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#1381 |
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Henshin Heaven
Join Date: Jan 2016
Location: Inside a Hyper Battle Video, help.
Posts: 1,514
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Supaidaman is definitely a show worth watching. The musical theme alone is worth it, incredibly catchy! And I'm also amazed that they thought to make the plot where Takuya starts working with an Interpol agent a movie, and not part of a series. It's a pretty important plot point. And Doctor Miracle is such an interesting villain that if I were Marvel, I would consider adding her counterpart to the official Spiderman.
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#1382 |
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Standing By
Join Date: Feb 2020
Location: USA
Posts: 2,748
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I finished up Exceedraft today. It wasn't bad but it's notably worse than both Winspector and Solbrain in most respects. The show carries forward the human crime oriented angle of its predecessors and has far less video and sound editing jank, but it suffers a lot from feeling like the show just didn't have anything to say. Winspector is about the importance of saving every life possible and Solbrain takes on the challenging idea of saving the hearts of people, but Exceedraft is a cop drama that just says trite things about people and society.
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The show also tries to delve deeper into the team members as individual characters, but I didn't feel like it added much, and I feel like the characters involved in the crime of the week tended to get neglected instead. Hayato gets far less focus than Daiki or Ryoma did too, so he wasn't much of a leader figure.
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The further along the show goes, the more the rescue aspect starts to feel neglected, escalating into the characters getting combat oriented suit upgrades and... peaking when the show features a war between the biblical God and Devil where humanity is nearly wiped out by God's judgement for the finale? Did Exceedraft just get revived from death by aborting the child of God?! After a certain point I just had no idea what the show was even about anymore.
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Largely unremarkable, but with occasional good episodes. Then the show loses its mind. Definitely the weakest 90s Metal Hero I have seen so far, but it DID make me appreciate Winspector and Solbrain even more than I already did. I guess things just weren't the same without Noboru Sugimura as head writer.
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#1383 |
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Ex-Weather Three leader
Join Date: Jan 2012
Posts: 11,978
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Speaking of Exceedraft, a young Mamoru Miyano was a guest character in episodes 7 and 8 as a kid. For those not familiar, that's Mr. Ultraman Zero or Deathryuger for Ultra and Sentai fans.
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![]() Last edited by Sunred; 01-18-2026 at 04:34 PM.. |
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#1384 |
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Henshin Heaven
Join Date: Jan 2016
Location: Inside a Hyper Battle Video, help.
Posts: 1,514
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I actually fairly like the overall design of the Try Jackets, although I wonder how they're supposed to see out of those opaque-looking visors. Sync Redder was a big improvement in that sense. I also winced at that early suit-up scene where Ken slaps his face with the metal gloves. Surely that hurts.
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I think the main characters were decent on their own, but yeah, I didn't really feel their dynamic as a team. Looked like there was a hint of rivalry between Hayato and Kosaku, but it didn't go anywhere. Katsuragi got nothing and Ai got screwed by the final arc. They've got nothing on Ryouma, Daiki and Masaki!
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Crazy how Miyashita Junichi followed this with Janperson, which we both loved. Blue SWAT could be either high quality or a car crash, I have no idea what to expect from this wildcard writer. I can't even attribute it to being his first time, as the sudden biblical warfare in a rescue police show isn't a sign of poor experience, only poor and deranged narrative.
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#1385 |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: Aug 2021
Posts: 3,094
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Well, this is not tokusatsu at all, but it’s still related, so I’ll share my impressions here. I watched "The War at Sea from Hawaii to Malaysia" from 1942. That is, the same propaganda film for which Eiji Tsuburaya made miniatures long before Godzilla and Ultraman.
If we talk about impressions, now this film is interesting precisely as a piece of the era. Thanks to him, you can find out what people thought at a critical historical moment, because neither before nor after they would have ever filmed something like this. Viewers, along with young Tomoda, go from a cadet to a military pilot participating in the attack on Pearl Harbor and the battles near the Malay Archipelago. The scenes with the military are very massive and impressive in scale. It is clear that no expense was spared on the film. Propaganda for the most part manifests itself in the absence of any conflicts. Tomoda gets along well with his peers and with his elders, and his family also fully supports him. Although some of his mother’s phrases and actions can be interpreted in two ways, and it is quite possible that the director dared to put a secret meaning into the film, unnoticed by the censors. Also slightly surprising is the almost complete lack of justification for the war. Typically, in propaganda films this is the main emphasis: to explain the need for bloodshed as eloquently and as accessiblely as possible. Here it is presented simply as a given. Apparently, by that time the Japanese were already in the mood to conquer the world and they had no need for additional explanations. The enemy in the film is faceless. Only technology and an English-speaking voice on the radio. Most likely this is explained by the lack of European actors, but in the end this only benefited. If we talk about the technical side, the miniatures are excellent. I understand why they were mistaken for real filming at the time. Planes fly and drop bombs on ships and buildings. Of course, in my situation, when there is no electricity for 15 hours a day due to the bombing, it doesn’t look very nice, but it’s still worth appreciating good work. As a result, I can recommend watching this film to those who want to know the origins of Godzilla, as well as those interested in that period. But both as a work of art and as propaganda, the movie is frankly weak. I think that the director and screenwriter clearly did not believe what they were filming. |
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#1386 |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 1,138
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As of last night, I have just finished Jiraiya and with it, all of the Metal Heroes of the Showa era in its entirety. It's been a long time coming and as such, here is my ranking list for them all and this is probably the easiest ranking list I've ever done thus far:
The Complete Metal Heroes Rankings (Showa Era Edition) 1. Metalder 2. Spielban 3. Jiraiya 4. Sharivan 5. Gavan 6. Shaider 7. Juspion |
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