Title: Attack on Titan (Shingeki no Kyojin)
Writer: Hajime Isayama, Yasuko Kobayashi
Director: Tetsurō Araki
Episodes: 25 episodes
When the man-eating giants called Titans first appeared, humans retreated behind massive walls. After a hundred years of safety, a colossal-sized Titan smashes through the defenses, unleashing a flood of giants and carnage in the streets. Eren Jaeger watches helplessly as one of the creatures devours his mother.
He vows to kill every Titan walking the earth.
Eren and his surviving friends enlist to fight against the insatiable monsters. The future looks bleak, but there s more to Eren than meets the eye: he may be humanity s last hope against extinction. From the director of Death Note and High School of the Dead comes the series Anime News Network calls an intense, visceral, and graphic thrill ride. The Titans have come to feast. Anything can happen. No one is safe.
FUNimation | Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Crunchyroll | Hulu
Writer: Hajime Isayama, Yasuko Kobayashi
Director: Tetsurō Araki
Episodes: 25 episodes
When the man-eating giants called Titans first appeared, humans retreated behind massive walls. After a hundred years of safety, a colossal-sized Titan smashes through the defenses, unleashing a flood of giants and carnage in the streets. Eren Jaeger watches helplessly as one of the creatures devours his mother.
He vows to kill every Titan walking the earth.
Eren and his surviving friends enlist to fight against the insatiable monsters. The future looks bleak, but there s more to Eren than meets the eye: he may be humanity s last hope against extinction. From the director of Death Note and High School of the Dead comes the series Anime News Network calls an intense, visceral, and graphic thrill ride. The Titans have come to feast. Anything can happen. No one is safe.
FUNimation | Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Crunchyroll | Hulu
To avoid all sorts of spoilers you should skip to the bottom for the spoiler free wrap up.
So I know I'm late to this party, but this is such an amazing anime that I MUST add my voice to the thousands of people fangirling over it. I'd heard of this anime long before I actually took the time to check it out and when I finally did, I ended up binge-watching all 25 episodes on Crunchyroll in one sitting. It was so good, that after taking a nap I watched it again from the beginning.
You may be asking yourself, what makes Attack on Titan so freakin' awesome? Well let me give you a quick (Who am I kidding? This won't be quick.) rundown on why this should be moved to the top of your anime watch list.
1. A post post apocalyptic setting that is uniquely terrifying.
The premise of this world is that humans have been herded behind three enormous walls after creatures known as Titans mysteriously appeared one day and began devouring the human race. (Imagine being caged like cattle, never knowing when you'll be part of a Titan buffet.) For 100 years, humans have lived peacefully behind these walls sending out an advanced guard, known as the Recon Corps, to get supplies and learn more about the Titans. (Usually, less than half of each party makes it back alive and they really haven't learned much about them during these missions.) The anime begins on the day this peace is broken when a Colossal Titan breaks through the outer wall allowing the city to be overrun by Titans. When all is said and done 20% of the population is dead and humanity has lost access to the outer walls.
2. Did I mention these truly creepy monsters known as titans?
Zombies step, or stagger, aside if you will; there's something far more terrifying than hordes of the undead. Titans are these humanoid shaped giants that mindlessly eat humans for apparently no other reason than to eradicate humans from the face of the earth. Seriously, they have no digestive system or any need for sustenance. They just eat to kill. (Kind of speaking of zombies, here's a not so serious question to ponder: Would a Titan eat a zombie and would a zombie survive said Titans eating them?)
Except for the missing genitals (no idea how they reproduce), vacant expressions and the disproportionate bodies, Titans are human in appearance. This adds to the creepiness factor, as it seems almost cannibalistic when they are devouring people. The worst part is when people try to reason with the them. The Titans can't comprehend their pleas so there is no mercy.
3. Unforgettable characters
The characters in Attack on Titan are well developed and simply unforgettable, which is a shame since so many of them die. (I know when a character is about to die, because I'll have started to grow attached to them.) George R.R. Martin has nothing on Yasuko Kobayashi when it comes to killing off characters. More than half of the cast is dead by the end of the first season of Attack on Titan. (I don't think I'm exaggerating.)
Jean Kirstein: He's one of my favorite characters in the series. He also has one of the most interesting character developments. He starts out as a brutally honest yet self-centered, delightfully cynical, and a somewhat apathetic recruit and evolves into a brutally honest, delightfully cynical, and a somewhat selfless leader. His sole purpose of joining the Training Corps is to join the Military Police Brigade who serves in the interior wall where it's "safe." He has no plans to look out for anyone but himself and when the Battle of Trost District begins he almost deserts.
With the coming of the Titans and the death of a close friend (I'm trying to maintain the illusion of a spoiler free review) Jean finds the courage to accept leadership and the difficult decisions that comes with such responsibility. One of the best moments in the anime is when Jean leads his squadron (really the remaining trainees) into certain death to retake the supply depot in the Trost District. He's a realist, but one that pushes through even when the outcome is obvious. He's the most human out of all the characters and probably the character I relate to the most.
Levi (too cool to have a surname): He's just a cool character and the best fighter in the kingdom. He's very calm under pressure and nothing really phases him for long. For Levi, anger is a fist to the face, pain a lingering look, and he takes the world as it comes. More than anyone he lives in the moment. I defy anyone not to hurt for him when he loses his entire Survey Corps Special Operations Squad, including Petra who may have been a love interest, in one outing.
Sasha Blouse: So I kind of fell in love with Sasha's character from her introduction in the 104th Training Corps when she offered her commander half of her potato. (The smaller half I might add.) It might have been the funniest moment in a series where laughs are pretty hard to come by. She remains optimistic in the worst possible situations which is quite lovely.
Hannes (not sure if he has a surname or not): I relate to Hannes more than I should admit to. His fear when faced with a Titan at the fall of Shiganshina and decision to take the children (Mikasa and Eren) and run resonated with me. A memorable moment is when Hannnes faces a young Eren, shortly after a Titan killed his mother, and tells Eren that he is too weak to have saved his mother, while he [Hannes] was too cowardly. (So many tears at this part.) I admire that he's able to use this experience to grow as a person and face his fears head on. (By the end of the first season he's a Captain of the Garrison and a valued soldier in the fight against the Titans.) In spite of a shaky beginning, he forms a strong relationship with Mikasa and Eren - almost acting as a favorite uncle.
Eren Yeager: Hot headed and eager to avenge humanity by killing all the Titans, he immediately signs up for the Survey Corps after graduating. Eren is the type who acts first and maybe thinks later. (I sometimes think he needs Armin to act as his functioning brain.) In spite of all this he's one of my favorite characters. There's something so honest in his rage and need to break free of the walls of humanity's captivity.
Armin Arlert: Physically weaker than the rest, but he's also smarter than the rest. It's thanks to Armin's quick thinking that the remaining trainees survive the retaking of the supply depot during the Battle of Trost District. His greatest weakness is his lack of confidence in himself which causes him to doubt his place in his friendship with Eren and Mikasa. I love watching him begin to trust in himself and to speak up. Out of all the characters, I think he has the most heart.
4. A kick ass heroine
If you know anything about Attack on Titan, you probably noticed Mikasa wasn't listed above. That's because she's so freakin' awesome she deserves her own category. She's easily one of my favorite anime characters and probably my favorite in the series so far. She's the best fighter in her class and better than many of the veterans. Her devotion to Eren is a beautiful thing and I unabashedly ship Mikasa with him.
This doesn't mean that she isn't feminine or that she's a man-hater or doesn't have a vulnerable side. She's just capable and doesn't pretend to be less than she is. [View Spoiler]
5. Sweet technology
The technology in Attack on Titan is unusual in the best possible way. I'm specifically referring to the Three Dimensional Maneuver Gear that they use in fighting the Titans. If there weren't Titans to kill it would be the ultimate extreme sport. It seems to work using gas, wires and a fan. Not real sure about the mechanics, but it looks awesome!
6. An unexpected plot twist or two
While everything above has been filled with spoilers, this part is pretty much nothing but spoilers. So really read at your own risk.
One of the best characters, and one of my favorites, in the anime series turns out to be a villain. I'm of course talking about Annie Leonhart. I liked her when she was just another trainee and still liked her after it turned out she was the unusual Female Titan that killed off a good portion of the Survey Corps. I don't condone her actions, but I have a healthy respect for her.
I felt for Annie during training and her self-imposed isolation. I didn't understand why she isolated herself, and from the brief flashbacks given when it's discovered she's the Female Titan I'm still unsure of her motives. She's a complicated villain rather than merely being evil. I'm not sure if she truly believes in what she's doing, or if she's one of the "weak" who got "swept along with the flow." She's a villain that I can't hate without hating a part of myself.
8. An ambiguous ending
This is all:
Final Thoughts
So this blog post was just an excuse for me to fangirl over Attack on Titan. I love the premise, the characters, and the world building. This is an anime series that once I started watching I couldn't stop until I had finished it. I laughed (rarely as everyone kept dying), I cried (ugly sobbing), I said "WTF?" A LOT, I cheered (hooray someone didn't die!), and I cringed during most of the battle scenes (some truly terrifying monsters).
Side Notes:
My favorite episodes so far in the series are also the episodes with the most feeling behind them: The World the Girl Saw, The Small Blade, and The Beating Heart. These three episodes delve into Mikasa's, Eren's, and Armin's past. They also have some truly beautiful scenes that are heart wrenching. I might have cried like a baby while watching The Small Blade.
[I cried for her when she heard of Eren's death, mainly because she wasn't able to cry for herself. While they're not related, Eren is the center of Mikasa's family, and her dreams of a future. Even when she decides to give up for a brief moment after his death (and it's not the typical collapsing aforementioned in my previous paragraph), she can't stop fighting. She refuses to give into her grief. Such determination in the face of such loss is heartbreaking and inspiring.]