Spriggan

Spriggan     ASIN B000063IMS     Medium Count 1     Medium DVD     Release Date 4/23/2002     Group Glass Frame     Link [+]     UPC 702727021527     EAN 0702727021572     Aspect Ratio 1.85:1     DVD Region 1     Running Time 90     Studio A.D. Vision     Theatrical Date 10/12/2001     Audience Rating R (Restricted)     Cast Hawkins, J.D. / Patton, Chris / Corn, Kevin / Pfister, Ted / McAvin, Andy     Director Kawasaki, Hirotsugu     Format Anamorphic / Animated / Color / Dolby / DVD-Video / Widescreen / NTSC     Language English (Subtitled) / English (Dolby Digital 5.1) / Japanese (Dolby Digital 5.1)     Date Imported 11/25/2007     List Price $19.98     Rating 4.54.54.54.54.5     Genre Anime     Copy Count 1     Tag Japan      

Amazon.com Fast paced, violent, and loud, Spriggan uses a combination of drawn and computer animation to deliver the kind of slam-bang thrill ride Final Fantasy only promised. The convoluted plot, based on a manga series by Hirotsugu Kawasaki and Yasutaka Ito, mixes elements from Raiders of the Lost Ark, 2001: A Space Odyssey, Akira, and Universal Soldier. Yu Ominae (voice by Christopher Patton) is a Spriggan, a member of an elite corps of biologically engineered warriors created by the secret organization ARCAM, who finds himself involved in a baroque adventure centered on the newly discovered Ark of Noah. The Ark is actually an extraterrestrial vehicle with the power to alter the Earth's climate and spawn new animal species. A sinister cadre of rogue Pentagon generals wants it and dispatches a corps of murderous cyborgs lead by Col. MacDougall (Kevin Corn), a monstrous child who's also the product of biological experiments, to capture it. ARCAM is determined to prevent the generals from gaining control of the Ark's awesome powers. Yu battles his way to victory through car chases, sword fights, shootouts, explosions, knifings, and psychic blasts, with a little help from fellow-Spriggan Jean-Jacques Mondo (Andy McAvin). Director Hirotsugu Kawasaki handles the action sequences more effectively than the minimal character development, and Katsuhiro Otomo's screenplay doesn't always make a lot of sense. But Spriggan supplies what hard-core action fans sought in vain in many recent Hollywood blockbusters. Just don't sit too close to a speaker. MPAA rated R, under 17 not admitted (for considerable violence). --Charles Solomon