Wednesday, November 17, 2021

ANI-MOVIES, *One Miliion Year Trip-Bander Book


Being the first ever made-for-television anime movie, Osamu Tezuka's Bander Book is a spawling space saga spanning eons done in the spirit of Warlods Of Mars and other sci-fi pulp stories. This was released over the Japanese airways in the late 1970s during a telethon, and was one of the most popular anime movie of its time. It was Tezuka's open ticket for taking his panache of transforming humans into animals all the way up to 11.

Sometime in an alternate future, Earthling Bander is sent off by his parents after their interstellar flight is targeted by assassins. Bander is recieved by an alien race of humanoids who all have the ability to turn into animals, but can only maintain their human form thanks to a special control ring. Their peace is disrrupted by invading space gangsters arriving in a ship modeled after the Nautilus from 20,000 League Under The Sea, and run by none other than Black Jack. This is not however the Black Jack from his own manga series where he is a superhuman doctor, but a different version of the character as numerous other Tezuka characters appear as well, including Don Dracula and Astro Boy, and Tezuka himself can be briefly seen in the background of one shot. Black Jack is secretly Bander's brother whose parents were assassinated by a corrupted Earth government, which was the result of them accidently releasing a huge dose of fear gas into the planet's atmosphere through a time warp going back millions of years. On his quest, Bander tries to save his family, and an alien plant princess, all while realizes that his time/space trek can't change mankind's destiny as the future is already in set, despite the fact that all the humans were turned violent due to their own time travel dealings.

This was only recently made available for North America through various streaming services, so it might turn off some non-old school otaku being in Japanese only with subtitles. It was also one of Tezuka's more experimental anime mixing in psychedelic imagery with quick animated sight gags. It can be difficult keeping up with the ever-shifting pace of the plot, but pans out to be a bizarre and still stunning spectacle of an anime viewing.

Saturday, November 6, 2021

MISC. MANGA, *Silbuster


During the mid-90s, the manga market was making its mark in the American geek world, and alot of these weren't done directly through the general Japanese publishers. Several titles were obtained from the underground doujinshi market, which even though a large portion of it is made up of "fan comics", a good portion of it is original material. One of these was a mature but silly sci-fi superhero sentai sage titled Silbuster, done by Ikkou Sahara. Combining elements of Iczer-One, Ultraman, and various Super Robots anime, this was an ongoing spoof saga of supergirls vs. giant monsters.

The Earth is being invaded by mysterious aliens constantly sending spies in human disguise to infiltrate military secrets, along with them occasionally mutating into city destroying kaiju. Doctor Kizuki is helping to prep mankind's best chance, a spaceship named Starlight, along with his middle daughter Mitsuha being genetically altered into a superhuman. After her father is killed by the aliens, Mistuha takes on the codename of Silbuster to battle the space invaders, with her powers of super-strength, finger beams, and the abilty to transform into a giant with an expanding costume, even though her first time going big resulted in her fighting a monster totally naked. Silbuster works with her techinal expert older sister Mitsuho, along with her part time Playboy bunny younger sister Mitsuka to prevent the aliens from advancing their plans. Silbuster also learns kickboxing from the enigmatic Masked Boxer to gain a fighting advantage over kaiju stomping rampages.

The manga went on to be released as 19 seperate issues in English through Antarctic Press, which got two collected edition making for only less than half of its run being covered in graphic novels. Like numerous doujinshi titles translated into English, Silbuster never actually reached its conclusion, possibly due to several of the original fan comics not achieving an ending because of the mangaka being hired into the official manga market. Ikkou Sahara's work has a unique style similar to Artmic and AIC anime from the late 80s, with a love of tokusatsu TV shows that later on went to influence Super Sentai and Power Rangers. There's some cheeky humor and gratuitous fan service throughout the manga, making it not meant for younger readers, but old school otaku will likely favor it as just reading it takes them back to the Golden Age of "Japanimation".