1. notleia says:

    This looks like the same art style as in “The Girl Who Leapt Through Time.” Is it the same studio?

    • dmdutcher says:

      No, different one. A-1 pictures and Aniplex for Sora, Madhouse for Girl.

      The director is Mamoru Kanbe, and his other notable anime is the ultra-violent Elfen Lied. Both have the same style of opening, influenced by the painter Gustav Klimt, but both are radically different from each other in style and tone. I don’t recommend Christians to watch Elfen Lied at all, though.

      • notleia says:

        I think I saw the opening of the first episode. Looked like a slasher with all the gore, though at least it’s supposed to have more plot than your average slasher.

  2. bainespal says:

    Thanks for the review, maybe I’ll try this one as an introduction to anime — when I regain sanity after finals week.

    The local branch of the Helvetican Orthodox Church isn’t quite orthodox, as it fuses cultural practices from the Japanese who had settled the area after the devastation.

    Helvetican Orthodox? Are they in Switzerland? Or do they just really like sans-serif type? 😉

    • dmdutcher says:

      They could be, actually. The nation the girls fight for is an odd mixture of European and Japanese culture. It’s a very mellow anime too, so it might calm your nerves some.

  3. Hannah says:

    Interesting. Are ALL the main characters girls? From that poster, it looks like all the soldiers are female, even children.

    That is so cool that Amazing Grace is the main song!

    • dmdutcher says:

      Yes, they all are. In-universe, it’s justified mostly because their post isn’t considered to be an important one, to the point where they don’t always get resupplied. There’s just five of them to an entire platoon, and they mostly just inspect the no man’s land by their town.

      In general though, a lot of anime tend to feature young women as much or more than men. This is because young women are considered moe: they awaken tender feelings in male anime fans as well as a desire to protect them. Moe culture has a lot of issues, many of them bad, but it’s also popular. Both Lucky Star and K-On are good examples of that trend.

  4. Interesting indeed. As an avid anime consumer, I will definitely have to look this one up! I do find it fascinating that they used the song Amazing Grace as the ‘sound of the sky’.

    Do you know if this is based of a manga series, or if it had a manga tie-in? Or is it just an anime?

What do you think?