Anime Quick Information

Title: Texhnolyze #1
UK publisher: MVM Films
Genre: Sci-Fi, Thriller
Studio: Madhouse Studios
Type: TV Series
Director: Hirotsugu Hamazaki
Year: 2003
Running Time: 1hr 40mins
Rate this anime:
Average Rating: 10.0

Paul's review

Paul scored this with 8/10. Disagree?

In a brooding, unsympathetic and bleak future, Texhnolyze documents humanity's sheer visceral will to survive. Even as Mankind has hit an evolutionary grave-stone, there are people left who want to go on living; and through all the despair and hopelessness that surrounds him, Ichise stands tall with such a tremendously strong spirit, refusing to give in.

Texhnolyze is the latest series involving the eclectic artistic genius Yoshitoshi ABe, the acclaimed creative driving force behind the high-brow science fiction landmark Serial Experiments Lain and symbolic coming-of-age drama Haibane Renmei, and this unique, claustrophobic vision of the future more than lives up to his sizable reputation.

Texhnolyze #1 is a remarkably cerebral effort, relying on the viewer to feel the story rather than understand it. Ichise is far from a typical "leading man" and with him being a very quiet and brooding personality, we are forced to judge him on his actions rather than words. And it's his innate, desperate instinct to survive that underlines the struggle at the heart of Texhnolyze, where Mankind has all but lost hope in natural evolution and long since turned to technology to push themselves past their old physical boundaries. In this underground decaying city of Lukuss, Ichise is one of the few people left who are simply content to go on living.

This is clearly not a series for everyone and I can understand how many viewers could watch the first few episodes and dismiss it outright as being "pretentious" or "stuck up"; Texhnolyze is a show that eschews modern story telling techniques and depends on the narrative trapping the viewer in its thickly tangled web of raw atmosphere and base emotion.
Rarely is anything explained during Texhnolyze #1, instead we watch as Ichise struggles from disgusting sewer to dirty back-street, having been horribly wounded for defending himself against a powerful Yakuza woman.
Ichise is eventually "saved" by a rogue female doctor who specializes in creating Texhnolyzed limbs; advanced robotic technology that can sync with the human mind and more than make up for any missing arms or legs.
This is but a small taste of a story that looks to involve social disputes, religious philosophy and mafia war-fare.

In a series that is as dialogue-lite as this, it's a relief that the industrial musical score more than stands up to the task of driving the story forward and emotionally identifying the viewer with these characters. Texhnolyze immediately struck me as a show with a great mysterious sense of urgency and the atmospheric, often rousing soundtrack more than outlines these feelings. Notable are the fantastic opening and ending themes, respectively exciting industrial beats and melancholy, sad acoustics.

Artistically, Madhouse Studio's have animated Texhnolyze in a way that perfectly matches the series tag-line of "Inhumane but beautiful". This is cold science-fiction at its most bitterly attractive, burying us knee deep in the grime and desperate hopelessness of that embodies the underground city of Lukuss.

In Summary

Texhnolyze #1 is a fantastic introduction to latest artistic masterwork involving Yoshitoshi ABe; eclectic, visual story telling nearing perfection. Some viewers will be disappointed in the lack of plot exposition and considerably slow moving narrative, but if you dare to allow yourself to be sucked into the bleak hell-hole of Texhnolyze, the claustrophobic, emotive atmosphere will have you glued to the screen.

Review Information

Score: 8 out of 10
Review By: Paul
Date Published: Thu, 9 Jun 2005
1 responses to our review of "Texhnolyze #1"

1. Comment by Martin

Right from the techno-industrial theme tune from Juno Reactor, it's clear that this is one of 'those' series: experimental, original and something of an acquired taste. For one thing, there is practically no dialogue for the first ten minutes: we are introduced to a cast of characters and a series of events that are not even partly explained for quite a while. All you can do for the first couple of episodes is sit back and enjoy the dark and pitiless atmospherics while the story picks up pace. Rest assured though that it is worth sticking with. The involvement of character designer ABe and studio Madhouse should be reason enough but now that the major players and settings have been introduced, Texhnolyse shows the early signs of becoming a classic.

Posted on Tue, 23 Aug 2005. Martin rated "Texhnolyze #1": 8 out of 10.

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