nekokoban: (woobity! :D)
([personal profile] nekokoban Jul. 31st, 2004 02:41 pm)
Today, my father and I discovered the use of our digital camera -- its purpose, it seems, is to be around to take embarrassing photos of my mother, lying on the couch with ground-up cucumber on her face. XD Really, now. XD

Anyway, my LJ paid account expires today. Thank you again, [livejournal.com profile] jyuu_chan for buying me the two months♥♥♥♥♥♥ I will miss the extra iconage, I admit, but at least I still have my penguins♥♥ I had fun with my time, and now I'll say goodbye to the paid world~~~ XD

Also, downloaded and just finished watching Fullmetal Alchemist episode 43.

Now, I gotta admit -- I know a lot of people who were sort of "meh" for a large chunk in the middle, and while I was sort of like that, I mostly wasn't. This is seriously, in my opinion, one of the best stories I've seen in a long time, and there's just something nice about a quasi-wartime story that has its lighter moments, but doesn't actually shy away from the whole GOOD PEOPLE DO BAD THINGS, and vice-versa. I love how Ed is portrayed as a very failiable and sometimes weak human being, while still being strong enough to have survived his own horrible mistakes and still come out fighting for it.

Now, pretty much from the beginning -- my friends who've been in the fandom with me a long time -- I've had this peculiar fascination for the Elric parents, Hoenheim in particular. I've just watched episode 43, and he seems like a genuinely good guy -- a bit absent-minded, a bit out of date and goofy, but a good guy. This isn't someone you could picture deliberately leaving his wife and two young sons and then ignoring letters talking about Trisha's illness. The fact that he had to ask Winry how long Trisha's been dead indicates that there's a good chance those letters Ed and Al sent actually never reached him.

At the same time, Winry is probably Al's age, a year younger than Ed. The fact that Hoenheim keeps mistaking her for her mother, and the things the Ouroborous have implied about "that guy" -- and from Envy's rant, I'd say it's pretty damn obvious he's talking about Hoenheim -- you've got to wonder. Is the nice-guy thing a facade, that he's using to lull his sons into a false sense of security and into trusting him (though I wonder, truly, if Ed even can at this point) -- or was he, like Ed and Al, a good person who made some horrible mistakes, though perhaps on a grander scale?

The manga, at this point, has all but said that Hoenheim is the "Father" of the Ouroborous, and what we've seen of him isn't pleasant at all. In the manga, just from what I've seen, he comes across as a cold and calculating sort, with no mercy or kindness. He appears to be the kind of man Ed expects him to be -- an uncaring bastard who abandoned his family without a second thought.

At this point, we don't really know what Hoenheim's motives are, in either the anime or the manga. It could very well turn out that the pleasant attitude is just a mask, and that he's no different from his manga-self, under the surface. The manga-self could have some kind of noble ideal backing him -- one of my theories was perhaps that Hoenheim knew Trisha was ill (in the anime, at least, they say she must have been sick a very long time and hid the pain for years), and left to find the Philosopher's Stone to create a cure for her, and was corrupted by the search along the way.

Of course, there are vague implications here and there that Hoenheim is MUCH older than a human could be (like Dante, in the anime; if she ressurected Greed, but Greed's been sealed over a hundred years -- it lends to curiousity, how the two stories should intersect and tie together). I know in the manga, at least, there are still some theories that Hoenheim will be Pride, the last of the Ouroborous, and given how old the Ouroborus are implied to be, this could very well be the case.

The beautiful thing is the not knowing, though -- I want to know, I sure as well would love to have the secrets explained and the rationlizations given. I'd like Hoenheim to be a nice guy -- it's too late for him to give back anything to his sons, but at least there's the comfort of knowing he isn't evil. But I like the concept of him as a sick and twisted bastard, too, an "evil" character with selfish motives. (Because one can argue that in FMA there's no truly evil character; I'd say Envy comes the closest, but I also think Envy's bugfuck nuts, which doesn't excuse, but at least explains his attitude.)

Alternately, I've been thinking about this too damn much. XD But I freaking LOVE this series, man, and next week's episode is 「光のホーエンヘイム」 which just makes me excited because we're gonna learn MORE yay and eek what's going to happen NEXT and DUDE, what's going to happen to Lust? O___O

It's great, man. Love this show. XD

From: [identity profile] karanlikmelek.livejournal.com

Re: Another point...


That would kicksomuchass. *purr* Oh yes, if you're serious, we'd luff you forever. ^^

I haven't played too many tactics games. Um. Just.. I think Final Fantasy Tactics and Ogre Tactics -- and they did amuse me, mmhm (although I never really saw much use in having the little human-classes when with a bit of hunting, I could have a little army of all monster characters.. >>;) Disgaea looked cute, and I heard good things about it, but I've never gotten much of a chance to play it. x.X;

And yep. Or well, one homunculus, who amuses me. Anyway, since you don't mind, I will. ^^

As I was saying, the comment on him being in a sort of 'stasis' reminded me of one of the endings to the game -- it insinuates that the main character (Eike Kusch) has been around for a VERY long time, but that he has no memories of it. But backing up a bit, as I said in the last comment, the premise of the game is that SOMEONE is out to kill Eike Kusch, however the game's Homunculus (who is never given any other name) decides to help him out and give him a time-jumping-device so he can stop each attempt before it happens -- he doesn't give any reason for doing so (and, offnote, it's rather funny in game if you DON'T stop the attempt, as the Homunculus starts mocking Eike if you mess up enough). Anyway, shortly into the game, second chapter I think, Eike comes to possess an odd red stone -- he plans to have it set into a necklace or a ring to give to one of the female characters (I can't remember her name x.X), shortly afterward he is forced to time-jump and ends up in a fairly medieval era where he meets a family of scientists (or the father and son are, anyway) -- you find out later in the game that they're actually related to him, and Eike NEVER meets the father ingame, he just hears about him from his son. It turns out, if you get the 'right' ending, that the father of the family is actually none other than Eike Kusch -- his original life -- and that the red stone you find much earlier in the game is the Philosopher's Stone and was used to summon the game's Homunculus (also that if future-Eike hadn't interfered, the stone would have never come into creation -- thus why it gave him the device to time-jump) -- he then has it grant him one thing: eternal youth. It does so (laughing as it does) and then disappears -- however, either because of something it did to him, or perhaps his mind not being able to take living so long (they don't explain that) he has a sort of amnesia and can't remember very far back into his past at any given point of time (ingame he carries around lots of photographs and a journal 'so he doesn't forget'.)

Anyway. Yup. Game in a nutshell, and.. all. ^^; Looong comment for me. o.o;
.

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