Anime Quick Information
| Title: | Full Metal Alchemist #4 |
| UK publisher: | Revelation Films |
| Genre: | Action, Drama, Fantasy |
| Studio: | Bones |
| Type: | TV Series |
| Director: | Seiji Mizushima |
| Year: | 2003 |
| Running Time: | 1hr 40mins |
| Average Rating: 8.66 |
Paranoia Agent's review
Paranoia Agent scored this with 8/10. Disagree?
Aspiring alchemists Ed and Alphonse Elric are back for a fourth helping of transmuting action focusing on their never-ending quest to find that most elusive of pebbles, The Philosopher’s Stone. Before they can get to the business at hand, however, the Elric siblings have to contend with Scar, an enigmatic Alchemist with a thirst for violence. At the same time they find themselves protecting Marcoh, a fugitive with a troubled past, a past that may be inexplicably linked to their own.
Earlier volumes in the FMA series (while entertaining in their own right) failed to nail the right balance between the uproarious and the heartbreaking, coming off either too inane or just downright depressing. With volume four, however, the series has finally found its feet, forsaking juvenile humour in favour of a serious, focussed narrative. Of course, the odd gag inevitably slips through, but as the series moves into darker territory the humour is gently being phased out allowing the series’ dramatic chops to really shine.
Chief among this volume’s highlights is the reappearance of Scar, a scarred (believe it or not) zealot with a very, very big chip on his shoulder. Whenever he’s around something spectacularly gruesome is never far behind and his little tête-à-tête with the kiss curled, Strong Arm Alchemist is one of the best sequences to grace this disc. Up until now he has remained something of an unknown factor, cropping up now and again to put the wind up our young heroes. This volume, however, sheds some light on his bloody quest, and as the pieces of his murky past fall into place it’s clear there’s more to him than your average ‘freak of the week’.
Characterisation is as strong as ever and while the personalities thrown up don’t often err on the side of originality they each have enough ticks and quirks to save them from obscurity. The lengthy stretches of development that pepper the action don’t hurt either and this disc blesses the viewer with plenty of exposition that goes a long way to deepening our understanding of the weird and wonderful world the Brothers Elric inhabit and the people they meet.
Visually, this volume is easily on a par with earlier instalments in the series and the usual combination of graceful line work and silky animation never fails to get the eyes watering. My favourite aspect of the visuals has to be the character designs that have a wonderful, chunky feel reminiscent of cult Dreamcast scrapper, Powerstone. It makes a refreshing change from the angular, dare I say clinical, character design that plagues so many modern anime titles, and while I wouldn’t necessarily slap it with the retro tag it has that mid-nineties flavour.
In Summary
16 episodes in, and Fullmetal Alchemist shows no signs of slowing down. In fact, I’d go as far to say this disc has been the most impressive yet, blurring the line between the humorous and the heartfelt with a deftness oddly lacking in volumes 1-3. It’s still early days, but if you’re looking for an action adventure with a bit more grit than your average Shounen series you could do a lot worse than give Fullmetal Alchemist a look.
Screenshots (click to pop out)
Review Information
| Score: | 8 out of 10 |
| Review By: | Paranoia Agent |
| Date Published: | Wed, 18 Jan 2006 |
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1. Comment by FMAsgal
Posted on Thu, 19 Jan 2006. FMAsgal rated "Full Metal Alchemist #4": 10 out of 10.
2. Comment by White_Alchemist
Funimation has done its usual good work and made a high quality set of FMA.
Posted on Mon, 30 Jan 2006. White_Alchemist rated "Full Metal Alchemist #4": 9 out of 10.
3. Comment by Mak
This volume, despite the hype, was not as good as Volume 2. It lacked the psychological horror, angst, suspense and fun that Vol.2 gave to it. But, in a way, that helped. It gave way to an extremely darker anime and opened an extremely complex storyline. Everything that I said it lacked, it didn't forget, it just didn't have the elements as much as Vol.2 did.
This anime is beginning to reach its turning point and I give it a thumbs up. FMA really is a pioneering anime; mainly because it has managed to reinvent the action/fantasy/sci-fi genre as its own, adding a dash of alchemy for inventiveness. Buy this DVD, but don't expect it to be the greatest thing you ever did see, expect it to be one of the top 5 greatest things you ever did see.
Posted on Sun, 12 Feb 2006. Mak rated "Full Metal Alchemist #4": 1 out of 10.
4. Comment by FMAzgal
Posted on Mon, 27 Feb 2006. FMAzgal rated "Full Metal Alchemist #4": 10 out of 10.
Type the characters you see in the picture above.