Dennis D. McDonald (ddmcd@ddmcd.com) consults from Alexandria Virginia. His services include writing & research, proposal development, and project management.

KABANERI OF THE IRON FORTRESS, SEASON 1

KABANERI OF THE IRON FORTRESS, SEASON 1

Review by Dennis D. McDonald

This 12 episode animated series combines an action-packed road trip through a mythical ancient Japan complete with giant machines, zombies with steel encased hearts, steampunk, riotously colored 2D and computerized animation, exquisite detail, constant cliffhangers, strongly defined male and female characters, an epic soundtrack, and constant bloody and violent action.

We may have seen all these elements individually before in other anime but their concentrated presence here is engaging and impressive.

The greatest appeal is how the strong characters are so well defined, drawn, voiced, and integrated with the constantly moving and aggressive storyline. Others have compared KABANERI with ATTACK ON TITAN (e.g., because of the role of the walled cities). I think KABANERI stands on its own.

Here the human population, under constant threat from a zombie infested countryside, has retreated to giant walled cities interconnected by railroad lines traversed by gigantic city-sized armored locomotives. Travel between walled cities in these giant locomotives is constantly threatened by zombie hordes that have evolved the ability to cluster into giant centrally-controlled monster-sized assemblages. All of this takes place in a society where warring families control different cities and rail lines in an uneasy stability overseen by a supreme ruler of questionable character.

Much mysticism and outrageousness are on display. The strong story and strong characters make it all worthwhile as we careen from one calamity to another. Recommended for fans of action, animation, and anime!

Review copyright (c) 2017 by Dennis D. McDonald. To find more reviews like this scroll down. To find out more about my consulting services go here. An edited version of this review is available on aNewDomain.net.

 

Richard Kelly’s “DONNIE DARKO” (DIRECTOR’S CUT)​​​​​​​

Richard Kelly’s “DONNIE DARKO” (DIRECTOR’S CUT)​​​​​​​

Jocelyn Moorhouse’s THE DRESSMAKER

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