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Jubilee
Rated: G - All Ages
Status: Finished Airing
Source: Original
Score: 5.21
Rank:
Popularity: 13686
A music video by Koji Yamamura.
Review
Sidewinder51
Rate a 4 Seen via Japanese raw Music is soft rock, perhaps r&b, a similar artist would be Red Hot Chilli Peppers Story- unclear. You have one line of text in the beginning, you have your music song that is it. The first line of text could have been the title in Japanese format. Ergo, not likely relevant to plot. A song as the plot? hmm... that can't work. For artists have multiple sources for inspiration to say one thing along led them alone to their song is a lie. In other words i have stated songs come from multiple pathways per-say. To figure out which pathtaken would be art and mostly would rely on the art. Art: I just mentioned how the plot was poor and needed art for guidance. Alas, the art did not help. Art focuses on multiple people. Each path they take, along with their actions. Whether it was going high and higher or far and farther. Also, the art was not detailed. For example if you picture a helicopter in your head you would see the lights, door, door crease, joystick, blades, yada yada. You would not see just a blurry version of the outer shell unless you were looking at it from it far away. But the art showed it close up. Overall, on a positive note it was nice to see that all the pictures used were a part of the big picture. In some if not most dementia the art seems so random. Sound-nothing of note Character- not relevant Enjoyment: best if you enjoy dementia:impaired reasoning.
Stephen2D
Starting in the same manner like the Italian movie "La Dolce Vita" (in this case with a representation of God flown by three helicopters), "Jubilee " is like the title says, a party showing the life under the threads of time. Practically, in under 5 minutes, we are shown in a surreal manner a bunch of characters, from the "mechanic boy" who needs a clear objective in life or a bureaucratic mosquito who steps on other people things to a fish-woman with two many fish-masks and a salaryman who reminds us of "Mt. Head" character design. These characters interact with ease, one loves anotherand sometimes one gets pissed off of another, but these things are trivial in the scheme of time, so they pass naturally like in the real world. The anime music video doesn't have a bigger message apart from the acceptance with ease of world interaction which is itself subjugated, like all things, by Chronos, the god of time. One can get stuck in it or one can see the bigger picture and be at peace with oneself. The music composed by Kazuyoshi Nakamura really helps emphasize that feeling. For some, it reminds of the early 2000's Beck. And if you're having a good time wouldn't you, like the poet, feel: "When I say to the Moment flying; 'Linger a while -- thou art so fair! Then bind me in thy bonds undying, And my final ruin I will bear!" Goethe