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Fullmetal Alchemist, Volume 5: The Cost of Living Movie Streaming

quinta-feira, janeiro 21st, 2010
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The latest installment of one of the best anime series in the past couple of years advances through its compelling chronicle. The action is about to come a fever pitch, and revelations will be discovered.

In Vol. 5, Ed and Alphonse Elric pay a visit to their former hometown for repairs after their first battle with Scar. The aptly named Major Armstrong, appointed to ogle over the brothers, accompanies them home. After a rather unemotional reunion with their childhood friend Winry and her grandma and a visit to their mother’s grave, the Elrics fetch set aside serve together again and head for Central to eye more information about creating a sterling Philosopher’s Stone. What they stare there may change their course of action and their whole motivation for creating it. Meanwhile, as Scar resumes his search for the Elrics, he encounters the Homunculi Lust and Gluttony and barely escapes with his life. The military is also looking for Scar to bring him to justice for the murders he’s committed.

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During their detective work, Ed and Al advance across a pair of assassins who seemingly have stop ties to the brothers, and build a few recent discoveries about themselves as they win in fierce battle.

Confused yet? Well, if you’re here, I certainly hope you are at least familiar with the account leading up to this volume. “Fullmetal Alchemist” is well into its second season with this chapter (Episodes 17-20), and it is inspiring along at such an moving lag that I fetch myself marking Vol. 6’s release date on my calendar. This is one anime series that pulls no punches emotionally, and reaches its audience by one terrifying area intention and/or twist after another. The series, dwelling in an unrevealed time period but teeming with technology and magic (in this case, two big tastes that go big together), does a fantastic job of grabbing acquire of the viewer and keeping them locked in to every detail, character, and sage element. As the series progresses, you’ll actually identify with Edward and Alphonse and their awful spot. You’ll ogle them grow and musty, and even feel for them as they reach closer and rep further away from the goal of their quest with each episode. The entire supporting cast is chock elephantine of memorable characters as well, especially the other Situation Alchemists (my personal fave being Alex Luis Armstrong at the moment) . At definite times, mostly during the beginning of the series, slapstick elements and humor even inject themselves beautifully into the mix. At this point in the series, though, the story’s taken a very serious turn, although every once in a while a trip at Ed’s height (which happens at least once an episode) or Alchemist Hughes showing off pictures of his infant daughter breaks up the somberness.

Talk about a series that’s got it all together. Whether you’re a fan of sci-fi or fantasy anime (or both), or you honest want to recognize a deep, arresting chronicle with extraordinary and memorable characters, this is the one. The dubbing, usually one of the most critiqued elements in anime, is absolutely excellent: Al’s and Ed’s English voices, especially, buy their every emotion with expert precision. I can’t imagine the anxiety in voice-acting a 10-year-old boy without a body whose soul is trapped in a case of armor, but darn it, it’s nailed here. Top it all off with a rawking opening theme from J-pop legends L’arc-en-Ciel (”Ready, Genuine, Go”), and you’ve got a winner for the ages. The only minor aggravation I found with this volume, though, was in the blueprint the DVD is space up: FUNimation forces you to inspect a 2 ½ tiny preview of the latest volume of (the albeit slick-looking) “Samurai 7″ and a dinky blurb for another series before the menu even comes up. (I’ve seen this on other discs before; don’t know if this is a flaw, but if every copy’s like that, it should be an extra on the disc rather than shoved down our collective throats at the beginning.) Do not miss this series; if you haven’t seen it up to now, befriend up and peep for Vol. 1 this instant! You won’t regret it.

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The previous volume of FMA left the Elric brothers in a less-than-hearty residence, and had them journeying home to earn some mighty needed rest and relaxations, as well as a replacement for Ed’s destroyed auto-mail arm. This volume picks up with the boys’ arrival in the exiguous village they once called home. Accompanied by Armstrong, the brutishly gentle alchemist, the boys view what they left tedious. Later, with the repairs completed, the brothers continue their search for the work of Dr. Marcoh at Central’s library. Only what they score isn’t what they had hoped for, and Ed becomes more certain to peep out the Philosopher’s Stone, leading him to what appears to be a prison where only the most risky criminals are. Once here, the brother’s Elric face off against creatures very familiar, at least in thought, to Ed and Al.

Fullmetal Alchemist only continues to deepen, adding a few conflicts to the characters that compose them more and more lovable, especially Alphonse, who faces a sunless realization in this volume. Scar also has a few moments on this volume. But the greatest surprise in this volume is Armstrong. He had a microscopic role in the previous volume, but he really becomes something special in this volume as Ed and Al’s protector while in their vulnerable plot.

I’m now completely clear that FMA ranks high up there as one of anime’s greats, standing easily beside classics like Akira, Cowboy Bebop, and Neon Genesis Evangelion, all anime I bear in high regard. If you’re reading this you’ve probably already found some interest in FMA, so I probably don’t have to recommend this. But mild, I have to, as FMA is posthaste becoming something stop to legendary in the anime world.
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