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FMA: The Brotherhood Diaries - Episode 4

Basque Grand

Ani-Gamers staff writer Ink contributes a weekly column in which he examines the difference between the original Fullmetal Alchemist and its re-telling, Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood. (As of this Sunday, we will be caught up with the latest episode in the FUNimation release.) To read previous entries, click here.

Watch Episode 4 - An Alchemist's Anguish

This is another episode that packs a couple of FMA1 story arcs into a single installment. Skipping a bit ahead of FMA1, we’re treated to the introduction of Basque Grand (The Iron Blood Alchemist) and his death via Scar via a rather impressive show of alchemic talent that was sadly little more than alluded to in FMA1. Again, this shows FMA2’s commitment to action sequences and exposing state alchemists’ abilities.

My favourite worm from FMA1, Lieutenant Yoki, also gets an early introduction. Paperwork being passed about in a room between Hawkeye’s crew and one line of dialog explains the whole of the FMA1 episode involved in his story. Although that particular episode was just a is-it-a-Philosopher’s-Stone quest, it served to set up an ultimate betrayal in FMA1, so it will be interesting to see how FMA2 uses him, if at all, or if they’re just keeping FMA1 fans like me happy by alluding to him.

The meat of this episode focuses on Shou Tucker (The Sewing Life Alchemist), who is directly recommended and introduced by Mustang as a tutor to the Elrics. This immediately lessens the manipulative implications of Roy’s FMA1 persona. Another difference is that the brothers don’t live at Tucker’s place as in FMA1, just going there to study (and play with Nina/Alexander) instead. This puts less believable emphasis for Ed’s distress over Tucker’s later action. Also, having Ed and Al at Shou’s after their exams puts less emphasis on learning to become State Alchemists and, in my opinion, rightly highlights their desire to perform human transmutation.

Continuing its tendency to tell-not-show important character development, FMA2 has Tucker explain the assessment process to his daughter instead. Thus the gravity of Shou’s motive doesn’t come as a dark epiphany to Ed but as a babble directly from Shou after his ill-fated work is completed. On the contrary, there is a very quick, but very effective flashback to the Elric’s estrangement from their father because of his obsession with alchemy, forming a closer identification with Nina.

Speaking of the ill-fated act, Ed’s discovery of Tucker’s Chimera’s components, the bludgeoning is more graphic and intense, with Ed losing control of himself during the beating. More importantly, the Chimera asks “does it hurt” of Tucker instead of FMA1’s “Edward, why does it hurt?” The ramifications are great, as this little line of dialog sways sympathy to Tucker’s side (via his daughter’s concern for him) instead of promoting the sense of pain and betrayal felt by the Chimera. This, together with Mustang’s darker and more matter-of-fact assessment of the situation, does lend a bit of a more real-world feel to the series that stresses the emphasis of an uncaring world as opposed to FMA1’s internal personalization of the same. Which is more effective? I’m not actually sure, which is a compliment to FMA2.

Lastly, but not at all what anyone should consider least, Scar kills Tucker(!) in a military safe-house. Needless to say Shou’s role in FMA2 will not be a repeat of FMA1...unless he comes back as a zombie (sorry, homunculus). Tucker is killed in front of his Chimera, which repeatedly and lovingly calls him “daddy.”

3 comments:

exalen said...

I just saw this for the first time, having only started watching "Brotherhood" this week. I haven't seen any FMA before.

What Tucker does with Nina left me with a sick feeling, and I don't think that the emotional throughline would be diminished whether the Elrics lived at his house or were merely visitors.

The dialogue from the chimera is heart-wrenching, and reinforces the innocence of Nina, and her not quite understanding what's going on. Even Al's reaction is hearbreaking, and I sure felt that Ed's reaction was what I was feeling.

I didn't quite like the "official" logic from Mustang, though. But that's a personal thing more than anything, I think.

I have to say that this is a brilliant episode, and all round a seriously awesome series.

FMAFAN said...

Hi, I left a comment on your episode 15 review. (stummbled on the blog looking up "brotherhood episode 15 reviews”) and thought I'd read the rest of your reviews from the beggining. I have to say I agree with exalen that this story is just as effective if not more so than FMA1's though of course it's much better in the manga, cause Brotherhood does tend to rush things and depend on dialogue, while the manga is great at using visuals to convey emotion. (I'm still upset with what they did to Maria Ross/the brother's finding out about Hugh's death which was filled with purely visual revelations in the manga and completely dependent on dialogue in the anime)

Anyway...the only other thing I want to add is that I think Brotherhood does a better job of showing how what happened to this young girl torments Ed than the first anime did. In FMA1 Tucker tried to bring Nina back and became some twisted Sloth/bear thing and slunk around constantly waving Nina in Ed's face. It was like a sneaky under-handed punch to the gut to try and evoke emotion in FMA1's Ed. But for me, I think it's far more emotional to have Ed freeze up in episode 26 because he hears the voices on Envy saying "Let's play" and it reminds him of Nina. I think what Brotherhood/the manga does well over FMA1 is keeping things simple and having emotion through simple gestures where as FMA1 goes for the overkill with emotion. And even twists emotion around in very odd ways. Ex: FMA1 Ed doesn't cry at his mom's funeral or during his automail surgery, but cries a lot on his journey with Al. In the manga, Ed cries at those times as a kid but refrains from crying on his journey with Al. The latter makes much more sense to me.

And then again, it always annoyed me how they rearranged the story to have Ed living and studying for his exam with Tucker in FMA1. I just think that the manga’s story, and thus Brotherhood, does a better job of showing the true emotions of these characters. But doesn’t do enough to convey the emotion as well as FMA1 did. Like I said with volume 15, and I said on another blog for Brotherhood it seems that FMA2’s flaw is that it’s too caught up in telling the STORY of the manga that it often forgets to capture HOW the story is told and then misses out on a lot of emotion. Which FMA1 excelled in HOW the story of these brothers was told and so it turned out a very, very emotion-driven anime. And you’re right, FMA2 does seem to lean more towards the action.

Ink said...

First, thanks for reading from the beginning! And to add to what you said:

"Like I said with volume 15, and I said on another blog for Brotherhood it seems that FMA2’s flaw is that it’s too caught up in telling the STORY of the manga that it often forgets to capture HOW the story is told and then misses out on a lot of emotion"

This is a great point and perhaps the essence of my FMA2 disperagement...although not so general as I'd state. Many things about FMA2 excel that of FMA1 in the relation of emotion - most importantly the artistic execution of specific aspects of certain scenes. What I pick on FMA2 for the most is character development, which, underhanded (sucker-puch or not) as it was in FMA1 was vital to its impact.

As a viewer who has lost his mother relatively early on in life as a direct result of a decision rested upon his and his obliging brother's shoulders, the whole emotional sucker-punch of having to kill your own source of guilt again is easily identifiable and very effective dramatically in execution to say the least.

FMA2 characters, I feel, have not garnered the respect or depth of feeling deserved of their FMA1 counterparts. They're not as involving in the same respects as FMA1 (to me), but that's ok...because FMA2 is its own series with its own agenda. Concerning the relation of emotion, as we have both agreed however, FMA2 has failed thus far in evoking a substantial investment compared to FMA1. Not to say it's neglecting...just lacking comparitively. And seing as they are totally different creative outputs, this is completely understandable...just a difference.

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