Jan 10, 2019
This is a really, really weird one. After completing it, I was just left thinking, "What the hell did I just watch?"
Let's start out with what sticks out the most: The character designs. Definitely not your standard, stereotypical 'anime' style, but rather a strange type of realism only stretched out a bit verging on the grotesque. Reminds me a bit of Don Bluth characters. And the designs are so...distinctive...you can't get past them in this one-shot story. You're noticing how strange the people look from beginning to end.
But beyond that, the
...
rest of the artwork (including the backgrounds) are wonderful. And the animation quality is top-notch. Among the very best I've seen for the entire decade's worth of work.
The storytelling style is also a little outside the norm, which is par for the course when you are dealing with the eccentric director Rintaro. Which is fine by me, it seems to work well in this case.
But as for the story itself...well, that's where this really falls down the most. There's some sort of psychic connection between Taro the Loser Boy, and a mysterious ghost train that is 'terrorizing' the railways. Not sure why, and not sure what it really has to do with anything. It just ends up being a hapless, simpering guy who is the sole person who can seem to stop this phantom train, as he runs around getting nosebleeds (from his 'psychic' events) all the time.
And I do mean All. The. Time. That's the other thing (besides the character designs) that I noticed that really stood out a lot. Loser Boy kept getting very visible, active and volumnous nosebleeds over and over and over and over again. It was very off-putting. Ugh.
In the end, I was just left wondering what really happened, and what was the whole point of it all. A visually interesting adventure (minus the quarts of blood dripping from the nostrils, ugh), but all sound and fury signifying nothing.
Reviewer’s Rating: 5
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