Sunday, 9 November 2014

Demonstrating The Development Of Animation Movies With Code Geass Anime Review

By Christa Jarvis


In the seventies, what was meant to be a revolutionary step in Japanese entertainment began showing. It was a cartoon program that was supposed to last for a whole year. At ten months, with the television executives almost pulling the plug, the developers realized that there was some loyal following, small but very devoted. Fast forward to today, and the popularity of what started then is clearly visible when reading the Code Geass anime review.

Code Geass begins in 2010, with an evil empire hell bent on conquering the world. The Britannia Empire invades countries across the world and Japan becomes one victim. The Japanese invasion proves easy as the empire uses mobile vehicles. The people of Japan have their sovereignty and dignity stripped away, and their country is renamed area 11.

A peculiar twist of events leads to hope of rescue. A cunning prince, exiled from the Britannia royal family, seeks to bring down the evil empire. Through a twist of events, the prince gets to meet a mystery woman, dressed as a masked terrorist. Through the meeting, the prince gets control of the Geass, with which he can get anyone to do his bidding. With this, his dream seems closer to reality.

The storyline of this animation series can be compared to many more before it. A notable similarity in this movie plot can be drawn to the Valvrave series. The main character in this series leads a revolution, and uses a magic object, together with clever chess moves to do it. However, that seems to be the end of the similarity trend.

Apart from that, Code Geass charts a completely different path. The fabulousness of the characters is one of the things that make it different. Through all the war and seriousness, the characters still find a way to bring entertainment into the plot. Both the emperor and the main character find ways of delivering humor even when they are supposed to be very serious.

The nature of the main character is perhaps the biggest point of differentiation. Everyone is used to the hero being noble and saintly, but not this one. He is content with using almost anyone he thinks will advance his agenda. He does not think about the consequences of his actions, whether the people he uses will get hurt or die.

Since the seventies, animation movies have grown and developed. During the past, they were reserved for the geek minority, but geeks are slowly being accepted. Look at the popular geeky storyline movies and series, like the billionaire geek Tony Stark in the Ironman Franchise, or the three academics in the Big Band theory.

But that is not the only reason for their success. In the western world especially, they satisfy curiosity of people by bringing them aspects of Asian and Japanese culture. Animation movies explore complex themes and present them in a simple, funny and entertaining way and this animation movie is a perfect example.




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