KIDOU SENSHI GUNDAM: CUCURUZ DOAN NO SHIMA
MOVIE
Dubbed
SOURCE
OTHER
RELEASE
June 3, 2022
LENGTH
109 min
DESCRIPTION
After a covert mission goes wrong, Mobile Suit pilot Amuro Ray and his comrades are stranded on a remote island. The battalion was sent to a land called the Island of No Return to clear off any enemy forces, only to find a group of children and an enemy mecha attack. Now Amuro must find a way for them all to escape this mysterious land, but not before meeting a strange man—Cucuruz Doan.
Note: Announced at the "Dai 2-kai Gundam Conference" event, the film is described as a retelling of the 15th episode of the original Mobile Suit Gundam television anime. The episode itself has been omitted from English releases of the series.
(Source: Crunchyroll, Anime News Network)
CAST
Amuro Ray
Tooru Furuya
Cucuruz Doan
Shunsuke Takeuchi
Sayla Mass
Megumi Han
Bright Noa
Ken Narita
Haro
Satomi Arai
Kai Shiden
Toshio Furukawa
Frau Bow
Misato Fukuen
Mirai Yashima
Satomi Arai
Sleggar Law
Tomofumi Ikezoe
Kikka Kitamoto
Satomi Arai
Hayato Kobayashi
Hideki Nakanishi
Job John
Takashi Kondou
Katz Hawin
Ayaka Asai
M'Quve
Takumi Yamazaki
Marcos
Yuuma Uchida
Tem Ray
Kouichi Sakaguchi
Letz Cofan
Megumi Han
Kamaria Ray
Kaho Kouda
Johann Abraham Revil
Hiroshi Naka
Gopp
Naomi Kusumi
Omur Fang
Yasutaka Tomioka
Ritsma
Shinji Kawada
Danan Rashica
Yuu Hayashi
Han
Yun Sanho
Kouji Yusa
RELATED TO KIDOU SENSHI GUNDAM: CUCURUZ DOAN NO SHIMA
REVIEWS
Woodaba
45/100Mobile Suit Gundam: Episode 15: Remake: YAS' REVENGEContinue on AniListA baffling production that only really falls into crystal clarity when taken as a piece with director Yoshikazu Yasuhiko's wider Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin project. The Origin is, essentially, a fix fic of First Gundam, one that follows the original show relatively faithfully with some things cut or streamlined (including this episode, natch), but with the crucial difference that the story is realigned to fit with Yas' conception of Gundam, most notably through the inclusion of a long flashback arc depicting the backstory of Char and Sayla, and the rise of the Principality of Zeon.
There's good stuff in the Origin, and as a comic, it frequently looks absolutely gorgeous. As an artist, Yas is clearly an immense talent, but as a writer, and as a conveyor of the Gundam story, he runs roughshod over a lot of the nuances and perspectives present in First Gundam in order to ensure that his conception of it rules the day. Zeon is transformed from a worthy cause hijacked by a fascist family into a ridiculous ideology conceived by a madman right from the very start, Char morphs into a Light Yagami-Esque serial killer, Ramba Ral is suddenly this super pivotal character deeply intertwined with the politics of the setting rather than being an excellent sympathetic antagonist...Yas is outspoken about the fact that he doesn't like any of the sequels to the original Mobile Suit Gundam, and considers it the only Gundam, but it's more than that, he only really seems willing to acknowledge his own narrow vision of that show, and has spearheaded this entire sub-franchise that closes off doors of interpretation and resonance opened by the other creators who worked on that show.
In many ways, this film is the apotheosis of that. It's a lavish, multi-million full theatrical reproduction of the episode of Gundam that was produced while Yas was in the hospital from overworking, and that he famously absolutely disavows, an episode whose infamy is inflamed by the fact that Yoshiyuki Tomino has requested that this episode not be included on western releases of the show, apparently due to a dispute between him and another member of staff that he's not willing to elaborate on as long as that person is alive, out of respect. For these reasons, and the fact that the episode contains some noticeable off-model shots, Episode 15 of Mobile Suit Gundam has acquired a reputation as some legendarily bad Spock's Brain status despite the fact that it's... just good.
It's really good, in fact! It's no Time Be Still, but the thing is, First Gundam just rips, and Cucuruz Doan's Island is no exception. It's a really illustrative episode for Amuro's character, and there's a lot of tragic weight brought out of how it becomes increasingly clear that Amuro has more in common with this older broken soldier than the kids around him closer to his age. And yeah, there's some off-model shots, but also, First Gundam is a hand-drawn show from the 70s, that's just what's gonna happen, and it's not like every other episode is totally immaculate and on-model. It's fine, it's charming! Cucuruz Doan's Island (the episode) feels lovingly hand-crafted and full of heart, in a way this film just doesn't.
It's not bad, to be clear. There are some bits I really really love, like flashbacks and hallucinations that evoke the wild colour palette of the 79 show, and the amazing gundam activations sequence in the third act, where the Gundam looms so menacingly, holding it's beam saber like Michael Myers might hold a knife dripping with blood, and the bit immediately after (you know the one)...that stuff is great, but it's small snapshots through a film that doesn't really have much of anything to justify its existence. It's an indulgence, not really for the fans, but for Yas himself, to "fix" yet another thing from First Gundam that doesn't meet his approval, whilst inevitably losing something in the process.
I enjoyed my time with it, sure, and I think I'd enjoy it even more if that time was closer to 70 minutes rather than 120. But it represents a vision of what Gundam is and can be that I strongly dislike. I kept thinking about Hathaway while watching this, a film that I have some issues with but has only grown in my mind as something that, even as it continues to mine obscure Tomino ephemera for content, represents an exacting and modern vision for this franchise that expands what it can be and what it can do into new and exciting places.
Hathaway made Gundam bigger, weirder, and more interesting. Cucuruz Doan's Island Remake just makes it smaller and smaller, until it only really fits into the box Yas is so desperate to cram it into.
Oh, and this is just a personal thing, but I don't like all the RG stickers the Gundam has. Keep that awful monstrous wonderful boy clean, thank you very much.
Kuropiko
65/100Doan's Island Wants To Eat Its Cake, And Have It Too.Continue on AniListWell, here it is. The big meme itself, who in their right mind would want to remake not just Mobile Suit Gundam, the mecha anime, but one of its most ‘controversial’ episodes? Controversial is in quotes, because anyone who called the original Cucuruz Doan’s Island bad was probably post-op from a lobotomy (or Tomino himself, I suppose), but the point still stands, out of everything one could do with the original Mobile Suit Gundam anime, why remake this seemingly innocuous episode not from its opening stretch, nor its climax, not an episode host to many an iconic scene, or even one with pivotal character turns- rather, we see our director, Yasuhiko Yoshikazu, return to an episode most people remember for looking off model.
The reasoning should be immediately clear given that name I just mentioned, as Yasuhiko was famously hospitalized during the production of the episode this film is based on, leading to it being ‘near completely outsourced’, and it was remade due to Yasuhiko thinking the concept would be great for a movie, according to uncited passages on the film’s wikipedia page.
But, the uncited commentary is not why I am writing this, if it was I would have attempted to find a citation. No, what I aim to do here is to assess this brief return to the days of 1979, where we get familiar faces, familiar voices, familiar music, and even familiar sound effects. It’s a nostalgic trip to the original anime, though released three years late for the 40th Anniversary. It likes to indulge in these characters, reanimate past events in a style reminiscent of Yasuhiko’s Gundam THE ORIGIN manga, upgrade notable side characters like Job John from background to supporting, and they even go out of their way to have later additions like Slegger appear. It makes the complete absence of one Char Aznable a fair bit amusing considering the fact that in the original anime, Slegger wouldn’t be joining the main crew for around twenty odd episodes.
This sense of familiarity is something the film loves to relish in, it dwells heavily on the downtime that the setting offers, whether it be comedic hijinks on the White Base, Bright annoying command comedically, rather than dramatically like in the original, or of course, Amuro working at a farm / orphanage / secret nuclear missile launch site for the bulk of the film’s runtime. Even of the four mobile suit battles across the film’s nearly two hour long run time, two are incredibly brief and occur in the opening twenty minutes, while the third is a one sided conflict far away from everything else set at the midpoint of the film. This is entirely about a desire to return to the past, albeit briefly, and without any of the dramatics or high tension that past once had.
These attitudes lead to a sense that the film wants to eat its cake and have it too. It wants to show all of Amuro’s past trauma, but also wants to have mostly clean mobile suit combat where people do in fact die. It wants to have the comedy of kids trying to milk a goat, but places that right next to the slaughtering of completely faceless soldiers, where not even a last pilot shot is spared. The antagonists are just the right amount of detached to crazy that you don’t really feel bad when they die, despite the original anime’s core trait being its humanization of these enemy soldiers. A scene that particularly stood out to me was this almost comical moment within the climax of the film, where Amuro steps on a Zeon soldier with his giant mobile suit foot, as if crushing a bug, the camera cutting to his disgusted and close to horrified face, but ultimately not dwelling on this brutal event that occurs not just in a film about discarding the shackles of war and moving on, but a film based on an episode adjacent to other episodes that explore the humanization of the enemy, and how much Amuro has changed. We even see a remake of the iconic scene where Amuro is confronted by his mother, and it’s then contrasted by a scene from far later in the original anime where his father tells Amuro to pilot his Gundam.
The film wants to bring up these ideas, these core structures that Gundam built its main character upon, yet it wants to pull on the comfort of nostalgia, ultimately getting to say very little that the original episode didn’t already say, yet it's done over a runtime nearly six times as long. There’s appreciation to be had, sure, the concluding mobile suit battle uses these mechanical Gods in a way that feels severely lacking in many other modern mecha anime. Doan is unable to conclude the battle because his Zaku is a symbol of his past, and how he uses that to push himself forward. Everything on his island and everything he does is built upon and done in response to his past, so when confronted with destroying it in the final battle, he falls. Amuro in the Gundam his father made is able to finish this battle for him though, as his Gundam is an extension of his hitherto unknown desire to communicate and truly love humanity, so he can step in to protect the humanity Doan has cultivated on this island. M’Quve is utilized as a background antagonist throughout the film, and he is in a similar contradictory state to his THE ORIGIN counterpart. He wants to push war to its limits, espousing that he has learned from the past, that where Hitler failed with Paris is Burning, he will succeed because he is aware of that past. Yet, when his plan fails, he laughs at the fact that someone among his men appreciates culture in a way similar to him.
These ideas and concepts are truly additive, ones that are interesting to witness in this film and make the project worth it for me, but they’re weighed down by other ambitions. Disgusting ambitions of nostalgia, depraved and fully on display throughout the runtime. I see Amuro’s shocking effeminate thighs, evoking eroticism that hadn’t been there before, but in a post-Z Gundam world is now commonplace, this imagery now paired with far too much admiration and fellation in regards to the content and characters on display in this film, and I think ‘So, this is what a remake of First Gundam would be like’.
And I breathe a sigh of relief that our culture has not created that.
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SCORE
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Ended inJune 3, 2022
Main Studio Sunrise
Favorited by 52 Users
Hashtag #ククルス・ドアンの島