REVIEW: Fate/Grand Order: Absolute Demonic Front Babylonia Episode 0: Initium Iter, Episode 1: Absolute Demonic Front Babylonia, Episode 2: Fortress City Uruk and Episode 3: The King and His People by Kinoku Nasu
TYPE: TV series
DETAILS: FGOB0-3, 4X25 minute episodes
While the Fate/Grand Order game has courted some small controversy in some regards, there is no doubt that it has an engrossing story, and this was particularly true of two of the later chapters in its original story arc. This was doubtlessly due to Kinoku Nasu, the creator of the Nasuverse, being involved directly in the writing of these segments. So, when Japanese fans were polled to find which parts of the game they wanted adapted, it was hardly surprising that the Camelot and Babylonia chapters topped the polls. Now, I have finally come to watch the Babylonia adaptation, but would it fare well?
Some years ago, Dr Romani Archiman, a man with a mysterious past that is reaching out for him, joins the Chaldea Security Organisation, a top secret organisation that sends people into the past to correct changes to history. There, disturbed by the experiments involving an engineered young girl, who has been made a vessel for a Servant, a hero from the past, he becomes the girl’s caretaker, naming her Mash Kyrielight. Now, years later, Chaldea is the only bastion of humanity left after the King of Mages, Solomon, has engineered humanity’s destruction. Mash, and humanity’s last Master, Ritsuka Fujimaru, are sent over four and a half thousand years into the past, where demonic beasts threaten to snuff out civilisation as it began. And finding out who is friend or foe in this hostile landscape of ancient Mesopotamia can be a difficult task…
Now, while the prologue episode and the first episode proper does help in cluing people into what’s going on, I’m sure newcomers to the Nasuverse in general and Fate/Grand Order in particular will be at sea. Which is a crying shame, as this is actually quite a masterful adaptation of one of the finest storylines in the game. Interesting dialogue and characterisation, and some neat lines, mixing adventure, dark fantasy, and even some comedy.
Ritsuka Fujimaru is a bit of a bland and generic protagonist, but he’s at least given more characterisation than in the game, and Griffin Burns does well portraying him. Of better note is Erica Mendez as Mash, along with Xander Mobus as Dr Roman, the initial episode showing how their relationship, like that between a father and daughter, developed. Of particular note is Erika Harlacher, who has big shoes to fill to do as well as Maaya Sakamoto as a genderflipped Leonardo da Vinci, and does so well, as does Marianne Miller as Enkidu. David Vincent also gets to play a more heroic version of Gilgamesh than he does before, and the writing makes him comes across as less antagonistic as he does in the game, while Melissa Fahn makes a nice return as Ana, a younger version of the character she usually plays in the Nasuverse.
Production values are mostly superlative. True, the character designs, hangovers from the game, do leave something to be desired (particularly on Ana and Ushiwakamaru), especially with the rather perturbing emphasis on the rear-ends of a few of the female characters. However, the animation ranks amongst the best the Nasuverse has seen, and done by Cloverworks as opposed to Ufotable to boot.
Overall, these are impressive episodes for what is an adaptation of a video game. True, newcomers may be at sea, and there’s a few sticking points, but I’m certainly looking forward to the next episodes…
****½
TYPE: TV series
DETAILS: FGOB0-3, 4X25 minute episodes
While the Fate/Grand Order game has courted some small controversy in some regards, there is no doubt that it has an engrossing story, and this was particularly true of two of the later chapters in its original story arc. This was doubtlessly due to Kinoku Nasu, the creator of the Nasuverse, being involved directly in the writing of these segments. So, when Japanese fans were polled to find which parts of the game they wanted adapted, it was hardly surprising that the Camelot and Babylonia chapters topped the polls. Now, I have finally come to watch the Babylonia adaptation, but would it fare well?
Some years ago, Dr Romani Archiman, a man with a mysterious past that is reaching out for him, joins the Chaldea Security Organisation, a top secret organisation that sends people into the past to correct changes to history. There, disturbed by the experiments involving an engineered young girl, who has been made a vessel for a Servant, a hero from the past, he becomes the girl’s caretaker, naming her Mash Kyrielight. Now, years later, Chaldea is the only bastion of humanity left after the King of Mages, Solomon, has engineered humanity’s destruction. Mash, and humanity’s last Master, Ritsuka Fujimaru, are sent over four and a half thousand years into the past, where demonic beasts threaten to snuff out civilisation as it began. And finding out who is friend or foe in this hostile landscape of ancient Mesopotamia can be a difficult task…
Now, while the prologue episode and the first episode proper does help in cluing people into what’s going on, I’m sure newcomers to the Nasuverse in general and Fate/Grand Order in particular will be at sea. Which is a crying shame, as this is actually quite a masterful adaptation of one of the finest storylines in the game. Interesting dialogue and characterisation, and some neat lines, mixing adventure, dark fantasy, and even some comedy.
Ritsuka Fujimaru is a bit of a bland and generic protagonist, but he’s at least given more characterisation than in the game, and Griffin Burns does well portraying him. Of better note is Erica Mendez as Mash, along with Xander Mobus as Dr Roman, the initial episode showing how their relationship, like that between a father and daughter, developed. Of particular note is Erika Harlacher, who has big shoes to fill to do as well as Maaya Sakamoto as a genderflipped Leonardo da Vinci, and does so well, as does Marianne Miller as Enkidu. David Vincent also gets to play a more heroic version of Gilgamesh than he does before, and the writing makes him comes across as less antagonistic as he does in the game, while Melissa Fahn makes a nice return as Ana, a younger version of the character she usually plays in the Nasuverse.
Production values are mostly superlative. True, the character designs, hangovers from the game, do leave something to be desired (particularly on Ana and Ushiwakamaru), especially with the rather perturbing emphasis on the rear-ends of a few of the female characters. However, the animation ranks amongst the best the Nasuverse has seen, and done by Cloverworks as opposed to Ufotable to boot.
Overall, these are impressive episodes for what is an adaptation of a video game. True, newcomers may be at sea, and there’s a few sticking points, but I’m certainly looking forward to the next episodes…
****½