Watch Steamboy - Director’s Cut Online
Jeudi, juillet 29th, 2010![]() |
Watch Steamboy - Director’s Cut Online.
Movie Title: Steamboy - Director’s Cut Steamboy - Director’s Cut is available for streaming or downloading. |
Like many anime fans the first anime I ever saw was Akira, and it blew me away. Ever since then we have all been waiting to view what Otomo would do next. At last the long wait is over, and the film that seemed destined never to hurry it’s incredibly long development cycle has been released.
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The tale of Steamboy isn’t as complex as Akira. It tells of a split between two inventors, grandfather and father, and the exiguous son who doesn’t know who side with. How distinguished should be sacrificed to further the progresss of science? The myth lacks the originality Akira had, and the characters aren’t quite as memorable, but it remains hugely enteraining throughout.
Akira was an animation landmark aid in 1988, and even to this day it’s a struggle to score anime with better animation. It is fitting then that when a movie finally raises the animation bar it will be Otomo attend at the helm. The animation in Steamboy is utterly jaw dropping, and a perfect marriage of 2D and 3D. Forget the poorly integrated 3D of other anime movies, here a scene can peek like a blooming painting, until it starts arresting and reveals itself as a 3D model. The 2D work is of course also stout and sets a novel standard for the format.
Buy,Download, Or Stream Steamboy - Director’s Cut! Click Here
In many ways Steamboy is similar to Akira. The character manufacture, especially that of Ray Steam (who looks like a younger Tetsuo), and Eddie Steam (a approach clone of the Colonel) is very reminiscent of Akira, and the film’s finale a greatly extended version of the raising of Akira from beneath Tokyo Stadium. And it all fits, a perfect sister movie to Akira. Otomo has now perfected both Cyberpunk, and Steampunk. Where next? I fair hope we don’t have to wait another 16 years to score out!
It is worth noting that the US dub of Steamboy has been hugely slash. I have not seen that version and have no desire to. Sadly it seems anime is serene not good from the meddling editing of western studios who should know better by now. We can only hope that the eventual DVD release is uncut and as Otomo intended.
Background:
Steamboy is the first movie directed by a giant from Japanese anime Katsuhiro Otomo since his ground breaking movie Akira from 16 years ago. Unlike most anime fans I saw Steamboy before seeing its more noted partner. If you are expecting another Akira you will be disappointed since Steamboy is a 180 degree opposite in ambiance although both movies seek similar themes. Instead of Akira’s dsytopic nihilistic Neo-Toyko Otomo re-creates a romantic optimistic Victorian England. Steamboy has the feel of a more mainstream Hollywood style action/adventure movie. Steamboy presents a intriguing intersection of history and sci-fi as its backdrop. The DVD is the director’s chop with your choice of having the dialogue in English, Japanese and various Romance languages. Also, one can have subtitles in English, and the other languages.
Non-spoiler Plot:
Steamboy takes dwelling in Victorian England in 1866. Although Otomo rewrites history by throwing in many elements not yet existing in 1866 but are from that overall period including Tower Bridge and battleships not built till the last decade of the 19th century. The movie is centered on the ownership of a Steam Ball which can generate the power equivalent to a itsy-bitsy nuclear reactor. The movie, as typical in many Japanese anime and fantasy movies, centers on the mumble of what is the noble employ of this modern breakthrough technology. This conflict is represented as an intergenerational conflict within the Steam family. The elder Steam, Lloyd (voiced by Patrick Stewart) has become deranged seeing his invention being set to what he sees as ghastly uses, his son Eddie (voiced by Alfred Molina), who is half man/machine, in a Nietzschian notion sees the Steam Ball as a showcase of the power of science for science sake to push humankind to fresh heights. Eddie’s 13 year outmoded son Ray (voiced by Anna Paquin) is caught in the middle trying to do his father and grandfather and London from the consequences of their invention. A imperfect corporation, the O’Hara Foundation wants the Steam Ball, and the British are alive to in acquiring it too sending Robert Stephenson, a tribute to the namesake who with his father invented the railway locomotive and built the first rail line from Liverpool to Manchester in 1830, to derive control of the Steam Ball for the sake of national security.
The movie spends the first piece in Manchester and the surrounding countryside, including a panorama showing to borrow Dickens “satanic mills” dominating the city spewing dim smoke into the air. The movie shifts to London centered on a park on the bank of the Thames. Otomo accurately animates the atmospheric effects of London’s fog and smog. The park is home to the Crystal Palace, magnificently recreated in this anime movie, housing the Enormous Exhibition and the O’Hara Foundation Pavilion, using the invent of Royal Albert Hall. [In history, the Crystal Palace, one of the substantial architectural achievements of the Victorian era, was built in 1851 to house the Big Exhibition of that year. The Spacious Exhibition in what might be considered the first World’s Magnificent organized by Queen Victoria’s consort Prince Albert the Exhibition invited all the nations of the world to showcase the technologies and applications that came about from the Industrial Revolution.] The O’Hara Foundation sponsors the research of Eddie and Lloyd Steam that resulted in the invention of the Steam Ball. As we learn in the film the O’Hara Foundation has darker purposes for attending the Immense Exposition besides showcasing the latest benevolent inventions. The titular representative of the O’Hara foundation is Scarlett O’Hara (voiced by anime regular Kari Wahlgren), around the same age as Ray, who is the sole heir to the O’Hara fortune. We immediately catch the conception the Scarlett is a putrid brat who complains about the smell and soot of London and enjoys bossing around the head of marketing for the O’Hara Corporation Archibald Simon. (PETA members might not like what she does to her unpleasant Chihuahua Columbus) . Although Scarlett is the one character who undergoes the most change as she sees the consequences of the her family’s firm inventions. The movie is filled with action and adventure including sprint scenes, and battle that breaks out at the position around the Crystal Palace where Otomo introduces many of the “futuristic” elements of the movie, and the reveling of Eddie’s vision of science in the Steam Castle (Steam Tower in the english subtitles) .
Analysis:
The main strength of this film is the comely combination of faded hand drawn 2-D and 3-D CGI animation. From what I have read, Otomo and his creative make team spent time on England, visiting London, Manchester and York, and studying steam locomotives and machinery from the Victorian era to beautifully recapture Victorian England, the motifs of that era, and the mechanical designs of the machinery down to the last rivet. For example, the Royal Navy ships in the movie are apt recreations of actual warships from the Victorian era. This research paid off in the beautiful detail of the movie. You are starring at the veil objective to soak up the details of the machinery Otomo created. I enjoyed how the movie archaic accurate historic events and places, mentioned above, as the backdrop for the movie. They showed colossal imagination in designing the “futuristic” elements which retains a 19th century appearance and mechanical beget. Unlike other Japanese anime with their convoluted set lines this is a straight forward action/adventure movie. The movie is dominated by browns and has a sepia tone to it. There are some improbable animation effects including how lenses distort images, from what I understand this is a very difficult conclude, to scenes with tons of falling confetti, to a scene where glass is shattered and on each chard you gawk an imprinted intriguing image from an earlier scene.
There is not noteworthy character development in this movie except for perhaps Scarlett. Most of the characters are representations of the different uses of science and technology. Eddie is the personification of science for science sake without any moral/ethical considerations. Lloyd takes the opposite understanding that science must be looked at in terms of the moral/ethical impact and science should be restricted if it leads to a “abominable” outcome. Ray is caught in the middle conflicted about what he should do and shows difficulty for both his father and grandfather. His actions and decisions are based on what he learns about the motives of the characters and his underlying desire to put his father and grandfather. Robert Stephenson sees science as being stale for national security reasons. Scarlett espouses the economic rationale for scientific advancement. Although the characters are not quite so gloomy and white. Eddie is perhaps misguided but he is not heinous personified. When one sees Lloyd’s vision of the uses of science for frivolity you might regain yourself believing his belief is unprejudiced as gross as Eddie’s but in the opposite direction. Scarlett has the determined rich girl obnoxious brat attitude but Otomo shows underlying this façade is a sensitive, and luminous girl. Otomo has these characters espouse their beliefs explicitly in their dialogue which often become monologues and lectures.
Otomo uses the several characters to reveal different philosophies on the exhaust of science but leaves it up to the viewer to manufacture their believe decision. The position could veteran some improvement and the action can pick up a bit overwhelming at times. The machinery tends to overwhelm the memoir Otomo is trying to swear.
I very grand enjoyed the classical soundtrack by Steven Jablonsky. He developed astounding themes for Ray and Scarlett and utilizes them throughout the movie.
Overall, Steamboy should appeal to a both anime fans and a more passe audience. This movie is far helpful to Hollywood’s new attempt at Steampunk with Will Smith’s Wild Wild West and Sean Connery’s The League of Astonishing Gentlemen.Time magazines Richard Corliss listed Steamboy, along with Akira, as one of the top 5 anime movies available on DVD. A side encourage of this movie is the educational opportunities this movie provides in further explorations of the Victorian era and the Industrial Revolution.
The movie is rated PG-13 for the action. The PG-13 is more to the PG side than R side. There is one scene with blood but there is no objectionable language or suggestive sexual scenes.
DVD Features: The transfer to DVD is top-notch with mammoth sound and characterize quality. The aspect ratio was 1.85:1 so the transfer does not choose paunchy advantage of widescreen TVs, the wide camouflage version of Star Wars has an aspect ratio of 2.35:1. The DVD features are heavenly bland. There is no director’s commentary which is understandable give the language barrier. There is a 5 limited interview with director Katsuhiro Otomo. There is a 15 exiguous featurette about the challenges of re-dubbing the movie in English with Anna Paquin, Alfred Molina, and Patrick Stewart. The 20 diminutive multi-screen landscape glance splits the veil three ways. First there are scenes from the movie mixed with true life shots of London. 15 minutes of this featurette are interviews with the creative team discussing how they made the movie. The ending montage shows the images from the waste credits of the English dubbed theatrical release without the text. Although this ending was a condensed version of the director’s crop ending, which is the ending for the movie on this DVD. The production drawings are unruffled shots of paintings mature to invent ideas in the movie, some of which are elegant intelligent. The animation onion skins shows the process by which five scenes are built combining hand drawn and CGI techniques although there is no dialogue explaining the process.
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