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VivisQueen

  • Joined Jan 19, 2006
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Story

I imagine the executive meeting that inspired this dull, jabbering insult to my intelligence went a bit like this.

Director: I’ve been thinking lately we should do something deep and relevant about today’s global financial situation. It’s been all over the news and I think the kids would appreciate someone really bringing it down to their level.

Exec: Uhh, really? But finance is like so BOOOOOORING.

Director: Well, of course we could spice it up a little, you know, give it a representational hook or gimmick. I have one or two ideas that I think would really -

Exec: Oh oh oh! I’ve got it, I’ve got it! MASCOT BATTLES!

Director: What?

Exec: Write this down! It’s not often I get such inspirational flashes. I can see it now - economic conflicts figuratively enacted through pet monsters! ‘Cause everyone likes Pokemon, right??

The result, ladies and gentlemen, is this show, the worst possible marriage of everything that shouldn’t exist in anime. Dry, abstract exposition about money combined with utterly mindless battles between metaphorical creatures that have no real-life relevance. Burrow deep enough and C: The Money of Soul and Possibility Control appears to contain a human tale about taking huge financial risks for the sake of loved ones. That this is mere veneer becomes clear the moment we ask why the characters don’t just work overtime, get a second job, or aim for promotion, considering any of these require less effort for more guarantee. The financial battles are vehicles for an impending apocalypse caused by some… thing that gets no explanation. All we know is, at some point, a digitised whatsit begins to sweep through Japan and the hero has to do stuff in the ether to make it go away.

Not that the fights are any good either. Occurring without reason or logic, they generate about as much friction as a limp dick. Just as one combatant summons giant balls of fire, the opponent blocks with an inexplicable beam of sparkling blackness, all the while an electronic voice yells nonsensical financial jargon not even the Wall Street folk would enjoy piecing together (how to counter sensibly when your enemy has just thrown a hail of MACROFLATION!!?). There are no recognisable dimensions to the battles, no identifiable limitations that tell me ‘this person is highly skilled compared to that person’. Thus we must take for granted that Souichiro Mikuni, the cool, mysterious rich guy, is unbeatable because everyone says so; when he fights, I can’t actually tell.


Animation

I’d like to put a message out there for the kids growing up on a diet of C-like atrocities: animated backgrounds full of feeling, atmosphere, and texture do exist. For evidence, look to Mahou Shoujo Madoka Magica or Eden of the East. The polygonal edifices we get in C bring to mind the artistic sensibilities of a McDonalds restaurant - cold, garish, and above all cheap. Effects happen, shapes and colours and patterns zoom past but none of it serves any discernible purpose except to distract us for another five seconds.


Sound

In moments when the plot wholly eluded me, the score managed to restore some of the potency of the situation. Unfortunately, sandwiched between unmemorable opening and closing themes, and voiced over by a crap script, the courageous cinematic soundtrack gets entirely lost.


Characters

If there’s anything anime needs more of, it’s teenage boys trying to get stronger. I’m being sarcastic, of course. What anime needs more of are characters I can tell apart from all the others. C’s cast melts into a giant pot of tokenism and archetype that effectively abandons the audience to apathy. I’m surprised, for instance, that the bland, pineapple-haired protagonist (had to look up his name, Kimimaro Yoga) was thought qualified to be one when his only notable features are being nice and harbouring angst about his long-lost father. The only vivid performance belongs to Masakaki, the guide of the alternate dimension in which the battles take place; he is a nod to Willy Wonka that strips away all the child-friendly veneer and replaces it with a chilling pitilessness.


Overall

Colour me spoiled if you will, but I like to spend my time watching things that I understand. I like characters for which I feel empathy doing things I could imagine myself doing if I were in their situation. Most of the financial jargon the target audience will struggle to relate to and anyone who does will snooze simply at the banal abstractedness of it. Instead of a poignant metaphor on the dangers of economic risk-taking, we get a discombobulated mess that farts a host of vague concepts. The only emotion this show inspires in the process is boredom.

3/10 story
4/10 animation
7.5/10 sound
3/10 characters
3/10 overall

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jkun Jul 10, 2011

Nice review.

@funnyweirdgirl, you haven't seen the show yet so how would you know whether or not this review is accurate?

GGXtreme Jul 9, 2011

This is a review I can agree with.

The show was a mess. The story had as much direction as a mob in panic over some unpredictable disaster. The 'fantasy world' it created was only defined by the asspulls every other episode that stood in for 'rules', and the characters had less dimension than the CGI cars they drove. There were no defined goals, goods or evils; the main character just waded aimlessly through the financial mess, adapting the purposes of the last character he had a conversation with. By the time Yoga decides to give thinking for himself a try (which he does by turning down the primary love interest...good job?), the show and everything therin are beyond fixing and the 'plot' resumes spewing 'surprises' that force a severly lackluster resolution. Even Yoga had a "what the fuck kind of ending is this?" reaction.I'll give the show points for effort, trying something new and being intensely eye-catching. But beyond that, it's not worth 11 episodes of someone's time.

 

funnyweirdgirl Jul 9, 2011

wooow i haven't even seen this anime yet, but woow. sigh* i appreciate the reviews people give to anime, but i hate it when it is a negative review. like everyone has there own tastes, but when its negative reviews the cons always weigh so much that it makes people reading the review not watch the anime. i honestly didn't like this review because you completely bashed the anime without a chance of survival, like give people a chance to watch the anime and be the judge themselves! i do not blame the people who call you a hater, there is a difference between not liking a anime and writing a fair review and hating a anime and writing a review about why you hate it.

valocis Jul 9, 2011

Lol, I hate it when I read a review and then am like, "Okay I might not watch this now.......crap its on my Want to watch list already along with several 100 other anime so I might as well watch the anime and be my own judge......"

Dace67 Jul 8, 2011

I wouldn't have rated it so low but I certainly understand why others would. Even understanding everything the show throws at you didn't really help me enjoy the show at all.