The fifth season of Senki Zesshou Symphogear.
Humanity is finally confronted with the threat of the Custodians—the ancient, sentient species held
responsible for cursing humanity to speak different languages thousands of years ago. The Symphogear
wielders—Hibiki Tachibana, Tsubasa Kazanari, Chris Yukine, Maria Cadenzavna Eve, Kirika Akatsuki, and
Shirabe Tsukuyomi—are sent to the Antarctic in order to retrieve an ancient relic. After securing it
and rescuing the scientific staff present there from a Coffin, the automated defense mechanism
protecting it, the relic is given to American researchers due to international agreements.
The criminal organization Noble Red, a remnant of the previously fought Bavarian Illuminati, starts
targeting the relic. Will the Symphogear wielders and their supporting organization S.O.N.G. be able
to foil the plans of the organizations conspiring against them?
(Source: MAL Rewrite)
~~~__This is a review of the entire series__. All of my reviews contain __spoilers __for the reviewed material. This is your only warning.~~~ ------ ~~~*"Create a new history with the light that God cannot know."* *-Symphogear XV Tagline*~~~ img880(https://i.imgur.com/chUQPiK.png) Where to start with *Symphogear*? Satelight Inc.'s crowning achievement is a hard series to summarize. What began 7 years ago as a sort of seiyuu supergroup series has grown into something that means a lot to a lot of people. It's quite the daunting task to stare it all down. Nonetheless, there *is* a place to start. In the course of exploring a medium--any medium--you will come across certain works that are so outsized in personality that someone liking them can tell you a lot about that person. They cut to the aesthetic core so thoroughly that they reveal what that person values in fiction in general. There are many of these in anime. And of those anime, many happen to be high-concept action series, focused on kineticism and heart with a strong emotional core. Many *FLCL*-indebted action anime are in this category, as is a certain kind of shonen, and many magical girl series. Yet, as far as sheer *force*, there might legitimately be *nothing* that tops *Symphogear*. It is easy to forget seven years and five seasons on, but the first episode of the original *Symphogear* actually begins with a grim premonition of protagonist Hibiki Tachibana’s funeral. Her girlfriend Miku Kohinata screaming in the rain at the prospect of never seeing her again. It’s only *after* that that the show jumps into its more memorable opening scene. The monstrous Noise attacking an idol concert. Those idols transforming into power armor-clad superhero-magical girls. One of those girls sacrificing herself to save the concert’s last survivor, Hibiki herself. Premiering almost a year to the day after *Puella Magi Madoka Magica* permanently darkened the mahou shoujo outlook (willingly or not), it must’ve been easy to believe at the time that *Symphogear* would follow a similar trajectory and was just being less coy about it. In truth, as the series went on it became clear that--by decision or by accident--*Symphogear* was an alternative. Less a refutation than a brighter future. This culminates in the reveal at the end of the first season that the rain-soaked funeral shown at the start of the first episode was a fakeout. Hibiki still lives, Miku hasn’t lost her precious girl, a story can be meaningful without having a sad ending. This emotional core makes it all the more frustrating that *Symphogear* is the sort of thing that often gets slapped with the “hype” label. Or even worse, “dumb fun”. To a point, these are valid descriptors. The series will definitely get you amped up, and it’s not an intellectual affair in the same way that say, something like (say) *Serial Experiments Lain* is. The problem with calling it these things is that it misses a bigger picture. *Symphogear* is so beloved because it embraces the entire toolset of its medium. *Symphogear*’s best animation is flashy and fluid. The franchise’s signature “attack cards” turn two things that are traditionally weaknesses for action series (non-animated stills and recycled shots) into a strength. img880(https://i.imgur.com/DtAlNTJ.png) The writing is Greek tragedy levels of deliciously melodramatic, with few anime peers in its medium. The soundtrack? A wadded candyball of idol J-pop and -rock, EDM, trance, hair metal, and even occasional splashes of traditional Japanese music. The characters have some of the *biggest* personalities in the whole medium. Each one a color-coded archetype that at the same time, manages to have a surprising amount of depth. Put simply, *Symphogear* is one of the most anime anime ever made. The entirety of *Symphogear*, on every level, could not survive in any other medium. Much of this is a unique blend of influences. Other shows have merged some combination of super robots, magical girls, and idol anime. None have done all three, in as nearly an even mix, as *Symphogear* does. What the series recognizes is that these genres have a common thematic endpoint. They are from-the-bottom, “for the little guy” power fantasies. Visions of a world where truth, justice, love, and compassion really *do* reign supreme, and there are no problems that cannot be solved with either the offer of an outstretched hand, or a fist balled in righteous anger. img880(https://i.imgur.com/e95UVYS.png) *That's it, that's the show.* ------------ Everything about *Symphogear* is **huge**. Themes, writing, animation, music. It is a series of uncommon enormity, which has perhaps a dozen peers in its medium in this realm--*Diebuster*, *Gurren Lagann* and that series’ own inspiration *GaoGaiGar*. *Nanoha*, the more ambitious *Pretty Cure* seasons. *Symphogear* is aiming for your heart, not your head, 100% of the time. That big-heart attitude cuts both ways. And part of what it means is that where *Symphogear* *does* fail, when it does, is in nuance. The series by necessity has a moral framing that, while I’d never call it simplistic, revolves around its particular interpretation of the idea of “love”, and what it means to sacrifice for the greater good. Hibiki’s forgiveness of her deadbeat father in *GX* reflects well on *her* character certainly, but not anyone else’s, and her attempt to knit her family back together, while understandable keeping in mind her age and general mentality, is kind of questionable from our perspective as the audience. Likewise, when *AXZ* delves into a character arc about Maria and her adoptive mother, it’s hard for it to not scan as abuse apologia. Nastassja’s actions, originally shown in *G*, are framed as harsh, but ultimately justified, which is absurd. All this complete with a clumsy people-as-tomatoes metaphor to rival the infamous example in *The Big O*. The sexualization of minors present in some places is also (understandably) going to lose some people. I’d argue that this is less an issue with *Symphogear* and more a systemic one in the anime industry. But it is just worth noting that unlike some of its stylistic peers and descendants, it does not go out of its way to avert this issue, and criticizing it for that is valid. Really if one wanted to be disingenuous, they could accuse any critics of expecting too much from a show where the moon is a supercomputer and also the Tower of Babel. But that’s underselling *Symphogear*, a series that, much more than most I’d argue, understands its core strengths extremely well. What prevents any of the aforementioned flaws from coming anywhere near sinking the series is that they’re also what makes its emotional writing so strong. *Symphogear* is primarily about how human connections inevitably hurt us--no two people can *perfectly* understand each other--but those same connections are what make life worth living. Often left out of analysis of the series is that among the many other things it is, *Symphogear* is a love story. Hibiki and Miku literally don’t fully process their feelings for each other until the closing minutes of the final season, a conceit that would be *maddeningly* frustrating in almost any other series. Here, it’s the perfect metaphor for the show’s overall philosophy. *Symphogear* deliberately does not make any great distinction between the personal and philosophical. What’s true of the lead couple is true of humanity in general. img880(https://i.imgur.com/lKrUSjM.png) So that’s *Symphogear* in the broadstroke. What about *XV* specifically? Well, while it may not be the overall strongest season (that might still be *AXZ*, it’s a tough call to make), it’s definitely up there. Noble Red are not quite as fully fleshed-out as some prior antagonists like the Autoscorers from *GX* and the Illuminati trio from *AXZ*, but this is a minor complaint and made up for by the foregrounding of Fudou, Tsubasa’s grandfather and a *very* transparent stand-in for all the worst tendencies in Japanese political discourse, as an antagonist. *XV*’s first half is in part an indictment of all the bad ends that tradition can be turned to--support of abuse and fascism chief among them. While antifascistic sentiment is not uncommon in anime, it is rarely *this* in-your-face. Tsubasa’s ‘seal’ plotline is literal brainwashing-as-easy-metaphor for indoctrination. Breaking it requires a literal slap in the face and being woken up to the fact that the condescending attitudes inherent in such philosophies are a lie to begin with. img880(https://i.imgur.com/OKGCxeH.png) *XV*’s overall ranking is arguable, but the show’s final episode, in a *deep* rarity for anime, is almost certainly its best. Plotlines from whole seasons back are briefly threaded into the narrative to support the final defeat of overall villain Shem-Ha, and the show closes with Miku and Hibiki finally realizing they’re more than friends in a fashion that is only *just* subtle enough to get around Japanese TV censors. There is more feeling in the last half hour of the show than there are in some entire romance anime. img880(https://i.imgur.com/C8NG7sX.png) At the end of it all? *Symphogear* has flaws and *they don’t matter*. More than almost any other anime I’ve ever seen, *Symphogear* almost actively resists critical analysis. A thousand lists of nitpicks throughout the franchise buckle in the face of any of its many explosive singing-fight scenes. Other “hype” anime *wish* they were *Symphogear*. But that’s not to say that *Symphogear* is above, or not in conversation with, other anime. Quite the opposite, in fact. While it’s true that *XV* likely marks the end of *Symphogear*’s explosive decade, the question of the series’ *influence* is not one of if or even when, merely when it will be acknowledged. Even now, we can probably thank *Symphogear* at least in part for the notable uptick in female-driven ensemble action shows that blossomed in the New Tens. Without *Symphogear* it is hard to imagine, say, the surreal symbolics of *Revue Starlight* or the dubstep superspy stories of *RELEASE THE SPYCE* getting so easily greenlit, and that’s just shows from *last year*. There is an entire legion of henshin heroines as yet untransformed, their stories as yet unwritten, who will be--and in some cases already are--the easily-identifiable daughters of Hibiki Tachibana (*Revue Starlight*’s Karen Aijo is so similar that for that series’ mobage crossover event, they saw fit to stick her in the Gungnir Gear and call it a day). All art is comprised of cycles of influence, of course. *Symphogear* itself is the synthesis of a good dozen different aesthetics that all shared a common thematic end, but that synthesis is itself what makes *Symphogear* what it is. Less a spark and more a roaring flame. Less a whisper, more a song. It is a light that will not be quick to fade from its medium. Of that much, we can be certain. img880(https://i.imgur.com/ZrIe6rf.png) ------------ And if you liked this review, [why not check out some of my others here on Anilist?](https://anilist.co/user/planetJane/reviews)
Not unlike all my other reviews, this will be less of an actual review and more an unorganised stream of consciousness after watching the entirety of this masterpiece that is the whole symphogear series. I will try to keep the general parts spoiler-free for people that might be interested in checking the series out, and will give a warning before spoiling anything. ~~~img520(https://imgur.com/iiJEoqr.gif)~~~ Now let’s start with what’s important. Is symphogear any good? Well, that’s complicated. It’s a very unique show like nothing I’ve ever seen before. A mix of several genres and concepts that come together to make one of my favourite series of all time. Well, you didn’t answer the question, you might ask. And that’s true, because I find it very difficult to give an answer in this particular case. Symphogear has many fantastic qualities and a lot of horrible ones as well. The difference is in whether the watcher takes those flaws at face value, or appreciates them for the ridiculousness and cheesiness they bring to the series. To start, as always, I’ll get into the pros and cons of the entire series as objectively as I can, and later I’ll talk about them a bit more in detail. Pros - Amazing music - Some characters are okay - Absolutely unpretentious and unapologetic Cons - Retarded plot - Cheesy dialogue and action - Nonsensical setting - First seasons have sketchy animation Note that for me, all of these “cons” except for the sketchy animation in the first seasons are not cons at all, they don’t detract at all from my enjoyment. On the contrary, I love Symphogear’s plot, dialogue, action and setting, but that doesn’t mean they are any good. ~~~img520(https://imgur.com/snHpqMw.gif)~~~ ~~~I appreciate them not using 3d animation for the idol scenes~~~ ___ Let’s talk for a minute about genres. What genre is symphogear? Well action, of course. And it’s probably the most actionest show I've ever seen. It has a touch of drama and comedy (sometimes probably unintentional), but what’s most important is it being a magical girl idol mecha sentai action anime, and let me explain what I mean by this gibberish. Symphogear is a series about singers and music students that use relics of mythological relic weapons activated via song to fight all kinds of enemies. Upon activation, the girls do a magical girl transformation sequence and after that they battle while singing. In short, it’s much like watching the singing power rangers. They even have freeze-frame finishing moves with text on-screen such as: ~~~img520(https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DblCn4BX4AAREK1.jpg)~~~ Now, maybe you’ve read until this point, and you are still asking yourself: Should I really watch 5 seasons of this? Is it really worth my time? And here’s my answer. Do you like the sound of watching a cheesy 80s action movie where the protagonists are singing power rangers, the plot is ridiculous to the point of delirium, and the levels of unga bunga turn-your-brain-off action are through the roof? If yes, give it a try. But keep in mind the first season is the weakest in my opinion. ~~~img520(https://imgur.com/z6r1r7u.gif)~~~ From the first season onward, they refine the formula with each iteration and the seasons only get better and better, trimming what was maybe unnecessary and improving on what makes the series unique. That means more budget for the animation and sound teams and embracing the cheesiness and stupidity of the writing. ___ ~~~Characters~~~ Not much to say here, Chris is okay, I like Maria quite a lot, and Tsubasa is alright I guess, but the rest are nothing special or even worth-mentioning writing-wise. But let me tell you, I have no idea why, but in Symphogear that doesn’t affect my capability to get attached to them. Somehow, against all logic, this has been one of few series where I’ve physically rooted for the characters when they did something cool while watching. ~~~img520(https://imgur.com/blHfUjF.gif)~~~ ~~~Maria epic girlboss~~~ There’s a couple of secondary characters though that I feel obligated to mention, because they are one of my favourite parts of the whole series, and they’re Mr. Chad Genjuurou himself and Ogawa, the character that has a design more generic than your average extra. Genjuurou, the commander, the man, the legend, has superhuman strength, capable of standing against Symphogears in hand to hand combat and beating them, capable of destroying a rock the size of a meteor with a simple punch, capable of causing an earthquake-level shockwave with just a stomp of his foot. And you might ask, what’s the reason for all his powers? And that’s the best part, it’s never explained. ~~~img520(https://imgur.com/y5wPCq3.gif)~~~ ~~~The chad himself casually blocking symphogear attacks like they're nothing~~~ Same for Ogawa, he’s a ninja that moves like Goku with his instant transmission, and can run on water, make body doubles and everything. In short, superhuman abilities as well, also not explained, and the rest of the planet are just normal humans with just a couple of exceptions. ~~~img520(https://imgur.com/bUrnlof.gif)~~~ ~~~This is Goro Akechi's voice btw~~~ __________________________________________________________________________________ ~~~Plot~~~ The plot is one of my favourite things about the series, and probably the most bonkers you’ll have seen in a while. The show has refined the formula of each season making a banger of a first episode and then building towards an always epic and very hype finale where, as I said before, I end up physically cheering for the characters and with a big smile on my face. I will talk a little bit about the setting here as well, and this will involve some SPOILERS. As I said before, it’s absolutely nonsensical but I love it. Ancient relics of mythological weapons such as Gungnir or Ichaival (Ýdalir) that are activated via song and transform their wielders into superpowered action heroes. Ancient alien gods that try to control humanity by literally building the moon with a metaphor involving the tower of babel. Nazis that fled to South America with ancient relics sponsored by the German illuminati, and the list goes on. I just loved seeing what crazy shit the writers would come up with each season and enjoyed every single moment of it. XV also has one of the endings I've enjoyed the most in anime that wraps everything up beautifully (Shem-ha Miku step on me). SPOILERS OVER. ~~~img520(https://imgur.com/5yu516U.gif)~~~ ~~~Each girl has a different epic transformation sequence each season~~~ ___ ~~~Music~~~ The music is one of the most important aspects of the series, as probably 95% of the action is performed while singing, and most of the show is action. And let me tell you, I like it a lot. It has a very distinct aesthetic, and Symphogear has at least one unique song per character each season they sing while fighting, with sometimes duet songs for big moments or collective ones for the finales. Also, the fact that they always use the opening and its name in each season for the big finisher move against the big bad guy brings a level of hype hard to match. I will leave here a couple of examples for the interested: ~~~youtube(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vb1SWPqecow)~~~ ~~~youtube(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nHGyEcwilts)~~~ In conclusion, this anime is pure hype, and honestly I have no idea how it turned out this way, but for some reason the recipe works. All the ingredients work together to create something special, the action, the music, the cheesiness, the over-the-top ridiculousness of everything, the hype, and the secret ingredient that powers everything up, just like the symphogears, love. ~~~img520(https://imgur.com/LCKQTXt.jpg)~~~
~~~Honestamente, eu não vou enrolar muito aqui e só colocarei meu ponto de vista depois de ter reassistido as temporadas umas 3 vezes~~~ Muito o que me fez escrever essa review foi uma watchparty que fiz com alguns amigos no discord, o que me fez questionar vários pontos e ter uma ideia melhor de como avaliar cada aspecto do anime Começando pelo enredo: Symphogear não é conhecido por ter os melhores enredos dos animes, muito pelo contrário, é o seu calcanhar de aquiles. Isso eu atribuo aos poucos episódios por temporada e também por ser uma obra original, poucos animes sem alguma base se salvam no enredo, mas acredito que a experiência de symphogear seria muito melhor com 24 episódios por temporada, o que eu acredito que seja suficiente para resolver todas as pontas soltas. Os personagens são incríveis, junto disso, um voice acting sensacional e consegue transmitir todas as sensações de tristeza, alegria e raiva com louvor, em específico [Aoi Yuuki ](https://anilist.co/staff/101686/Aoi-Yuuki)como [Hibiki Tachibana ](https://anilist.co/character/51737/Hibiki-Tachibana), em todas as temporadas ela se destacou não só em simplesmente dar voz à personagem, mas também viver ela. A trilha sonora é fenomenal, e também é o ponto alto do anime, com destaque para [Nana Mizuki ](https://anilist.co/staff/95081/Nana-Mizuki) como [Tsubasa Kazanari ](https://anilist.co/character/51733/Tsubasa-Kazanari), que canta as aberturas de todas as temporadas e [Ayahi Takagaki ](https://anilist.co/staff/95823/Ayahi-Takagaki) como [Chris Yukine ](https://anilist.co/character/55853/Chris-Yukine) que canta os encerramentos. Não deixando de fora outras seiyuus que também fizeram seus trabalhos com maestria no quesito musica. A animação deixa a desejar em boa parte das temporadas, sendo a primeira temporada como a pior neste quesito, no entanto não é algo inassistivel, até porque imagino que o foco mesmo esteja na parte vocal da coisa. No decorrer das temporadas a qualidade vai melhorando consideravelmente, porém não é algo que eleva o patamar do anime. EM RESUMO: Symphogear tem MUITO mais pontos positivos do que negativos, no entanto os negativos pesam demais para ser ignorados. Até para mim que tenho symphogear como um dos meus animes favoritos, não consigo mais ignorar as falhas do anime, mas pra quem quer só aproveitar um anime com personagens carismaticas e musicas boas, isso é um mero aborrecimento. E acredito que seja isso, é minha primeira review por aqui e também pode ser mais curta do que vocês estão acostumados a ver por aqui, mas é algo que eu usei todos os meus neurônios para fazer.
This series holds a very special place in my heart, as not only was it basically my first hyper-obsession back in middle school, it also was the very first anime i went out of my way to watch on my own. This is also the show that brought Nana Mizuki to my attention, and many of her songs on this show are some of her greatest hits (ex. Synchrogazer, TESTAMENT). As of the time of writing, my respect of this show has gone on to be even higher, with so much of it's achievements being so novel, and unique even among the most popular shows out there. Every leading voice actresse in this show is capable of singing in an amazingly powerful yet unique voice, and every main character has a minimum of 2 unique songs, which is an unimaginable investment on the parts of the composers and the talents. Speaking of composition, the Music is also an amazing fusion of classic J-pop, synthwave, and rock, which occasionally combines with traditional instrumentality to create a wonderful tone that few other discographies have matched. Aesthetically, this show is also extremely ambitious and unique. The show takes the tried-and-tested formula of the classic Magical girl, and turns it on it's head by combining it with the two volatile ingredients of Sci-fi and mecha, resulting in the most Imaginative Costume designs i have seen, and will probably ever see. The sharp chrome edges combined with the glowing technostrips, as well as the frills generated in beautiful holography by the Ex-Drives are so memorable that even to this day, i have never forgotten any of the designs, and characters are so wonderfully accentuated by their Symphogears that they are engraved into my memory all the same. The Music still rings in my ears to this day, with the entire OST being warranted their own playlist within my daily listens. Alright. I've complimented the show enough, the following is to really drive home the score, as well as to address skeptic ideas. Symphogear is extremely generic when it comes to theming. All of its lessons boil down to essentially the following: Even as we struggle to understand one another, even as we hurt each other, we should continue to fight to reach each other with not only our words, but our actions. This lesson may seem mild and bland after all these years, but Now more than ever, with the internet's rise of Hatred and Social deconstruction, this lesson rings out more than ever before, that despite everything, no matter what, we should, and we must reach out to everyone. Secondarily, a bland story with many plot holes does not warrant disrespect against the show at all. Even with all of its contrivance, inconsistency, and unsolved plot threads, The things this show did to make it unique, as well as all the work put into the show to make its risks bring reward, should be respected, and with all the recent shows that simply recycle ideas, the unexpected fusion and production of new, out-of-nowhere ideas should be revered and looked up to. Ultimately, as this show says, we cannot understand each other, but I will still do my best to hope that my thoughts and feelings will reach those who read this, and will help them understand this show's merits, as well as to give this show a chance to capture their hearts as it has mine.