Attack on Titan: Counter Rockets

2015

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1
4.3| NA| en| More Info
Released: 15 August 2015 Ended
Producted By: TOHO
Country: Japan
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website: http://pc.video.dmkt-sp.jp/ft/s0000778
Info

During the Great Titan War, a race of giants called Titans nearly wiped out humanity. The survivors built three concentric walls tall enough to keep the Titans out, but a century into that era of peace, the Colossal Titan suddenly appeared and kicked a hole through the Outer Wall, allowing other Titans to surge through. Forced to retreat behind the Middle Wall, humanity begins planning its retaliation.

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Attack on Titan: Counter Rockets Audience Reviews

Diagonaldi Very well executed
Executscan Expected more
Taraparain Tells a fascinating and unsettling true story, and does so well, without pretending to have all the answers.
Bob This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
Charles Herold (cherold) It's difficult to write any sort of fair review of this Japanese miniseries since I downloaded it off the internet with subtitles that appeared to have been created with Google translate from a bad transcription. Half the time I couldn't even guess what people were saying.But since no one else on IMDb has reviewed it (the one review here is by someone who seems to think this is the page for the Attack on Titan live-action movie that this is spun off from), so let me step into the breach.This three-episode, generally light-hearted series seems to be loosely centered around the creation of the vertical maneuvering equipment soldiers use to fight the Titans. The first and strongest episode focuses on the amusing inventor character (while I watched the anime series I don't remember anyone's names) as she experiments on a captured titan. I find the actress very amusing and overall this one is a lot of fun.The second episode involves a skilled archer and that character that is always hungry. It's a little disorganized but reasonably amusing and even somewhat touching.The third episode is longer and weaker than the rest. It's a totally lunatic thing that is primarily focused on the prettiest and strongest of the soldiers in training. She sets off the episode's longest action sequence when she announced she will marry whoever can battle through her defenses to kiss her. There is a lot wrong with this premise, but it does allow for a few amusing gags. Unfortunately, the episode's fight choreographer isn't nearly good enough to sustain an episode that is 90% fighting. Also, I couldn't for the life of me figure out why there were two women in hot pants carrying whips who appeared to be combination nurse/enforcers. I'm not really confident that better subtitles would have helped much with that one.Overall I think I'd give the first episode a 7, the second a 6, and the last a 4, because it really dragged. Overall, this is watchable and probably worthwhile if you're a Titan completist. I did like it better than Attack on Titan: Junior High, for whatever that's worth.
ThatAnimeSnob (ThatAnimeSnob) So I watched the live action version of the most over-hyped manga of the past years and then checked the impressions other people had about it. Almost nobody liked it, with their biggest grip being the various things they changed. But changes are not what make something bad. It's a live action movie, it is bound to change a lot of things, like pretty much all Marvel and DC superhero films did.For example, there are no horses and people move around with cars. It's clearly a budget restriction; where would they get so many horses and how could they control them in such crazy action scenes? This doesn't mean anything for the plot though, besides making the setting far more technologically advanced. Yeah, you can always complain about why they have cars and not tanks or airplanes, but if you go that far you might as well ask how people who haven't invented cars yet, can fly by using steam and try to kill titans with a sword, instead of snipping them with steam propelled blades.A somewhat bigger grip is how everybody in the movie was Asian, when the manga was supposed to be taking place in Europe. Sounds like it's a minor thing but part of the appeal the manga had, was not taking place in the present and was not about Asian people. The only oriental character in it was Mikasa, which was also what was making her exotic, and they took it out. Now she is just another person, and she is not even that obsessed with Eren.Speaking of Eren, he is a completely different character. Instead of that eternally angry teenager who felt imprisoned behind the walls, and who was hell bent on killing all the titans, in the movie he is just an average person who is simply curious to find out what exists beyond the walls.Something similar happens with all the characters. None of them has an over the top behavior, so they feel far more realistic, far less cartoony, and far harder to distinguish them, much less care about them, since nobody sticks out too much. In fact the most memorable one ends up being the dude who somehow used a sumo grappling move to throw a titan over his shoulder. Don't ask me how that is possible; all I know is that this is what made him more memorable than that guy who is not called Levi but is otherwise able to kill a dozen titans.Now speaking of the titans, they did the best they could to make them look scary and bizarre, but still pass as silly. What made them look eerie in the manga was the different way they were drawn, something which doesn't translate in the movie. They look like normal naked people, trying too hard to act like weirdos.The biggest issue ends up being the lack of downtime between action scenes so the viewer can bond with the characters. There are a few such scenes but it is mostly about Eren looking at people and commenting how he feels about the situation. There is very little physical interaction amongst characters, and they pass as mouthpieces info-dumping us with things we should be seeing instead of being told.The movie ends when Eren transforms, and leaves it open for a sequel. At this point it is identical to the manga, meaning that it is enjoyable if you watch it for the teenagers flying in the air, killing titans, followed by getting power ups and turning the whole thing into a Godzilla knock off. It becomes just mindless entertainment that will leave the non-otaku audience wondering why the hell is this thing considered to be one of the best anime of all times, followed by the expected reply of "read the manga". Yeah because the manga does not have Eren becoming a titan and destroying everything the premise was about.The movie is forgettable and lacks a lot of details that make the manga attractive to the edge-lords but saying it is not showing what the story is all about is a big fat lie. It is just another zombie apocalypse flick, with the difference being, the zombies are huge, humans fight them by flying, then turn to huge zombies themselves, and we get to see zombie Godzilla fighting zombie Mothra.