In this movie, Leomon dies. Dorumon
lives... and the ruling powers have a real problem with this.
And now for something completely
different!
Not long after Frontier wrapped up,
with no Digimon on Japanese TV for the first time this millennium, we
got this- a standalone CGI movie that features no human characters
and is only loosely inspired by a manga. The animation style alone
makes it stand out, as it's very much a product of its time. Odd as
it looks, all CGI anime looked like this back then, and I've got the
Vandread episodes to prove it. It's also the longest thing we'll have
to review here. Only the first Zero Two movie is longer, but that one
was mercifully shortened when brought stateside. As that one was
incomprehensible to begin with, nothing was lost.
X-Evolution is not incomprehensible,
but doesn't do the audience any favors when it comes to understanding
the plot. It drops us right in the middle of the story and leaves us
to infer what's going on through dialogue. This requires very good
concentration, made difficult thanks to all the detailed computer
animation, rather dull music and the fact that these characters
insist on stopping to have a conversation every five minutes.
The gist of it is that ruling deity
Yggdrasil, having determined that the Digital World is growing too
complex to maintain order, is blowing it up and starting over,
choosing a select few Digimon to populate this new world. However,
some of the unwanted Digimon, such as furry little Dorumon, carry
with them the X-Antibody, which keeps them alive in the new world
against Yggdrasil's wishes. The Royal Knights have been tasked with
wiping out these X-Antibody Digimon or, failing that, killing
everybody and starting over. There's also a secret connection between
Yggdrasil and Dorumon. Good luck figuring that part out.
While the movie stumbles frequently in
outlining what exactly is happening, it does a brilliant job
examining all the themes and angles in play here. That helps elevate
it over the typical Digimon movie: this one feels like it's about
something. As a mutant stowaway, Dorumon is a social outcast among
the “chosen” Digimon, partially due to overt classism and
partially due to the (justified) fear that Dorumon's existence will
prompt the Royal Knights to, quite literally, kill 'em all and let
God sort 'em out. You also get into the heads of rebels like
WarGreymon who are actively fighting such an unjust system. The three
featured Royal Knights all take a different approach: Magnamon sucks
it up and obeys orders, Dukemon openly defies Yggdrasil, while
Omegamon does his job while increasingly asking all the right
questions.
While out of any mortal's reach for
most of the movie, it's implied that even Yggdrasil's motives fit
into the picture. The resounding message here is that fighting to
stay alive is justified instinct rather than defiant political
statement. Yggdrasil is doing the same thing, as its increased
inability to control the Digital World is making it less and less
relevant, making its subjects less and less reverent- bad news for a
god if Neil Gaiman's any authority. It's sort of a “maintaining
control vs. letting nature run free” conflict. Imagine Jurassic
Park from the perspective of the cute spitty dinosaur that eats Wayne
Knight.
Combining the philosophical commentary,
surprisingly intricate character development and the gaudy number of
plot twists makes for a movie that ultimately tries to juggle more
than it can handle. It would have done well to simplify things, maybe
establish the setting before diving into it, and do more to show us
what's really going on instead of telling us what everyone's aiming
for. That prevents X-Evolution from transcending from a good Digimon
movie to a good movie that happens to have Digimon in it. There was
no reason not to shoot for that.
My Grade: B
Loose Data:
- As this movie was never dubbed, we're using Japanese names here. If you're more comfortable with dub names, feel free to change Dukemon to Gallantmon, Omegamon to Omnimon and, if you absolutely insist, Yggdrasil to King Drasil.
- The Royal Knights refer to three different terminals- Urd, Skuld and Verdandi, the three Norns closely tied to Yggdrasil in Norse mythology. Insert Ah My Goddess reference here.
- MetalGarurumon and WarGreymon fight Omegamon. This is your mind going kablooey.
- One of the more confounding elements of this movie is how nobody (except Leomon!) can stay dead. No less than four characters return from presumed death, and only two are given any sort of explanation. MetalGarurumon is the worst example as he's seen giving up his X-Antibody to Tokomon, falling to the ground dead, then returning later just because.
- So whose bright idea was it to combine a rebel base with a refugee camp? Having to take care of the innocents makes it really hard to mount a proper defense.
- While more time should have been spent building a bond with Dorumon, Tokomon has such a wonderful, understated role in all this as his relationship with Dorumon doesn't change even after multiple evolutions. This in turn helps Dorumon preserve his identity after his Perfect form looks an awful lot like the bad guys everyone's fighting.
- There's a great deal of meaning in Magnamon allowing Alphamon and Omegamon to pass through to see Yggdrasil. Even as he doesn't go along with them, simply allowing them to pass amounts to betraying his lord. He's silently rooting them on.
Okay on your last point, I don't think it's that Magnamon was rooting for them. He WANTED to stop them and even alerted Yggdrasil that they were coming. It's just kind of hard to do anything physical when Alphamon and Omegamon are the TWO STRONGEST Knights. So it's most likely there was /nothing/ he could do to stop them at that point.
ReplyDeleteNot *officially* dubbed, anyway. There was a fandub I found online when I first searched for this movie, but the quality of the voicework was so bad in the first few minutes, that I decided to search out the original Japanese version
ReplyDeleteWargreymon X & Metalgarurumon X VS Omegamon! The X means they are more badass and actually have chance LOL
ReplyDeleteYou gave this movie a very fair review and I can't disagree with you on any part but personally this is still a top favorite of mine that I give an A+ to.
So many former good guys as bad guys here!
ReplyDeleteI wasn't even sure what I was watching or why I was watching it half the movie, and admittedly hung on mainly because of Wargreymon, Metalgarurumon, and Tokomon. And then it got *good*. I'm impressed and quite pleased I didn't just decide to call it a loss.
ReplyDeleteAlso, Omnimon/Omegamon as an antagonist kind of threw me a lot. I guess I got Mummymon as a protagonist to balance it out.