Ichi wa zen, Zen wa ichi
- Episode aired Jun 21, 2009
- TV-14
- 30m
While visiting Izumi, their childhood teacher, the Elrics recall the early difficulties of grasping equivalent exchange. They also discover she shares their intimate knowledge of alchemy's g... Read allWhile visiting Izumi, their childhood teacher, the Elrics recall the early difficulties of grasping equivalent exchange. They also discover she shares their intimate knowledge of alchemy's greatest taboo.While visiting Izumi, their childhood teacher, the Elrics recall the early difficulties of grasping equivalent exchange. They also discover she shares their intimate knowledge of alchemy's greatest taboo.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
- Edward Elric
- (English version)
- (voice)
- Alphonse Elric
- (English version)
- (voice)
- Izumi Curtis
- (English version)
- (voice)
- (as Christine Auten)
- Trisha Elric
- (English version)
- (voice)
- Sig Curtis
- (English version)
- (voice)
- Narrator
- (English version)
- (voice)
- Additional Voices
- (English version)
- (voice)
- Additional Voices
- (English version)
- (voice)
- (as Jonathan Brooks)
- Edward Elric
- (Japanese version)
- (voice)
- (as Romi Pak)
- Alphonse Elric
- (voice)
- Izumi Curtis
- (voice)
- Trisha Elric
- (voice)
- Sig Curtis
- (voice)
- Man A
- (voice)
- Man B
- (voice)
- Man C
- (voice)
- Narrator
- (voice)
- Edward Elric (Animax Asia dub)
- (English version)
- (voice)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
The relationship between this episode and the last one is really interesting. The last episode really drove home the beauty of the miracle of childbirth and the inherent value of human life. Here that theme serves to augment the tragedy of Izumi and Sig's past in their efforts to conceive a child. Their relationship with the brothers comes about so naturally and develops in such a wholesome manner. The Elrics become the children Izumi and Sig always yearned for but could never have. Their banter is also delightful, the puking blood gag (while a bit morbid after learning more about Izumi's past) never fails to get a chuckle out of me.
The theme of cyclicism is explored thoroughly. We see its beautifully sublime nature through the boys' experience training on the island, as well as its more macabre side with the boys committing the same taboo their teacher did in the wake of a tragic loss. This darkness does give way to a wonderfully cathartic moment at the episode's conclusion though, with the boys being able to grieve and express their emotions authentically to someone who can truly empathize with them.
This is really a charming and simultaneously thought-provoking episode. It's a nice break from the political drama and brooding mystery that fills in some important gaps in our knowledge of the Elric boys' past.
This episode leaves us with a thematic question of "What does 'One is all, all is one' mean?" It ties in with the story really well. The main highlight of the episode is Izumi. She is just a badass and she looks like she might be a really well-written character. She is overall very interesting.
The animation continues to impress. It's smooth like butter and incredibly consistent. The pacing of this episode is underated. The comedy is pretty good.
8.4/10 Tight, good episode.
Did you know
- Quotes
Alphonse Elric: Say, Brother, have you found the answer to "One is all, all is one"? I've been thinking about it all this time, but I only have a vague idea about it.
Edward Elric: I'm not sure about this, but remember when I was weak from hunger, and ate those ants?
Alphonse Elric: You did?
Edward Elric: Mm-hmm, I ate them, They were sour as hell, too. But then, I thought, if I didn't eat them, and died, I'd be eaten by ants, or the foxes. I'd go back to the earth, and become grass. The rabbits would eat that.
Alphonse Elric: The food chain, right?
Edward Elric: Yeah. And it's not just that. Long ago, this whole island may have been at the bottom of the sea. In tens of thousands of years, it might be the peak of a mountain.
Alphonse Elric: All things are connected?
Edward Elric: Everything is in the middle of a great, unseen flow. I don't know if you'd call it the universe, or the world, or whatever. Looking at it as this huge thing. Al, you and I are like ants. One small part within the flow. Nothing more than on fraction of the whole. But putting all those small "ones" together allows the "all" to exist...
Details
- Runtime
- 30m
- Color