xbl0x180 wrote:
You either have a R2 copy that was fan translated or you have a copy of the U.S. Renditions videotape. The "Chariots Of Fire" theme was censored out of the North American dvd release by Bandai for fear of copyright infringement (they didn't wanna pay royalties to Vangelis for its use).
Ah must be the R2 one. It's actually a beautiful set, super quality, and came with all the extra science lessons and 3 short film segments based around the universe. I'd link you all to it but I'll probably get in trouble with the shmup feds, so PM me if you want it.
Just finished Gunbuster this morning and damn,
that's what it's all about.
I can't believe it took me that long to actually watch something that awesome, I should have been onto that from the beginning (I knew of its existence of course.)
It was terrific. I was totally seduced by the beautiful colour and design work, and that incredible depth of imagination Anime had when they were all about exploring sci-fi.
SPOILERS:
The whole messing with Einstein's theory of relativity and light travel versus time was capitalised on beautifully. I'm not sure that the maths was always accurate, but it didn't matter because it was cemented so well into the storyline. And yes, this had what we would consider today as fairly trite themes: Young girls in skimpy clothing, a smattering of tits and ass, a hero who has to find her inner strength to prevail and become a hero of the ages, and lots of melodrama; yet it was still utterly captivating. All the influences were great (I was loving the product placement), and the SD science lessons were brilliant. I loved the fact that Gainax were bold enough to tell folks there was no episode 5 preview because "we haven't finished it yet", that Noriko has Miyazaki tributes on her wall and that they came up with a warp technology pioneered by prof 'Tanneuser' who developed the 'Tanneuser Gate', lol.
"I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate." -
Roy Batty, Blade Runner
And, I'm sure this has been mentioned in the past (but it was a new association for me), but does anyone see the quite obvious Gunbuster influence in MD Advanced Busterhawk Gleylancer?
I didn't really have both pieces of the puzzle until now, but Gleylancer is like Gunbuster the shmup that never was!
Closing: I don't care for the rose tinted glasses argument, yet I'm willing to accept that some of what I find beautiful about Anime was definitely crystallised in the Gunbuster era. That said, on the flip side, taking the 80's aura out of the frame, it's still more fun, with stronger characters, greater heart and a thousand times more artistry than the tin-canned factory pieces they churn out today. Someone show me something as good as Gunbuster that was made in the last decade and I'll eat my head.
EDIT: Getting Diebuster now.