Friday, 13 March 2015

Analyzing Code Geass Anime Review

By Leslie Ball


Code Geass is a wildly popular example of the Japanese art of anime, a specialized type of cartoon. You can count on anime to have colorful graphics, colorful characters and colorful story lines. Code Geass anime review is a perfect example. First developed in 1917, it became popular released commercially in around 1960.

This series has features in common with "The Wonder Years, " "The Hunger Games, " and "1984." You could probably throw in a little "Terminator" as well, since the presence of the Knightmares, a super-powered android system developed as a military weapon, is germane to the story. Each episode should include a warning that watching it could lead to addiction.

Blue-ray discs and DVDs of the television series, shown on the Cartoon Channel, sold better than a million copies. Idsvjbt was shown for two years, winning awards at the international anime fair in Tokyo on both occasions. The show was also made into light novels and manga comics in the United States.

The series is dystopian because the story line centers around Area 11, what used to be Japan until the Holy Britannian Empire ran roughshod over it during its invasion. The residents of Area 11 are called "Elevens."

Code Geiss is related to the Hunger Games because it, too, is a dystopian novel. In the case of post-apocalyptic Panem, the undesirable society resides in District 12.

It is its similarities with "1984, " the George Orwell novel published in 1949 describing a then-futuristic society. Where the three political powers in the anime were called Britannia, the European Union and the Chinese Federation, in 1984, they are known as Eastasia, Eurasia, and Oceana. Those who do not believe in coincidence might conclude that the creators at Sunrise, possibly even the writer of Code Geass, Ichiro Okouchi, were channeling Orwell at the time.

The Wonder Years has been included because the protagonist in both cases is an idealistic young man. In the Wonder Years, this is 12-17 year-old Kevin Arnold (the show ran for six years), while in the anime under review, the central character is Lelouch Lamperouge, an exiled prince from Britannia. Lelouch receives the gift of Gaessian power, through which he can get anybody to do anything by simply looking at them. The youth's reaction when he first exercises his new-found power explains perfectly why the first episode was called, "The Day A New Demon Was Born."

The series is gripping and the first episode will leave you wanting for more. It's peppy theme tune could be a commercial jingle for a type of girly cuddly toy, teenage makeup or a new kind of bubble gum, yet the lyrics paradoxically talk about mournful anguish. The song has a positive outcome. If you want to know if the ending of CG is happy, you are going to have to watch the episodes and discover that for yourself. Think of Episode 1 as a gateway to a new addiction and be prepared to binge watch over and over again.




About the Author:



Unknown

Mình là Dũng. Hiện đang là quản trị viên của website http://idocs.vn. Mình sẽ chia sẻ với các bạn những tài liệu là các Luận văn, Đồ án, Tiểu luận, Giáo án, Sách ... Giúp các bạn tham khảo và sử dụng trong học tập và công tác. Các bạn có thể liên hệ với mình qua yahoo: iDocsvn hoặc mail: idocsvn@gmail.com !

0 nhận xét:

Post a Comment

 

Copyright @ 2013 Free eBooks Download.

Developed by Mr.Dpro