UCHUU KAIZOKU CAPTAIN HARLOCK
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
42
RELEASE
February 13, 1979
LENGTH
25 min
DESCRIPTION
The year is 2977. Mankind has become complacent and stagnant. All work is done by machines, while humans spend all their time on entertainment. But when a mysterious invader from the stars catches Earth unawares, only the legendary space pirate Captain Harlock and the crew of the Arcadia have the will to stand against them.
(Source: Anime News Network)
CAST
Captain Harlock
Makio Inoue
Miime
Noriko Ohara
Kei Yuki
Chiyoko Kawashima
Tadashi Daiba
Akira Kamiya
Narrator
Hidekatsu Shibata
Emeraldas
Rihoko Yoshida
Tochiro Ooyama
Keaton Yamada
Mayu Ooyama
Chiyoko Kawashima
Yattaran
Hiroshi Ootake
Rafflesia
Haruko Kitahama
Mitsuru Kiruta
Hidekatsu Shibata
Dr. Zero
Jouji Yanami
The Dorm Dean
Noriko Tsukase
Akias
Yumi Nakatani
Dr. Daiba
Yonehiko Kitagawa
Zorba
Kazuhiko Inoue
Sunora
Keiko Han
The Twin Sisters
Noriko Ohara
Meizo
Noriko Tsukase
Jorjibel
Mieko Nobusawa
Professor Aihn
Yonehiko Kitagawa
Miyu
Noriko Tsukase
Elza
Mieko Nobusawa
Gozo Otowara
Yonehiko Kitagawa
Chief Engineer Maji
Kenichi Ogata
EPISODES
Dubbed
RELATED TO UCHUU KAIZOKU CAPTAIN HARLOCK
REVIEWS
CountZero
70/100A visually stunning landmark work that has, narratively, aged poorly.Continue on AniListI’m something of a fan of Leiji Matsumoto’s work, and particularly the character of Captain Harlock (if you couldn't tell from my avatar). Harlock made his first appearance as a supporting character in Matsumoto’s other major series from the 1970s – Galaxy Express 999. However, he was popular enough to get his own series in its own separate continuity in 1978. So, as a fan of the character, I figured I might as well give my thoughts on the show.
The premise of Harlock ’78 is that Harlock is a Space Pirate (as you can tell from the title), who has rejected Earth due to its corruption and decadence, but still has some ties because his old friend Tochiro, (who spends most of the series unnamed and who built the Arcadia), told Harlock before his death that he wanted his daughter to be grow up on Earth. When a group of plant-aliens, who all look like women, called the Mazone announce their intentions to invade, Harlock and the crew of the Arcadia are the only people who will stand in the way of the invaders.
This actually leads to one of the show’s faults. Harlock and the courageous crew of the Arcadia are the only ones who will fight the Mazone not because they are the only ones who are able to do so, but because they are the only ones willing to do so. The government of Earth is either too lazy and decadent to fight on their own behalf, or too obsessed with the hunt for Harlock. In the former case we have the Prime Minister, who frequently poo-poos the idea of alien invasion. In the latter case, we have Kiruda, an officer in the Earth Military who pursues Harlock with a passion that would put Inspector Zenigata or Javert to shame.
This is clearly meant to be social commentary and satire, but taken almost forty years out of its original context, and without any real knowledge of Japanese domestic politics in the 1970s – particularly related to their legislature – it’s hard to get a good read on it. The satire reads heavy-handed as hell, but without context, I can’t tell if it’s conservative or progressive. That said, because the satire is so heavy-handed, it does mean that most of the scenes that are involving the government of Earth become rather rough to watch.
For the sake of satire, a lot of people in this show from Earth simply don’t act in a manner like I’d expect a human to act. Tochiro’s daughter, Miyu, is frequently tormented by the matron who runs the orphanage where she lives, and by Kiruda, in order to get at Harlock. When Miyu is tormented just as badly (if not worse) by the Mazone, I buy it, because the Mazone aren’t humans. When, on the other hand, Kiruda and the Matron act like they’re desperately trying to win the Agatha Trunchbull Award For “Excellence” In Education, it comes across like bad writing.
Additionally, the Mazone introduce some rather unpleasant issues to the story. With the exception of one episode, the Mazone exclusively look like beautiful women. This leads to a messy narrative issue, related to how small the show’s female cast is. The series recurring cast has only two heroic female characters – Kei Yuki and Miime. This leads to an unfortunate situation where whenever any mysterious attractive female character appears in an episode, odds are incredibly high that the character is in fact a Mazone spy. It became enough of an issue where, during a 3-episode flashback arc where we saw the origins of the Arcadia, and where Tochiro met Miyu’s mother, Emeraldas, I began to worry that this series was going to have Emeraldas turn out to be a Mazone, with Miyu being half-Human, half-Mazone. This did not happen, but this plot point was enough of an issue that I became very concerned that this might be the case.
I did, ultimately, enjoy watching the series, but this is in spite of large swaths of the series which are absolute slogs, and which unfortunately cannot really be skipped. Because of this I cannot fully recommend the series – I only toughed it out due to an affinity for other parts of Matsumoto’s work.
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SCORE
- (3.6/5)
MORE INFO
Ended inFebruary 13, 1979
Main Studio Toei Animation
Favorited by 182 Users