Final Fantasy: Unlimited
Saturday, January 21st, 2006Synopsis
A mysterious pillar of darkness appears in Japan, opening a dimensional gate where two monsters were released fighting each other in an epic battle. Two kids, Yu Hayakawa and Ai Hayakawa embark on a journey in search for their parents who vanished during the fight. Hitching a ride on a phantom train, they arrive in a mysterious world accompanied by Lisa, a girl who they met on the train. Soon, they begin jumping from one world to another gathering clues about their parents with the help of Lisa and another mysterious person named Kaze who has the ability to summon creatures with his gun. Will the kids ever find their parents? Who is Kaze and what is this man’s past that seems so dark and enigmatic?
Review
A person may either be a hardcore Final Fantasy fan or a person may not even know what Final Fantasy is. If one happen to luck out being a fan, then this can be an anime that that person has been waiting for all his life. If not, all I can say is… Welcome.. To …Hell. Lucky for me for the most part, it doesn’t matter if I’m a fan or not right now.
Final Fantasy: Unlimited attempts to bring you back all the lovable characters you saw in many Final Fantasy games. There are Moogles Cactuars, summons, battles, multi dimensional transportations, and yes, even cid is in this anime. Unfortunately, that’s all I can say about this anime.
The impression I got watching the first episode was ‘oh look… kids looking for their parents. Sounds interesting.’. It turns out that these kids were nothing more than plot driving devices. If anything, the story was based more on Kaze and how long it would take for him to summon using his gun.
Also, the characters were flat and bland. We have Ai and Yu who we don’t really see much of them other than possessing some third person characteristics. We also have Makenshi who the viewers also don’t know much about. Lisa who tags along with these kids and tries to show her caring side up to the point where it seems also artificial. Also, we have Kaze who we don’t really know anything about either. It didn’t seem like the anime really care much to introduce Kaze other than some awesome guy who swings his mighty gun around like a toy every kid wants. Seriously, there are many other characters that don’t get introduced other than the name they have and the evil laugh they possess. In other words, most of the characters fail to show depth ness in them. Maybe Lisa and Kaze develop a little of that, but hell, I’ve seen episodes some anime that are 20 minutes long with more character development than the two can develop holding hands with each together.
In addition, the animation of almost everything was horrible. The character designs were extremely plain and simple. This includes humans, monsters… etc etc. I mean come on… most of the monster we see are mushrooms with the ability of a jump attack and releasing spores. However, I was a little amused when Kaze summons using his gun, though it seemed like more time was dedicated by the animators on that one event than the whole anime combined.
Furthermore, the fighting was uneventful for the most part. Lisa has the ability to use magic and Kaze has the ability to spend five minutes flipping bullets into his demon gun. Most of the time, I wonder what the monsters are doing while Kaze is spending all his time doing that. Common sense says they actually… attack him? Sounds like a plan right?
Lastly, each episode felt extremely unbalanced with the preceding episode and vice-versa. I got the feeling of watching Kino’s Journey gone horribly wrong. For example, the first half of this anime shows our ‘protagonists’ moving from world to world riding on the phantom train ending with a resolution most of the time. For the last half however, we get many episodes which is a result of a single cause. Thus, we move from being episodic to where each episode heavily depend on each other in order to make sense.
Final Fantasy: Unlimited can be an anime for Final Fantasy fans to appreciate. Otherwise, stay out of its path. You might get killed by some jumping mushroom attack.
The Breakdown
25 episodes of the planned 52 episodes of this anime. The second reason seemed to have been gone with the wind.