Macross Frontier.

If Ranka is one quarter Zentradi, then why is she so short?

Macross Frontier Episode 3

Alto’s Last Stand

Alto stared into the dressing room mirror, but he wasn’t seeing anything anymore. His tired vision looked past the graying circles under his eyes, and his luxurious hair pulled out in clumps as he aimlessly brushed it. To an objective, outside observer, he was as beautiful as ever. But the stress of the Miss Macross competition was starting to take its inevitable toll.

What a pipe dream this was all turning out to be! That rosy-cheeked bastard Luca had put on a sympathetic face when Alto shot down Mikhail’s Valkyrie, killing him instantly.

If it hadn’t been for the smug little punk throwing himself between Alto’s face and Ozma’s fist, there would be no Kabuki fallback career for the Princess, no matter how much makeup there was in the world. Shame his young face was so ruined now, right alongside Ozma’s shattered life.

But sympathy wasn’t something Alto felt deserving of. He felt like he was taking advantage of the entire world, slacking off thanks to his own ineptitude. Advantage of dead Michel, who he’d killed himself. Advantage of Sheryl, who’d pulled the strings to get him into the contest so late. Even her.

Ranka Lee.

In another life, a life not lived singing endless retreads of Minmay jingles, Alto thought that perhaps the two of them could have been friends, if not… more. But here in the heat of competition, that heartless bitch wouldn’t give him the time of day, except to attack him in one of their many physical confrontations.

Not that she needed to be so cruel — her maddeningly cute and disturbingly expressive bunny-ear hair gave her an unfair advantage that no one in the contest was ready for.

A knock came at his dressing room door.

“What is it,” he moaned.

“Let me in, I need to talk to you.” Speak of the green-coiffed Devil, and so shall she appear at your door. Alto’s jaw tightened, and he made a little grunting noise like everyone in Shakugan No Shana does when the camera cuts to them.

“It’s open,” he growled.

Ranka opened his door in her usual domineering but somehow graceful way. Though she stood no higher than his shoulder (an advantage he was more than willing to count his blessings for), her authoritative and overbearing personality made her appear larger than life. The swimsuit competition was tonight, and she was wearing a pink bikini that was fairly demure for the competition, but nonetheless looked downright dirty on her. Maybe it was her, or maybe it was the fact that she looked about 12.

Alto didn’t feel much like a woman when he looked at her in that thing. He felt the strain of his own sexual duality pushing feebly against the fabric of his underoos.

“You like what you see,” she sneered at him with bloodshot half-opened eyes, “or you just scared of how bad this is gonna crush you tonight?” Alto grimaced as the stench of old vodka finally made its way across the room to his finely-shaped nostrils.

“Eh,” Ranka scoffed, “Who am I kidding? You’re just a no good trap-ass fag, anyway.” Alto’s grimace of disgust turned into a drooping sigh of defeat. Night after night of this, eventually it wore him down. His perfect eyeliner and tasteful mascara were suddenly at great risk. Moisture built up in his eyes until they appeared to shake, or at least that’s how they were represented by the animators.

“I guess I won’t be seeing much of you anymore, since you’re going to lose tonight, so, good luck with life, fag.” And with that, Ranka turned back to the door.

Alto’s brain had ceased to function. He was no longer a pretty pretty princess; her endless abuse had transformed him into a wild animal. A bear, perhaps. An angry, somehow sexual bear. Or a wildcat. Rar!

As he launched himself from his chair, his brush flew behind him and tears streamed, sparkling, all around his face. Vague speed lines began to form, but faded again, as if realizing that he was only traveling 4 or 5 feet. Before he knew it, his hand was locked firmly around Ranka’s wrist, which suddenly seemed so tiny and fragile. She looked back over her shoulder at him with a mix of shock and no small amount of fear.

“I’m not… gay!” he growled through clenched teeth at her.

Her fear melted into her usual egomaniacal smirk.

“Then prove it, trap.”

Alto yanked Ranka toward his body by the wrist, and the surprise returned to her face. He wrapped his other hand around her bare midsection and pressed her against him tightly. She was stiff at first, but softened, and finally her free arm threw itself around his neck. The positioning of arms and legs became horribly confusing for a minute, but as his resolve strengthened, so did other parts of his anatomy that he was far more sure about.

“I fucking will.”

Fin.

HAHAHA that is the sound of me laughing at myself because I am a fucking idiot. There is an increasing trend in episodic blogging against actual episodic blogging, i.e., summaries, which I think is great, and I will take credit for it — but rather than rest on my laurels as an innovator, I must continue to innovate by blogging NEXT WEEK’S EPISODES before they happen. And, just to be safe and make sure no one else is doing what I am, I will do it as horrible fanfic!

I hope anyone reading that paragraph is keen on what jokes are. But seriously, we got some great development on the classic Macross Triangle principle this week, and the preview shows Ranka in a Minmay-esque dress while singing, with the translation “this song of antiquity will resonate throught the galaxy.” So far Macross F has shown the greatest parallels to the original of any other Macross series, so to me that means that I must pray to not be subjected to “My Boyfriend is a Pirate PILOT” shit I keep doing that for the entirety of the episode. I’m guessing Yoko Kanno is going to go in a different, some would argue better, direction. And yes, Ranka in a bikini. You sick fucks.

Macross Frontier Episode 2

Hard Chase

I don’t know why this episode title sounds dirty to me. Must be all the Kanokon I’ve been watching. But when a new Macross comes out, I’m reminded why the hell I’m watching a bunch of cartoons from a country I’ve never been to in the first place.

But, like Geass, I find that simply puking out a summary of an episode that largely consists of a mech battle is not my cup of tea. So I present to you the Corporate Douchebag Version, aka a PowerPoint deck (Flash/not visible in RSS).

I fucking crack myself up. Pretty sure getting a new copy of MS Office has been the worst thing that ever happened to me.

Macross Frontier (Preview)

MACROSS. MAAA-KUUU-ROOSS!

New Macross.

The words alone brought chills to me. However, I didn’t see the last Macross. I heard it sucked. It looked like it sucked. So I didn’t watch. But the original Super Dimension Fortress Macross is not just a classic because someone said so — it’s classic because it’s awesome. In spite of its vintage, and its sometimes-weak battle scenes, the original anime space opera holds up very well. There are some episodes that I can always go back and watch. I believe it’s #27, the giant against-all-odds battle juxtaposed with Lynn Minmei singing, as the earth is pretty much wiped out — I’m not sure the impact of that has ever been equaled.

And Macross Plus was a lesser but still significant landmark, not just for its story but for its pioneering use of computers.

Anyway. I’m so excited, I just can’t hide it.

Story

40-some years after the events of SDF Macross, the humans have expanded further into space, leaving their mostly-wasted planet pretty far behind. The giant spacecraft have come a long way from the Macross itself, with oceans, natural environments, and blue atmospheres making human life much more pleasant.

The galactic idol Sheryl is visiting the idyllic-looking Macross Frontier station for a concert, and cute young Lanka or Ranka (who works in a Chinese restaurant, hmmm) is stoked to be going.

For visual entertainment, Sheryl employs some young chaps with snap-on flying suits called X-Gear (sort of a mecha lite thing), including the overly-ambitious Alto.

Alto is not incredibly pleased to be doing this kind of work, and no matter what he does, he can only fly as high as Macross F’s ceiling, though he longs for more. He’s also incredibly effeminate, which to me means that he was probably dimensionally warped to manly Macross World from the Gundam universe.

When Lanka gets lost in the huge concert crowd and has a mishap with a sprinkler, she and Alto share a little meaningful moment, but all isn’t well. Crazy scary aliens attack during Sheryl’s concert, eventually piercing the outer layer of Macross F’s protection. The crowd scatters to shelters, again leaving the smallish (not quite loli-like) Lanka stranded and hurt. When a Valkyrie pilot is brutally crushed to death by one of the enemy robots, Alto is the only one around to jump in the variable fighter and try to save her.

Computers!

While the storyline is a more direct successor to the original SDF Macross, the legacy of Plus is apparent in Macross Frontier’s digital-heavy animation style. In fact, the computers are so prominent that it’s sometimes a bit much for me, but it’s hard to deny that the battle scenes and Valkyrie transformations are light-years away from SDF’s choppy and repetitive dogfights. Even the well-blended cel portions are smooth and bright, and the backgrounds evoke a beautiful future far removed from the dark and low-tech original, which took place very near present day.

In short, this is visually fucking impressive.

Animation production is by Satelight, whose list of work isn’t really familiar to me (although they did cleverly work their name into the episode), but the credits in the ED show a billion names, including Xebec and JC Staff. It doesn’t surprise me at all to find out that a lot of hands are in the pot to make this work.

Music

The incidentals and the OP are composed by the ever-impressive Yoko Kanno (who did Plus as well), but the OP isn’t her best work. The rest of the music, which varies between symphonic and rock-ish, never sounds cheap and, along with the animation, elevates the feel of Macross F to a cinematic level. You probably won’t hear better music this season.

Acting

It’s all pretty damn good. Kikuko Inoue, best known as Ah! My Goddess’s Belldandy but also recently as Sanae in Clannad, seems somewhat wasted as Sheryl’s assitant Grace. Yuuichi Nakamura, our hero Okazaki in same, plays Alto. Sheryl is handled capably by Aya Endo (Miyuki in Lucky Star, Kinue Crossroad in Gundam 00). Most surprising is how great newcomer Megumi Nakajima is as Lanka. She’s a natural fit.

First Impressions

Everything about Macross F screams big budget, big battles, big awesome, a movie-like experience on your TV. I hope they didn’t dump everything into this one episode, though.

The connection with the Macross legacy is firm — there are two versions of this episode, and the original special broadcast features a concert intercut with a battle that reminds me of that amazing episode of SDF I mentioned. Then Alto attempting to save Lanka in the Valkyrie closely parallels Hikaru and Minmei’s meeting.

Bottom line, of anything I’ve seen thus far this season, this is the episode 2 that I absolutely can’t wait for. Seriously, if you could see my pants now. CRAPPED ‘EM!

And because I DO remember love, here’s the original Macross opener, which plays mercilessly through my head every time I so much as hear the word Macross.