AKA Bonjour Galaxy Express 999
Starring Masako Nozawa, Masako Ikeda, Hidekatsu Shibata, Kaneta Kimotsuki, Youko Asagami, Kei Tomiyama, Makio Inoue, Reiko Tajima
Directed by Rintaro
Say, did you know there was anime before 1980? It’s true. It’s also damn near impossible to find American releases of it. That’s why this is my first review from the ’70s (unless you count the Champion Joe compilation film). It’s also the first film of the Galaxy Express trilogy, which I’ll be tackling over the next few weeks.
One of the few things I know about ’70s anime is that the animation quality was generally crap. I’ve seen brief snippets of anime films from the ’50s and ’60s that could stand proud next to Ghibli films, but somewhere along the line it all went to hell. By the ’80s, animation quality had hit bottom. Sadly, Galaxy Express 999 met my expectations for the ’70s. That doesn’t mean this is a bad film. It just means that Galaxy Express is a product of its time.
It’s also the product of Leiji Matsumoto, one of the biggest names in Japanese sci-fi, perhaps equivalent to Ray Bradbury in America. His most high-profile work in the west was the Yamato series, which went by the name Star Blazers in the US. You’d have to be pretty old to remember that series, but there are still productions based on Matsumoto’s works being made today.
It starts off with a boy named Tetsuro who’s out for revenge. The evil cyborg Count Mecha killed his mother and then mounted her nude body over his fireplace mantle. I’d be out for revenge, too. So Tetsuro tries to steal a ticket for the Galaxy Express 999 (that 999 is pronounced “three nine,” by the way). Apparently, the train will take him to a planet that gives out robot bodies for free, and he’ll need one to take on Count Mecha. As his journey goes on, Tetsuro meets other people, both human and robot, that make him question whether becoming a robot himself is such a good idea. Sure, the immortality is nice and all, but the loss of humanity leaves him with some doubts. It’s this theme about the cost of immortality that drives the plot more so than the revenge tale.
It feels like a bunch of celebrity guest appearances, except we don’t know who they are. It’s not that we need to know anything about them beyond the fact that they are badass space pirates, feared by the government but loved by the poor (a bit like Robin Hood, I suppose). It’s that all of these characters know each other, and the film expects you to know them, too. It feels like we don’t have the whole story here, and unless you watched the Captain Harlock TV series, you really don’t.
In fact, it’s one of the most coherent adaptations of a longer series that I’ve seen. I never felt like pertinent information was left out or glossed over. Character relationships develop a bit too quickly, but that’s a small price to pay for a clear and succinct retelling of a TV series over 100 episodes long, a series that was not even finished when the film released. It took another two years for the TV series to finish its version of the story.
Galaxy Express is, as near as I can determine, the first film directed by Rintaro, who also directed a large number of other Leiji Matsumoto adaptations. I didn’t get that trippy feel to the action sequences that usually accompanies Rintaro films, but this might be one of his best anyway simply for the completeness of the story. This is the first time I’ve watched one of his films and felt the story was complete.
It’s a well-made film overall. The animation is pretty low quality, but that’s nothing abnormal for the time it was made (and may be why the action scenes don’t carry that unique Rintaro feel). More importantly, the story is compelling, the style is cool, and the characters are great. You might want to watch a Harlock film first to establish the setting, but this is still a solid piece of work well worth the time.
Next week I’ll bring you more flying locomotives and girls with absurdly long eyelashes in the sequel, Adieu Galaxy Express 999.