The Anime Encyclopedia by Jonathan Clements

The Anime Encyclopedia by Jonathan Clements

Author:Jonathan Clements
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Stone Bridge Press
Published: 2012-05-23T16:00:00+00:00


N

Nadesico *

1996. jpn: Kido Senkan Nadesico. aka: Robot Warship Pink (Sweet William); Martian Successor Nadesico. TV series, movie. dir: Tatsuo Sato, Nobuyuki Habara, Kenichi Hamasaki. scr: Sho Aikawa, Takeshi Shudo, Hiroyuki Kawasaki. des: Kia Asamiya, Keiji Goto, Takeshi Takakura, Takumi Sakura, Rei Nakahara, Yasuhiro Moriki. ani: Keiji Goto, Natsuki Egami, Masayuki Hiraoka. mus: Takayuki Hattori. prd: Xebec, Studio Tron, TV Tokyo. 25 mins. x 26 eps. (TV), 30 mins. (Gekiganger), 90 mins. (m).

In the year 2195, while Earth prevari-cates about sending troops to fight inva-ders from Jupiter, a brave civilian takes matters into her own hands and steals a privately owned warship. With a rogue captain straight out of Silent Service, an unwinnable war out of Gunbuster, and a plaster of irony over any cracks, Earth’s last hope against the Jovian “lizards” is the ragtag crew of the Nadesico—a ship named after the nadeshiko flower that is said to represent Japanese womanly perfection. Captain Yurika and her mostly female crew are determined to meet the challenge, while their cook (and Yurika’s childhood sweetheart) Akito is a former pilot ace on the run from his fears, pilot Jiro Yamada is an anime addict bent on living his favorite show, and the military is out to take control by fair means or foul.

Based on a manga in Monthly Ace magazine by Kia Asamiya and supposedly set in the same universe as his Silent Möbius, Nadesico is one of the better 1990s shows, particularly for a hard-core fan audience that can spot the in-jokes and identify the fine line between a satire of cheesy shows and the cheesy shows themselves. Parodies and homages are handled lightly, and the anime’s characters and situations are cleverly scripted to avoid the repetitive tedium of Tenchi Muyo!, whose adoring-female-of-the-week policy it often imitates. The most striking example of this is cute moppet Ruri—a mixture of Wednesday Addams and Tenchi’s Sasami, marrying intelligence and competence with sullen cynicism.

Often playing like a superfast trailer for a much longer series, the viewer is left dazed by the compression of information, events, and background. Director Sato cuts conversations as if they were fight scenes; tone and mood change without a by-your-leave, and there’s an incredible amount of shouting. The camp giant-robot show-within-the-show Gekiganger Three is more than mere comic-relief pastiche of Getter Robo and its ilk—a viewing experience that turns the crew into anime fans, it eventually becomes a cultural bridge between the warring worlds. With a wink to the fan audience, anime saves the universe in much the same way as the power of song in the earlier Macross. The Gekiganger segments were compiled and released with extra footage straight to video in 1997.

The movie release Nadesico: Prince of Darkness (1998) closes the series with a flash-forward redolent of the second Patlabor movie. Years after the original series, the two main leads are missing, presumed dead, and an older Ruri is now the commander of the Nadesico B, fighting an enemy that’s not all it seems.

Nagahama, Tadao

1932–1980. Born in Kagoshima,



Download



Copyright Disclaimer:
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.