
They weren’t numerous, not able to be measured in leaps and bounds, but they were there–quirks of divinity, if you will! Seeing Eureka and Renton with their child, as well as seeing how AO handles preposterous situations makes my life feel better: so I have to say that, if only for my own nostalgia, I thought the show was “good”. Still, despite how truly abysmal the plot was, the show had ups. It had potential, but the issue is that it did not take advantage of it (as I illustrate below) this was, ironically, something its parent managed to do quite eloquently. I don’t know, maybe I’m wrong because I misunderstood something that wasn’t adequately brought up.Overall, a big, big mess. I do think there was a bit of ignorance, because to be entirely frank, I don’t think the Eureka of the original/the Renton of the original would just let their child, you know, wonder the various universes. It looks like they wanted us to not get close to anyone specifically for the reason of this ending: that virtually none of it mattered.
#Eureka seven ao episode series#
I found myself leaning towards the former, because I said “if they make him fall in love with a girl who has been crap all series long, I’ll blow my brains out”. We never really got close to any characters like in the original: especially potential love interests like Fluer and Naru. This attempted to tell the story in the same fashion, but it didn’t work out–for the viewer.It did, however, work out to make some sort of weird sense. Clearly, everyone here acknowledges Eureka Seven was special and this was…bad.I thought during the original that Bones got extremely lucky and their odd way of telling the story just happened to work out.
