Infinite Ryvius

hopeful_monster

Thousand Master
Said I'd get round to a review sooner or later, well here it is. Hadn’t heard much about this series before Other than it was good and it was a cross between ‘Lord of the Flies’ and ‘Hunt for Red October’, and it is. Good anyway, haven’t read ‘Hunt for Red October’, so can’t compare.
The basic plot places about 500 teenage students on a scrapped prototype wars ship with a living heart powering it. It follows Kouji Aiba, an average navigation student, as they have to fight various factions within the government, as well as various factions within the ship as well. While normally if you hear the words ‘average student’ in anime it means he controls the fate of the galaxy, or god in human form in this case it really means it. Average grades, no desire to fight (as he’d get the snot kicked out of him), and generally not the most assertive or charismatic of the characters. And since there are several dozen recurring characters there are lots to chose from it brings it Kouji’ averageness into greater prominence. While only 20 to 30 are really involved in the plot, many of the others are used to give an idea of what the pleb on the street (or should that be deck) is going through and how they cope with what is happening, (also it’s great fun playing ‘Where’s Wally’). All the characters are not static either, they all change as the series progress, from the captain to the guy who cleans the bog.
While there are the usual love dodecahedrons and comedic moments you find in anime there is a much darker tone than flows through the series than in most anime (but is not pitch black). It shows love as a hugely varied thing, with much darkness as well as light. It also brings up many comments on growing up, justice, inequality and number of other social issues with a mix of subtlety and in you face shock tactics that it keeps you guessing.
The animation is solid, but never makes you sit up a pay attention to it. Like wise the music is never mind blowing, but since I’m not the greatest fan of hip hop or techno, or whatever style music it is probably not the best judge. One thing of real note though is the fact that there are real extra’s on the R4 DVD’s. Not just a few ads and maybe a few production sketches, but translated audio drama's, Ryvius Illusion (Japanese web content from when the series was on TV I think), and AMVs.
Only major gripe about the series is the pacing, the first half is very action orientated, but with almost no explanation as to why anything is happening, then about ¾ of the way through almost all the questions and mysteries are given away in a recap episode. It’s almost as if they got so far then thought ‘Smeg, we haven’t said X, Y and Z. err sod subtlety weaving it plot lets just tell them’.
All in all it is very a good, realistic, gritty, maybe a bit sappy in places, but well worth watching. 8/10
 
I agree, Infinite Ryvius is a very underrated, thought provoking and interesting show. It's not the usual kind of thing you get when you combine animation studio Sunrise with mecha, and its all the better for it. I loved how the ship switches between political structures and each version has notable flaws- dictatorship, democracy and communism all virtually flaw apart under the strains of Ryvius.
 
Watched it for a second time not that long ago, but I still can't quite get to grips with a lot of it.

There are so many things about Infinite Ryvius that I absolutely hated, but at the same time I really enjoyed watching it. I hated the frustration at not knowing what the hell is going on and why things happened that seemed so illogical and did wonder more than once if I missed some important part of the plot somewhere along the way . I spent far too much of my time away from watching this anime just thinking about everything and seeing if I could figure it out for myself. The problem is, as much as I hated this side of it, I loved it as well! Not necessarily because it made me think too hard (and I’m not a fan of thinky jobs :lol:) but because I felt something the whole way through. It might have been annoyance and frustration, but that doesn’t mean it’s bad to feel that way. It felt good being pissed off with the “bigwigsâ€
 
hopeful_monster said:
...it was a cross between ‘Lord of the Flies’ and ‘Hunt for Red October’...
Since I've read and enjoyed both of these, I'm sold already! As an aside, there was a lot in Clancy's original '...October' novel that was missing from the film, so its worth a read!

Anyways, this sounds like something that's a bit out of the ordinary so I'll make a point of tracking it down.
 
Miaka-chan if you though Ryvius was frustrating would love to know what you thought of something like Eva. While i agree that there was a lot unanswered until the end, there was enough going on to distract me, with both battles or emotional traumas, as well as hints as to a reason behind what was happening.
 
hopeful_monster said:
Miaka-chan if you though Ryvius was frustrating would love to know what you thought of something like Eva. While i agree that there was a lot unanswered until the end, there was enough going on to distract me, with both battles or emotional traumas, as well as hints as to a reason behind what was happening.
No you wouldn't :lol: :lol: :lol:
I haven't watched Eva in about 4 years because of THAT ending ^__^
I hate people who profess to totally comprehend what the ending was all about and my personal opinion is the creator was on some real wacky drugs when he wrote that bit :wink:
You seriously don't want my opinion on Rei Ayanami either - I'm a Rei hater extraordinaire :twisted:

I liked Infinite Ryvius; I've watched it twice. I hate and love the frustration, but I felt put out by all of the "out of anime" thinking I had to do. I would be making a cup of coffee trying to figure out why the adults were persecuting those kids. I hated the bickering, the elitism, the egos, the saps, the fools etc that were the kids, but at the same time understood them. I hated waiting so long for answers and felt the viewer was being forced to watch whether they wanted to or not, because you'd be mad to miss out on the ending!
Now Argento Soma had me thinking and thinking and coming up with all sorts of possibilities, but it wasn't frustrating. The actual answers were gob-smackingly shocking and even though you had to wait until the end to know the truth, it didn't annoy the hell out of me while I was watching it!

Hints? you saw hints? where, where?! :lol:
 
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