What if one day you get a cellular phone and a multi-million dollar account with the sole purpose of saving your country? This is the premise of the anime series which I will make mention today: Higashi no Eden.
live surrounded by thinkers and philosophers cafe (minus your servant, of course), towards the end of minimal consumption of a jug and cut a toasted ham and cheese have spun the solution of most of the problems of today. But notwithstanding this visionary attitude, there's a hand-bag of excuses not to give free rein to the salvation of the country, if not the world and the entire Universe (recorded myself included, insist on this.) And the excuse is: it's all twine and platunga there.
Now suppose that the fly is at hand. And in quantity. Ponele 10,000,000,000 yen (approximately USD 112 million). Now we must decide how to invest.
Morimi Saki is a new university received Washington DC travel that intersects with his "Prince" ball against a guy in the White House with a gun and a phone. It is through this relationship between Saki and Akira Takizawa (Is this your real name?) We move from the artificial normality of Japan's fiction in this strange world that means "The Game" and his "Selecao."
insist on telling the story is actually more, since the hand of an excellent animation attended various ways of dealing with this game, ranging from revenge, justice, the company benefactor, to the super-known and simplistic violence. Interestingly
Higashi no Eden (Eden literally something like the East) is contemplating despair among the population of the country of the rising sun, noting that their society is broken as ever. In one corner: NEETs armies or teenagers who are neither studying nor working and do not manage to enter formal society, without much interest to use your cell phone. In addition, most educated young people fairly, no matter the degree or where studies are located in this whole mess, and after careful observation lead us to desist from selling their ideals to get jobs where they will be denigrated.
Ok, but all part of a shojo and maintains certain similar trend, the story goes for any other side. A series strange, strange rhythms and more strange characters. Eleven chapters which open the door to a world of redemption and particular concerns that trigger something more general. In view two films that end the story. When you see them, I comment.
The soundtrack is quite tranqui. But it highlights the opening, a song by British rock band Oasis included on their latest album Dig Out Your Soul.
Falling Down / Falling
A setting sun That blows my mind, / A summer sun blows my mind,
Is a falling down on all that I've Ever Known, / It is falling on all I knew , Time to
kiss the world goodbye, / Time to say goodbye with a kiss in the world,
Falling down on all that I've Ever Known, / Falling on everything I knew,
Is All That I've Ever Known, / That's all met,
Is all that I've ever known. / It's all I knew.
A dying scream, It Makes No sound, / A cry in agony, not noisy,
Calling out to all that I've Ever Known, / Calling all who ever met him,
Here am I, lost and found, / Here I am, lost and found, Calling out to all
... / Calling all
... We live a dying dream, / We live a dying dream, If
You Know What I mean, / If you understand what I'm talking about,
All That I've Ever Known, / All that I knew,
It's all that I've ever known. / It's all I knew. Catch the wheel
That breaks the butterfly, / On the hunt for the wheel that breaks the butterfly I cried the rain
That fills the ocean wide, / I cried the rain that fills the ocean,
I tried to talk to God to no avail ... / Tried to talk to God to no avail, Calling my name from
out of nowhere, / Calling my name from scratch,
I said "If You Will not save me, please do not waste my time" ... / I said "If you will not save, please do not make me waste my time" ...
The summer sun That blows my mind, / A summer sun blows my mind,
Is a falling down on all that I've Ever Known, / It is falling on all I knew,
Time to kiss the world goodbye, / It's time to say goodbye with a kiss in the world,
Falling down on all that I've Ever Known, / Falling on everything I knew,
Is all that I've ever known. / It's all I knew.
Aloha!
PD1: Again we see again the strong role of cell phones in fiction, and have achieved in ordinary life. The Departed, of Scorcese, and taught us how important can be the gadget in a story.
PD2: If you are interested, here's the opening: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_7Rp5qOv6h0
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