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Review

by Richard Eisenbeis,

Bloody Escape -Jigoku no Tōsōgeki-

Anime Film Review

Synopsis:
Bloody Escape -Jigoku no Tōsōgeki- Anime Film Review

In a post-apocalyptic future filled with cyborgs, dragon-men, and vampires, humanity has been relegated to living in small, self-contained city-states called "clusters." Lunalu is an ordinary girl living in the yakuza-run Shinjuku Cluster. However, rather than trying to find her place in the organized crime system, she dreams of escaping the walled city and crossing the wasteland to reach the utopian (perhaps mythical) Yokohama Cluster.

One day, on her way home from cram school, Lunalu finds an injured man passed out in an alley and takes him home—only to discover that it's her brother's childhood friend who has somehow become a cyborg vampire ninja. Little does she suspect that this encounter is the start of a chain of events that will change her life and force her to make a bloody escape across the wasteland.

Review:

Bloody Escape -Jigoku no Tōsōgeki- is a film of tremendous highs and lows on nearly every level. On the one hand, its world is wonderfully over-the-top. The mixture of future technology, magic, and fantasy races leads to wildly fun clashes in tone and style. Kisaragi, our main protagonist, is a cyborg vampire ninja who has to feed on normal vampires to survive. His blood is also highly toxic to vampires—and that's something he utilizes in numerous creative ways throughout the film.

On the other, we have the story itself. It's predictable to the extreme—both in the twists and character reveals. It's not hard to know with absolute certainty where things are going—especially once the adventure devolves into Mad Max: Fury Road with trains instead of cars (complete with its own enemy-mook-turned-ally comic relief character).

The characters themselves are also a mixed bag. Many are one-note—especially the aforementioned mook-turned-ally (whose main job is to be stabbed or shot in the butt at every opportunity) and the team of mercenaries who help people escape their clusters to re-settle in new ones.

But then we have Lunalu, who is surprisingly nuanced—especially in how she deals with the personal trauma she experiences throughout the film and how she grows stronger because of it. Likewise, Kisaragi's decent arc goes from a man who has no reason to live (or die) to one who manages to find meaning in his life by the time the credits roll.

However, it's not just the writing quality that varies wildly but the animation as well. The action scenes are well-choreographed and imaginative, with excellent camera work that makes it easy to understand what is happening on screen despite all the visual chaos. Polygon's 3D animation takes center stage here—culminating in a frankly awesome fight between a "web-slinging" hero and flying villain across two speeding trains. The fights are filled with great little visual storytelling beats—like Kisaragi constantly being out of breath from all the physical exertion and how the villains are quick to chop off any limb of theirs infected by Kisaragi's blood. But outside of action scenes, the camera work is typically dull and uninspired. Simple, head-on, static shots with bland backgrounds litter the film's more dialogue-heavy moments.

Speaking of the aural side, the voice acting (most notably Lunalu's) is on point. Still, the character animation can't quite match the extreme feelings in the characters' voices—leaving an odd sense of dissonance in what should be the film's most emotional moments. This brings us to the only aspect of the film not plagued by ups and downs: the music—which is competent (if forgettable) throughout.

Overall, Bloody Escape feels like an anime film destined to be forgotten. For every moment of wild creativity, there is an equally cliché counterpart. For each scene of explosive visual style, there is a blandly directed conversation highlighted by one-note characters. It is a film that succeeds at its most ambitious moments and fails at its most grounded ones. And, when it comes down to it, it's a film I'm glad I watched—though I doubt I will ever do so again.

Grade:
Overall : C+
Story : C+
Animation : C+
Art : C
Music : C

+ Over-the-top world, great action scenes, explosive creativity on display.
Predictable plot, an expanded cast filled with one-note characters, boring direction outside of combat.

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Production Info:
Director: Goro Taniguchi
Screenplay:
Shingo Nagai
Goro Taniguchi
Music: Kotaro Nakagawa
Original Concept: Goro Taniguchi
Original Character Design:
Simadoriru
Yūsuke Kozaki
Cgi Director: Satoshi Oyamada

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Bloody Escape -Jigoku no Kōsōgeki- (movie)

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