











 |
EXCEL SAGA (PG)
|
|
|
DETAILS:
Volume 1: The Weirdness Has Begun
DVDs $34.95 each (Multilingual - English/Japanese)
Region 4. Running time 125 mins
Available in Australia
from Madman.
Episodes
01: Koshi Rikdo Assassination Plot
02: The Woman from Mars
03: The Sacrificial Lamb of the Venomous Great Escape of
Hell
04: Love Puny
05: The Interesting Giant Tower
|
SYNOPSIS:
No anime is safe
from the barrage of parodies and "subtle" jokes
contained in this episode series. Excel, a female agent for
ACROSS (a secret organization whose total membership is 2),
deals with all manners of the insane.
From Poke-demonic style aliens, superheroes
sporting afros to one demented creator, Koshi Rikdo, tormenting
the main character of his own anime. What's a girl to do but
cause as much destruction and mayhem as possible? With a cast
that should be institutionalized, and a heroine who should
have a straight jacket as her uniform, this show will make
you laugh, make you cry, and definitely make you question
your sanity.
|
|
REVIEW: There is a certain pointless, charm
in self-referential entertainment. On a good day, it can be
almost painfully clever, but on the other hand there is only
so much tongue/cheek action one can handle in one session
and such self-absorption can get a little old after a while.
One might even wonder, in this case at least, exactly how
much of an increase in pointless charm certain genres of anime
can actually take before critical mass is exceeded and they
collapse into nothingness.
| |
| Wonder no longer. Theoretical
Physics and Post-Modern art move over. Quack Experimental
Anime Excel Saga proves that in anime at least, the
source of energy is not only terrifyingly inexhaustible it
actually demands a certain educated awareness to properly
appreciate it. Not of course that I would describe this truly,
deeply, apparently out-of-control series as high-art, or indeed
even high-brow, God forbid. No, Excel Saga
is art cleverly disguised as madness. Amidst all that chaos
there is a certain amount of skill involved, a knowledge of
the vagaries and histories of anime and manga enough to impress
even the expert otaku.
|  |
| The story itself is almost irrelevant
(which...uh...when I think about it, is really just another
genre feature in itself in some cases isn't it...). But this
series is also wonderfully irreverent, and indeed that’s
the whole point. Each episode is a genre unto itself, each
parodying its source with wit and style not only in order
to ridicule but to examine, to dissect the medium and see
what makes it tick. Each episode, given express permission
by the author, one Koshi Rikdo, undertakes the next twenty-four
minutes according to the definitions and limitations of its
origins, to often-hilarious effect, right down to the details.
Plot line, character rendition, even animation style, none
of them are sacred and the distinctions in genre they indicate
are applied with deliberate intention. From easily recognisable
Super-Deformed caricatures, terrifyingly cute Pikachu-type
aliens, shoujo lighting techniques and dating simulation game
graphics to the animation stylism of artists like Monkey Punch
(Lupin III) and Reiji Matsumoto (Galaxy Express
999, Space Battleship Yamato), Excel
Saga is a no holds barred class on Japanese Pop Culture
101.The references fly thick and fast and in some cases so
high you can feel them shooting past overhead.
|  |
| And perhaps that is Excel Saga's only real
flaw - some of the references are obscure in the extreme for
the average Western anime fan so be prepared to utilise that
pause button and the extremely handy AD Video Notes,
which appear in the form of the much valued, possibly tasty,
emergency supply Minchi. The much-abused pooch and its cartoon
bubble hints might seem like a distraction but believe me it
will help with the more culturally and linguistically specific
puns and provide some serious extra chuckles into the bargain.
This is one series where it pays to check the extras for production
information first. |
 |
| Not that Excel Saga is necessarily impossible
to get. Even a little exposure to 'serious' anime will have
the farce alarms buzzing (haha!). Excel's irritating screech,
exacerbated by her inability to pause for breath but redeemed
by the fact that she always seems to stand on the trap door,
is something that many anime fans will find instantly familiar.
So too the cool, calm, handsome demeanour of the great Lord
Ilpalazzo, visionary and leader of the secret ideological organization
Across to which Excel claims overly enthusiastic membership.
The man is poster boy for bishounen heroes everywhere (I’m
positive there’s more than a little Clamp in his design)
but if it ever gets out that he’s really just a loser
the world might really be in trouble! Hyatt, ex-Martian
princess and permanently terminally ill completes this little
coterie, and provides just a modicum of sense, or at least she
would if she could stop dying for more than five minutes at
a time. |
 |
| That none of them can be taken even slightly
seriously as they plot to take over the City of F on their
way to conquering the world (after the electricity bills are
paid of course) only really reinforces the idea that Rikdo
knew exactly what he was doing when parodying the
genres from which he drew. And that's not even the end of
it! Film references and in-jokes abound, a combination of
appropriation, inspiration and examination that forms the
apex around which Excel Saga’s true
brilliance revolves.
I, Deni Stoner, hereby give my permission for Excel
Saga to be enjoyed as the madly self-referential,
extremely hillarious, immensely clever, genre-parodying entertainment
that it is !! |
 |
Rating: 9 Screeching, Madcap Anime Anti-stereotypes
out of 10!
| |
About
the DVD The interface design of the first volume is minimum
fuss and fluster, providing simple (once you take a second
to work out the code) interaction. The image transfer quality
is top-notch and the colours are rich and brilliant without
any washed-out blacks. Sound is up there as well and the dub
is good with clear, easy to read text in the sub. You might
find, unless you're a speed reader, you'll prefer the dub
to the Japanese subbed version, merely due to the speed at
which Excel can talk! It's interesting to note that the Japanese
seiyuu for Excel is none other than Kotono Mitsuishi who voices
for Misato Katsuragi in Neon Genesis Evangelion and
anyone familiar with that will understand how hard it might
be for text to follow dialogue when Mitsuishi really
gets going. With the subs on, as well as the vid-notes, there's
a lot to digest.
Features:
- AD Vid-notes - an in-play function which provides info
on the more obscure references
- Clean open/close - creditless
- Japanese open/close
- Video piracy warning - that's in case you didn't catch
it at the beginning (the only time I've ever read one
of these darn things!)
- Original Japanese trailer
- Production sketches
- ADV previews - Gasaraki, Nadesico, Orphen, Evangelion,
Steel Angel Kurumi
Places of interest:
The Official
Excel Saga website, worth every k of your download time.
Reviewed by Deni Stoner
|

|
H E R O I C * C I N E M A
http://www.heroic-cinema.com
|