Bubblegum Crisis Tokyo 2040
Bubblegum Crisis Tokyo 2040 | |
Cover to ADV Films DVD Collection release | |
バブルガムクライシス TOKYO 2040 (Baburugamu Kuraishisu TOKYO 2040) | |
---|---|
Genre | Cyberpunk, Action, Mecha |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Hiroki Hayashi |
Written by | Chiaki J. Konaka |
Studio | AIC |
Licensed by |
‹See Tfd› |
Network | TV Tokyo |
English network |
‹See Tfd› |
Original run | October 8, 1998 – March 31, 1999 |
Episodes | 26 |
Bubblegum Crisis Tokyo 2040 (バブルガムクライシス TOKYO 2040 Baburugamu Kuraishisu TOKYO 2040) is a Japanese anime series produced by Anime International Company (AIC). A retelling of the 1987 original video animation Bubblegum Crisis, the series premiered on TV Tokyo on October 8, 1998 where it ran for 26 episodes until its conclusion on March 31, 1999. Toshiba EMI released the episodes on both VHS and Laserdisc across 13 volumes, each containing two episodes. The first volume was released on January 21, 1999; the final volume was released July 26, 2000.[1] The series was later released on DVD, however the Japanese versions were simply the American DVD releases encoded to play for Region 2.[2]
Plot
The story takes place in Tokyo where much of the manual labor is done by robots called Boomers, which are run by a mega-corporation Genom. Linna Yamazaki, a new office worker, observes a Boomer that has “gone rogue”, causing destruction and attacking people. Although the AD Police are called in to stop the rogue Boomers, a renegade group called the Knight Sabers dressed in cybernetic, armored Hardsuits appear and save the day. Yamazaki joins the group which consists of: Priss, a rock star; Sylia, a boutique store owner and the group’s leader; and Nene, a computer whiz who also works within the AD Police as a dispatch operator.
Over the course of the series, the Knight Sabers go after the rogue boomers, which frustrates the AD Police officers Leon McNichol and his partner Daley Wong. Genom is not happy with the development. its leader Quincy Rosenkreutz and advisor Brian J. Mason seek to unlock more boomer technology. Meanwhile, the girls must deal with Sylia’s younger brother Mackey. Leon pursues Priss with romantic intentions, but does not know of her connection to the Saber Knights.
Mason uncovers and reactivates Galatea, a humanoid based on Sylia’s DNA who is able to control all boomers. Genom cuts AD Police’s funding, resulting in a strike, however, Galatea’s influence causes boomers everywhere to go rogue, trapping the Knight Sabers and the AD Police folks inside their own building. The Knight Sabers follow and defeat Galatea at a satellite orbiting Earth.
Characters
Many of the characters are similar to those in the OVA series.
- Priss S. Asagiri (プリス・S・アサギリ Purisu Esu Asagiri)
- Voiced by: Yu Asakawa (Japanese); Christine Auten (English)
- Priss is the strongest member of the Knight Sabers, specializing in heavy assault. The vocalist of an underground rock band, she lives in the slums of the town in a trailer truck and is a distrustful loner who is rarely seen with her fellow Knight Sabers. AD Policeman Leon McNichol is attracted to her, but she initially mocks him. As the series progresses, her view changes as they both encounter each other in various dangerous situations and they helped each other. She also begins to become more friendly with her fellow team mates, though she always retains some distance with them and is very protective of her privacy.
- Linna Yamazaki (リンナ・ヤマザキ Rinna Yamazaki)
- Voiced by: Rio Natsuki (Japanese); Kelly Manison (English)
- Farm girl Linna traveled to Megatokyo to become a Knight Saber and to get away from her overbearing family. An office lady for the Hugh-Geit Corporation, she is constantly harassed by her bosses but continues to be a positive, friendly, and outgoing person who dreams of helping others. It was her confrontational tendencies and sense for justice which eventually got her admitted to the Knight Sabers. After joining the team, she forms a close sisterly relationship with Nene.
- Sylia Stingray (シリア・スティングレイ Shiria Sutingurei)
- Voiced by: Satsuki Yukino (Japanese); Laura Chapman (English)
- An enigmatic billionaire, and the founder of the Knight Sabers, Sylia is the daughter of Dr. Katsuhito Stingray, the man who invented Boomers. Implants in her brain were used to create both Galatea and Mackey and her brain patterns were used in the creation of Boomers thus strongly relating her to boomers, but she sees them as an abomination as her mother did. She acts as ground support for the Knight Sabers. She is in love with Nigel Kirkland, a sullen mechanic who was an engineer on the Boomer project who helped her design and build the hard suits. Sylia owns and operates an upscale clothing boutique called Silky Doll, which also serves as a front for the Knight Sabers HQ. Sylia suffers from regular flashbacks; most stem from her extremely complicated and disturbing childhood involving her mother's death and the cruel experiments her father conducted on her. She rarely dons her hardsuit or enters combat.
- Nene Romanova (ネネ・ロマノーヴァ Nene Romanōva)
- Voiced by: Hiroko Konishi (Japanese); Hilary Haag (English)
- An 18-year-old perky and naïve hacker who is employed as an operator for the AD Police, Nene is a genius with computers and routinely hacks into military networks. She is recruited for the Knight Sabers after she hacks Sylia's computer trying to learn more about them. She primarily works on sensor ops, battlefield communications, ECM and ECCM. As the series progresses, Mackey develops a crush on her, despite the fact that she is three years older than him. The two eventually become good friends, although their relationship remains platonic.
- Leon McNichol (レオン・マクニコル Reon Makunikoru)
- Voiced by: Kiyoyuki Yanada (Japanese); Jason Douglas (English)
- Leon is a frustrated but dedicated cop, with a tendency to rush in without thinking. Having worked his way up from the normal police, Leon sees himself as the protector of the local citizens and initially dislikes the vigilante nature of the Knight Sabers. He meets and becomes a big brother figure for Nene and falls in love with Priss. He is unaware of her being a Knight Saber until later in the series, but when he learns the truth he keeps it to himself. At the end of the series, Priss returns her feelings.
- Daley Wong (デイリー・ウォン Dirī Won)
- Voiced by: Yūji Ueda (Japanese); Chris Patton (English)
- Daley is Leon's partner, and a highly skilled investigator who actively questions the contradictory nature of the AD department's relationship with the Knight Sabers. Towards the end of the series, he disappears without explanation, although it is likely that he chose to evacuate the city after he helps ensure that the boomer menace cannot spread any further.
- Nigel Kirkland (ナイジェル・カークランド Naijeru Kākurando)
- Voiced by: Ken Yamaguchi (Japanese); John Gremillion (English)
- A former engineer, Nigel worked on the Boomer Project with Sylia's father and Brian J. Mason, then later helped Sylia design and build the hard suits. Now a mechanic, he helps maintain the hard suits. He is romantically involved with Sylia, but because of his quiet, sullen nature he is called the "man of a thousand grunts" by other characters and his true feelings for Sylia are unknown. Mackey becomes his protege and one of the few people Nigel seems to consider a friend. At the beginning of the series, Priss appears to be infatuated with him, though he does not react to her flirtations. However, he later creates a "Motoslave" (motorcycle that can transform into an exoskeleton for Priss's hardsuit) specifically for her that, using Nigel's voice, says it wishes to protect Priss. Both Priss and Sylia are attracted to Nigel, however, Nigel never showed preference for either one. However, Sylia was more emotionally desperate to have Nigel and Priss gave up on Nigel since she has Leon. Nigel would later build more advanced Hard-Suits for the ladies in their battle against the mad-boomers and eventually Galatea.
- Mackey Stingray (マッキー・スティングレイ Makkī Sutingurei)
- Voiced by: Kouki Miyata (Japanese); Spike Spencer (English)
- Mackey was initially introduced as Sylia's younger brother, however, he's actually a male doppelganger version of Sylia. Created by Sylia's father, in his quest for advancing artificiality, Mackey is neither fully human nor boomer; he's a prototype that was deemed too human and considered a failure. However, he wasn't discarded and was kept around to be a false little brother to Sylia and she accepted Mackey as such. Mackey is depicted as being a naïve, inquisitive and awkward young man who loves machinery and computers; due to his artificial nature, he can never age and remains forever in his mid-teens form. After surviving the infamous earthquake, Mackey reunited with Sylia and walked right into her Knight Saber Operation. Although reluctant at Mackey's infatuation with machinery and getting involved in her affairs, she eventually accepted it and allowed him to tag along with the Knight Sabers and eventually formed a good relationship with Nene and Nigel. As the series progresses, his origins was revealed as well as his connection with Galatea.
- Brian J. Mason (ブライアン・メイスン Buraian Meisun)
- Voiced by: Jōji Nakata (Japanese); Andy McAvin (English)
- A ruthless corporate shark who works against the wishes of Rosencreutz, Mason believes the human race should go away and that Boomers should become the new dominant species and uses Genom's spaceborne solar generator and earthborne energy storage project to search for the underground laboratory that housed the Sotai project (Galatea). He once worked on that boomer project with Sylia's father and Nigel Kirkland. Because of his traumatizing past, he is a bitter man. He adopted Galatea in hopes of using her. To fulfill his wish, in a manner he does not want, she changes him into Boomer-Human hybrid, then fuses him into a wall to be hung up high above Megatokyo so that he can observe Galatea's plans for Tokyo and the world.
- Quincy Rosenkroitz (クインシー・ローゼンクロイツ Kuinshī Rōzenkuroitsu)
- Voiced by: Tadashi Nakamura (Japanese); John Swasey (English)
- The GENOM Chief Executive Officer, Quincy wishes for humans and Boomers to live together peacefully. Though suspicious of Mason's activities, he believes he can control and maintain Mason. With his body badly decayed, he uses tubes and wires to keep him alive, afraid of using more advanced implants. Mason's boomer secretary later kills him by disconnecting a vital cord in his life-support system. He shares his surname with Christian Rosenkreuz, legendary founder of the Rosicrucians.
- Kusui (クズイ Kuzui)
- Voiced by: Takehiro Murozono (Japanese); Lew Temple (English)
- Kuzui is a double-agent inside GENOM who passed information to Sylia in exchange for money, but was also aiding Mason in his search for Galatea. He is willing to sell his services to the highest bidder and states that he has no ethics. On Mason's orders, he tells Sylia about the search for Galatea so that she could find it for Mason. Shortly afterwards, Mason has him murdered.
- Galatea (ガラテア Garatea)
- Voiced by: Yui Horie (Japanese); Laura Chapman (adult), Kira (child) (English)
- Galatea is a secret Boomer Project started by Sylia's father, Dr Stingray. She becomes the main antagonist of the series. It is revealed in flashback that she was grown from an implant inserted into a young Sylia's brain against Sylia's mother's wishes, that Dr Stingray asked her to go into stasis when she started to function strangely and that she killed Dr Stingray while still complying and that Genon caused the great earthquake in order to seal her in and prevent her contaminating boomers for her own design. When she is initially seen, she has an appearance like that of a prepubescent Sylia. She is released from stasis by Mason and rapidly matures from her childlike appearance to an adult almost identical to Sylia. After her plans are revealed her hair turns black and her eyes change to red. Late in the series, her mind begins maturing and she begins questioning the meaning and purpose of her existence. At the end of the series, Priss helps her find her path, and Galatea, in turn, saves Priss's life.
List of Hardsuits
Hardsuits are powered battle armour developed by Sylia Stingray and Nigel Kirkland. Initially they are suits of armour that the four Knight Sabers step into while wearing body stockings as close contact with skin and "plumbing" connections are required. Sylia states that the reason there are no male knight sabers is because it was easier to find women who shared a similar shape to her than to redesign hardsuits for a different anatomy. After the suits are lost the replacement suits are instead applied to the naked women as a viscous liquid silver-coloured 'biometal' that morphs into the coloured hardsuit. The hardsuits and the motoslave are revealed late in the series to be a form of boomer, that the very first set of suits (not seen in the series) were all lost due to their wearers not being well suited for their use and that Sylia had to find people like her whose consciousness could meld with the boomers' nascent consciousness (itself based on Sylia's consciousness due to her father's development process) in order to optimise their function. This requirement is revealed when the Knight Sabers receive psychic messages from Galatea and at times the four women are sometimes able to communicate telepathically. Sylia notes that the highly limited power supply of the hardsuits was to prevent them going rogue.
- Priss's Hardsuit is specifically designed for the alley-style, hit and run fighting tactics she prefers. Her red-accented dark blue suit's main weapon is a set of "knuckle bombs". These are essentially shaped-charge explosive devices on the knuckles of her gauntlets, with which she beats against a Boomer until she can tear inside where its "core" (its heart) resides and destroy it from the inside out. Until Linna's arrival, Priss was the primary combatant of the team and it is her suit that is used in Linna's first test simulation.
- Linna's hardsuit is a green color accented with orange trim, and is extremely maneuverable. As the newest suit of the group, it has some of the most advanced features, including a pair of long, ribbon-like cutters with nanometer-thick mono-molecular edges that can slice through almost anything. This newness is a double-edged sword however, for it fails on its first mission with almost tragic consequences for its owner. Linna's suit also has heavily armored gauntlets, but she does not carry the knuckle bombs that Priss's suit has.
- Designed more for field support and data acquisition than for combat, Nene's hardsuit is an unusual reddish-pink and purple. Her weaponry includes a railgun that can shoot high sectional density armor-piercing metal spikes into her opponents, armored gauntlets, and an incredibly powerful computer system and scanner array that lets her handle almost any field intelligence operations required of her. Nene tries to prove herself as a fighter several times but overestimates her physical prowess and endangers herself and others. Eventually her suit is upgraded with several automatic functions that greatly increase her ability as a fighter.
- Sylia's Hardsuit is not often seen in the series, as Sylia does not engage in actual combat as often as the other Knight Sabers. However, when she does, her hardsuit is equipped with a retractable Katar (कटार) style sword blade that she uses to inflict fatal damage to any boomer who makes the mistake of getting too close to her, and her combat style is even more savage and brutal than Priss's. Her suit is primarily a silver/white color with teal and pink accents. It also sports active stealth systems, and she is known to carry remotely detonated explosive charges.
Media
Episode list
Each episode was named after an album or song by a rock/punk band. Many songs were also the title tracks of their respective albums and thus shared the same name as the album. The songs were never played in the episodes themselves. Two pieces of theme music are used for the series. The opening theme, titled "y'know", is performed by Yu Asakawa. The ending theme, titled "Waiting for YOU", is written and performed by Akira Sudou.
The twenty-six episode anime series is directed by Hiroki Hayashi and features character designs by Hidenori Matsubara and Masaki Yamada. It premiered in Japan on October 7, 1998 and aired weekly until December 23, 1998. The remaining thirteen episodes premiered on January 13, 1999, with twelve new episodes airing weekly until the series concluded on March 31, 1999. The original video animations (OVAs), were released directly to VHS and laserdisk. The series was licensed for English-language broadcast and distribution in English by AD Vision and premiered their English dubbed version of the series on May 19, 2001.
As of November 3, 2010, the series has been re-licensed by Funimation Entertainment.[3]
No. | Title | Original airdate |
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01 | "Can't Buy a Thrill" | October 7, 1998 |
02 | "Fragile" | October 14, 1998 |
03 | "Keep Me Hanging On" | October 21, 1998 |
04 | "Machine Head" | October 28, 1998 |
05 | "Rough and Ready" | November 4, 1998 |
06 | "Get It On" | November 11, 1998 |
07 | "Look at Yourself" | November 18, 1998 |
08 | "Fire Ball" | November 25, 1998 |
09 | "My Nation Underground" | December 2, 1998 |
10 | "Woke up with a Monster" | December 9, 1998 |
11 | "Sheer Heart Attack" | December 16, 1998 |
12 | "Made In Japan" | December 23, 1998 |
13 | "Atom Heart Mother" | January 13, 1999 |
14 | "Shock Treatment" | January 20, 1999 |
15 | "Minute by Minute" | January 27, 1999 |
16 | "I Surrender" | February 3, 1999 |
17 | "Moving Waves" | February 10, 1999 |
18 | "We Built This City" | February 17, 1999 |
19 | "Are You Experienced?" | February 24, 1999 |
20 | "One of These Nights" | March 3, 1999 |
21 | "Close to the Edge" | March 10, 1999 |
22 | "Physical Graffiti" | March 17, 1999 |
23 | "Hydra" | March 24, 1999 |
24 | "Light My Fire" | March 31, 1999 |
25 | "Walking on the Moon" | Unaired |
26 | "Still Alive and Well" | Unaired |
Episode title references
- "Can't Buy a Thrill" (album by Steely Dan)
- "Fragile" (album by Yes and the name of a song by Sting, and an album by Dead or Alive)
- "Keep Me Hanging On" (song by The Supremes from the album The Supremes Sing Motown; covered by Vanilla Fudge and Kim Wilde, among others)
- "Machine Head" (album by Deep Purple, also the name of a thrash metal band and a song by the band Bush)
- "Rough and Ready" (album by Jeff Beck)
- "Get It On" (song by T. Rex; covered by The Power Station, various bands have also released songs with the same title)
- "Look at Yourself" (album by Uriah Heep, also the title track of the same album)
- "Fireball" (album by Deep Purple, also the title track of the same album)
- "My Nation Underground" (album by Julian Cope)
- "Woke up with a Monster" (album by Cheap Trick, also the title track of the same album)
- "Sheer Heart Attack" (album by Queen, also the name of a song from the Queen album News of the World)
- "Made in Japan" (album by Deep Purple)
- "Atom Heart Mother" (album by Pink Floyd; also the title track of the same album, a six-part suite)
- "Shock Treatment" (song by The Ramones from the album It's Alive)
- "Minute by Minute" (album by The Doobie Brothers, also the title track of the same album)
- "Surrender" (song by Cheap Trick from the album Heaven Tonight)
- "Moving Waves" (album by Focus, also the title track of the same album)
- "We Built This City" (song by Starship from the album Knee Deep in the Hoopla)
- "Are You Experienced?" (album by Jimi Hendrix, also the title track of the same album)
- "One of These Nights" (album by The Eagles, also the title track of the same album)
- "Close to the Edge" (album by Yes, also the title track of the same album)
- "Physical Graffiti" (album by Led Zeppelin)
- "Hydra" (album by Toto, also the title track of the same album and the name of a southern rock band)
- "Light My Fire" (song by The Doors from the album The Doors)
- "Walking on the Moon" (song by The Police, from the album Reggatta de Blanc)
- "Still Alive and Well" (album by Johnny Winter)
References
- ↑ "Releases" (in Japanese). Anime International Company. Retrieved 2009-01-21.
- ↑ "Releases" (in Japanese). Anime International Company. Retrieved 2009-01-21.
- ↑ "Funimation Adds Excel Saga, Noir, Bubblegum Crisis". Anime News Network. 2010-11-03.
External links
- Bubblegum Crisis Tokyo 2040 (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Bubblegum Crisis Tokyo 2040 at TV.com
- "Animerica feature: Bubblegum Crisis Tokyo 2040: What's old and what's new in the world of Mega-Tokyo and battling Boomers". Archived from the original on 2004-04-07. Retrieved 2011-11-15.