The other review for the third Mecha Month takes us not quite as far back as
Matchless Raijin-Oh did; this time we're only going back to 2006. In this year Toei Animation was celebrating their 50th Anniversary, and one of their products during this celebratory year was a relative rarity from them nowadays, a mech anime. Yeah, they had a notable hit with
Gaiking: Legend of Daiku-Maryu shortly before, and I guess you could include 2005's video game adaptation
Xenosaga the Animation, but prior to those Toei's last mech anime was the generally ignored
Getter Robo Go from 1991 (& before that you'd have to go back to the early-80s for titles like
GoLion,
DaiRugger XV,
Albegas, &
Lazerion). Not only that, but the topic of this review was the last mech anime Toei has ever done until literally just a few days ago with the theatrical debut of their sci-fi movie
Expelled from Paradise. What am I trying to get at, though? Hisashi Hirai.
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This is literally the only image I could find of Hirai |
It's honestly pretty astonishing that a man like Hisashi Hirai has become such a highly notable name in anime without ever having directed anything; the highest he's done is animation direction for OPs, EDs, & the occasional episode. Instead, Hirai is known primarily as a character designer, with his first notable work being 1995's
Wild Knights Gulkeeva. He would then go on to do designs for
Infinite Ryvius &
s-CRY-ed, but he didn't became a big name until he was brought on for 2002's
Mobile Suit Gundam SEED. His style was very sleek & for
SEED he featured a bit more of a bishonen look, which helped attract female fans. What happened, though, was that his next two works, 2004's
Fafner &
Gundam SEED Destiny, looked a little too similar. How similar, exactly? Well,
SEED Destiny's lead, Shinn Asuka, looked almost 100% exactly like
Fafner's Kazuki Makabe; the only notable difference was eye color! Not only that, Hirai didn't seem to feature much variety in general when it came to making larger casts of characters, leading to anime fans (especially in North America) nicknaming him "Same-Face" Hirai. Naturally, when Toei debuted their 50th Anniversary mech anime, which featured Hirai character designs, fans immediately began mocking it. Then once the show debuted it was deemed one of the worst mech anime of recent memory & promptly buried under the sands of time. How bad, you ask? Well, joke anime news site AnimeMaru deemed it special enough to warrant a bogus license announcement from Sentai Filmworks
this past May, complete with not just a DVD & Blu-Ray release but also VHS. So let's take a look at the most obscure Hisaishi Hirai mech anime out there,
Gin-Iro no Olynssis (
Olynssis, The Silver Color).
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You can ignore the "Tokito" at the end... Everyone else does. |
It is the year 3567 & the Earth is a post-apocalyptic mess. A being known only as the Consul operates from the Moon & sends down organic robots called Gardeners in an attempt to eradicate humanity. At the same time, the Earth itself is surrounded by the Olynssis Phenomenon, a space-time distortion that has sent people both to the past & the future. Tokito Aizawa is a young man who works with some others as Hunters, who take out Gardeners for a living using their Crawlers, which are created from salvaged Gardener parts. While stopping in Meteotown, Tokito comes across a mysterious girl named Téa, who can't remember anything past 6 months ago & insists that he's a man named Koichi. She shows him a secret part of the town that leads to the lake right before the town is attacked. Téa lead Tokito there specifically to release a giant robot named Silber from its slumber & have him pilot it. Tokito agrees to pilot it alongside Téa, while she travels with Tokito's firends in an effort to find out her hidden past, and if she's from the present, past, or even the future.