by Juno Reactor, Gackt, and Yoko Ishida.

    Sit back and prepare to be mind-boggled by "Texhnolyze."

    10/10

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      In the first episode, there's no dialogue whatsoever until 11 minutes in
    • Connections
      References Le plongeon (1968)
    • Soundtracks
      Guardian Angel
      by Juno Reactor

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 16, 2003 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Official site
      • Web of the Official trailer
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Техноліз
    • Production companies
      • Fuji Television Network (Fuji TV)
      • Madhouse
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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