646f9e108c The world is falling apart and Casshern is to blame. He is said to have killed a robot named "Luna" and by doing so unleashed a plague referred to as "ruin". But Casshern has no recollection of committing such an act, none the less both the humans and sentient robots hold him accountable. Now he must struggle to unravel what has truly happened to the world to be able to make a mends for his sins. ruin. That is all that is left in our world. As humans fade away, and robots rot into the dirt, those who are left cling to life. Casshern is the man who killed the sun, and the show goes on from that point. This story is mature. If your into shonen, this isn't for you. Its dark, gritty, and depressing. The story follows Casshern, as he regains his memories, and meets people who are affected by the Ruin, a plague that kills both humans and robots. The soundtrack fits the show very nicely, fitting the dark mood of the story very well. The dub is also very good, FUNimation clearly put their all into this dub, including Eric Vale, Brina Palencia, and Trina Nishimura, who did amazing jobs. The animation is splendid, as the character designs are beautiful and dark. The action scenes, and the coloring really bring out the tone, the backgrounds are dreary and depressing, fitting the tone, and it was done by Studio Madhouse, so nuff said. The series follows Casshern in his journey to find himself and combat the Ruin, a devastation that causes his fellow robots to rust and die. An immortal killing machine, Casshern must watch everyone around him fade away. The Ruin began with the death of Luna; and rumor has it she was murdered by Casshern himself.<br/><br/>It's a very nice setup with strong philosophical questions. I feel, however, that the series doesn't dive deep enough into the issue of immortality vs. death. It doesn't matter though because the stylized visuals, excellent voice acting, and ferocious action keep the audience entertained. Think about the series' plot and philosophical conclusions too long, however, and you'll be disappointed.<br/><br/>I can't reveal anything, but let me say that after watching the whole series….it makes no sense. The plot has several glaring holes in it. It wouldn't be so bad, except character's actions and motivations HING on these plot holes. So their actions end up not making any sense either. The series concludes with nonsensical violence and philosophical posturing. Do any of these characters understand what's going on, or why they have to accomplish their strange goals? Do they even know what those goals are?? <br/><br/>There's a strong theme of madness and desperation in the face of eternal death, but it's nothing anime viewers haven't witnessed (and better done) before. The ending is such a let down, and the main characters' motivations so nonsensical that the slow build up to the final climax hardly seems worth it. Don't get me wrong, there are genuinely insightful moments here and there. Opening sequences before the song and titles are helpful to fill in the mysterious back story, creating tension.<br/><br/>But the series ending? Sorry, such nonsensical rubbish is a Sin (ho-ho! zinger!) 4 out of 10 for wasting my time.
worlcetelfi Admin replied
370 weeks ago