iBet uBet web content aggregator. Adding the entire web to your favor.
iBet uBet web content aggregator. Adding the entire web to your favor.



Link to original content: http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infinite_Ryvius
Infinite Ryvius - Wikipedia

Infinite Ryvius (Japanese: 無限のリヴァイアス, Hepburn: Mugen no Rivaiasu) is a 26-episode science fiction drama series produced by Sunrise.

Infinite Ryvius
Infinite Ryvius anime series logo
無限のリヴァイアス
(Mugen no Ryvius)
GenreScience fiction, psychodrama
Anime television series
Directed byGorō Taniguchi
Written byYōsuke Kuroda
Music byKatsuhisa Hattori
M.I.D.
StudioSunrise
Licensed by
Original networkTV Tokyo
Original run October 6, 1999 March 23, 2000
Episodes26 (List of episodes)
Manga
Written byYōsuke Kuroda
Illustrated byShinsuke Kurihashi
Published byMediaWorks
English publisherComicsOne (volume 1)
DrMaster (volume 2)
MagazineMonthly Comic Dengeki Daioh
DemographicShōnen
Original runDecember 18, 1999September 18, 2000
Volumes2
Original net animation
Infinite Ryvius: Illusion
StudioSunrise
ReleasedJune 30, 2000
Runtime5–7 minutes
Episodes6
icon Anime and manga portal

The character and mecha designs in Ryvius were created by Hisashi Hirai, who later went on to act as the character designer for Gundam SEED.

The series is also noted for its music, which blends western R&B/hip-hop with J-pop vocals, including its title song "dis–", performed by bilingual Japanese-American singer Mika Arisaka. Most of the songs were composed by M.I.D., while background instrumentals were created by Katsuhisa Hattori.

The anime was originally licensed by Bandai Entertainment in North America until it went out of print in 2012. Following the 2012 closure of Bandai Entertainment, Sunrise announced at Otakon 2013 that Sentai Filmworks had rescued Infinite Ryvius, along with a handful of other former BEI titles.[1]

A two-volume manga adaptation was released concurrently with the series in 1999–2000, which was then published in English in 2004. A parody spin-off original net animation (ONA) series Infinite Ryvius: Illusion, was released in 2000.[2]

Plot

edit

In the year AD 2225, mankind has expanded from Earth to inhabit nearly all the planets and nearby moons in colonies and settlements. Space travel has advanced to the point of being commonplace. For the inhabitants of the solar system, becoming an astronaut is a realistic career path. One of the schools established to train future space voyagers is the Liebe Delta, a space station positioned in Earth's orbit. This progress exists despite the Geduld, a mysterious sea of plasma that erupted from the sun along Earth's orbital plane in AD 2137. Stretching from the sun to the edge of the solar system, this phenomenon of high temperatures and gravity pressures remains unexplained.

Kouji Aiba, a sixteen-year-old boy, leaves his home on Earth to attend the Liebe Delta and train for his Level 2 piloting license. He travels to the space station with his childhood friend, Aoi Housen, who surprises Kouji by revealing she has enrolled in the Liebe Delta's flight attendant program. Aoi also informs Kouji that his younger brother, Yuki, will be attending the Liebe Delta and joining the same flight class.

The students and teaching staff on the Liebe Delta lead normal lives, focused on their studies and daily routines. They even have a vacation period, called the Dive Break, during which the space station approaches the Geduld for system maintenance. Out of approximately 1,000 students, about 500 remain onboard during the break. Unknown to everyone, the space station is sabotaged during a routine dive, leaving most of the staff unconscious due to a gas attack. The Liebe Delta begins free-falling into the depths of the Geduld Sea, where the intense gravity pressures threaten to crush the station and kill everyone aboard. The remaining instructors sacrifice their lives in an attempt to save the students, but their efforts fail. Just as the station teeters on the edge of collapse, a hidden ship called RYVIUS activates and surfaces from the Geduld Sea, rescuing the surviving students aboard the Liebe Delta.

Now stranded in space and abandoned by humanity's governments, the students aboard the RYVIUS must navigate their new reality. As anger, fear, and tension grow among the crew, Kouji struggles to maintain order and unity. He faces personal challenges, including clashes with his brother Yuki, his complicated feelings for the Uranian aristocrat Fina S. Shinozaki, avoiding Aoi, and the mysterious appearance of a girl in pink wandering the halls. As the situation worsens, Kouji must determine whether he can guide the RYVIUS to safety or risk losing everything he holds dear.

Vaia ships

edit

The Vaia ships are said to be crucial to mankind's survival despite the effect it has on those who are exposed to it for long enough, which results in major mental breakdown, as seen with the Blue Impulse's captain after losing the battle with the Ryvius.

It was mentioned that there were six Vaia ships, which took several hundred thousand trained astronauts entering into the Geduld to capture, formulate, and secure Vaias[spelling?] for the ships. This was made known for the purpose of protecting humanity from another Geduld phenomenon, as the gravitational warping effects of the vital guarders could block the advancing Geduld phenomenon.

  • BLACK Ryvius (Referred to as the "Brattica" by those who seek to take it.)

The main setting of the rest of the series after the destruction of the Liebe Delta, and the target of the Orbital Security Bureau, so much so that they've justified destroying Hyperion with the Blue Impulse's Vital Guarder to try and destroy them. The Ryvius is one of two Vaia ships whose Sphixs have been manifested, but is also the only one with a humanized one, Neya. The other ship is basically stripped of any humanity but the desire to kill Neya. Vital Guarder - Einvalt, A large humanoid like mecha deployed from the lift ship housed in the front of the Ryvius, has the power to control gravitational forces in much the same way as the others, but has a much stronger localized control of gravity waves it creates (especially from its hands.)

BLUE Impulse The first Vaia ship to be a technical casualty to the Ryvius, after using its vital guarder to destroy Hyperion. The Ryvius detached its barge cannon and with the vital guarder in hand, turned the tides of the battle in favour of Ryvius. Impulse is no longer known after this battle, possibly decommissioned due to the loss of its vital guarder. Vital Guarder - Vertical Drill, A powerful vital guarder capable of plowing through large masses using a strong gravitational field projected around the main drill arm, which spins with tremendous force. Was used to destroy Hyperion, which established another of its attacks, by using any sized chunks surrounding it the Vertical Drill could capture these objects in its field and fire them.

CRIMSON Dicastia Piloted exclusively by aged women. The Dicastia boasts the greatest output of gravitational force, using smaller pods wired together. Dicastia was the first ship to score casualties on the Ryvius by firing on it while trapped in the entrapment field. Vital Guarder - Eysfina, the pod chain system used to generate an entrapping gravity field. Used as a means to detain their target in order to safely enter firing range.

GREY Gespenst Conrad Vicuss's Vaia ship most akin to the Ryvius, also possessing a comparable and somewhat humanoid vital guarder, but fused to a large fixture system at its arms and legs. It is only upon seeing Neya and recognizing her form as that of his deceased daughter that he realizes what grave wrongs he has committed. The Gespenst is capable of forming blades from gravitational forces to cut through the targets that it closes in on. It also has the ability to merge with existing 'vaia squids' to amplify its mass and gravity control and power, much to Stein's dismay, as he cannot stand to see anything that defies scientific logic. Vital Guarder - Geist, a humanoid body fixed vital guarder with tremendous gravitational force power, estimated by Stein's numbers of being at least twice as powerful as the Ryvius. These observations were more or less proven when the Geist merged with a number of Vaia squids around it, significantly boosting its attack power. Geist continued to destroy parts of the Ryvius's vital guarder, until it separated from the large ball of mass it created around itself, and began a powerful supercharge of energy. In one final ramming attack, the Geist was annihilated, along with the Einvalt, while everyone in the lift ship is safe.

After a maddeningly fierce battle, and the loss of his vital guarder, his final words after once again being face to face with Neya, were: "Attention all hands. The Ryvius is piloted by children, I want them rescued!" before killing himself with a gun, proof that he had understood the situation on board the Ryvius during most of his pursuit of it. (He had earlier stated that the student's pleas for rescue must be a trick). This marks the end of the war between the Orbital Security Bureau and the crew of the Ryvius.

Themes and symbols

edit

Infinite Ryvius is a complex series with many underlying themes and symbolism.

  • Responsibility: The only adult characters aboard the Ryvius are written out of the story at an early stage and throughout the series the characters are regularly forced to take responsibility for difficult decisions in the absence of adult guidance.
  • Loss of innocence: The burden of responsibility and the traditionally adult situations the children face brings about the premature loss of innocence.
  • Politics: Throughout the series the political power structure aboard the ship shifts and changes and acts as a microcosm of real-world politics.

Episodes

edit
Some of the titles given by the series' North American distributor, Bandai Entertainment, differ from the literal translations; the Bandai-given titles appear in parentheses where applicable.
  • Sere 1: A Time That Should Come (きたるべきとき, Kitarubeki Toki, or The Forthcoming Time)
  • Sere 2: Unnecessary Things (よけいなこと, Yokei na Koto)
  • Sere 3: Crossing the Ocean (うなばらをこえて, Unabara o Koete, or Beyond the Vast Sea)
  • Sere 4: Ring Of Ryvius (リヴァイアスのわ, Rivaiasu no Wa)
  • Sere 5: A Small Settlement (ちいさなまとまり, Chiisana Matomari, or A Little Harmony)
  • Sere 6: My Moment (ぼくのせつな, Boku no Setsuna)
  • Sere 7: The Changing Times (かわりゆくとき, Kawari-Yuku Toki)
  • Sere 8: We Didn't Know Anything (なにもしらなかった, Nanimo Shiranakatta)
  • Sere 9: Vital Guarder (ヴァイタル・ガーダー, Vaitaru Gaadaa)
  • Sere 10: Even if it's Unbelievable (しんじられなくても, Shinjirarenakutemo, or Even If You Can't Believe)
  • Sere 11: After the Festival (まつりのあと, Matsuri no Ato, or When the Party's Over)
  • Sere 12: Whereabouts of the Future (みらいのありか, Mirai no Arika)
  • Sere 13: We Can Only Touch Each Other (ふれあうことしか, Fureau Koto Shika, or If Only to Meet)
  • Sere 14: Overly Conscious (いしきしすぎ, Ishiki Shisugi, or To Be Too Conscious)
  • Sere 15: As if We Were Set Adrift (ながされるままに, Nagasareru Mama ni, or Swept Away)
  • Sere 16: Distorted World (ゆがむせかい, Yugamu Sekai, or Deforming World)
  • Sere 17: Free Order (じゆうのちつじょ, Jiyū no Chitsujo)
  • Sere 18: We Didn't Understand (わかりあえない, Wakariaenai, or Incomprehensible)
  • Sere 19: Smiling With You (えがおできみと, Egao de Kimi to)
  • Sere 20: Things You Can't Give Up (ゆずれないもの, Yuzurenai Mono)
  • Sere 21: We Don't Need Tomorrow (あしたなんかいらない, Ashita Nanka Iranai)
  • Sere 22: For the Sake of Surviving (いきのこるために, Ikinokoru Tame ni, or In Order To Survive)
  • Sere 23: The Torn-Off Past (ちぎれたかこ, Chigireta Kako)
  • Sere 24: Kōji Aiba (あいばこうじ, Aiba Kōji)
  • Sere 25: For the Sake Of Being Myself (おれであるために, Ore de Aru Tame ni, or In Order To Be Me)
  • Sere 26: Tomorrow (あした, Ashita)

Manga

edit

A companion manga was released in Japan in 1999-2000. Created by Shinsuke Kurihashi, and released by MediaWorks Publishing, the manga details the voyage of the Ryvius from the character viewpoints of Aoi Housen, and to a lesser extent, her roommates Kozue Izumi and Reiko Ichikawa. This is in contrast to the anime, which had been seen through the eyes of the Aiba brothers, Ikumi Oze, and other mostly male characters. As such, the manga does not follow the anime "to the letter", but provides episodes and plotlines previously unseen.

The English-language rights to the Ryvius manga were acquired by ComicsOne, and the first volume of the English version, covering the anime episodes 1-13, was released in October 2004. The second and final volume, covering the remainder of the series, was expected to be released in January 2005. After ComicsOne was taken over by DrMaster, Volume 2 of the Infinite Ryvius manga was delayed. It was finally released under the new DrMaster label in May 2005.

Soundtracks

edit

Infinite Ryvius Original Soundtrack 1

  • VICL-60485
  • Release Date: 16 December 1999
  1. "Dis (Club Mix version)" by Mika Arisaka
  2. "Nani mo Shiranakutemo (なにもしらなくても, "Unaware of Anything")
  3. "Boku no Setsuna" (ぼくのせつな, "My Moment")
  4. "Revise Us"
  5. "Nowhere"
  6. "Mishiranu Mono" (みしらぬもの, "The Unknown")
  7. "Kokoro no Sukima" (こころのすきま, "Void in the Heart")
  8. "Kuzureyuku Mono" (くずれゆくもの, "What is Decaying")
  9. "Easy Living"
  10. "Kobore Ochite" (こぼれおちて, "Dropping Out")
  11. "Yume o Sugitemo (Remix version)" (夢を過ぎても, "Even After Dreaming") by Mika Arisaka
  12. "Communication"
  13. "Almost Blue"
  14. "Ikinobiru Kanata" (いきのびるかなた, "Beyond Survival")
  15. "Faint Hope"
  16. "Maemuki ni" (まえむきに, "In A Positive Mood")
  17. "Cool!"
  18. "Dis (English version)" by Mika Arisaka
  19. "Yume o Sugitemo" (夢を過ぎても, "Even After Dreaming") by Mika Arisaka
  20. "Dis" (Instrumental)
  21. "Yume o Sugitemo" (夢を過ぎても, "Even After Dreaming") (Instrumental)

Infinite RYVIUS Original Soundtrack 2

  • VICL-60486
  • Release Date: 1 March 2000
  1. harakunaru sasayaki (Distancing Whisper)
  2. nani mo shiranakutemo (Unaware of Anything)
  3. toge (Thorn; performed by Mika Arisaka)
  4. mukai aumono (Face To Face)
  5. genjitsuto no haza made (Until Reality Shows Its Face)
  6. kokoro no kakera (Fragments of the Heart)
  7. itoshi sa no nakade (Into Beauty)
  8. hayaru kokoro (Thriving Heart)
  9. utsutsu narumono (Taking Revenge)
  10. tawamurete (Flirting)
  11. mitsumete (Watching)
  12. shijirarerumono wa (Of Disbelief)
  13. yume o sugitemo (Even After Dreaming)
  14. mirai e no ippo (A Step Towards the Future)
  15. aragaenumama
  16. sasurai tsuzukete (Continued Wandering)
  17. tsumugareta fuan (Spun Anxiety)
  18. ketsui to koudou to (Decision and Action)
  19. todoketai kokoro (Undeliverable Heart)
  20. shinkirou no you ni (Like A Mirage)
  21. ashita ga arukara (Because There Will Be Tomorrow)
  22. yamikara no hohoemi (Smile From The Shadows)
  23. shiritakatakoto (Things I Wanted to Know)
  24. yume o sugimoto (Even After Dreaming; performed by Mika Arisaka)
  25. todoketai kokoro (Undeliverable Heart; Reggae Phil Mix)
  26. H (Mega Mix)

Infinite RYVIUS Original Soundtrack 3

  • VICL-60487
  • Release Date: 23 March 2000
  1. M.I.D. ANTHEM
  2. DIS~ (Song Bird Mix; performed by Mika Arisaka)
  3. BLUE WRECKAGE (performed by Noriko)
  4. CODE-026
  5. aoi tori no yukue (performed by Mika Arisaka)
  6. menterae
  7. GOING (performed by Kaori)
  8. JUST (Interlude)
  9. THE NEPHILIMS (performed by Afrika Bambaataa)
  10. kanashiki hyouryuu (performed by DJ MA$A)
  11. SEE THE LIGHT (performed by Smooth Bee and his family)
  12. tobira (performed by DJ MA$A)
  13. GENERATION WAR
  14. ENVIOUS
  15. DIS~ (Terra Mix; performed by Mika Arisaka)

Reception

edit

In 2000, Infinite Ryvius won an award for Best TV Animation at the fifth animation Kobe.[3]

References

edit
  1. ^ "Sentai Filmworks Adds Sacred Seven, The Big O, Kurokami, More". Anime News Network. Retrieved 11 August 2013.
  2. ^ "リヴァイアスイリュージョン その". Infinite Ryvius (Official Site) (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. Retrieved 19 December 2019.
  3. ^ "ANIME NEWS SERVICE – NOVEMBER 29 – DECEMBER 1 ANIME NEWS". 2000-12-01. Archived from the original on 2007-02-05. Retrieved 2020-01-02.
edit