Old Skool Anime: The Three Faces of The Guyver
Following the original manga more closely in
turn, each adaption follows high school student Sho Fukamachi who, along with
his friends and family, are thrust into a world of danger after stumbling across
a Guyver unit; a genetically enhanced alien battle suit that can be called upon
when needed, with Sho its unfortunate and unwilling host. What follows is an
ever-escalating battle against the Cronos corporation, the original keepers of
the Guyver units, who use humans to manufacture Zoanoids, grotesque yet
superhumanly powerful monsters in a bid to achieve world domination.
Each
adaption delves deeper into the manga than the one before it, but none explore
the 32-volume to its full extent which is also sadly now long out of print in
the west. While the origin of Sho’s transformation is largely the same, each of
the adaptions take their own directions, but nevertheless, believe this: THE GUYVER is anything but Power Rangers.
Guyver: Out of Control (1986)
One of the
very first OVA productions in Japan, as well as one of the very first anime to
be dubbed and released on VHS in the US, Guyver: Out of Control has the darkest
tone of all Guyver anime. Produced in line with the manga barely off the ground,
Out of Control comes from Hiroshi Watanabe, future director of the
fantasy manga/anime series Slayers, with the screenplay coming from Toyoo
Ashida, fresh off the back of his work on Fist of the North Star. Straight off
the bat, it is apparent at how aged it was even when released in the west in
1993, just seven years later.
The opening scenes are almost page for page from
the manga; Sho accidentally triggers one of three alien units stolen from the
Chronos corporation, which then forcefully bonds with him. Following a
subsequent attack from minions of Chronos, who can transform at will into
horrific monsters called Zoanoids, Sho’s own metamorphic suit takes over,
tearing off the limbs of its attackers in spectacularly violent fashion. You
could say the Guyver is OUT OF CONTROL….
You’d be forgiven for thinking this was
some trashy yet entertaining obscure animation from the US instead of its
Japanese origins. Both this and the later OVA contain classic Hollywood horror
hallmarks and action cues (rainstorms when a big fight’s brewing, timely
lightning bolts), but here the Sci-Fi elements are purely secondary. This
iteration of The Guyver goes even further with the dark stormy nights, gruesome
fights, complete with a damsel in distress, but very little of that science
fiction anchor that grounds the later adaptions.
There are however some
reservations; in true 1980’s anime fashion, the inclusion of a female antagonist
in Chronos special agent Valcuria is purely for sexual gratification of the
worst kind. Valcuria’s introduction is one of grace, intelligence, athletic,
even beauty, only for her own Guyver transformation to be an inexplicable and
nonsensical tentacle rape sequence that has no bearing whatsoever. You’d be
forgiven for switching over at this point, but that would mean missing out on an
ending fight that is fantastic fun, aided by a great backing track that is so
delightfully eighties you can’t not enjoy it.
It may be a little rough around
the edges in places, but Guyver Out of Control certainly has its moments. Mostly
bad ones, yet somehow when strung together (tentacle rape aside) this first
Guyver adaption pulls off an enjoyable yet equally forgettable B-Movie slice of
anime. Given there has never been a physical or digital release since the
VHS/Laserdisc days, don’t expect Out of Control to rear its head in any official
capacity anytime soon. This is a shame as it serves as a perfect snapshot of the
early days of the OVA. But there is little doubt that Guyver: Out of Control’s
most endearingly quality of all is its
weird-video-nasty-you-caught-at-1am-as-a-teenager feel.
The Guyver: Bio-Booster Armor (1989-1992)
If you were to ask me broadly “Have you seen The Guyver?” then
this would be the incarnation that immediately comes to mind. As a
twelve-year-old growing up in the 1990s, on the verge of puberty and on a
voyage of discovery, everything about Manga Video, the UK arm of Manga
Entertainment at the time had me hooked. Having only seen the odd anime feature
(mostly Akira on repeat), I soon stumbled across advertisements in the video
game publication Super Play magazine for a new monthly VHS series, The Guyver:
Bio-Booster Armor. It would soon become a series that played a major part in
discovering the love for anime I have over twenty-five years on.
The Guyver:
Bio-Booster Armor opens with a thumping sci-fi-driven rock theme, a Manga
Video-produced replacement for the Japanese original. But as the title hits the
screen with an impending god-like announcement of “THE GUYVER” ill admit 12-year-old me had a Keanu Reeves “WOAH” moment. Visuals of a biologically transformed Sho
literally ripping monster after monster apart, gore and guts spilling, with
momentary glimpses of a supporting cast of characters you simply cannot wait to
see more of. That may be just the 60 second or so introduction sequence, yet for
better or worse it encapsulates this iteration of The Guyver perfectly: a
teenage-driven mishmash of monsters, malevolence and murderousness that also
struggles to fit into a particular target market. And yet is such a silly and
fun series that successfully dodges the video nasty tag of its predecessor.
Bio-Booster Armor’s twelve episodes is two series bundled together. Both have separate production origins and staff; Koichi Ishiguro, one-time production manager on the hit 1980’s French/Japanese collaboration M.A.S.K. directed the series’ superior first half. Released from the rushed running time constraints of Out of Control, time is taken to explore both Sho’s Guyver origin, his friends and of course, Chronos’ intentions other than that just “beat the Guyver”. The pacing quickens considerably following Sho and Chronos’ initial confrontations, swiftly adapting chapters of the Manga almost too quickly for comfort in places. The violence also ramps up at an alarming pace, which oddly has become harder to fathom as an adult than as a starry-eyed teenager who should know better.
Many of the fight sequences remain spectacular, and not just
for their level of violence, either. Yoshiki Takaya’s manga declares open season
on violence given the antagonists are malevolent monsters. Sho discovers more
and more abilities since becoming *pause* The Guyver (one the dub fans will
know), but most are simply more ways to spill monster gore in more visually
spectacular ways. Sho is no protector but also no coward and must quickly come
to terms with the responsibility placed upon him, as well as the power. In less
graceful terms, after chapter two he is pretty much zipping around, brandishing
built-in arm swords and laser cannons from his head and chest, destroying
everything in sight. Episode five, curiously titled ‘Death of the Guyver’, is
easily the most violent chapter, and it is clear from here the series also isn’t
pulling its punches in the plot department. Betrayals, bereavement, and yet more
big-bastard monsters. With its endless catalogue of baddies and more widespread popularity
The Guyver could have been a great Streets of Rage-style videogame.
The
remaining episodes mark many wholesale changes, new locations, new allies, and
of course, new monsters. These episodes are also of a markedly less quality of
animation in places, which falls in line with the series’ production changes.
Two directors, Masahiro ÅŒtani and Naoto Hashimoto took the series forward to
the battle against the head division of Chronos. Situated within a mountain and
led by Dr Balcus, Chronos' lead scientist.
Despite the changes in direction, Bio-Booster Armor commands some chasm-size
plot jumps well, and never loses sight that this is a show about Sho and the
love of his life, Mizuki. Considering the amount of injected narrative around
the existence of Chronos, the Guyver units, and even humanity, the focus remains
on Sho. However, just another six episodes would have done wonders for the pacing. Instead,
we’re left with hints of both Guyver and Chronos lore that is left wanting long
after Sho’s final battle of the series.
Speaking of the final episode itself, it
remains the OVA’s biggest mystery and infamous oddity. Lasting memories of The
Guyver: Bio-Booster Armor are mostly attributed to its violence, fixed in time
as perfect teenage taboo television. The final episode is no exception, with
more visibly human harm on show than the rest of the show put together. Despite
a mixture of sale certifications at the time, ranging from PG through to 15, a
key moment of nudity is shoddily removed at a key juncture of the final
instalment. Nudity isn’t necessary of course, in a series with none before it,
but this unnecessary cutting room decision removes any intended context,
compounded by the fact that we see said naked person a few shots later anyway.
The ending, or lack thereof after six hours of slaughter, screams and some
hilariously schlocky dialogue (seriously, the Scotsman Chronos agent is just
brilliant), is disappointingly inconclusive. Comparatively speaking other OVA’s
of the same era, notably Devilman and 3 x 3 Eyes, suffered the same, only
adapting a portion of the original manga. Such practice today is far more
uncommon. Could you imagine a part-adaption of Attack on Titan?
Anyone lucky
enough to obtain the US DVD release will have their satisfaction somewhat
restored with the inclusion of the original uncut subbed episode as an extra.
The UK was not so lucky; the series fell victim to Manga’s poor transition to
DVD media, failing to meet its once targeted release date of twenty years ago.
Since that time the licenses have expired, never to be seen again in the west.
The series lives on through YouTube uploads, including the Japanese-only uncut
final episode, but as an OVA that helped put Anime onto the western map,
particularly in the UK, it deserves a wider audience beyond those drawn back
through nostalgia.
The Guyver: Bio-Boosted Armor (2006)
If you like your anime
adaptions source-material friendly, then this, the most recent adaption, trumps
all previous Guyver efforts. With the boat firmly sailed on any potential OVA
sequel, AD Vision provided this fresh 26-episode adaption, complete with yet
another Sho-Guyver origin re-tread. The inception of this series, especially
from a UK perspective, is important given its failure to receive a DVD release
in that region plunged the 1989 OVA into anime obscurity frighteningly quickly.
Even more frightening is, despite Guyver: Bio-Boosted Armor still being
available streaming on Funimation or with a superb Blu-Ray cut fifteen years on, its OVA brethren holds up
better in both hearts and minds of many and on-screen.
Katsuhito Akiyama is at
the directorial helm this time, whose early work as an animator on 80’s classic
Thundercats would then lead onto directing Bubblegum Crisis, Gall Force and more
recently Beyblade Burst. Visually Sho’s almost pointy young adult features evoke
memories of Sousuke Sagara (Full Metal Panic!), although the standard
square-shouldered, stand-up-collared school uniform deserves a shoutout for a
big visual assist. As a result, this incarnation of Sho is more emo than the
more emotional, innocent Sho of both the OVA and, more importantly, the original
manga. There is always pressure to naturally progress characters in the right
way from page to screen, and naturally, the adaptor of such characters like to
tweak here and there for their own vision. The problem is this vision,
particularly Sho, is completely devoid of character. Like many of the supporting
cast, Sho is very much hero by numbers; an accidental saviour-comes-good, with
trusty sidekick Tetsuro there to merely chew everyone’s ears off as he keeps the
background narrative afloat for the viewer. The use of current technology for
research and communication activities throughout is a nice touch.
As touched on
before, Akiyama’s Guyver series is certainly the most comprehensive one of the
three attempts. And although it doesn’t cover the whole manga series, it strides
into Chronos-lore confidently where others barely tread. Instead of a certain
one-liner (“A Zoalord – Impossible!”) near the end of the OVA leaving everyone
hanging forever, we see some interesting personal dynamics within Chronos, going
beyond the generic “there’s the Guyver, let's get him!” routine. Then there’s the
action sequences, otherwise known as the budget suckers. If you’re looking for
action there’s plenty of it, and just like its distant cousins, the fights get
more frequent, flashier, and gorier as they progress. Yoshiki Takaya clearly
loved drawing monsters, given the growing absurdity of appearance and abilities,
and once again the use of humans as vessels for Zoanoids grounds them somewhat
with uncomfortable reality.
Unfortunately for all its flagrant-yet-fun violence, flashy
monsters and, er, cardboard protagonists, Guyver: Bio-Boosted Armor came fifteen
years too late even in 2005-6. Takaya’s concept for a good vs evil
science-fiction tragedy lost its cutting edge by the mid-1990s, and with plenty
of western concepts hitting the scene since, only core Guyver fans seemed to
care. A completed version of the OVA is the easy pick for fan service, but even
with its lack of character Bio-Boosted Armor, had the series completed beyond
the adaption of volume nine, could still have reigned supreme as the definitive
anime adaption. Instead, it serves as the odd one out amongst important snapshots
in time that helped chart the western direction of the anime industry.