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Rayearth (Volumes 1 - 3)
Madman - Rated M (medium
level violence)
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SYNOPSIS:
Three friends discover they need to change the course of
destiny to save the world... and learn that faint in one's friendship
is the ultimate power.
Hikaru, Umi and Fuu, the Magic Knights destined to protect
the Earth against its ravaged sister-world Cephiro, stand together
before a terrifying power. Eagle, Princess Emeraude's brother
and keeper of the enternal dream in which she remains frozen,
has sworn to destroy the girls and everything they love, to
kill and kill until nothing in the universe remains. His only
goal is complete destruction - can even Rayearth, the awesome
combination of all three Magic Knights and their spirit beasts
prevent the murder of two entire worlds?
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DETAILS:
Rated M.
Video $22.95 per volume
Format: VHS
Run Time: 60 mins
Language: English
Produced: 2000
Company: Madman
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| HEROIC-CINEMA'S
REVIEW:
If there is one thing about anime, and in particular anime
from the creative pool of Clamp (check out the X review for
more info on the Clamp collective), it is that nothing ever
happens on a mundane level. If you find yourself in a Clamp
story, of indeterminate high-school age and Chosen (it doesn't
really matter what for) you can at least be sure the last thing
you are going to be is bored. It's the world at stake
(again) and it's up to you and your friends to fight the forces
of evil (again). Will you prevail? Well probably, but it won't
be easy and you'll probably take quite a beating in the process.
Lucky you're blessed with astonishing, supernatural powers,
but then in the end it will be your humanity, not your super-humanity,
which will defeat evil and save the world.
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| A little formulaic
perhaps, but what is continually satisfying about Clamp's work
is that it's never quite as straightforward as that. Rayearth,
known in its manga form as Magic Knights Rayearth, might
be aimed at a slightly younger age group than something like X
but don't ever mistake it for Disney (can I get sued for
saying that?). Underneath its surface moral lessons abound, orbiting
a central theme of self-awareness versus self-illusion. Never
mind that there are huge, hulking spirit-beasts, called Deities,
whose colossal battles destroy whole city blocks, this is a story
about the willingness to face the realities of growing up, to
understand and accept the role of personal responsibility and
all the pain that accompanies it. |
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The three main characters - school mates Hikaru, Umi and Fuu
- find themselves nearing the end of school and the reality
of never seeing each other again. Under an enchanted Sakura,
they make a fateful, perhaps childishly innocent wish to stay
together forever. True to the tenant of Be Careful What You
Wish For they get their opportunity but not in the way they
expect. There are forces at large in the universe settling in
Earth's dimension with the intention of destroying all life
in order to fulfill their wish. What precisely this wish is
remains unclear throughout, but it doesn't change the fact that
all that stands between Earth and its destruction are three
unprepared teenagers. The friends must first face their own
fears and self-deceptions alone before they can team up and
fully assimilate their spirit beasts, Deities of immense power
who need the humanity in each girl to be free from illusion
in order to manifest their full warlike aspects and defend the
earth. Yet illusions are not the divine providence of humanity
and defending the earth requires strength of both body and spirit.
The gods of Cephiro, the forces behind the threat to the earth,
delude themselves also and in the end it is the girls that show
them how to face their pain and move past it.
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| Originally,
I was supposed to review the third volume in this trilogy only.
I sat down to watch it, and while the action was kind of cool,
the story was interesting and it was easy enough to spot the bad
guy (he's always the prettiest), was that guy in black a friend
or foe? And why were the girls grieving over the death of an enemy?
Things seemed a little more complex than just coming in a third
of the way through the story allowed. I was forced to wander over
to Trash Video
(shameless plug) and hire the first two volumes just to fill out
the details (so you're getting a three for one deal here). |
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In order, things make a little more sense. Rayearth
is another example of how lovely both Clamp's visual and narrative
style can be. While it is not overtly violent it is often graceful,
and action packed enough to hold interest. The plot unfolds
well despite the fact that on the surface it seems to be aimed
at a slightly older, post Sailor Moon age-group and things
move a little too fast to get any more complicated than that.
There are a few plot holes, the worst of which is that it is
never completely clear as to what the much talked about 'final
wish' is, and exactly who made it. Wishes seem to be a bit of
a theme in Clamp and seem to have something to do with a hidden
desire to have something happen no matter what the consequences
to yourself or indeed anybody else.
But anyway, despite the confusion over this issue, it is still
a pleasant, inoffensive movie. The music is quite nice, very
operatic in parts although not constantly dominating scenes,
and there is nothing really grating about the dub. There is
a lot of yelling and screaming which got a bit annoying but
that's fairly standard for anime of any sort and it only becomes
a real problem during the battle scenes.
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| It won't blow
you away, probably, but it's fun, nice to look at and easy to
listen to. As well, it's interesting if you feel like thinking
about it that much. Personally I liked what Rayearth had
to say under its surface, its basic comments on self-awareness
and I liked its consistency in that respect. The characters, even
the so-called evil ones, confront this basic issue in one way
or another. Whether because of a need to hide from pain, from
fear or from truth each character reaches a point of illumination,
of understanding which is not always crucial only to their survival
but to their humanity, to what they believe is right and wrong.
Maybe I have selective memory but I don't remember any Disney
film trying to teach me anything quite that adult and for that
Rayearth deserves more respect than the delegation to mere
kids' cartoon. |
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Rating: Six god-like super-warriors out
of ten
Reviewed by Deni Stoner
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H E R O I C * C I N E M A
http://www.heroic-cinema.com
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