It's amazing this is the lowest rated Gundam show on this site. It honestly doesn't deserve it. It didn't fuck up nearly as much as Gundam Age or Gundam Seed Destiny--I mean, at least someone put some thought into it. But the point is, it did fuck up. You learn in writing class 101 that every story has to have a denouement, a fancy way of saying "ending". Gundam: G no Reconguista has none. And that is why it fails. And fails hard, which is a shame to say as I tried to love this show as much as I could.
Yoshiyuki Tomino is the director,
...
you know, the guy who created Gundam in the first place back in 1979. This was his first anime he directed in over a decade. I have great respect for the man--he directed so many classics, even outside of Gundam, like Dunbine and Ideon, plus he has an interesting personality. After all, why are his shows full of that odd but quirky and lovable writing that some people describe as "Aspergers-like"? Maybe a criticism, but that "odd" sense gives Tomino's shows their charm.
Tomino's most recent Gundam show he directed was Turn A Gundam, which many say is the height of the franchise. I'm inclined to degree--the atmosphere, the emotion, the sheer charm behind it, most certainly makes it unforgettable. Now this show--you knew from the PVs, you knew from the director, you knew from the art, and you quickly learned from the story, it clearly intended to capitalise on that aspect.
That's obvious from moment one, when you learn this is "after Universal Century" when civilisation is rebuilding itself. Okay, cool. So what will we do with this? We introduce a very interesting setting--we have a religion worshipping a space elevator in Brazil or somewhere nearby in Latin America, we have an interesting, enthusiastic protagonist, Bellri Zenam (first Brazilian Gundam protagonist), defending said space elevator, and we have a supporting cast full of intrigue. You've got some shady guys from the Moon (ancestors of the Moonrace of Turn A Gundam?), enemies of the future Brazilians in what's implied to be the future United States, and various other players in the intrigue like space pirates. It sets itself up well, evidenced from the introduction of the main Gundam when it crashes into some mobile suits from ZZ Gundam in an early fight scene--yes, Gundam fans are the target audience, make no mistake.
Anyone familiar with a Yoshiyuki Tomino anime will feel at home--it's blatantly obvious Tomino never cared one bit about the current anime industry or fans of nowadays anime. Plenty of weird dialogue, plenty of obscure motives, plenty of that strange 80s charm, well-transcribed to 2010's style animation.
Very good animation, I must add. Colourful and vibrant, but not like a children's anime like Gundam AGE nor "mature" like Gundam 00. It hearkens back to Turn A Gundam without a doubt, as does the character design and the mecha design. The G-Self and its many backpacks may not be as blatantly quirky as the titular mecha of Turn A Gundam (more reminsicent of Eureka 7, if anything), but it certainly is reminiscent of Turn A Gundam in so many ways in that it's one of the most unique mecha bearing the name "Gundam" (well, a protagonist's Gundam). For the music, it's not quite as good as the incredible soundtracks of the previous Gundams (every Gundam show up to and including Turn A Gundam), but it has a wonderful quirky nature to it, with jazz-inspired energetic tracks. It fits perfectly with the nature of the show. The ending song is glorious, too ("Tsukame prido! Tsukame success", etc.) as is the first opening song (a fantastic modern J-pop opener).
But there's one issue with this that utterly kills my enjoyment of the show--it has no point! Tomino introduces tons of interesting plot threads, interesting characters, a very interesting setting that any Turn A Gundam fan would love, but it all fails to be tied together. I suspect at some point Tomino asked for a 50 (or so) episode show, but didn't get it. Instead of anything else, Tomino stuck up his middle finger and organised it as he would a standard-length Gundam show. No other explanation can be given for the time spent doing very little but fighting off random enemy raids (like in a typical Tomino show), the villains who clearly have something up their sleeve but never really show it, and just the general feeling you're only halfway through the show when it suddenly ends.
I was expecting the whole time for something like the "Black History" episode of Turn A Gundam to show up, for the motives of everyone to be explained and come to light. But none of that happened. I was even expecting as late as the second-to-last episode for there to be an announcement of "there is a second season, don't worry!". But there wasn't. Instead, everything ends as basically follows--main Gundam gets uberhax weapon (that makes no logical sense why is only used a few times), a major battle happens (an admittedly very good battle, but regardless), and then a completely nonsensical ending happens which sees many, many out of character moments and utterly odd decisions by the characters. It feels like somone involved just said "fuck it, here's your ending".
Which is an utter shame, since I grew invested in the many characters as well as the setting. Bellri Zenam, an energetic and positive Gundam protagonist who might otherwise rank among my favourite Tomino protagonists. Aida Surugan, who I was always waiting for her potential to be revealed even though it never was. Raraiya Monday, the utterly crazy girl with some real moe appeal as well as an interesting subplot ended all too soon. Klim Nick and his crew, from a rival faction but sympathetic and intriguing at the same time. And the villains, from the Char clone "Captain Mask" and the interesting ideological factors driving him to the various folks supporting the factions in space, many of whom are never really enumerated upon or masked in random dialogue that's just waiting for an explanation which never comes. Again, there is so much potential and I can't say I didn't enjoy watching this show until the very end of it.
Really, up until the second half of the final episode, I'd be willing to give this show a solid grade. It's got plenty of great elements, and much of the charm of Turn A Gundam with almost no real bad moments (until the ending). But when you cloak everything in obfuscating dialogue and never reveal any of what it actually means, you produce something that means nothing in the end. Every story has to have an ending--G-Reco doesn't, instead it skips from the middle of the show to an ending that makes no sense. Production issues or just an utter lack of care? I don't know. All I know as a person viewing the end product is that somebody left you hanging in the process out of sheer lack of care.
The ultimate question G-Reco brings up is whether the journey or the ending is more important. I can't deny I utterly enjoyed this show as I was watching it, up until nearly the end. But when you have no real ending and leave an infinite amount of plot threads untouched, or, well, wrapped up in the most haphazard and pathetic way possible, you can't possibly leave the audience satisfied. I have no doubt G-Reco could have been a worthy successor to Turn-A Gundam if it had been 50 episodes long. But again, you simply piss off the audience if you write the show like that.
But it isn't, and that's the point. It fails as an anime, and watching it will do nothing but piss you off. If you like watching something with minimal to no overall plot, plenty of enjoyable anime exist for that. Not something with pretensions like this. G-Reco is to be viewed as a failure precisely for everything it doesn't do. This is a show for Tomino fanboys and Gundam completionists only, unless you have strong tolerance for being pissed off by the endings of the anime you watch. Not recommended for the sane among us.
Mar 27, 2016
Gundam: G no Reconguista
(Anime)
add
It's amazing this is the lowest rated Gundam show on this site. It honestly doesn't deserve it. It didn't fuck up nearly as much as Gundam Age or Gundam Seed Destiny--I mean, at least someone put some thought into it. But the point is, it did fuck up. You learn in writing class 101 that every story has to have a denouement, a fancy way of saying "ending". Gundam: G no Reconguista has none. And that is why it fails. And fails hard, which is a shame to say as I tried to love this show as much as I could.
Yoshiyuki Tomino is the director, ... Dec 19, 2014
Kidou Senshi Gundam AGE
(Anime)
add
*Due to the nature of the plot of this show, this review contains slight spoilers*
There's much to say about Gundam AGE--from the time it was first unveiled, the fanbase went crazy in anger thinking it was going to be some childish take on the franchise, things like how the Gundam wasn't even going to be piloted but controlled from afar by the AGE device, that they were going to remove any grimdark from the show, and so on. In any case, AGE is a significant departure in look from the grittyness of the previous Gundam, Gundam 00--00 had darker, mature-ish character and mecha designs, and ... |