cahn: (Default)
cahn ([personal profile] cahn) wrote2014-05-07 09:28 pm

Fullmetal Alchemist (Volumes 22-27)

I FINISHED IT. *flails madly*

YES, wow, very tightly plotted, that... had about the highest ratio of truly stupendous plot (and/or character) twists to actual text that I've ever seen, and I am in love with all of the characters, and now I'm afraid to read any more manga because that one was so good, ha.



-I never figured out why "Father" had all those tubes on him. Because he was feeding the homunculi through them? Because they all seemed to come out once he came to Central..?

-OMG the plot involved EVERYONE DYING (but then they didn't, whew)

-So let me get this straight... Ed was able to come back, when he went for Al, because Al was an alchemist and brought them back. This is why Roy couldn't take that route, because there would be no one to bring him back...?

-It's still... sort of... interesting, that Roy accepts the Philosopher's Stone to pay the toll, whereas Ed and Al utterly reject it. I would love to know what Ed and Al thought about that. (I like how Ed and Al are on the idealistic end of the spectrum, the homunculi are on the other end, and everyone else is in between... Olivier is in the middle somewhere, and Roy is between her and the Elrics.)

-Olivier is still MY FAVORITE. ALL THE SPARKLY ARMSTRONG FAMILY SHENANIGANS EVER.

-GREED ALL THE GREED/LING EVER I MISS YOU GREED I NEVER THOUGHT I'D SAY THAT

-I was so glad to see Knox again at the end! As well as really happy that Lan Fan learned from him.

-I totally love that Roy didn't end up as Fuhrer at the end. Also I totally loved Hawkeye pulling a gun on him. FANTASTIC.

-Although, I mean, I gotta say that I thought it was totally okay to kill small little homunculi objects.

-Speaking of which, do we really trust reborn!Selim? (Although his comment about the bird was very sweet.) I suppose Mrs. Bradley will keep him in line!

-...do we really think that no one is going to go around making Philosopher's Stones anymore? Seriously? I mean, Our Heroes aren't, of course, but man, quite a few people figured out the secret, or had clues to it, by the time the Promised Day was over. And it seems like there is no overt cost to making a stone (in particular as opposed to paying the toll)... I guess it seems to take a lot of expertise and possibly a concerted effort by a group of people (?), which might slow it down for a while.
genarti: Hawkeye standing at Mustang's back (from the tunnel scene with Envy) ([fma] this is my right)

[personal profile] genarti 2014-05-08 07:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Brotherhood is a very faithful anime adaptation! There's a weird intro-to-everyone first episode which is eminently skippable -- it's got some fun bits but it's mostly clunky, and it introduces a lot of spoilers for later in a dizzying whirl that the first-time viewer won't catch and the viewer who knows manga canon will be astounded by -- but after that it settles down. There are some manga bits it does differently, some in ways that work well and some in ways where I prefer the manga version, but they're mostly small things, and I personally really like having motion and color and good voice actors. (I've only watched the sub; I can't speak for the dub, except that Vic Mignogna annoys me in general so I don't really want to listen to his Ed. YMMV.)

YES YES SO MUCH YES -- the Elrics, who can actually grow apart a little and into their own lives, yes, awesome, thank you Arakawa for making that a happy ending while still maintaining that utter bedrock of trust and love! Emperor Ling! Mei and Al! Havoc doing physical therapy, because nothing is 100% easy, yessss! The chimeras in the circus! Scar and Miles, rebuilding Ishval because it needs to be rebuilt BY ISHVALANS at heart even if the Amestrian military also has a responsibility here! SO MANY CHARACTERS GETTING TO COME BACK ONSCREEN. I LOVE EVERYTHING.

And okay yes. You're right, I was partly referring to Hohenheim! Also partly to Scar and to Marcoh, since I couldn't remember where they were in their arcs. But Hohenheim's arc is so interesting to me because a lot of the others -- well, they're complicated and layered and nuanced, but the basic framework of I did this and now I need to figure out what to do with that guilt and responsibility is fairly clear. Hohenheim's backstory takes a while to come out, and it's huge and weird and hard to grasp, and his reactions are also weird and hard to grasp, because he's kind of an odd guy and because he's had literally centuries of grappling with this. But the more you stop and think about it, the more affecting and complex it is. The reveal about how he knew all their names -- I couldn't do anything but keyboardmash for a while. All we'd had was, you know, the souls as a bubbling or occasionally wailing mass, no sense of real humanity left beyond shreds, and then Hohenheim knew their names, he spoke to them, every single person inside of him, and THAT was part of what he'd spent his hundreds of years doing, getting both them and himself past the trauma enough to be able to do that. I hadn't even thought of it as a possibility. And it's so huge, and so in keeping with all the themes of humanity and personhood in this series, that he did that.

And yet he remains, you know, a pretty terrible deadbeat dad despite his best intentions and his genuine reasons for leaving. And that's not forgotten either, and Ed is allowed to keep his anger and his hurt over it. I love Arakawa for that too, because people are complicated, and they're allowed to be complicated.