Anime (pronounced "annie-may") is animation (cartoons) drawn
and produced in Japan. Many American cartoon shows are actually anime
shows that have been imported, redubbed, and re-released to the
American public. Besides Robotech, other examples of American
cartoons that use footage from anime are Speed Racer, Battle of the
Planets, Gigantor, Transor Z, and others.
It is important to note that anime is a MEDIUM and not a
GENRE. There are all types of animes available; sci-fi animes, comedy
animes, romance animes, action animes, horror animes, et cetera, et
cetera. Basically there are examples of anime for any type of story
you can imagine. Robotech is NOT representative of all anime; to say
that Robotech represents all anime would be like saying that Star Trek
represents all American television. It is simply not true.
Some people claim that anime is much more violent/sexual and
drawn much better than American animation. This is not really true.
There are examples of American animation that are just as
violent/sexual ("Heavy Metal") or just as well drawn (Disney) as many
anime shows out there. The difference is that there is a LOT more
animation produced in Japan than there is here in America.
Consequently, even though the percentages of types of animation are
about the same, the greater number of shows produced means that there
is a lot more anime to choose from in any particular genre.
One reason why anime seems so much better than American
animation is the "fan filter" effect. Only a select few animes make
it overseas via traders or professional companies, and those few are
usually chosen because they stand out in some way. Thus, we usually
only get to see the "best" examples of anime here, while the poorer
ones remain in Japan in relative obscurity.
No, not really. Although some of the anime listed below were
produced by the same producers/designers/artists that worked on the
footage that made up Robotech, NONE of the plots have anything to do
with Robotech. All of these shows are completely independent stories.
Many of these shows have been subtitled or dubbed in English
by American companies and are now available for purchase in the
U.S. and other countries. You can usually find them by looking in
your local video or comic book stores, or by contacting mail-order
video shops. Another good way to see these shows is to visit a local
anime club. Many colleges and universities have Japanese animation
clubs that promote anime by offering free showings to the public of
the latest shows. These clubs are also a good source of information
on how to get your own copies of these shows. Ask the employees at
comic book and video stores in your area to see if there are any anime
clubs near you.
In 1999 the nations of Earth are locked in a state of nearly
constant war, wars that everyone knows will ultimately result in a
self-induced genocide. But before anyone starts using nuclear weapons
an extra-terrestrial starship crashes on a small island. Many think
that someone has started using nukes, but public announcements claim
it is an massive asteroid that has impacted the Earth. The crash and
eventual exploration is the impetus that causes the Unified Earth
Government to coalesce. Investigators discover that the ship had
retreated from a battle in space, a battle against gigantic
soldiers. The "UN Spacy" (think army, navy, spacy) is formed to
protect the Earth from the possibility of invasion.
After 10 years, reconstruction of the flagship of the UN
Spacy, the SDF-1 Macross, is finished. But during the launching
ceremonies a Zentraedi fleet appears and launches an offensive to
capture the Macross. In an effort to gain a better tactical position,
the Macross attempts a fold jump to lunar orbit. But there are many
things about the Macross the new crew doesn't understand, and instead
of the Moon they fold out to Pluto's orbit, taking the island and over
50 thousand civilians with it. One more problem: the fold drive that
allowed the jump vanishes. Cut off from Earth, hounded by an enemy
they don't understand, and carrying 56,000 civilian refugees, the
Macross struggles to return to the planet it is sworn to protect.
"Superdimension Fortress Macross" was intended to be a
tongue-in-cheek parody of shows like "Kidou Senshi Gundam" (Mobile
Suit Gundam) and Uchuu Senkan Yamato ("Space Battleship Yamato" aka
"Star Blazers"), as well as itself. But as the story evolved, and the
company funding the project changed, the parody was set aside in favor
of a more serious soap opera-style war story. As "Gundam" was the
first TV series to take the giant robot seriously, turning it into
just a machine of war, "Macross" was the first to do so with
transforming giant robots. Macross broke many other cliches and
stereotypes of the giant robot genre as well, from not making the
story's hero the best pilot, to giving that distinction to an
otherwise "nobody" character, and having that character become
romantically involved with the the enemy pilot.
Originally slated for 52 episodes (a full year; Japanese TV doesn't
have broadcast seasons like the US), it was gradually pared down to 36
episodes due to monetary and manpower restraints. But even with only a
36-episode run, Macross is still one of the most popular animated TV shows
in Japan, spawning a beautiful feature-length film ("Macross Summer '84: Ai
Oboete Imasuka"), a 30-minute music video "sequel" to the movie ("Flash
Back 2012"), a 6-episode OAV (Original Animation Video) series sequel to
the movie ("Macross II"), a new TV series starring one of Maximillian's and
Miria's many daughters started it's run in early October 1994 ("Macross
7"), and a new OAV series prequel to "Macross 7" ("Macross Plus"). Not to
mention numerous other merchandising endeavors from soundtrack and vocal
albums to toys and models to clothes and school supplies.
Carl Macek made many modifications to the Macross story in
order to mesh it with Southern Cross and Mospeada, some trivial,
others grotesque. These are some of the more notable differences.
The most important difference is the definition of
"Protoculture." It is not an energy source; it is not some
biochemical substance that allows for mecha transformation; it is not
some quasi-mystical force playing games with the Universe; it is not a
god. "It" is not an it at all. The Protoculture were literally the
"first culture" to evolve in the galaxy, circa 50,000 B.C. Circa
47,000 B.C. a Protoculturian exploration vessel visited Terra,
presumably leaving behind humanity's ancestors. As their Stellar
Republic expanded they came into conflict with the Patrollers, that
conflict eventually resulting in the destruction of the Protoculture
and their republic.
The "SDF-1 Macross" (originally designated "ASS-1: Alien
StarShip-1") belongs to an unnamed race that is at war with the
Zentraedi. Britai Kridanik's fleet is chasing it because of several
unique abilities the ship possesses. The ship is capable of
self-repair, something of vital importance to the aging Zentraedi
fleet. Its systems are technologically more advanced than the
Zentraedi's, something else they wish to study. The ship's fold
engines are capable of feats previously unheard of to the Zentraedi,
including folding while inside a planet's near gravity well and
atmosphere. There is speculation that the fold engines are also
capable of limited temporal displacement (the kanji for
"superdimension" literally read "exceed[ing] time [and] space"), again
something the Zentraedi desire greatly. And it's proper combat tactics
to ride your kill down to make certain it's a kill.
"Robotechnology" is another invention of Carl Macek. The
advanced technology of the SDF-1, referred to as "overtechnology," was
studied and adapted, resulting in the development of the Destroids,
Valkyries, and the reconstruction of the ship. Reflex (reactive)
weapons are a form of thermonuclear weapons, probably designed in such
a way as to minimize or eliminate radioactive fallout.
There is no SDF-2 being constructed on Earth. Construction of
the SDF-2 "Megaroad" (or "Megalord" or "Megaload" depending on how you
read it; all three were used during the preproduction of "Battle City
Megaroad," the original working title of Macross when it was still a
parody, the name itself being a linguistic word-play) begins on the
moon in 2003, a space battleship of purely Terran design. After the
near-annihilation of humanity its construction is altered, instead
becoming the ark that will search the galaxy for a new home for
humanity.
The reconstruction project does not completely unify Earth;
there are a number of anti-unificationists using guerrilla warfare and
terrorism against the United Earth Government. Because of the
Unification Wars all personnel on the Mars Base are withdrawn to
Earth; the Anti-Unification Army hijacks a Space Destroyer and
destroys the entire return fleet (Riber is killed here, not on the
Mars Base). The Anti-Unification Army is finally defeated by the
unification forces in 2007 after 5 years of civil war. Even with the
defeat of the Anti-Unification Army, though, there are still many
people chafing at UEG rule--witness the initial decision by the
leaders of the Ontario Autonomous Region to allow the Macross to
debark it's civilian passengers.
At the time of the Macross' launch, there are only 2 A.R.M.D.
(Armored) Carriers commissioned; Armored-1 and Armored-2 (not
Armored-10 as the dialogue states) were to rendezvous with the
Macross. That is probably the simple mistake of reading the "01" on
the hull as "10." Construction plans called for a total of 10
A.R.M.D. carriers, though only 8 were completed and comissioned.
Many names were changed. The Macross has an international cast
(see section 2).
Lynn Kaifun (Kyle) is Lynn Minmei's brother, not cousin.
Finally, of course, "Superdimension Cavalry Southern Cross"
and "Genesis Climber Mospeada" have absolutely nothing to do with
Macross. Any footage from Southern Cross or Mospeada that appears
during the first 36 episodes of Robotech, or any Macross footage that
appears during the rest of the series, has been edited in for
continuity and plot development. There are no Inbit or Zor, Invid or
Robotech Masters, no special or metaphysical flowers (other than the
dandylions Hikaru finds out in the wastelands) in Macross.
"Superdimension Century Orguss" also has nothing to do with
Macross aside from sharing a "Superdimension" title and the same
character designer (Haruhiko Mikimoto, aka HAL).
Oddly enough, the Zentraedi are one of the things Macek
changed the least, and borrowed from the most to develop the
"prehistory" of the Robotech timeline.
The Protoculture's greatest science was that of genetic
engineering. They could perform miracles with genetic tissue, from
determining the sex of an unborn foetus to cloning an army of gigantic
warriors. The Zentraedi were created by the Protoculture to protect
themselves from the Patrollers and other enemies. They were
conditioned to fight, devoid of emotions, and segregated by sex to
prevent a resurgeance of those emotions. All knowledge of how to
repair their machines of war was denied them, and they were further
conditioned to respect and fear those who could perform such repairs,
such as the Protoculture themselves.
The average Zentraedi soldier is approximately 35 feet tall,
not the 50 feet the dialogue states; that's probably an exaggeration
for effect as a 50-foot tall Zentraedi wouldn't be able to fit in a
50-foot tall Regult Combat Pod. Britai Kridanik's height is given in
"Macross Perfect Memory" (the Japanese equivalent to "Robotech Art 1")
at 44.5 feet, and he is much taller than the average Zentraedi soldier
(and approximately the same height as a Battroid Valkyrie). Bodolza is
taller still.
In the future, humanity has moved out of the solar system and
started to colonize planets far away from Earth. One of the farthest
colonies in existance is the planet Glorie, on the very edge of explored
space. The main military forces protecting the colonists of Glorie from
the unknown are the Armies of the Southern Cross.
However, unknown to the human colonists, Glorie is the ancestral
home of the Zor, a race of highly advanced humanoids that have been
wandering the galaxy for the past few centuries. Although the Zor
abandoned their homeworld ages ago, they have now returned with what
remains of their fleet to reclaim their planet. Unfortunately, the
humans have already made Glorie their new home and refuse to leave it.
Since Glorie does not have a large enough food supply to support the
humans and the Zor together, they declare war on each other for sole
possession of the planet.
The resulting war for Glorie basically makes up the Southern Cross
TV series. The events focus on Jeanne Francaix (Dana Sterling), the
young and inexperienced leader of the 15th ATAC. Jeanne struggles to
change her band of misfits and drop-outs into a skilled fighting force,
and largely succeeds in turning the 15th ATAC into an elite unit by the
end of the war. During the battles Jeanne also grows and matures from a
headstrong girl into an experienced woman. (Typical Japanese "coming-ofage"
storyline)
During the war, the Zor learn that they can kidnap humans and
brainwash them into expendable pilots for their own mecha. This causes
great moral conflicts on the side of the humans as they discover that
they are often fighting their own kind, who are helpless pawns of the Zor.
One of the best examples of this is Seifrietti Weisse (Zor Prime), a
Southern Cross soldier captured, brainwashed, and surgically altered to
be a spy for the Zor Lords. Seifrietti is returned to Glorie, where he
is captured and then "adopted" by Jeanne and the 15th ATAC. Seifrietti
manages to break the Zor's conditioning and kills the Zor Lords himself at
the end of the series.
The three mounds seen near the end of the series are not rotting
spaceship carcasses, but instead contain the last surviving plants of a
species that made up most of Glorie's food supply in the distant past.
When Seifrietti detonates the last Zor fortress over the mounds, the
resulting explosion spreads the plant's seeds all over Glorie. Unlike in
Robotech, this is a GOOD thing, since the new plants will increase Glorie's
food supply to the point where it can support both the humans and the
surviving Zor together in peace.
Aside from the differences mentioned above, one of the major
differences between Southern Cross and Robotech is that in the original
SC TV series, Glorie had TWO suns instead of one. Since Carl Macek wanted
to turn Glorie into a post-holocaust Earth, he eliminated the second sun
by editing out most of the footage where both suns appeared, and editing
out the second sun via airbrushing in those scenes which could not be cut
out.
As mentioned above, the "Masters" are the Zor, a race of wandering
conquerors who left Glorie long ago and returned to it when their forces
and number began to wane. Despite their humanoid appearance, they do not
appear to be related to humans in any way. Their technology is TOTALLY
different than human technology, and the two share nothing in common
(unlike in Robotech).
[To be completed]
[To be completed]
[To be completed]
"Macross: Do You Remember Love" is a full-length anime film
based on the Macross TV series. The movie starts out with the SDF-1
traveling near Saturn, presumably on its way to Earth. The normal
life on the warship is interrupted when a Zentran battlecruiser
defolds and attacks. During the battle, a young pilot named Hikaru
Ichijo rescues the famous singer and movie star Lynn Minmay from being
killed, but ends up trapped with her in the lower decks of the SDF-1.
While trapped, the two become very close. After being rescued, the
two begin to date, and Hikaru takes Minmay on a tour of Saturn's
rings. However, the lovers are captured by the Zentran along with
first officer Misa Hayase, squadron leader Roy Focker, and Lynn
Kaifun, Minmay's manager. However, while returning to the main
Zentran fleet the Zentraedi are attacked by the Meltran, giant warrior
women who have ben at war with the Zentran for ages. Hikaru and Misa
manage to escape during the confusion, but Roy is killed and Minmay
and Kaifun remain captured.
Hikaru and Misa fall out of the Zentran ship during a fold and
wind up back on Earth. The surface of the Earth has been laid to
waste by Zentran bombardments, and almost no one has survived. While
searching for survivors, Hikaru and Misa discover an ancient spaceship
that was once buried at the bottom of the ocean, before the ocean was
evaporated in the Zentran attack. The ship turns out to be a colony
ship from the Protoculture, an ancient race that were the ancestors of
the Zentran, Meltran, and Humans. Misa also finds a fragment of an
ancient song from the Protoculture in the ruins. Hikaru and Misa
start to become very close to each other, when they are rescued by the
SDF-1 which has finally made it back to Earth.
While trying to figure out what to do next, the SDF-1 is
attacked by a Meltran cruiser. However, the battle is interrupted by
the arrival of the Zentran fleet, which is broadcasting Minmay's
singing. Bodolza, leader of the Zentran forces, calls a truce with
the SDF-1. Bodolza wants the humans on the SDF-1 to complete the song
that he has discovered (a "fragment of culture") which he can then use
as a powerful weapon to attack the Meltraedi. While the songwriters
on the SDF-1 try to come up with suitable lyrics, Misa translates the
fragment she found on the colony ship and discovers that it is a
listing of the original lyrics to the original song Bodolza has
discovered. However, before she can announce her discovery, the main
Meltran fleet arrives to destroy the Zentran and the SDF-1.
Bodolza, angered by the lack of progress from the SDF-1,
breaks the truce and orders the Zentran ships to fire on the
battlefortress. However, the SDF-1 manages to escape. Misa gives the
lyrics to Hikaru, who in turn convinces Minmay to sing the song. The
complete song, entitled "Do You Remember Love", convinces most of the
Zentran and Meltran forces to join ranks with the SDF-1 against
Bodolza. As both fleets and the SDF-1 attack the Zentran fortress,
Hikaru enters it with his Valkyrie and manages to kill Bodolza, saving
the last survivors of humanity and the Zentran and Meltran fleets from
destruction.
Although "Do You Remember Love" is based on the Macross TV
series, the events in the movie take place outside of the original
story's continuity. Some of the events from the Macross TV series are
included in the movie, like Hikaru and Minmay's time trapped in the
SDF-1, Roy Focker's death, and the final climactic battle against
Bodolza. However, new parts were also added such as the Meltran
forces and the Protoculture colony ship. While closely resembling
each other, the Macross TV series and Macross Movie should be
considered separate and unrelated stories.
The original Macross storyline has undergone several revisions
since the release of the original Macross TV series. According to the
newest continuity a la Macross Plus and Macross 7, Macross '84 is a
fictional theatrical release based on the events of the original
series. In other words, the movie is NOT part of the official Macross
storyline. It is a historical fiction movie *within* the Macross tv
series universe released in 2031 about Spacewar One. Macross II is an
"alternate story"; some have interpreted this to mean it is an OAV
sequel (again within the series universe) to the movie. On the other
hand, Flashback 2012, which clearly uses mecha designs from the movie,
has, nevertheless, been integrated into the series timeline. "August
2012, Lynn Minmay's final concert".
Two years have passed since the events in the 1984 movie
"Macross: Do You Remember Love". Lynn Minmay, who is still a
superstar, quietly reminisces after a concert about the events in her
life that had led up to that point. She remembers her arrival on the
SDF-1, her meeting Hikaru Ichijo and Misa Hayase, and the final battle
with the Zentran and Meltran forces against Boldolza. (These
flashbacks are done in the form of music videos with footage from the
Macross TV series and the 1984 movie.) Near the end, Hikaru and Misa
appear to Minmay and show her the newly-completed SDF-2 Megaroad and
the VF-4 Valkyrie fighters. The SDF-2 launches from Earth on her
maiden voyage on a mission to find a new home for humanity. Minmay,
however, chooses to stay behind this time and watches the enormous
ship as it departs Earth to voyage into history.
Although Flashback 2012 uses footage from the original Macross
TV series in some of its videos, the OAV is actually a "sequel" to the
1984 Macross Movie. The most direct proof of this is the fact that
the SDF-2 design used in Flashback 2012 is *VERY* different than the
design used in the TV series.
Macross II is a 6-episode OAV (Original Animation Video)
series that is a sequel to the 1984 movie "Macross: Do You Remember
Love". The new series takes place on Earth 80 years after the movie
ended. Since "Do You Remember Love" isn't part of the Macross TV
series continuity, Macross II is also outside that continuity. Thus
Macross II is 2 generations removed from the footage that became
Robotech.
Storywise, no. Orguss was done by the same studio that did
Macross and Southern Cross, which accounts somewhat for the
similarities in the names. Also, the character designs for Orguss
were done by Haruhiko Mikimoto, which explains the similar appearance
between Macross and Orguss characters. However, Orguss and Orguss II
are not related in any way to either the Macross or Southern Cross
storylines.
Character Designs: Macross, Macross II, High Speed Jecy, Eve
from Megazone 23, Gunbuster, Gundam 0080, Genesis Climber Mospeada,
Macross 7, Super Dimensional Century Orguss, assorted cover art for
Mobile Suit Gundam, Z Gundam, and Gundam F-91, and artist of his own
personal manga title: Marionette Generation
As you can see, HAL - as he is usually known, is one of the
most popular character designers in anime. He is responsible for the
character designs from Macross, which in turn became Robotech's
Macross Saga. And for Eve from Megazone23, which later was used to
created Robotech: The Movie. As well as Genesis Climber Mospeada
which became Robotech's New Generation.
A quick glance at the episode counts of the three original series
should provide the first clue as to their relative success rates.
Super Dimensional Fortress Macross has 36, Super Dimensional Cavalry
Southern Cross has 23, and Genesis Climber Mospeada, 25. (For those
number crunchers out there, yes this adds to 84. "Dana's Story," ep
37, which combines footage from Macross and Southern Cross is the 85th
episode.)
Obviously, Macross is the most successful. In fact, it is one of the
most successful anime titles ever. Originally scheduled for 27
episodes, nine more were added before the series ended. Furthermore,
it spawned Macross '84: Love, Do You Remember?, Macross Flashback
2012, Macross II, and now, in this ten year anniversary of the
theatrical release, Macross Plus and Macross 7. Lynn Minmay is one of
the most popular anime characters in history. And the Macross '84
theme song crossed over and made the *regular* Japanese pop charts; it
is the most successful anime song ever. Moreover, the ROBOTECH
project, as conceived by Harmony Gold, started out as an attempt to
bring over a faithful translation of Macross to North American
audiences. Only when the syndication "magic number" of 65 episodes
came into issue did the other two series enter the equation.
On the other side of the coin, is Southern Cross, which bombed.
Slated for a longer run, it was cut short during its run, hence the
oddball number of 23 eps.
Finally, splitting the middle is Mospeada. Mildly successful, it ran
its full run of eps without cancellation. Furthermore, it did well
enough to merit a follow-up music video OAV, Genesis Climber Mospeada:
Love, Live, Alive, but not so well as to afford a second series.
However, this should not be viewed as a sign of failure, for, as it
turns out, most anime titles are like this. They run. They achieve
reasonable ratings. They finish. The successful ones may spawn a
music video or extra CD releases while the rest never appear again
except as re-runs. End of story.
5.1: OVERVIEW OF ANIME
5.1.1: WHAT IS IT?
5.1.2: HOW IS JAPANESE ANIMATION DIFFERENT FROM AMERICAN ANIMATION?
5.1.3: ARE ANY OF THESE SEQUELS TO ROBOTECH?
5.1.4: WHERE CAN I GET COPIES OF THESE SHOWS?
5.2: SUPER DIMENSIONAL FORTRESS MACROSS
5.2.1: WHAT IS IT ABOUT?
5.2.2: HOW DOES IT DIFFER FROM THE "MACROSS" PART OF ROBOTECH?
5.2.3: WHAT ARE THE "ZENTRAEDI" IN THE ORIGINAL SERIES?
5.3: SUPER DIMENSIONAL CALVARY SOUTHERN CROSS
5.3.1: WHAT IS IT ABOUT?
5.3.2: HOW DOES IT DIFFER FROM THE "MASTERS" PART OF ROBOTECH?
5.3.3: WHO ARE THE "MASTERS" IN THE ORIGINAL SERIES?
5.4: GENESIS CLIMBER MOSPEADA
5.4.1: WHAT IS IT ABOUT?
5.4.2: HOW DOES IT DIFFER FROM THE "NEW GENERATION" PART OF ROBOTECH?
5.4.3: WHO ARE THE "INVID" IN THE ORIGINAL SERIES?
5.5: MACROSS: DO YOU REMEMBER LOVE (1984)
5.5.1: WHAT IS IT ABOUT?
5.5.2: HOW DOES IT RELATE TO THE JAPANESE MACROSS?
5.6: MACROSS FLASHBACK 2012
5.6.1: WHAT IS IT ABOUT?
5.6.2: HOW DOES IT RELATE TO THE JAPANESE MACROSS TV SERIES AND "MACROSS:
DO YOU REMEMBER LOVE"?
5.7: MACROSS II
5.7.1: WHAT IS IT? IS IT A SEQUEL TO ROBOTECH?
5.8: SUPER DIMENSIONAL CENTURY ORGUSS
5.9.8: I SEE "SUPER DIMENSIONAL" IN THE TITLE. IS IT RELATED TO MACROSS OR
SOUTHERN CROSS?
5.9: GENERAL ANIME QUESTIONS
5.9.1: WHO IS HARUHIKO MIKIMOTO? WHY IS HE IMPORTANT?
5.9.2: HOW WELL DID THE SERIES THAT MAKE UP ROBOTECH DO IN JAPAN?
[Introduction to Robotech]
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