A young man's rebel against authorities on a future version of Earth, after he has been recruited into an interplanetary military unit that suffers a 70% casualty rate.A young man's rebel against authorities on a future version of Earth, after he has been recruited into an interplanetary military unit that suffers a 70% casualty rate.A young man's rebel against authorities on a future version of Earth, after he has been recruited into an interplanetary military unit that suffers a 70% casualty rate.
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I am quite comfortable with both the animation, and the voice acting. They are not perfect, perhaps not even good, but more than enough to tell a story on a budget tv show. Really, no complain there.
Sadly, the story itself is very lacking, as well as sloppy, dumb and incoherent, and the characters don't add much to any of it. It seems like in no moment they considered asking any normal adult opinion, something with which the could have easily pull this up, and make some sense. Really, I believe that with some minor changes on the script, which some simple effort, it could actually make a decent story, and it has a lot of potential, which could be even deepen, but it wasn't actually the case.
It does provide some entertainment still, although skipping the flashbacks would help.
Sadly, the story itself is very lacking, as well as sloppy, dumb and incoherent, and the characters don't add much to any of it. It seems like in no moment they considered asking any normal adult opinion, something with which the could have easily pull this up, and make some sense. Really, I believe that with some minor changes on the script, which some simple effort, it could actually make a decent story, and it has a lot of potential, which could be even deepen, but it wasn't actually the case.
It does provide some entertainment still, although skipping the flashbacks would help.
Basically a non-stop action flick that had the potential to be so much more, but didn't bother trying.
Various aspects of the background and setting established room for a lot of intrigue and mystery. There are various races and caste-like social levels with complex politics and rebellions, unexplained AI tools, powerful military machines, and serious moral and ethical dilemmas. Yet these are all subsidiary to the action and never explored.
The action is interesting enough, and there are historical reflection scenes that help pacing by allowing for an occasionally slower pace and a bit of character development. Unfortunately, that's pretty much limited to getting a bunch of selfish idiots to work as a team. Their individual characters aren't explored, and the two that get the most lines are the most annoying: one stereotypically silly and boisterous; the other constantly whining and selfish from start to finish.
It's also not very consistent internally. For example, early on the 'heroes' are fighting against tech that was effectively stolen from their own military. Yet, despite their specialist training they seem to have never seen nor heard of any of that tech before. They even have an AI assistant that can control some tech, but have no idea that it can.
The worst part is the ethics of the whole thing; but that's getting into spoiler territory.
Watchable, even entertaining, if you can ignore the whining. But don't expect much in plot or character dev.
Various aspects of the background and setting established room for a lot of intrigue and mystery. There are various races and caste-like social levels with complex politics and rebellions, unexplained AI tools, powerful military machines, and serious moral and ethical dilemmas. Yet these are all subsidiary to the action and never explored.
The action is interesting enough, and there are historical reflection scenes that help pacing by allowing for an occasionally slower pace and a bit of character development. Unfortunately, that's pretty much limited to getting a bunch of selfish idiots to work as a team. Their individual characters aren't explored, and the two that get the most lines are the most annoying: one stereotypically silly and boisterous; the other constantly whining and selfish from start to finish.
It's also not very consistent internally. For example, early on the 'heroes' are fighting against tech that was effectively stolen from their own military. Yet, despite their specialist training they seem to have never seen nor heard of any of that tech before. They even have an AI assistant that can control some tech, but have no idea that it can.
The worst part is the ethics of the whole thing; but that's getting into spoiler territory.
Watchable, even entertaining, if you can ignore the whining. But don't expect much in plot or character dev.
Yakitori is not for everyone. Based on a Japanese novel series, it is a military / sci-fi anime that is actually pretty good for what is it - a basic story about a young man looking for his place in the world, space dogs and cats and other species, and fluid combat that is not too outlandish if somewhat simplistic.
The Good: The animation is sufficiently detailed and crisp. There is good use of tracking shots, which in anime is not all too common. It's done skillfully and judiciously, thankfully. The story itself is also refreshingly interesting. And rare for Japanese anime, the English voice version is actually better than the Japanese once. Not that the voice actors are better - they're not really; it's that it fits better with the diverse human characters.
The Bad: The dialogue, as in many Japanese manga and anime, is terrible. Too much exposition and unrealistic ways of speaking. Good dialogue has a natural rhythm and recognizes that people talk differently, with each conversation propelling the narrative forward. Not so much here; it's serviceable though. Also there are some elements of the plot that is simply unbelievable, even for a sci-fi story.
The Verdict: Overall this is an enjoyable anime. Is it memorable or ground-breaking like "Akira"? Nope. There's nothing thought-provoking or philosophical like "Ghost in the Shell". But it is entertaining and at the very least not boring.
The Good: The animation is sufficiently detailed and crisp. There is good use of tracking shots, which in anime is not all too common. It's done skillfully and judiciously, thankfully. The story itself is also refreshingly interesting. And rare for Japanese anime, the English voice version is actually better than the Japanese once. Not that the voice actors are better - they're not really; it's that it fits better with the diverse human characters.
The Bad: The dialogue, as in many Japanese manga and anime, is terrible. Too much exposition and unrealistic ways of speaking. Good dialogue has a natural rhythm and recognizes that people talk differently, with each conversation propelling the narrative forward. Not so much here; it's serviceable though. Also there are some elements of the plot that is simply unbelievable, even for a sci-fi story.
The Verdict: Overall this is an enjoyable anime. Is it memorable or ground-breaking like "Akira"? Nope. There's nothing thought-provoking or philosophical like "Ghost in the Shell". But it is entertaining and at the very least not boring.
The series can't decide if it wants to be compelling or weird. While that doesn't have to be a mutually exclusive choice, in this instant it is. The alien species are relatively unassuming and I guess that was for the shock value of making the violence more impacting.
The series is filled with very cheap creative choices that drag down an otherwise okay work. Shakey cam in an animation is incredibly unnecessary and nauseating. The plot is pretty pretentious and mostly driven by a bad situation the main cast volunteered for. The art style, while well animated, feels bland and detracts from what should have been stunning otherworldly vistas.
It's not terrible, it just feels like trying to be different ended up making it worse than it should be.
The series is filled with very cheap creative choices that drag down an otherwise okay work. Shakey cam in an animation is incredibly unnecessary and nauseating. The plot is pretty pretentious and mostly driven by a bad situation the main cast volunteered for. The art style, while well animated, feels bland and detracts from what should have been stunning otherworldly vistas.
It's not terrible, it just feels like trying to be different ended up making it worse than it should be.
My overall impression with the intent of the show is that of a pro-military set of writers with a gleeful disregard for morals.
However, the intent of the author is always secondary at best, and the actual product can easily be enjoyed as an at times absurdist parody with some genuinely brilliant moments. Starship Troopers stuff.
Like how the dumbass protagonists go about mowing down waves of rebels even after their own planet has been taken over in the same manner they are now subjecting others to.
I'm completely obsessed with the bunny Hatsune Miku combat AI who steals the show by delivering notifications about death and war crimes with a pop idol dance.
Some of the action can be intense and grounded, with cool sci-fi weaponry and tactics. I recall an amazing shot where a spherical shield is hit by an impact, causing dust to swirl around inside the shield as well as outside. It was only there for a split second, but the effect was really neat and we'll thought out.
And don't get me started on the choice to give the humanoid zebra background character hoofs for fingernails.
The end fizzles out disappointingly, but the unexplored themes are a sight to behold.
It has space elevators and orbital drops, and the color and style of the animation is enjoyable.
However, the intent of the author is always secondary at best, and the actual product can easily be enjoyed as an at times absurdist parody with some genuinely brilliant moments. Starship Troopers stuff.
Like how the dumbass protagonists go about mowing down waves of rebels even after their own planet has been taken over in the same manner they are now subjecting others to.
I'm completely obsessed with the bunny Hatsune Miku combat AI who steals the show by delivering notifications about death and war crimes with a pop idol dance.
Some of the action can be intense and grounded, with cool sci-fi weaponry and tactics. I recall an amazing shot where a spherical shield is hit by an impact, causing dust to swirl around inside the shield as well as outside. It was only there for a split second, but the effect was really neat and we'll thought out.
And don't get me started on the choice to give the humanoid zebra background character hoofs for fingernails.
The end fizzles out disappointingly, but the unexplored themes are a sight to behold.
It has space elevators and orbital drops, and the color and style of the animation is enjoyable.
Did you know
- TriviaBased on the light novel written by Carlo Zen, illustrated by so-bin, and published by Hayawaka Publishing. Two volumes have been published since 2017 and it considered still being published.
- GoofsThe Yakitori are referred to as "yakitoris" to refer to specific groups. However, as English borrow-words usually follow the rules of pluralism from their native tongue, there should be no "s" (Japanese doesn't differentiate between singular and plural forms as English does).
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Yakitori: Soldados de la desdicha
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 45m
- Color
- Sound mix
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