

Code Geass: Rozé of the Recapture
コードギアス 奪還のロゼ
After the supposed death of its 99th emperor, the Holy Britannian Empire broke up, and the areas it controlled finally regained their independence. While most joined the United Federation of Nations, a group aiming to create everlasting peace, remnants of the oppressive empire continue to exist. One such faction, Neo-Britannia, has taken over Japan's Hokkaido island after killing its governor, Juugo Sumeragi. The Seven Shining Stars, a resistance group in Hokkaido, finds itself at an impasse as it struggles to find a way to defeat the Neo-Britannian Empire. As a last resort, it enlists the aid of the Nameless Mercenaries: brothers Rozé, a genius strategist; and Ash, an exceptional Knightmare pilot. Though Rozé and Ash are Britannian, they have made a name for themselves by protecting the Japanese and killing the empire's officials. With their help, the resistance may finally be able to recapture its territory and prevent another reign of terror. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
After the supposed death of its 99th emperor, the Holy Britannian Empire broke up, and the areas it controlled finally regained their independence. While most joined the United Federation of Nations, a group aiming to create everlasting peace, remnants of the oppressive empire continue to exist. One such faction, Neo-Britannia, has taken over Japan's Hokkaido island after killing its governor, Juugo Sumeragi. The Seven Shining Stars, a resistance group in Hokkaido, finds itself at an impasse as it struggles to find a way to defeat the Neo-Britannian Empire. As a last resort, it enlists the aid of the Nameless Mercenaries: brothers Rozé, a genius strategist; and Ash, an exceptional Knightmare pilot. Though Rozé and Ash are Britannian, they have made a name for themselves by protecting the Japanese and killing the empire's officials. With their help, the resistance may finally be able to recapture its territory and prevent another reign of terror. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
hexashadow13
September 6, 2024
I have been a major Code Geass fan since the original two seasons aired about a decade and a half ago. I can't say I liked Akito the Exiled all that much, but I felt it had potential and was still appreciative of what they were trying to do. I acknowledge the issues with Re;surrection but I still absolutely loved the film for what it successfully managed to do. Rozé of the Recapture however, I found to be a failure in essentially all respects to the point I feel it may well have been better for it never to have been made at all. Oneof the the most critical aspects of Code Geass is a protagonist that is, for lack of a better way to say it, intellectually overpowered. The writing may have to gloss over things and straight up bullshit things at times in order to make them feel that way, but the important part is to give off that sort of vibe. Lelouch is obviously the best example, but I'm not a hardliner that feels that Code Geass without Lelouch is impossible to do right. After all, I felt Leila filled that role reasonably well. Rozé however just doesn't make a good Code Geass protagonist. That Lelouch would still be amazing even without his Geass was heavily emphasized. On the other hand, with Rozé the focus is on how she wouldn't be able to accomplish much without hers. This is a core element of her character arc. It isn't all that well written of a character arc, but the issues are broader than that. It is simply not the type of character arc the protagonist should have. A side character sure. But if the protagonist has such a character arc, it kneecaps the entire series. Crazy schemes and great strategies that manage to pull off things that no one expects to be possible are Code Geass's bread and butter. Rozé just straight up isn't smart enough to do all that much. And this results in the series just overall being a lot less intriguing or exciting. Something that elevated the narrative in Code Geass was the themes that it explored. Most of the themes it explored it did superficially and often in ways that were pretty naive or fantastical. Thus, it was better from the perspective of bringing up questions than answering them. Still, it definitely had something to say, and with Zero's Requiem it did provide a resolution, and provided it an incredible fashion. Many argue that Re;surrection diminished that ending. I disagree with them in that I feel that showing that minor conflicts that the Black Knights can resolve (as long as Geass isn't involved) elevates the world that Lelouch created and thus builds well on that ending. But that's beside the point, which is that Rozé of the Recapture actually does do what people accuse Re;surrection of doing in that it greatly undermines the ending of R2. It makes it feel like what Lelouch accomplished really didn't have all that much of an impact. Somehow Neo-Brittania manages to take over Hokkaido again. Also, Neo-Brittania has an overpowered defensive wall that the Black Knights are completely useless against for some reason. Neo-Brittania also has Damocles and a bunch of F.L.E.I.J.A. despite them having been blasted into the sun. If that wasn't ridiculous enough, things get completely absurd in the final stretch where apparently they have an even greater superweapon that could easily have defeated the entirety of the rest of humanity if Rozé and Ash didn't just happen to be in the right place to be able to stop them. On top of that, it is explicitly shown that Lelouch and CC chose not to interfere in all this because they decided it was no longer their place, which is pretty much their only involvement in the show. None of this makes any sense and severely contradicts key elements of core aspects of the main series. It is quite frankly insulting. How cartoonish the villains were in this was even more insulting. They could not have created more 2-D villains if they had tried. That everyone had complex motivations was a core part of the main series. Some motivations were clearly better than others, but there was an attempt at giving depth to at least all the main characters. On the other hand the primary antagonist of Rozé of the Recapture is so lacking in depth and is so generic of a villain with such simple minded and evil motivations that I suspect the writers may have been trying to go for "It's so stupid it's actually genius", but just ended up with something utterly stupid. The rest of the antagonists don't fare much better. The majority are also two dimensionally evil to the point they make Clovis look deep. The exceptions are so half assed that they might as well be. For example, Narah has motivations centered around how Brittanians in Japan were discriminated against once it was freed, but this is obviously nonsense and doesn't justify her actions at all. And Catherine had a decent character arc conceptually, but it was severely rushed and thus wasn't able to hit the character beats necessary for it to be built up properly. The cast on the protagonist's side is similarly weak. The majority feel like bargain bin version of characters from the main series in that there was very heavy use of the same personality types in similar roles and with very similar relationships thus producing very similar dynamics. It felt a lot like the writers were just taking things from the main series and throwing them together without understanding why they worked so well in their original context. There are a lot of character and plot threads that go absolutely nowhere or feel like they had no point whatsoever. As such, its quite hard to build up investment in the cast. This severely weakens the ending, which was trying to go for strong character centered emotional beats, but isn't able to land any of them properly. This results in the ending being immensely unsatisfying. The use of reoccurring characters from prior Code Geass media was decent. The only one that has any major presence is Nina, whose story does a pretty good job of reinforcing her character arc centered around her desire for redemption for creating F.L.E.I.J.A.. Beyond that everyone's presence is cameo level. Seeing them is cool again and all, but Re;surrection was so much better at this that the cameos in this don't really have all that strong of an impact. The only exception I can think of is that unlike Re;surrection, characters from side series like Akito and Oz get cameos in this, so for those that especially love those characters this might hit harder. With all that said, there are still some areas where Rozé of the Recapture is pretty good. It still manages to handle the intermixing of slice of life and fanservice with the more serious parts of the show really well in a way that felt very true to the spirit of Code Geass. The action is also pretty good, though it uses a lot of 3DCG which some may take exception to. I also feel the new mech designs are weaker than the older ones. The character designs on the other hand are fantastic, and the art and animation in general is pretty good. The soundtrack is as good as the main series when it comes to the more action oriented tracks, but is weaker when it comes to softer tracks or tracks that are meant to be regal. The OP was pretty good in terms of the song and visuals. The ED was decent in terms of both. tl;dr: A sequel that is unsuccessful at most everything that was great about it's predecessors.
Hallideus
September 6, 2024
I loved the original Code Geass and it will always be a very fantastic series but this? Well first off its not "bad". It showed a lot of promise and potential at times to really be something but setting everything up, trying to establish a cast, a villain, a story and resolving all of that set up in 12 episodes was its ultimate downfall though. Now, If it had the same amount of episodes as the original Code Geass series to properly establish the cast, their stories, their motives and individual story arcs as the plot advances from A to B then no doubt thiswould have been a truly worthy successor and a seriously good watch. I won't say this was outright bad, or trash because its not quite that bad but it was disappointing nonetheless because what potential and promise it had went right out the window.
Surox
October 11, 2024
Despite the online consensus and general discourse revolving around this show, I found it to be quite enjoyable, and that's coming from a long-time fan of the original series. Where Dakkan no Rozé shines is in Ash & Rozé's character dynamics. Previous entries had a similar premise to this one, and the knightmare fights are as good as always (I would daresay this entry has the best in terms of animation & choreography), but none of them had this level of intrigue in how character relations would play out over the course of the series. This alone was enough to have me invested in howthe conclusion would be handled. Many critiscize Rozé's character for not being as smart or as cunning as Lelouch's, but I find that to be a strong point of this series. Instead of serving us with a Lelouch copycat, we get an interesting character who possess the same power, but with different motivation and far less ability. As such, it is also interesting to see how the character handles different situations given the same power, as well as the big mistakes she makes that Lelouch wouldn't have. The show obviously isn't perfect. The biggest problem is clearly the villains' lack of depth. The enemy generals have unique traits, but we don't learn much about them outside of their "visual" quirks and presentation. The worst offender is clearly Norland, as he ends up being nothing more than a template for big bad guy, with no motivation even given for his goals. I would also agree that the series clearly needed more than 12 episodes, as many of these issues could've been addressed by simply giving more time to develop these aforementioned characters. The finale could've also been better handled, as it was a tiny bit rushed, but I still really liked the ending.
CodeBlazeFate
September 6, 2024
*mild spoilers for Dakkan no Roze, and inherent spoilers for everything leading up to it* Nothing's gonna stop Code Geass from being successful. Not even being given a proper studio until well into production didn’t stop S1’s team from launching an instant hit back in 2006. Significant content changes and omissions didn’t stop the original writers and directors and their team from making Fukkatsu a success to launch a 10 year plan off of back in 2019. The abysmal quality of Dakkan no Roze isn’t gonna stop a different pair of writers and directors from making it part of the brand’s continued success if the myriadcharacter trailers and episode trailers are anything to go by. Whenever we reach the end of this 10 year plan, there will probably be another big and successful project to cap it off. Geass may not have the staying power overseas that it once held, and Disney’s absolute lack of marketing has only further damned Roze into being a legacy sequel only a fraction of the original fanbase has even heard of prior to its conclusion. However, Geass is still a massive franchise in its home nation, and Roze is just another cog in the machine. A rusty cog with cracks everywhere, but a cog all the same. That doesn’t mean it’s not an abysmal legacy sequel and a worse follow-up to Fukkatsu no Lelouch than imagined. They managed to make the premise of a future conflict set in Japan a non-starter in such a way where the UNJ established by the Zero Requiem of R2’s/Movie 3’s finale looks completely inept for years. Upon Year 3 of the post-ZR Kowa period, a surprise attack is launched in Hokkaido, taking it over and quickly establishing Neo-Britannia and a series of EMP defense towers that keep enemy Britannians and whatnot at bay. These unprotected towers that seemingly nobody has attempted to target. If the mere conceit of this show is a non-starter, how is the show supposed to function? Technically it’s not impossible, but after more or less nullifying any actual effectiveness of the original ending (or more pertinently, its movie timeline counterpart which is 99% the same), put charitably, it’s gonna be a hard sell. There are a few other overarching issues with the show which compound with one-another. First off, the show feels roughly half its length, especially with the first quarter and last quarter. As such, most of the characters don’t have much time to breathe as the gigantic cast of protagonists and antagonists cannot begin to flesh out even half of the survivors to any meaningful degree. It’s hard to say if the Neo-Britannian officials have it worse, or if the Black Kni-er, sorry, Seven Shining Stars have it worse. The issue of unoriginality will be covered later. The most immediate example that comes to mind is Heath Lott, a Neo-Britannian official introduced at the start of episode 3 as he confidently challenges the SSS. The next time we see him not 5 minutes later, the battle is skipped and the officials report of his failure as he is hyperventilating before their leader, Norland kicks him out. He blows his brains out immediately thereafter. An entire story that could span at least an episode, reduced to 2 minor scenes just to add another body to the pile of corpses. One of his more successful cohorts, Christoph Scissorman, makes a point about how Heath wanted to fill the shoes of the guy who seemingly died in episode 2, and yet despite being the first antagonist to have a remotely engaging motivation and sympathetic demise, he’s snuffed out in two quick scenes. The Neo-Britannian forces have it arguably even worse on the whole than the Knights of the Round back in R2. It’s almost as bad as how the majority of the Seven Shining Stars have next to no personality or detail or anything for the entire run. The only minor exceptions are Haruka the Kallen expy, and Kensei Kuroto who is rescued in episode 2. We have the mecha-loving Tamaki expy in Oda, the nice girl with a giant rack in Youko, and you have the rest. That’s all we have as far as personality or any personal details or chemistry beyond the mildest of teasing towards Oda for being an upstart. The Black Knights back in the original only really had 3 notable starting members in Oghi, Kallen, and Tamaki, but even back in the first few half or so of S1, those 3 alone had more going on than every SSS member put together. Main leads Ash and Sakuya do have compelling backstories and character arcs respectively, and certain Neo-Britannians such as Narah, Catherine, and Walther do have something going on to keep them mildly interesting. However, the show rarely has enough time to make the most out of them, let alone other SSS members or Neo-Britannian officials. That is, except for Norland, who is a vacuous waste of space with a boring, borderline nebulous “kill humanity cuz they’re disgusting” motivation after being an apathetic killer for most of the show. The less said about him, the better, at least for now. You may have caught on by now that this legacy sequel has a habit of sucking on the original series’ teet. The premise is a variation of what the original show started out with. We have a new take on the Black Knights, complete with them being apprehensive of working with mysterious outsiders such as the main duo. The main characters have to stop the Damocles from firing FLEIJAs at a city. The Lelouch expy Sakuya interrogates the starter villain for information and gets him killed after revealing themselves and geassing him following another bout of him exterminating the Japanese. An ambitious official seemingly dies before getting turned into a cyborg with a Geass canceller and an obsession with one of the main characters. Dakkan no Roze frequently remixes elements from the original, usually to terrible results since the pacing is so blitzed and the characterization is so threadbare aside from around 6 characters in a roster of around 20 notable new entities. The worst example is in how it handles violent discrimination. Code Geass wasn’t subtle about displaying Britannians’ violence and bigotry towards the Japanese. However, it had a level of depth and gravitas that this show lacks. Geass S1 doesn’t start with casually shooting a guy off a pier during “target practice” and slaughtering a bridge full of “Elevens”. The first on-screen slaughtering comes when Clovis, a novice snuffing out the local resistance while trying to cover his own ass for C.C's escape lest he be disinherited, gives the order and it’s treated with some actual weight. Geass went in some level of depth about even workplace bigotry with how Suzaku and his team were sometimes barred from missions because being an “Honorary Britannian” was a social playcating move that didn’t actually mean anything for Japanese folks who joined the Britannian military. They were frequently gossiped about as well. Dakkan no Roze has 1 minor gossip scene and at most, Catherine berating Sakura Sumeragi for being a half-”Eleven” figurehead with no actual power. Both shows do have random Britannians harassing or beating up “Elevens” for existing or for the most minor slights, but the original series has more than the most surface level atrocities, and Roze has fucking murder roombas. You read that right. Towards the last ⅓ of the show, the audience is introduced to giant robots that suck people up, shred them, and spew out blood geysers that turn into blood mist across the globe while cutting off all nearby surveillance and communication. The concept is beyond over the top and schlocky, just like the show’s handling of discrimination is sometimes. It’s almost impossible to play this for any legitimate horror, not that the show tries to since the concept isn’t exactly grounded or easy to take seriously. It would be easier to do so if most of the cast had stuff going for them, but they don’t so atrocities such as this, and the multitude of adequately animated fight scenes are hard to get invested in. It doesn’t help that the show doesn’t have much in the way of exploring themes or advancing what the original explored. Sure, there are multiple Neo-Britannian officials such as Natalia and Sakura who are working from the inside. Walther and Narah also think about their original good intentions and what they can even do beyond fighting enemies. They do comment on how it’s still difficult to get any kind of positive political policy going by working from the inside or trying to help outsiders from the inside. However, none of that broaches the depth of Suzaku’s rise through the ranks and how multiple systems in a totalitarian government make such approaches difficult long-term games. The original also ended on conflicts between people stuck in the past, people focused on controlling the present, and people trying to create a better future for others to have agency over. This show ends with “we must stop the guy who hates everybody otherwise world peace will have officially gone out the window along with Earth’s population”. Riveting. It’s hard not to compare Roze with either season of the original series when Roze itself insists on aping them and adds so little to the table. That being said, there are some decent things it does on its own, like the shared connections between Ash and Narah and how their trajectories have affected them despite the fact that they would rather not fight each other if need be. Ash’s backstory was surprisingly compelling, especially when his younger self interacts with Jugo Sumeragi who was killed before the start of the show. There’s a scene where the latter breaks down at the fact that while death doesn’t scare him, he won’t get to see his daughter again, and Ash who recently lost a loved one, relates and soon breaks down himself. Roze aka Sakuya, who had Geassed Ash into obeying her and believing she’s his brother via a fake identity, starts regretting her vengeful actions towards him the more she learns about him. There is a good and compelling series somewhere, with plenty of characters who have moments that elevate them beyond the vacuous entities they appeared to be at the start, and other engaging moments not described here. It’s all just buried underneath all the show’s stupid decisions, rushed pacing, and plenty of woefully underwritten characters. That’s to say nothing of how Ash’s and Sakuya’s stories end, which are about as bad as Lelouch’s and Suzaku’s endings were good. With all that said, do the audiovisuals at least come within striking distance of what came before? Yes, but at best, they’re closer to the level of Fukkatsu. Kenji Kawai is one of anime’s most acclaimed composers, working on the Ghost in the Shell movies of the 90s & 2000s, the DEEN adaptation of Fate/Stay Night, Mob Psycho 100, and Higurashi, among a sea of other notable titles such as Ranma ½ and Gundam 00. His pedigree perhaps even exceeds that of the original Geass composers, including its most prolific one, Kotaro Nakagawa. Unfortunately, none of Kawai’s contributions to Roze are nearly as memorable or bombastic as the sweeping scores of the original series. The tracks are often spammed ad nauseam such as the plethora of bagpipe-heavy tracks and the buttrock that plays whenever Ash’s mech goes turbo. There are some solid orchestral tracks and mildly emotional pieces, but while the OST is solid, it’s not filled to the brim with memorable tracks that move or excite. Also, the OP and ED are fine? Not notably good or bad enough to really discuss. As for the visuals, they’re solid. Surprisingly, there’s a lot of 3D CGI Knightmare Frames that practically feel 2D to the point where the average viewer may not even notice. The mecha designs are fine enough, and they animate decently well with no frame rate clashes with the frame rate of the 2D assets. A variety of fighting styles are used such as fencing, CQC, and more with the show’s decision to return characters to largely ground-based combat and weapons. It has none of the flippy-dippy breakdance type evasion combat of S1 unfortunately, with barely any moments where the fight choreography even comes close to having moments nearly that engaging as far as mecha combat is concerned. Oftentimes characters just zip and zoom about or refuse to shoot until it’s too late. The only notable exception is the final battle having a fair amount of tracking shots as Sakuya and Ash weave through Norland’s attacks without giving the audience motion sickness. The characters are generally drawn consistently with hardly any egregiously off-model moments. Takahiro Kimura’s final set of character designs includes some standouts such as Scissorman, Ash, and Sakuya, including her Roze disguise. Redesigns of returning/cameo characters were also generally nice, particularly Cornelia’s redesign. Some designs such as Catherine’s are really pushing it in terms of being able to take them seriously in a remotely grounded military show, especially when this one is far less comedic or filled with fanservicey romps than S1 or especially R2. That being said, hardly any are particularly bad, even if the SSS members often look as plain as the characters themselves are in practice. There aren’t any noticeable animation fuck-ups either aside from a few awkward shortcuts like in Ash vs Narah in episode 5 just having the characters border on becoming lines slamming into each other. That being said, there are some scenes where the lighting filters become absolutely garish for no real reason, namely in some scenes where the SSS members and the main duo are making plans. Still, the show overall looks good, even if it doesn’t have any of the over the top facial expressions, editing choices, or overall style of the original. At the end of the day, Roze is a terrible legacy sequel. It apes from the original without adding much worthwhile to stand on its own or advance what came before. Several decisions actively and needlessly undermine the ending of the recap trilogy which is almost identical to the original when there were easy ways to avoid that. Most of the new characters are featureless planks of wood and the ones rising above don’t get dealt the best hands, either. The show does admittedly do a tasteful job with its many cameos across the entire Geass pantheon, and somehow Nina gets some agency as the show’s resident remorseful Oppenheimer. However, just because some old and new characters get some decent material to work with doesn’t mean that the show’s overarching narrative isn’t broken. It may have started going somewhere decent towards the middle, but it started off as a derivative mess, and it ends in a similarly dire place. There are rumors that the show’s episode count was cut in half, which probably explains some of the more egregious issues with much of its new cast. However, nothing could have saved the show’s beginning and end. If the culmination of the 10 year plan’s front half is a dumber, edgier, Geass Greatest Hits compilation that’s as rushed as it is hollow, what hope is there for the next 5 years? Also, insert obligatory “Geass girls are hot and the camera really wants you to know that” here.
lolghost
September 17, 2024
The fact that "Roze" is just an anagram of "Zero" is an encapsulation of everything wrong with this show: it is derivative, uninspired, sloppy, and built to entirely to say "Hey! Remember this better show?", which it really shouldn't do given how bad it is. Firstly, the pacing is atrocious and is probably one of the core problems that has led to this mess. It tries to do everything the original Geass does but with a quarter of the run time. It gives no time to flesh out characters or give meaningful resolution to character arcs. New faces and factions pop up and disappear so suddenlythat you end up just simply not caring about them. The writing is so rushed that the world building suffers and you're left scratching your head about what's going on. The ending is meant to be bittersweet but its never given enough time to make it land properly. In fact, the only bittersweet I'm feeling about the ending is that they fumbled the one original, interesting plotline (the main story romance with the trademark Geass sprinkles on top). They could've hung so much on that but they didn't and its a shame. On the bright side, with only 12 episodes, you don't have to suffer through much. Hooray? The characters are horribly generic and its incredibly easy to make parallels with past characters. It feels like many of characters were written specifically with the original Geass cast in mind but we have other people sitting in their seats who kinda look like them: Roze/Sakuya is a a blatant-yet-inferior Lelouch clone, Ashe is wearing the metaphorical clothes of Suzaku, Haruka is a knock-off Kallen, etc. The list is numerous and very obvious. They're little more than inferior palette swaps with their original series counterparts. Everything about them makes them feel like their the equivalent of the off-brand soda you find at a supermarket at a discount. The only interesting characters here are Ashe and Scissorman (what a name), and even then you can still make the parallel's to who they're supposed to be replacing. Speaking of who they are replacing, this show is full of fanservice appearances of characters from the past series. They pop up all over the place and they even include characters from stuff like spinoff manga series. But they're done so poorly, I don't even think fans would really get their fanservice needs met. The past, recurrent characters have such incredibly minor roles. Some of the biggest, most beloved characters probably each have a total of less that one minute of cumulative, total screen time and the screen time they do have is irrelevant. They could easy cut them and nothing happens to the story. Yet, they felt the need to give a relative ton of screen time to Nina "I like Tables" Einstein of all characters. Baffling. The animation and music is fine, though it can feel extravagant and amazing at times yet incredibly cut-rate at other. This is probably the one part of the show that doesn't entirely feel misused but its still not groundbreaking or consistent. Just the least bad part of a really bad pile. Would this how have been better received if it wasn't tied to the legacy of prior Geass shows? Maybe. It wouldn't have been a good show and expectations wouldn't have been as high, but they hitched their wagon to the past seasons and that just made the let down feel so disappointing. Avoid this show. Its not worth watching and the only way it will be is if they release a new Geass and the events here become required reading to understand some plot point, and even then you can probably get by with just reading the plot.
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