Arcane Review...
Sep. 25th, 2022 10:14 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Finished Arcane - which was surprisingly good. I don't like video games, and usually adaptations from them vary from awful to mediocre, but this thing was brilliantly adapted. It may well be the best adaptation from a video game ever done.
You can't tell it was adapted from a video game - I only know it was - because they tell me in the front and end credits. That's the only way you'd know.
Airing in 2021, it quickly became NETFLIX's most popular and best reviewed animated series ever. It also, is the first animated streaming series to ever win an Emmy. According to the Verge Arcane beat another streaming exclusive, Marvel’s What If…? (available to watch on Disney Plus), as well as non-streaming offerings from Bob’s Burgers, The Simpsons, and Rick and Morty, to the punch. Previous years have seen entries from other Netflix animated shows, such as Big Mouth and BoJack Horseman, nominated for the award. [ I can see why - having attempted or watched the others, Arcane kind of leaves them in the dust. The animation is better, the characterization, world building, vocal talents, the soundtrack and the writing.]
The soundtrack, animation, world-building, plot and characterizations are all well done and well executed. That's kind of difficult hat-trick to pull off. It's a combination of steam-punk and horror sci-fi. While there are sexual situations, it's more violent than anything else - and there's quite a bit of body horror involved (reminiscent of Japanese Anime in that respect).
The story focuses more on sibling relationships than romantic ones. And the key romantic relationships are between two women, and interracial. The lesbian relationship is quite subtle and being built over time - I'm not quite sure it is going in that direction, but it feels like it is. And it has a lot of unexpected twists and turns in both the relationships (familial and romantic) that I didn't respect - with a heavy emphasis on friendship.
There's an extensive and quite diverse ensemble cast. The science fiction is melded with fantastical elements or magic. And the fight scenes are well choreographed. Plus the main fighter is female.
Even the villains are interesting and complicated.
It's well deserving of the awards it has received to date along with the accolades. Not everything is. And while it sort of ends on a cliff-hanger, it does have a second season in the works.
The set-up? Two brothers on opposite sides of the war underground - internal battle ends up in turn breaking up two sisters, who also end up on opposite sides of a battle. It starts when various characters are kids, then skips ahead to when they are adults. It's clever and progresses the characters and storyline along in a manner that not only tracks plot wise, but demonstrates how the characters are diving the plot, not the other way around, and the theme organically comes from the characters.
Highly recommended, if you like this sort of thing. Among the best anime series that I've seen to date.
You can't tell it was adapted from a video game - I only know it was - because they tell me in the front and end credits. That's the only way you'd know.
Airing in 2021, it quickly became NETFLIX's most popular and best reviewed animated series ever. It also, is the first animated streaming series to ever win an Emmy. According to the Verge Arcane beat another streaming exclusive, Marvel’s What If…? (available to watch on Disney Plus), as well as non-streaming offerings from Bob’s Burgers, The Simpsons, and Rick and Morty, to the punch. Previous years have seen entries from other Netflix animated shows, such as Big Mouth and BoJack Horseman, nominated for the award. [ I can see why - having attempted or watched the others, Arcane kind of leaves them in the dust. The animation is better, the characterization, world building, vocal talents, the soundtrack and the writing.]
The soundtrack, animation, world-building, plot and characterizations are all well done and well executed. That's kind of difficult hat-trick to pull off. It's a combination of steam-punk and horror sci-fi. While there are sexual situations, it's more violent than anything else - and there's quite a bit of body horror involved (reminiscent of Japanese Anime in that respect).
The story focuses more on sibling relationships than romantic ones. And the key romantic relationships are between two women, and interracial. The lesbian relationship is quite subtle and being built over time - I'm not quite sure it is going in that direction, but it feels like it is. And it has a lot of unexpected twists and turns in both the relationships (familial and romantic) that I didn't respect - with a heavy emphasis on friendship.
There's an extensive and quite diverse ensemble cast. The science fiction is melded with fantastical elements or magic. And the fight scenes are well choreographed. Plus the main fighter is female.
Even the villains are interesting and complicated.
It's well deserving of the awards it has received to date along with the accolades. Not everything is. And while it sort of ends on a cliff-hanger, it does have a second season in the works.
The set-up? Two brothers on opposite sides of the war underground - internal battle ends up in turn breaking up two sisters, who also end up on opposite sides of a battle. It starts when various characters are kids, then skips ahead to when they are adults. It's clever and progresses the characters and storyline along in a manner that not only tracks plot wise, but demonstrates how the characters are diving the plot, not the other way around, and the theme organically comes from the characters.
Highly recommended, if you like this sort of thing. Among the best anime series that I've seen to date.