I’ve always read it as at least a little bit a comment on the Iraq war, but what’s it’s deal? It’s the only anime I can think of that climaxes with a military coup, and its cool that mustang wants to put people on trial for war crimes, but then he gets in power and doesn’t do it.

It’s also just got a whole plotline about racism, but it feels slightly off? Like minorities are okay if they save your life.

  • Cromalin [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    3 years ago

    I mostly agree, but Mustang didn’t get in power. I don’t think the show or manga would have actually gone through with showing him or any of the others executed for war crimes, but he’s only a general in the epilogue. So you’re free to imagine all of the war criminal characters up against the wall if you’d like, it could be canon.

  • GalaxyBrain [they/them]@hexbear.net
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    3 years ago

    I’ve never seen it before and know nothing about it but here’s my take, it is a regressive and reactionary text to be viewed only in order to facilitate to most ruthless and scathing criticism. I also add that incurse Full metal Alchemist and all who enjoy it to an early and well deserved grave.

  • Zodiark [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    3 years ago

    FMA 2003 and its conclusion, Conqueror of Shamballa, was the better anime. Both were decent though

    The message that FMA 2003 and its sequel movie made is, extrapolated in Edward’s quote “even when we close our eyes there’s a whole world around us” to Mustang and then to his brother, Alphonse, when they reunited in Germany. It seems the point is to not turn a blind eye to radical evil, even at your own peril, because indifference is tantamount to complicity and moral infancy.

  • RamrodBaguette [comrade/them, he/him]@hexbear.net
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    3 years ago

    It’s also just got a whole plotline about racism, but it feels slightly off? Like minorities are okay if they save your life.

    Just gonna use this as an opportunity to rant about the PEAK LIB moment where one of those oppressed minorities talks about working for the same genocidal, imperialist military that destroyed his ancestral land because he wants to enact “change from within”. All while he talks down to another member of this group for resorting to extreme measures.

    That’s right. Those partisans should have just called for “MORE 👏 JEWISH 👏 EINSATZGRUPPEN 👏 TROOPERS” instead.

    • Redbolshevik2 [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      3 years ago

      I think if you’re a Liberal, it’s extremely hard to write a story about how you defeat Fascism because of your ideological blinders. Fascism is an evil that results from a master plan, and when you defeat Hitler, you win and can now reform your way to an equitable society instead of organizing a new one.

      • I think if you’re a Liberal, it’s extremely hard to write a story about how you defeat Fascism because of your ideological blinders.

        Not only that, but i’m more and more convinced that when most authors represent societies falling prey to fascism, it’s mostly due to moral failing of the people in charge, who are very clearly evil and have a plan, not because of systemic issues, which makes for a satisfying ending when you defeat the bad guy(s) and everything will come out roses afterwards.

  • camarade [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    3 years ago

    I’ve noticed anime series often tend to appear allegorical at first and then either veer into superficiality (which isn’t a bad thing in of itself) or fail to deliver anything other than tired pop philosophy platitudes that don’t ruffle any feathers.

    FMA in particular seems to fall into the first category. for a while it looked like it was setting amestris up to be some kind of nazi analogy but it turns out demonic forces are pulling the strings and the evil doesn’t actually dwell within; the system though not perfect is mostly good. maybe it’s just a nice story about brothers fighting with magic.

    • BynarsAreOk [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      3 years ago

      I’ve noticed anime series often tend to appear allegorical at first and then either veer into superficiality (which isn’t a bad thing in of itself) or fail to deliver anything other than tired pop philosophy platitudes that don’t ruffle any feathers.

      You have to consider anime are mostly manga and light novels adaptations and the choice very heavily influenced by popularity and you guessed it popularity among certain demographics is incredibly simple to define.

      How do you write something with a deep message about our world that isn’t just “Japan society sucks, you suck because you are all apathetic cowards that don’t want to organize or care about politics, also you have incredibly deep rooted problems with authority and conforming with the status quo, [add another 20 criticisms here]”?

      You can’t write that without being cancelled, parody and cynicism is fine and there are many examples of it, but actual political messaging is never going to get through the filters. Really remember that manga specificaly have to go through a filter, before you even get published you have to go to the magazines and basicaly pitch your series with a first draft(forgot the proper name).

      Basicaly while I am sure many Japanese know all the problems but there is a huge barrier to voicing a message that reaches a large audience.

      And the whole light novel/doujinshi side of things is basically a lottery and most people would rather gamble on what is likely a winning choice(i.e write a popular genre).

      • TraschcanOfIdeology [they/them, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        3 years ago

        How do you write something with a deep message about our world that isn’t just “Japan society sucks, you suck because you are all apathetic cowards that don’t want to organize or care about politics, also you have incredibly deep rooted problems with authority and conforming with the status quo, [add another 20 criticisms here]”?

        Hideaki Anno has been saying similar stuff about his fans for decades now, yet most people are still saying

        :so-true: cool robots and sexualized 14 year olds!

      • camarade [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        3 years ago

        How do you write something with a deep message about our world that isn’t just “Japan society sucks, you suck because you are all apathetic cowards that don’t want to organize or care about politics, also you have incredibly deep rooted problems with authority and conforming with the status quo, [add another 20 criticisms here]”?

        I agree with most of your post but this looks to me like a failure of imagination. the human condition is vast and can be explored without attacking the audience.

  • AOCapitulator [they/them, she/her]@hexbear.net
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    3 years ago

    Let’s get one thing clear: hoenheim sucks

    the dude is literally as powerful as the evil man who plans to genocide the world and doesn’t even try to fight him or really even seem to work against him

    he taught folks alchemy and then later that was used to win, but like, I don’t remember it framing this as his intended result, his own master plan against father, it just kinda worked out like that

    • Cromalin [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      3 years ago

      I got the feeling he only found out about Fathers plan kind of recently. I always assumed that was why he left Ed and Al, he’d just learned about Father trying to make the big stone. That makes the most sense to me, where he goes to Xing for a few centuries and then heads west, falls in love, and then the genocide starts and he decides to make his big circle that brings everyone back to life.

  • Redbolshevik2 [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    3 years ago

    One aspect I enjoyed was the presentation of a Fascist society from within that society. I think Triumph of the Will has so thoroughly made Fascism into this grand and serious thing when there were millions of Fascists who spent their days hanging out with their friends and having meals and making jokes. This predominant depiction of Nazis I think turns then into an alien force of things that look like humans but just goose-step and kill people (and the show utilizes that imagery when it depicts the Ishtvalan genocide).

    That said, I think it undermines itself with the ending and turns Fascism back into an alien force imposed on humanity, but even then it shows how people can be easily taken in and corrupted by institutions and their propaganda.

  • GreenTeaRedFlag [any]@hexbear.net
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    3 years ago

    It’s main message is to always keep moving no matter how bad things get, and to not lose your humanity in the pursuit of power or control. The messages about the Ishvalans are more that genocide is never for the advantage of the citizens of the country committing genocide, but for the goals and power of the rulers. I think you’re forgetting that germany committed a few genocides in Africa and the Middle East before WW1, which makes the loose metaphor more clear than trying to impose american actions from much later onto it. There’s also a lot of “don’t be blindly obedient to authority, and fight your government if it is evil” messaging, which is vague and not as radical as we would like, but better than most liberal shows.

  • Theblarglereflargle [any]@hexbear.net
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    3 years ago

    Isn’t the govenrment literally fantasy nazis or something?

    Please don’t well actually me I don’t know anime the only one I’ve seen is funky jazz spaceship show

    • effervescent [they/them]@hexbear.net
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      3 years ago

      The government is indeed pretty fascist. It’s a state military dictatorship headed by Führer Bradley. It appears to be a meritocracy based in individual prowess at alchemy, which fits in nicely with the power fantasy of fascist societies. I think there could have been a very pointed critique here given that the brothers are furiously opposed to the state despite participating in it. But the political intrigue angle on the corruption and the kind of hard magic stuff muddled that

    • FidelCashflow [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      3 years ago

      About that connection

      spoiler

      They go through a portal and end up in the natzi thule society for an adventure. The alchemy power is using the souls of holocaust victims from our world as a fuel source

    • zifnab25 [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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      3 years ago

      There’s something to be said about Entryism, as a great deal of the story revolves around Edward’s decision to join the military and the consequences of that decision.

      There is also something to be said regarding the cost associated with power. The Equivalent Exchange Theory that underpins Alchemy and the efforts power-seeking individuals make to circumvent this rule form the backdrop of nearly every character in the show. The big reveal in the show boils down to

      Full Metal Spoilers!!!

      the potential for unlimited power being prefaced by the necessity for limitless cruelty, a la human sacrifice on a national scale being necessary to create a “flawless” Philosopher’s Stone.