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ハイスピード・ジェシー
12
OVA
Finished Airing
Sep 5, 1989 to Mar 5, 1990
Jecy is a young man on a quest for revenge; he lost his parents to the hands of the organized crime syndicate called the Bismark House - a group on a hunt to acquire a product called ‘lyzorium' at any cost. With incredible abilities such as increased speed and agility, Jecy travels through space with a girl named Tiana; Fork Green, a priest of the Heartland religion who kills criminals slowly to send them to heaven; and a living ship called Paolon. However, Jecy's revenge won't come easily - a woman named Jera, her bloodthirsty little brother Cross and a number of other adversaries stand in their way! (Source: Anime-Planet)
5.7/10
Average Review Score
33%
Recommend It
3
Reviews Worldwide
5/10 is what happens when you take an otherwise fair sci-fi adventure-story with a clear premise, married with artwork from one of the most prolific designers of the 80's and 90's, bundled with interesting characters, supported by a competent musical score and enjoyable OP/EDs, only to completely and utterly buckle at the knees from the apparently overwhelming responsibility of providing the audience any sort of intelligent ending. You like space capers with a young male protagonist who is a lone-wolf against the world? Who shoots from the hip and has unique skills such as being able to run remarkably fast or talent of being able toshow absolute indifference toward his cute and adoring girlfriend? Then buckle-in for eleven episodes of cool only to be slapped in the face with a twelfth episode of WTF. The bad guys are a ruthless monarchical pirate family who killed your parents. Your best friend is a bad-ass womanizing priest and your ride is an unrivaled starship. You travel planets, meet people, fight evil world-conquering ambitions, get involved in a few romantic tensions along the way, explosions. Hi-Speed Jecy seems to have it all. Except an ending. Even if the staff behind this series closed half of the boxes it opened for us, Hi-Speed Jecy would be your vintage 7/10 series. A gem lost in the shuffle, waiting to be discovered. The subtitle translation work is top-notch. A lot of care went into this. But after spending more than 4.5 hours leading up to such a non-nonsensical conclusion, I really hope the people behind the localization effort find something more deserving of their craftsmanship. 5/10. P.S.: This studio sponsored a cut-in character competition where the winning design would be included in the final episode. But the character wasn't in the final episode at all. Just epitomizing how Hi-Speed Jecy rivets off the starting-block, makes good stride, but on the final turn decides not only to stop sprinting, but maybe, sort-of, kind-of cross the finish-line. Huh.
On the surface, “Hi-Speed Jecy” has a lot going for it. The series’ space action-adventure premise sounds exciting, and the character designs are pleasing to the eye. Moreover, “Jecy” has a full 12 episodes to flesh out its story and characters, so it doesn’t suffer from the short runtime handicap that most OVAs coming out at the time seemed to have. All of this potential was wasted, however, and the end result is incredibly disappointing. The plot, the characters and the direction all jump around and go nowhere. The first episode gives a taste of what is to come: the main character, Jecy, meets Falk, a priestwith a twisted sense of justice, and prevents him from killing some villains. Then Falk tries to kill Jecy, but they’re both asked by a mysterious woman to take on a bodyguard job, and they and Tiana, Jecy’s “sister,” hop in a taxi with her and go to her house, where Tiana proceeds to take a shower after telling the woman that they will not take the job. They end up working together anyway, and Falk, who wanted to kill Jecy at first, is now suddenly his friend. Characters’ personalities change at the drop of a hat, and they do and say things that make no sense. The villains have a different goal almost every episode — it’s like they give up on one objective after facing the slightest bit of resistance, and move on to the next. The protagonists are also lackluster. We have the titular Jecy, who is indifferent to just about everything that happens to him, and all of the women who show feelings for him. As the title indicates, he is supposed to be “hi-speed,” but what this really means is that he can… run kind of fast sometimes. That’s it. And it’s not explained how he has this “power,” or the extent of it — can he run faster than a speeding bullet? Is he more powerful than a locomotive? There are no comparisons here to illustrate how superhuman his ability is. He always somehow manages to thwart the villains’ plans, but that is mostly due to his sentient butler spaceship, which just happened to pick him up one day when he was a kid drifting in space, and has stuck with him ever since. The spaceship, Paolon, is the most powerful being in this universe, and is basically the concept of deus ex machina personified. It gets our heroes out of just about every pinch they find themselves in, and is the MVP of the series. Then we have Tiana, who was created by Paolon to be Jecy’s “companion,” and who looks like a girl that Jecy kind of liked who was killed at one point. Oh, and she breathes carbon dioxide, like a plant. She has a habit of crying and running into men’s arms. The voice acting for her is terrible — the person voicing her, interestingly enough, is the granddaughter of Eiji Tsuburaya, of “Godzilla” and “Ultraman” fame. This was her voice acting debut, and she only got maybe one or two roles afterwards. She also sang the bland opening and ending themes for this OVA. Rounding out the cast of protagonists is Falk (or Fork?), a priest who kills people with a stun gun. He becomes Jecy’s friend suddenly and for reasons unknown. When he’s not busy killing, he’s either fooling around with a woman or waxing pseudo-religious nonsense. There are some side characters, mostly there to serve as potential romantic partners for Jecy, but none of these relationships go anywhere. The villains are the Bismark family, headed by an old bald guy named Lou who transfers his consciousness into a variety of objects, including a spaceship and a building. His three children do most of the dirty work: Jera, the oldest, who has a thing for Falk; Telaine, the middle sister, who has doubts that being evil is the right thing and starts developing a soft spot for Jecy; and Cross, a punk rocker delinquent who is obsessed with trying to kill Jecy for reasons unknown. The story is disjointed, but it is at least marginally watchable up until around the halfway point of the series, when things start going downhill fast (or should I say “hi-speed”?). This culminates in the nonsensical ending. Calling the ending an “open ending” would be an understatement; it feels like the staff were pressed for time and just decided to throw a bunch of unrelated scenes together and call it an ending. There is no closure to anything and nothing is explained; heck, there’s not even any dialogue in the last part of the episode so we can’t tell what’s going on. As for technical aspects, the character designs and background music are good, but everything else is subpar bordering on poor. The animation is bad. The voice acting is bad, especially for Tiana, but even the other main characters, who are voiced by pros, sound like they’re just reading off of a script. Voices for some of the side characters, like Latina, are okay. As mentioned above, the opening and ending themes are bland. The direction is absolutely terrible — lots of lingering and unnecessary shots, particularly of characters just staring at something in the distance. Also, half the time it’s hard to tell if the characters are in space or on a planet. Dialogue is redundant and all of the “jokes” fall flat. There is a lot of objectionable content which becomes more prominent around halfway through the series. There are a couple of sex scenes, and attempted rape scene, and about a dozen scenes with nudity. There’s some cringingly sexist dialogue as well. Being an action series, there is a fair amount of violence and death, but it’s not that graphic. Don’t be fooled by its intriguing premise — “Hi-Speed Jecy” does not deliver. It could have been the next “Crusher Joe” or even a prototypical “Outlaw Star,” but it fails in nearly every aspect. Avoid this one.
Hello i found it so weird that this show having a Review so i write my first review for it so i hope you found it helpful. The story begins when a superhuman young man, Jecy Moore, his sister Tiana, and warrior priest Falk Green as they're asked to be bodyguards for a mysterious woman named Telaine Bismarck. Turns out, she's got connections to some shady people, with one in search of immortality, one with killer brains, and one who is a total psychopath. The adventure really kicks off when Tiana is abducted by the Bismarck crime family to force Jecy to do their bidding,and the experience brings back memories of a dark incident from his past actually a interested story and with the passing of episodes you will see the development of characters to Unexpected ways. the opening and ending are so dope but the art is bad and the design also in the end i hope you found this Review helpful