By: Robert Murphy
In the not too distant year of 2039, Tokyo is under the
control of the organization known as GHQ, which was the only company able to
develop a cure for a disease that struck Japan known as the Apocalypse virus.
Since then, GHQ has been much like a warden of the land; protecting its people
from the possibility of future outbreak, but this is not as keen as it may seem.
The story follows Shu Ouma, an average seventeen year old boy, who encounters a
mysterious young girl, Inori Yuzuriha, which changes his life forever. Shu is
bestowed with the King’s Power which allows him to pull “Voids” out of people
in the form of various weapons or tools which he uses to aid the terrorist
organization Funeral Parlor which he is now wrapped up in.
First off, I must say that from the animation stand point the
show is extremely sleek and stellar, I haven’t enjoyed animation like it since
I watched Sword Art Online. This is
especially notable when you take a look at some of the action scenes that take
place, mainly the battles Shu is apart off. When Shu pulls out a Void from
someones body is quite a sight to see; especially once you see what he can
do with it, and you truly understand why the power he’s obtained is called the
King’s Power. The weapons he uses can range from a giant sword to a shield, and
he can jump on spell like pedestals that form underneath him much like you’d
see Dante do in a Devil May Cry game.
Not only is the animation exceptional in the battles but its also impressive in
regular shots, characters are well put together and just look great.
This, however, was the only main draw of the show, as I
watched the story progress further and further I began to notice many
similarities to one of my favorite animes, Code
Geass. In fact, the only difference is that they take away Geass and replace
it with the unique Void ability, oh, and how sub par it is in comparison to Code Geass, too. Stop me if you’ve heard
this before, Japan
is taken over by an outside power and their cruelty and oppression of the
Japanese people inspires a young student to fight out against them with a power
he’s gained from a mysterious girl. The similarities don’t stop there though; the
ace pilot for the terrorists is a young girl, in a red jumpsuit that pilots a
mech robot known as an Endlave. But the icing on the cake of similarties comes
from a quote that the leader of Funeral Parlor receives from an elderly
Japanese opposer to GHQ about the pure white snow of Japan being tarnished by
the GHQ people, the concept of snow was a bit of controversy in Code Geass and the fact that it came up
in Guilty Crown was a final red light
to me.
But, you know this probably wouldn’t be such a big deal to me
maybe if it weren’t for the fact the show is thoroughly awful. Guilty Crown’s story enters the world of
ridiculous and over-dramatic for the sake of being over-dramatic and it just
ruins any hope of it being saved. For starters, Shu is a hopeless Shonen
character who constantly goes back and forth on his loyalties to Funeral Parlor
where one minute he pledges allegiance, and the next he’s questioning every
little thing they do. Then, there is our C.C. carbon copy Inori, who is a robot
type character but one who doesn’t have the personality to pull it off and
still be engaging like C.C. was. Moving on to the realm of ridiculous, at one
point the horrible virus that ravage Tokyo not to long ago is reignited at one
point and to stop it Inori literally sings and it stops the infection, really?!,
singing to stop a virus plague killing everyone. Sure we’re in a world where
someone can pull weapons out of people’s chest, but this was just ridiculous and
I’m afraid it gets even worse from that episode on which is about half way
through the show.
Guilty Crown did
nothing but piggyback many of its ideas from Code Geass, and where this may have worked if it had an engaging
cast or interesting new take, it just didn’t. Many of the new ideas the show
tries to bring to the table are in the world of ridiculous and just down right
dumb, especially when Ino sang to stop the outbreak of the Apocalypse virus. The
show also tries its hand and fan service to make people watch a little
more with characters like Tsugumi, a fourteen year old hacker in a skin tight
suit who has her controls just out of reach so she jumps up and down or has
buttons behind her she activates with her butt. So, in all honesty, Guilty Crown is just a mess, it’s like
they copied one show and tried to throw ideas to replace things here and there, which I bet was disappointing for a lot of people who saw all the hype about
this show.
Good:
- Animation is very sleek and solid
- Fights were entertaining in the midst of a bad show
Bad:
- Characters are all exceedingly poor
- The whole show reeks of copied ideas from Code Geass
- The show comes out with all the clichés and enters new ideas
that were just ridiculous
Scully Rating: 3.0 out of 10
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