86: EIGHTY SIX
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
11
RELEASE
June 20, 2021
LENGTH
24 min
DESCRIPTION
Called “Juggernaut,” these are the unmanned combat drones developed by the Republic of San Magnolia in answer to the attacks by the autonomous unmanned drones of the neighboring Empire of Giad, the “Legion”. But they’re only unmanned in name. In reality, they are piloted by the Eighty-sixers—those considered to be less than human and treated as mere tools.
Determined to achieve his own mysterious ends, Shin, the captain of Spearhead Squadron, which is comprised of Eighty-sixers, continues to fight a hopeless war on a battlefield where only death awaits him.
(Source: Crunchyroll)
CAST
Vladilena Milizé
Ikumi Hasegawa
Shinei Nouzen
Shouya Chiba
Kurena Kukumila
Sayumi Suzushiro
Anju Emma
Saori Hayami
Raiden Shuga
Seiichirou Yamashita
Theoto Rikka
Natsumi Fujiwara
Fido
Kaie Taniya
Haruka Shiraishi
Henrietta von Penrose
Riho Sugiyama
Daiya Irma
Haruki Ishiya
Mina Atomica
Mayuko Kazama
Haruto Keats
Daiki Yamashita
Shourei Nouzen
Makoto Furukawa
Lev Aldrecht
Taiten Kusunoki
Rin Rekka
Shizuka Ishigami
Kujo Niko
Taishi Murata
Jerome Karlsthal
Satoshi Mikami
Chise Oosen
Masamu Ono
Kairou Mikuri
Yuka Nukui
Louis Kino
Shinei Ueki
Sasha Touzan
Taito Ban
Touma Soobi
Katsumi Fukuhara
Václav Milizé
Masaki Terasoma
Frederica Rosenfort
Kiriya Nouzen
Yuuto Uemura
EPISODES
Dubbed
RELATED TO 86: EIGHTY SIX
REVIEWS
Magenta
43/100A brutal war overly sugarcoated.Continue on AniListIn terms of themes to center a story around, the general conflicts and effects that arise due to a war are ones that need to be treated with a type of care. It has been documented in many brutal periods of history that war is when the worst of humanity can come out. If any war story wants to be honest in its depiction of its subject matter, then it has to be absolutely unadulterated in its representation of it. In this aspect, 86 is definitely trying to get there. There are many aspects that show attempts to portray these horrifying concepts as they should. However, 86 mainly falters in how it hesitates to go all the way with its depictions. It is in these hesitations where flaws emerge that undermine what was accomplished by the attempts to depict a brutal war. While 86 did have potential in its earlier stages, it is eventually squandered by its reluctance to truly take its concepts to the extremes that it needs to.
86’s two main sections, the ones taking place in District 86 and the Capital of San Magnolia. Both of these sections of the story both fall victim to this problem of reluctance, but they each suffer very different effects because of it. The reluctance to portray war in a more real manner affects District 86 far more obviously and concretely. In the earlier episodes, the sections were the most engaging to watch. Between the major Eighty-Sixers exhibited, there was a type of camaraderie exhibited between them that actually made me care about them at the start. While the slice of life elements weren’t the greatest, I initially forgave them due to what it set up. By emphasizing the brief moments of levity at certain points, that when the story got to its more brutal aspects, then they would be amplified due to the fact that I would actually care about these people. This is a common tactic pulled in most other dark stories of this nature. However, this type of symbiotic relationship crumbles in the face of the botched execution of nearly everything around it.
I can’t exactly pinpoint when it happened, but there was a certain point when I realized how misplaced 86’s priorities are involving these scenes. That certain point was when I realized District 86's slice of life moments were becoming way too frequent than what was necessary, and in way too many episodes, started to eclipse the brutal scenes of war. While this is a useful technique that darker stories could leverage, most of the time, they don’t overshadow the actual brutal elements that the series was based around. These are moments of levity because they are supposed to provide breathing room from the sheer brutality of everything else going on. The slight bit of air that you have to breathe gets less meaningful when you have too much of it.
What compounds the problem even more is the fact that the brutal scenes that they are even trying to serve don’t sell anywhere near the intended effect as they should. There are too many Eighty-Sixers to even keep track of at the beginning, and they end up being killed too quickly so that I can really even care about them. When they die early on, I am still trying to learn their name, but I can’t do that when they are dropping like flies. Yet another problem that makes it even worse is in the aftermath of the battle scenes. After any scene that takes place on the battlefield, there is rarely any grief in the air in the Eighty-Sixers’ headquarters felt over their deaths. It is mostly just the Eighty-Sixers mildly feeling sad over their deaths and being a little bit philosophical over the nature of their fight, and then just moving on. While there was one instance where grief was shown at the end of Episode 3 and beginning of Episode 4, this moment was short lived. With this type of behavior being constant, The Eighty-Sixers end up feeling unsympathetic, due to how it is framed in the show as if they are apathetic over the deaths of the ones closest to them. Even with the justification for this behavior provided late into the series, it feels more like duct tape to a gaping hole. Nearly every one of them except for Shin exhibits some type of emotion of joy during the slice of life scenes, but it is rare to find this type of strong emotion pushed in the other direction. Most of the grief felt over character deaths is mostly from Milize, which should not be the character that is experiencing this type of thing in her position. While it does say a lot about how poorly the Eighty-Sixers are written, it equally says as much about how Milize is implemented into the story. Her character over in the Capital of San Magnolia also gets affected heavily by this series’ persistent reluctance greatly.
Along with attempting to show a war from the perspective of the battlefront, 86 also shows the war from a more political perspective. Usually war stories only show one of these two perspectives in their story, so I can appreciate the attempt to take on both of them at once, even if I believe that both of them are botched in their own ways. The depiction of a society centered around a singular race is actually done really well. While there is an obvious racism between the Albans and Eighty-Sixers, it isn't explicitly done in a way where it is constantly reinforced by every Alban. There is just a lack of acknowledgment to the horrible atrocities being committed, which is what makes it truly terrifying. The conditioning of most of the people of San Magnolia to turn a blind eye to the hypocrisies of the government is realistic in a type of way that I haven't exactly seen before with a fictional society as its kind. As well as the world building of San Magnolia is, there is one major aspect of these sections that brings down what has been set up here significantly, where nearly all of the nuance setup here completely vanishes. This aspect is the character that we view this section of the story through, Milize.
Milize as a character strikes me as odd from nearly every perspective. In the society that she is a part of, she sticks out like a sore thumb. With the pure indifference of nearly every Alban towards the persecution of nearly every other race, Milize is the only one who shows any type of empathy towards those other races. It isn’t even a little bit of empathy too, she has a visibly large heart for the people that she commands. This is her central character trait, and it causes a lot of problems for any part of the story that involves her. While it isn’t really out of the question for there to be Albans that advocate against the actions San Magnolia has taken against non-Albans, what leaves it off putting in the early stages of this season is that she is the only one that is like this. The society of San Magnolia draws a lot of parallels to real ones, and part of the reason why is the subtle type of subconscious assumptions about other races. However, Milize’s beliefs remain unmoved by the society that latently tells her to change them. A society that emphasizes a singular flaw, the people typically carry that flaw, but Millize finds herself free of it. She is already the shining example of a good and pure nature in this world already, which makes her feel completely shallow as a result. Her character is already in a position that she would be in after a character arc had completed, which gives her character little room to grow.
As much as I have complained about Milize’s character, the issue of her being naive would be fixed by how the story contextualizes and justifies it. However, its approach to actually doing this is extremely inconsistent. By how Milize got this way, the flashback involving it is incomplete. At this point, I will state that I am anime-only, and I don’t exactly know the full story of this flashback. However, from what has been shown, she doesn’t exhibit a full character arc from it, but just that she got the beliefs that she had from the people around her projecting their ideals onto her. In terms of actually giving her flaws that compensate for her important lack of ones in a certain area, she doesn’t exactly have one persistent enough to make up for it. It would be absolutely untrue to call her a Mary Sue, but she is more so just too much of a good person for a story like this. Maybe it is unrealistic to want a more flawed character, but for a premise like this, it was practically begging for a very flawed character that was in the position that Milize was in. However, this story just didn’t get it. The reluctance to portray aspects in this story as unadulterated as they need to have near opposite ways on the two sections of the story. However for both of them, they always ended up in disappointment because of how they ended up.
As hard as I have been on the series up to this point, I still liked some aspects of it. Shin’s subplot with his brother was pretty well done compared to everything else. I don’t really have a full blown analysis of it prepared, but I will say that it got me to care at least a little bit about Shin compared to the pieces of cardboard that surrounded him. The general presentation was really great. The visual direction was really stunning even with the CGI Paragons and the editing being a bit awkward at times. The OST was great, mostly due to Hiroyuki Sawano doing Sawano things. However, the first season of 86’s greatest accomplishment is that it leaves me wanting more. Yes, I just complained about how much I didn’t like it for 6 comprehensive paragraphs, and I want to watch more of it. But the series has done a great job at leaving a promise that it would get better. With the direction that the story is going, it is promising to stamp out the major flaws that it already has with the second season. It is weird to end a negative review on a positive and hopeful note, but this series started to show just a slight bit of promise just as its first season ended. While I didn’t have hope for other series that I didn’t enjoy to get better, I am willing to give this another chance when the second cour starts.
Thank you for reading to the end of the review if you did. I really appreciate the willingness some of you have to get to the end of a review that probably disputes your own opinion. If you have any criticisms with how this review was made, you are free to message me to critique what I had to say.
Reeyzinzkr
100/100For me? Well, the best adaptation of a light novel..Continue on AniList(This Review may contain spoilers)
Finally arrived the time to comment on the anime and the experience that the adaptation of 86 gave me. When I finished reading volume 1 of the novel I was wondering if the "story" could go beyond that, in this case an anime adaptation ..
When they announced the anime I was very euphoric and extremely happy with the announcement, but after some doubts in my mind and if it would be something as incredible as Light Novel.
As everyone knows, adaptations on the same level or even better than the original material is a very rare case of whether currently in the industry, I may be mistaken to say that 86 is the best adaptation of recent times. A lot of adaptations usually have between 11-13 episodes and some end up adapting an absurd amount of volumes in just a few episodes. As an example: Re:Zero that suffered some cuts in relation to the novel, but it is still a very good adaptation.
Nowadays people have come to be quite critical of Manga/Novel adaptations. Imagine you seeing your favorite work being adapted in a way that does not follow the same tracks as the original material this is sad to see. But everyone dumb knows that the changes always made will be in relation to a Novel/ Manga, the changes that can sometimes be ruined or pleasant.
But in the case of 86 it is something that deserves all the praise and I am not saying this just because I am a long-time fan of the work, I say this because we are blessed with a studio that took all possible care for the adaptation from 86 would become what we are seeing this season.
The scenarios presented in this first part were a little different from what I imagined when I read the novel, but I think they hit the nail on virtually everything. In the novel, the base of the Eighty-Six was something that looked like a place totally similar to a concentration camp, but here in the anime it was something totally different.
The CGI was one of my big concerns and not to mention that A-1 pictures had never done anything like that and it turned out they got the CGI and the action parts right. It's amazing how a soundtrack makes such a difference in an anime. I think the only composer who could work on the part of the soundtrack this guy was Sawano.
I confess that I was a little worried when they announced that A-1 Pictures would adapt 86 and I think everyone was left with the receipt that a novel would not be so well adapted, when it changed the first promotional image of the anime it was worrying and thankfully that they adjusted it like things like character designs.
When I read that the author of [86] supervised all the storyboards for each episode, I was even more relieved and that may have been one of the great factors of the anime being incredible.
I wonder if another studio had taken 86 to adapt and I wonder if it would be something at that same level, well .. although I had some doubts when it was announced that A1- Pictures would adapt, but I didn't think it would be something at that absurd level. I saw a lot of people complaining about the original partrs that were implemented in the anime and that they didn't have in the novel. Sometimes implementing new things in works can be good or bad, but as volume 1 of the novel leaves something to be desired, the anime corrected and not to mention that it was really good.
It's really amazing how the anime made me have a greater appreciation for the secondary characters and that's one of the things I don't like very much about the novel, we have Daya's death which in the novel is only mentioned in a few volumes farther ahead. It was fantastic to see that even the very important characters had a bit of prominence and that's something that added a lot to the plot.
ColdRain
91/100The struggles of war may never be portrayed to perfection in anime, but 86 EIGHTY-SIX did a damn good job at it.Continue on AniListBest anime of spring 2021 that I’ve seen. #__</center>STORY - 9/10<center>__ The story is definitely interesting. Two nations at war, one nation that has separated it’s citizens into two categories - Alba, and Eighty-Six. Alba all have the same colored hair, and are considered to be human, while Eighty-Six have different colors of hair than the Alba, and are no longer considered human. Therefore, whenever Eighty-Six die on the battlefield, they are not counted as casualties, so each day, on the news in The Republic where the Alba live, they say there are “zero casualties” when in reality there are plenty. This anime takes a deep look into racism and war and oppression. The Republic is sitting back, drinking, relaxing, stuffing their faces assuming they’ll win the war in two years instead of getting off their asses and doing something about it, while the Eighty-Six are out here dying for no good reason and being treated like shit by the Alba. And this anime certainly doesn't sugarcoat it's portrayal of racism, it does a very good job of showing us how oppression affects people, and how no matter what, certain types of people will always be considered "lesser" than other due to factors beyond their control. It really makes you take a look at examples of oppression that people still face here in 2021, and it sheds light on how no matter how hard you may try to understand people who are oppressed, until you yourself get oppressed, you'll never understand. The main character, Major Lena is one of the very few people who care about the Eighty-Six and actually consider them to be human. This is very interesting to see the way she acts compassionately when it comes to the Eighty-Six. She is constantly requesting backup to be sent to them, and always checks in with them. She is a true diamond in the rough. A pure person surrounded by all the impure, bloated bastards of the country she lives in. </center>~~~<center><img width='300' src='https://media.tenor.com/images/a1de9ad1fbbc0b08bb652d43f55d6668/tenor.gif'></center>~~~<center> # </center>__ANIMATION - 10/10__<center> The animation is beautiful. It depicts the beauty and the madness of war perfectly. The colors used, the background/environment, the movements of the characters and the machines they pilot into war are very smooth, and the character design is impeccable and incomparable to anything else. </center>~~~<center><img width='300' src='https://media.tenor.com/images/053cc7024e6d2bbddc2bcdc99804eb9c/tenor.gif'></center>~~~<center> # </center>__CHARACTERS - 9/10__<center> The characters are all unique and interesting, albeit most of them end up dead. My favorites are: Lena - Her personality is very amazing and unique, and I find it very commendable that she’s able to stand up for the Eighty-Six, even lecturing an entire classroom on how Eighty-Six are actually humans. Shin - Shin is a very interesting character. He hears the voices of many of his dead comrades who have been turned into members of the Legion army. He’s suffered through so much loss, including that of his own brother, and still manages to be an effective leader and keep his team in high spirits throughout all their hardships. Lena's Friend - I don't remember her name, but the girls whos dad created the Para-RAID is an interesting character. I was shocked to know that the boy she knew in the past, and had been friends with turned out to be Shin. It's also interesting how all of her marriage candidates are out of her age range, likely because of her traumatizing encounter with Shin when she was younger, where she referred to him using a term that was used to insult and oppress people who weren't Alba. Lena's Uncle - I don't remember his name either, but he had some interesting moments, despite the fact that he was always trying to stop Lena from siding with the Eighty-Six Of course there are more interesting characters, but those are my personal favorites. </center>~~~<center><img width='300' src='https://media.tenor.com/images/67bb82d104ee252d4b037c90d2525975/tenor.gif'></center>~~~<center> # </center>__OPENINGS AND MUSIC - 8.5/10__<center> The opening and outro music and the OST that plays throughout the show at various different sad or happy moments always manages to perfectly compliment the events going on in the anime at that moment. It adds emotion to the already emotional scenes that occur throughout this anime. # </center>__ENDING - 9.5/10__<center> The ending of this cour was perfect and amazing. Lena goes to visit the camp that Spearhead squadron was staying at. She find their cat, she finds Shin’s room, and she finds notes that they left her. Knowing they were going on that mission to die, they left a final goodbye on the drawing they had used to mock/make fun of her when they first spoke to her. It made my heart ache a little bit if I’m being honest. # </center>__OVERALL - 9.1/10__<center> This show is amazingly animated with an interesting story, uniquely designed and animated characters, and so many amazing scenes and moments that keep you on the edge of your chair, </center>FUCKIN’ GLORY TO THE SPEARHEAD SQUADRON<center> </center>~~~<center><img width='300' src='https://media.tenor.com/images/83186d7396f45879350e65fcdc48424f/tenor.gif'></center>~~~~~~
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SCORE
- (4.1/5)
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Ended inJune 20, 2021
Main Studio A-1 Pictures
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