Reviews for Guyver: Out of Control
Back to AnimeShame on me for not writing a review before.This movie was´nt my 1st introduction of the Guyver genre after seeing the t.v serie´s in the late 90´s( i was nuts as a minor aged kid too see such bloodshed), but u definetly like the ´spark ´of the franchise.For the fans keep in mind that the 1st Guyver anime is only based on the 1st 4 chapters of the manga wich some minor changes thats notable in the 1st t.v serie´s from the 80´s 90´s, and that the production was´nt a milliondollar company but a small studio with limited resources. Storywise i was really intoit, the whole unpredictabillity of the guyver suits and stuff, more interesting was how the very dark twists further in the story, how short it may be get a nice setting that fits after half the film. i liked the art somewhat, though u have to be used too see 80's 90's handdrawn anime like me but that once again differs for the viewers.For the soundtracks it gave the suspense to what an 80's anime should be, especially when the Female guyver dies, and a bit of rockmusic ofc. All of the ordinary charachters involved have something special to themselve's aside from Sho Fukamachi (the guyver) as for the villians, i mean by that the personality that was given to them, and no girls screaming over the damn place like helpless sluts! each of them acted like real evryday humans.
the t.v show inproved the storyprogressing of the manga and of the art , they kept the strength of most of the charachters alive although sometime's it dropped time to time.
The title of this may cause some slight confusion. This is an OVA Movie adaptation of the Guyver manga; mainly referred to as: "Guyver: Out of Control". Some people may confuse this with the Guyver (1989). In reviewing this OVA film, there is not much to say other than it isn't a great adaptation... like at all. It is a terrible retelling of the Guyver. I highly do not recommend this film as I thought it was a disgrace to the Guyver series. Watching this movie is sure to cause pain. The original series however, is very good if you love action anime: "The Guyver" (1989). The artshows its age, but of everything else, I deeply enjoyed that better TV series adaptation. So if you're looking for a decent action anime I recommend the 1989 series and not this one.
This anime tries to be something, but it doesn't succeed. At first I thought it might be something average, but as the anime went on it just got bad. The anime starts with a guy hitchhiking in the rain, and a trucker gives him a ride. This guy who hitchhiked was carrying Guyver Guns, for some unexplained reason he was carrying them, and the government was after this guy. After finding him, they almost manage to recover the suitcase with the armors, but the suitcase explodes and one of the armors ended up in front of the protagonist. Mizuki, the protagonist's supposed girlfriend, had fainted after seeing oneof the soldiers transformed into a huge monster, and right after the protagonist defeats everyone there, he carries her on his back, but she wakes up, and since he is carrying her on his back, he is holding her and carrying two school bags, she wakes up and calls him a pervert for holding her by the legs, and also gets mad at him. Like, what is the logic? Are they really boyfriend and girlfriend? If so, what's the point in getting mad at your boyfriend for carrying you while you are passed out? It's too silly.
Things really start to come to a head when two of his classmates are killed in front of him in class, then the school guard is also found dead.
Soon after this, the protagonist is interrogated by the police, who for some reason know that he came in contact with the Guyver Armor. How do they know if there isn't even a military man left in the fight that the protagonist was transformed into Guyver l for the first time? It makes no sense.
The guy who interrogated the protagonist also threatens to kill his supposed girlfriend who was with him when the Guyver armor flew off after the suitcase explosion. This guy turns into a huge monster and continues to threaten the protagonist, so the protagonist turns into Guyver and defeats him.
Now comes the bad stuff in this anime. Instead of the protagonist going straight to save Mizuki, he just wanders around aimlessly. An agent finds him, only then he decides to go after her after killing this agent. That makes a lot of sense.
The government already had the Guyver ll Armor that didn't disappear in the explosion, so this armor has Valcuria, a squad supervisor. The problem is that they sexualized a scene that should be horrible; Valcuria moans a lot while the Armor possesses her and penetrates various parts of her body. They literally made this scene as if she was getting a hard-on from the thing (which looked like tentacles, by the way). This didn't even have a narrative function.
For some reason, out of nowhere, Valcuria knows how to use and control Guyver ll. So she is left in charge of recovering the first Armor.
The protagonist goes after Mizuki who was kidnapped by a government squad, and he fights with Valcuria. Obviously he wins, everything explodes, and happy ending (though Guyver lll shows up to save Mizuki from being killed).
It is an action anime, so we expect good animation in the battles. Well, the animation isn't bad, but it's pretty poor. It clearly didn't have a very high budget.
The music I don't even remember, but I remember there was one that was used a lot and it sounded like game music. What bothered me about the audio was the voice when people turned into monsters.
At least the character design is not so bad.
In the end it was another anime full of inconsistencies in the story. It is really bad.
First adaptation that received the classic sleeve of Yoshiki Takaya, being removed in a format of only one short OVA the following year of which its sleeve began its publication. Due to this and the little that had advanced the material until that moment, the story of the OVA was only an approximate adaptation of the first four chapters of the manga. Covering only the basic elements of these chapters as the transformation of the protagonist when making contact with the artifact; the battle with the first Zoanoids presented; the battle with the Guyver II and the appearance at the end of the OVA ofthe Guyver III. Among the main changes that were made in the adaptation I could find the fact of having replaced Tetsuro Segawa by Mizuki Segawa, and the most notorious; the replacement of Oswald Lisker (the Guyver II) by a female agent named Valcuria, who would come to be the final enemy of this OVA as the Guyver II. But moving a little away from what would be to highlight the differences you have with your original material and probably not covered too well the little content that could be drawn from these few chapters, I will speak exclusively of my impressions on this first OVA.
The Guyver OVA is a job that has managed to capture my attention in one way or another. Coming clearly from a work that has had clear inspiration from other classics of yesteryear with the premise of the boy who for X or Y circumstances ends up abandoning his humanity and fighting with forces that threaten him, his friends and the world. To name the prime example we have Devilman from Go Nagai. The premise of this OVA is interesting in itself, but unfortunately as the first opportunity has not passed decently from the role to the animation. Production Reed, the studio in charge of this first OVA has not always been noted for having a budget too outstanding in their productions, we have cases like his adaptation of Vampire Hunter D in 1985, which would later be known as the ugly version of Hunter D , precisely because it has as a point of comparison the fascinating work done by Madhouse and Yoshiaki Kawajiri with Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust of the year 2000. And with the case of the OVA of Guyver (1986) the exact same thing happens: to be a work that has received several adaptations over the years it is impossible not to make the comparison to know which is doing more justice to his sleeve that already a practitioner can be considered cult and with its certain relevance in the world. Therefore, the adaptation to OVA of 86 is clearly considered the worst version that Guyver has had in animation, and I really believe it ...
In judging Guyver either as an adaptation or as a simple OVA plus action of the 80's, it is very badly stopped. In the first place we have to focus on how it looks, because at least it would have to stand out as a fun action with well represented violence, or not? The OVA is violent, of course, it has a lot of action as well, but it just seems to be fatal. If you only see her looking for some decent OVA Gore to put out the brain and enjoy, you'll get a good disappointment because even that does not give much. The violence is not at all shocking or outstanding, despite the fact that there are many dismemberments and crushes of heads around releasing liters and liters of blood, is very limited in the movement of the characters and how they draw the bleed makes it look very false, presenting scenes that far from causing any kind of impact on the viewer only cause you to think about how ridiculous you can get to see for such a poor drawing. Neither is that you have to forgive for the time because even for those years the decade of the 80`s was clearly the rise of this type of visceral works. And I know that this comparison is too unfair for the budget that was invested in both, but the first Devilman OVA of 1987 is much better as explicit Gore material, being very entertaining and sporting an incredible technical quality. Not to mention that he also has better fights than we could find in the Guyver OVA.
Leaving the poor animation and side design, the story as I said before is interesting, but the execution is very bad, mainly limited by time and by the bad decisions made to adapt what little they could of the manga. Leaving us with a generic OVA to kill Monsters to rescue the girlfriend of the protagonist who was kidnapped by the evil organization. The characters only leave us with the impression of being very basic, the protagonist has at least one notable moment of fragility, but nothing more. The OVA also suffers from the effect of being an incomplete material, clear, and in passing with loose ends such as the whereabouts of the protagonist and Guyver III, or if the organization was completely dismantled. So many things that could never have materialized in an OVA of 50 minutes To finish, just keep the memory that this OVA was a dirty little spot in the history of adaptations that Guyver has, you just have to ignore it and pretend that you never had a reason to exist. Because a short time later in 1989, a set of 6 OVAs would come out that would adapt the manga from scratch, having a better acceptance than the deficient product of 1986. Did these OVAs really achieve a result that was less acceptable?
My favorite adaptation of the guyver, allthough admittedly not the best. The reason why its my favorite is mainly up to some stellar animation and art style choices (very close to the orignal manga) that i just personally reallly love. The gore and fights, although very short lived, are best seen to in this movie vs any of the other animes due to not CONSTANTLY cutting the camera away and doing cheap to make one shots and reused animations, there is only one reused animation in this movie during the fight with guyver 2 which is NOTHING compared to how much they reuse in the otherOVA. I also am not going to compare it to the entirety of the 2005 anime because that would be unfair, the 2005 anime gets into the best parts of the manga and i really just dont think its fair to compare the two in their entirety, as to what the 2005 anime does cover in paralell with this movie, the ova does it better with more detailed gore and a darker feel. Which leads me to my main point about why I think this is the best guyver adaptation
its DARK
and i mean, theres a reason they named the second live action movie DARK HERO
Guyvers story has always been suited to a strangely realistic and serious feel, look at everything chronos does back to back in any adaptation in this series, sure its all dressed up in 80s goofiness but its a very dark and depressing story when you really think about it (and the 2005 anime did a perfect job of honing that in with the characters writing and dialogue, but just not in most of the fight scenes and its art style)
And whilst this movie is very goofy in execution, put under a microscope it has an aura of almost, mental illness. I could talk all day about it, but im just going to mention the example of how sho rips out the guyver 2s control metal without hesitation after she was very courteous to him and leave it at that.
Also id like to mention that i have no nostalgia factor with this series, i stumbled across it last year as a kamen rider fan and immediately fell in love. I am 18. I am not a 40 year old british dude who had this on VHS so please do not think of me as nostalgia biased.
TLDR: I will ____ you if you give this less than a 6.