| Plot Synopsis : Ross Syllabus is a Chicago cop who
lost his partner in a battle with a cyborg. He's
just been transferred to Mars as an expert on
robots, but before he's even left the spaceport
he spots a group of suspicious people who turn
out to be a madman with cyborg bodyguards. With
the help of his soon-to-be partner waiting in the
terminal, Naomi Armitage, he stops the cyborgs,
but their leader escapes. The plot thickens when
they find that the group was carrying the body of
a robot who was impersonating a popular country
singer. At the MPD office, Ross and Armitage are
paired up in the investigation of this unusual
crime. As it turns out, someone is murdering
robots--rare and illegal Third Types, nearly
indistinguishable from humans--who had been
living undetected as humans. Ross is already
uncomfortable with the investigation, and when he
finds out Armitage herself is a Third, he doesn't
know what to make of the situation. Matters are
further complicated when he is severely injured
in a confrontation with the murder, and has to
have large parts of his own body replaced with
cybernetics. All the while, the threat of war
with Earth looms overhead, and these crimes
appear to be related somehow. Armitage becomes a
wanted robot, and Ross must choose between her
and his prejudices.
Review :
Armitage
III: Poly-Matrix is the four OAVs put together
into a single feature, and it shows. A couple of
times you get the feeling that there should have
been a commercial break or something--there were
three suspiciously evenly spaced, climatic fights
through the film. Other than that, the plot was
pretty good--A classically styled cop film set on
Mars with a lot of robots. In all, the American
voice acting (there is no subtitled version of
the movie) was passable, though at times
surprisingly bad considering these people are
supposed to be real actors (well, Keifer
Sutherland, anyway). The other problem was with
the characters; I don't know if it was Keifer's
fault or it was just the way the character was
written (just by looking at him, I'd say the
writing shoulders at least part of the blame),
but Ross had all the personality of a tree.
Admitedly, it is part of the plot that Armitage,
the robot, acts a whole lot more human than Ross,
the human, but Ross's voice was nearly
emotionless throughout, so there was no contrast,
and he's just not very interesting to boot; his
voice varies from a cheesy monotone to a slightly
angry monotone. Armitage is more fun (she also
dresses a lot more like Elizabeth Berkeley's
character in Showgirls than like a cop), but not
notably well acted, either; not bad, just not
spectacular. The other roles were solid, but not
noteworthy. Overall, Armitage III: Poly Matrix is
pretty good; it has passable acting and art, a
reasonably interesting plot, above average
animation, and a healthy amount of action. Plus,
you get to hear major American actors voicing
anime characters. Weather or not that's a good
thing is up to you...
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Production Notes : Armitage III: Poly-Matrix is the
movie version of the four OAVs cut together with
some additional animation to tie them together,
and features some pretty high profile American
actors on the dubbing--Keifer Sutherland and
Elizabeth Berkeley (known for Showgirls) as Ross
and Armitage, respectively. . DVD Notes: The DVD
has English closed captioning, Japanese
subtitles, and an English 5.1 soundtrack but does
not include a Japanese audio track. The DVD does
include an animated menu with sound effects and
lots of background music; in particular, the
scene index has a different tune (some a couple
of minutes long) to go with each page. Quite
nice. Other features include a scene index with
thumbnail pictures, language selection, text from
an interview with the director, and a few other
production notes.
Rates :
-3- Had some
good parts and nice animation.
Genre :
Sci-Fi Action Drama
(Drama) (Action)
In It :
Little robots
Skimpy Police Uniforms
Feet n' fists
Guns n' ammo
Keifer Sutherland
Break Down :
Suitable for most teens.
Violence:
3--A fair amount of violence, though most of
those killed are (very human-like) robots
Nudity:
2--Several very brief bits of incidential nudity
(including one surprisingly detailed frontal shot
of an artist's model), and lots of tight outfits
on Armitage.
Sex:
2--One mild scene with more implied.
Language:
2--Light use of expletives.
Availability :
AnimeNation and RightStuf probably both have this video if
you want to buy it.
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