#the right spot i hope... this is also why i kept the OG shirt intact in case i hated the outcome.
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honorary-fool · 1 year ago
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anyone else feeling the friday the 13th luck?
i accidentally sewed a sleeve on upside-down
upside fucking down
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fullmetalirin · 6 years ago
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Fullmetal Alchemist OG: Wrath’s Awakening (OG 29-31)
OG adds an arc smack in the middle of this section, so I'll cover it all at once. We're close to the divergence point, now.
Fullmetal Alchemist Episode 29: "The Untainted Child"
The young boy who shadowed Edward and Alphonse on Yock Island is not only an alchemist, he is able to transmute his own body. After finding out about the scars on the boys right arm and left leg, Ed discovers that the boy is a homunculus who took his limbs during their failed attempt at human alchemy.
Ah, Ed and Al do ask why the guy attacked them. It's handwaved as Izumi telling him to toughen them up. Still feels like it goes against the point of the lesson.
Izumi walks towards Wrath, but coughs up blood. It's initially comedic, but she reverts to normal style as Al tends to her.
I'm not sure why Ed attacks Wrath.
Ed appears to try to remove the rock from Wrath's flesh, but the reaction seems to spread and turn his clothes into leaves. So I guess that's where he was getting the clothes? But why would he think to transmute them into proper clothes?
We can clearly see Wrath's arm and leg are Ed's skintone. The rest of Wrath is deathly pale, though. Shouldn't he be tanned if he's spent all his life in the wild? Or do homunculi's bodies never change? Since they don't age, maybe so.
Wrath can talk, so he must have had some human contact.
Wrath doesn't have purple eyes… but he does have blue ones. Maybe the purple comes from eating the red stones.
Winry wants to tell Izumi off for being mean to the Elrics.
Sig sleeps with his eyes open.
Ed sneaks into Wrath's room. Izumi apparently locked the door with alchemy so she'd know if the brothers broke in, so instead Ed busts a hole in the roof. Clever.
Wrath is very acrobatic. Ed turns the blanket into a rope to restrain him.
Oh, the reason Ed was weird about Wrath was because he transmuted without a circle.
Wrath gets upset trying to untie the rope, and transmutes the whole bed into his body.
Cartoon when Izumi barges in.
Ed reveals the homunculi are pursuing him.
Quick shot of Winry sleeping through everything. Haha.
Cut to Central. Sheska is playing with Elicia.
Sheska berates Mustang for not investigating Hughes' murder, and gives him the files Hughes was looking at.
Cut to Sloth calling Envy and telling him to track down the Elrics. Sloth says she's busy in Central.
Envy reveals Sloth is the youngest homunculus.
Sloth doesn't want the Elrics investigating Ishbal's Philosopher's Stone.
Ed explains everything to Izumi. He says transmuting one's own body shouldn't be possible with any alchemy.
Sig politely leaves before Izumi discusses the Gate with Ed.
This is where we get Ed's perspective for the human transmutation scene, which I already covered last post.
Ah, Ed does mention that soul-binding was one of the things he learned from the Gate. So that does explain it.
Back in Central, Breda attaches bishie sparkles to himself with wires when pretending to be Armstrong. LOL.
We get introduced to Archer, who I believe is an anime-only character? He's pursuing the Elrics, likely at the behest of the homunculi.
Al uses the radio in their room and the lamp in the bathroom to create a phone line.
Al figured out that Wrath has Ed's arm and leg. When he reveals it, Ed immediately tunnels into the bathroom to confirm for himself. Everyone looks scared and tells Ed to stay away.
Ed has a breakdown over the possibility his limb trade was not an equivalent exchange.
Ah, the scar on the arm is from the fox bite. So that was intentional. Nice.
Ed freaks out Wrath with his questioning, forcing him to run away. Ed pursues.
Izumi vomits blood when she sees a trail from her transmutation site. It's played completely seriously.
The thing that strikes me most here is how darkly Ed is portrayed. Winry looks scared of him, and everyone tells him he's wrong to be so cruel and suspicious towards this kid, which he completely ignores. We are seeing the dark side of that fiery determination so characteristic of shonen protagonists, and starting to commit to the idea that Ed ignoring all moderating influences in favor of his own obsessions is maybe not healthy behavior.
Fullmetal Alchemist Episode 30: "Assault on South Headquarters"
Yoki spots Scar in a group of Ishbalans arriving at a refugee camp. He runs off to contact the military, hoping to be reinstated. Meanwhile, the military, believing the mysterious boy to be a homunculus, captures and imprisons him in South Headquarters. A chimera called Bido discovers the same and Izumi storms South Headquarters to rescue him, but she soon finds herself in a five-way fight over the boy.
Ed apologizes to Wrath while chasing him. Wrath phases through a wall by fusing himself with it.
Archer has shown up at Sig's shop asking after the Elrics.
Sig and Armstrong strip and have a hulking-out contest.
The lizard-man heard about the Elrics from Tucker.
The lizard-man can climb a sheer wall.
The arm Wrath got from Ed looks significantly larger than his other one.
Archer is using a sniper rifle just as a telescope.
Archer says there's something important on Wrath's right foot (so his natural one). You can't see it in that shot, but later we see that's where his tattoo is.
Armstrong asks what they plan to do if Wrath's limbs really are Ed's – would they rip them off and take them for their own?
Sloth promises to reinstate Yoki if he tells them Scar's whereabouts. So yes, Ed's heroics were only a temporary reprieve – this shows the whole system is rotten.
And while that happens, Greed receives his own information on Wrath. He decides Wrath is a bigger priority than the Elrics. He gives us our first mention of Pride.
Tucker and Kimblee are with Greed.
Al tells Izumi Wrath was a monster, and tells her about the other homunculi as well. Izumi says she already knew.
Izumi vomits blood. It's played seriously. Sig rushes her to the hospital, and this is where we learn about her illness. The doctor points to a diagram saying all her organs from her liver to her intenstines are gone, which doesn't seem like it should be survivable. They'd have to be only partially damaged; you can't survive without all of them. Possibly we can assume her uterus took the brunt of the damage. This is where Ed figures out she did human transmutation.
There's still dried blood on Izumi's lips when she enters the southern headquarters.
Winry bemoans everyone keeping her out of the loop. This prompts Sig to tell her their backstory over footage of Izumi's assault, which I think is a nice technique.
How does Kimblee survive his own blast? He's touching the thing that explodes with enough force to take down a wall.
Ed says that as a soldier he's bound by duty to apprehend Izumi.
Bradley appears. Ed wonders to himself why he's here, hinting that we're supposed to find that weird.
And Bradley appears to be in Central simultaneously, ordering Mustang to take out Scar. I wonder if we're supposed to think this is a flashback…? Mustang coldly decides that if Scar doesn't surrender, they will take out the entire camp.
Scar recognizes a symbol in the alchemist's house, but I don't. I presume it'll be explained later.
Fullmetal Alchemist Episode 31: "Sin"
Amid the confusion inside South Headquarters, Envy, disguised as Bradley, manages to take the homunculus boy from Izumi. Kimblee and Bido came to battle for the same purpose and the boy remembered all his past after he consumed small fragments of the Philosopher's Stone.
We open with Team Mustang asking if they plan to kill the refugees. Mustang can't give an answer.
Archer is surprised to see Kimblee alive. Kimblee apparently was ordered to stop killing civilians.
When Kimblee tells them to ask Bradley, we get an internal monologue from Envy, thus showing us it's him. I don't like that, it's very tacky to shift perspectives suddenly. The writers probably thought it was funny but eh, not the time. Envy apparently didn't know why Kimblee was kept alive, also. I guess they keep him out of the loop on most things.
Envy-Bradley rushes forward to grab Wrath.
Izumi shoots a giant stone fist at Envy-Bradley, which Armstrong stops. The force shreds his shirt.
We switch to still images for the battle, because I guess they ran out of budget. It's not too clear what's going on, but apparently the force of their attacks is collapsing the building.
Kimblee taps Al and notes that he has an interesting body.
Bido not wanting to get turned into a bomb is played for comedy. Eenh.
Envy feeds Wrath a red stone. Wrath then starts eating the rest ravenously.
Envy says the red stones have several hundred human lives in them. That seems like a lot – even these low-quality ones require that much? Wrath is horrified and spits them out, but eats them again when Envy threatens to take them away.
Envy says the reason Wrath can use alchemy is because of his human limbs.
Wrath gets flashbacks to the Gate of Truth, and his eyes turn purple.
Archer offers to reinstate Kimblee.
Wrath has a new outfit with the homunculus markings. Where'd he get that? It looks very similar to Envy's outfit (short shorts and bare midriff), so possibly we can assume Envy gave it to him.
Wrath apparently eviscerated Envy after awakening.
The soldiers contacted Central and discovered Bradley wasn't supposed to be here. That seems sloppy. Did Envy do this on his own?
We get a flashback to Izumi's human transmutation. She did it at Yock Island, not an indoor location like in Brotherhood. We don't see her trip to the Gate. When she wakes up she vomits blood, and sees her baby is alive, but has become a monster. So this is pretty clear confirmation that the soul is the issue: she had a whole, intact body and it still didn't work.
Izumi tries to strangle Wrath but can't. Envy watches from a clifftop.
Ed arrives to see Wrath strangling Izumi. Izumi says she deserves it, and we complete the flashback: when she saw what she made, she gave it back to the Gate. The Gate looks much creepier here than it does in Brotherhood – it has a complete arch, like the front of a temple, and it's filigreed with strange human statues. A giant eye looks out from within. Ed says the inside of the Gate looked like truth to him, but Izumi says it looked like Hell.
The baby starts crying when it's taken away, and Izumi regrets her choice.
This is where we get explicit confirmation that homunculi are the result of human transmutation, and that they lack a soul. Ed thought they were created like chimeras.
This reveal, to me, felt so obvious and intuitive I was honestly shocked that Brotherhood did something so different and so, so much more boring. Homunculi as failed resurrections raises so many delightful questions about personhood, responsibility, and playing God that will be explored later in the series.
Wrath's personality has noticeably changed. He is extremely vulgar and hostile.
Lust and Gluttony can be seen among the refugees when Mustang's team approaches.
We see Sloth traveling through the water towards Yock Island. Wow, I guess a new homunculi is top priority for them.
Greed's arrived too, so we're in for a showdown. Envy asks him what he did with the skull – ah, there was a skull in his prison. That must have been from his human remains. So that's an early hint towards that.
Greed seems surprised that a Sloth exists. I guess they're rare? It'd be interesting to try to figure out if there's any theme to Dante's naming scheme. Envy also says that there's a full set of seven "for the first time in a while", so there has been a full set before.
Sloth namedrops Wrath for the first time.
Sloth says Envy's orders were to push Ed towards the Philosopher's Stone, not throw a wrecking ball at him. Envy just says he wanted to see Hoenheim's kid suffer. So Envy is unreliable.
Wrath says his body grew inside the Gate.
Wrath wants Ed's whole body so he can become human. Interesting that he couldn't use Al's.
Conclusion
Like the Fifth Laboratory, this probably would have benefited from being condensed into two episodes. Also like the Fifth Laboratory, I love it anyway. Where the last arc addressed the initial driving question of the Philosopher's Stone and what the Elrics would do to achieve it, this one is addressing the questions that were brought up there: What are the homunculi, what do they want, and how are they connected to human transmutation? Moreover, we are engaging with deeper questions to come: what is alchemy, and what is equivalent exchange?
We're also getting a deeper taste of the darker turn OG will take. Ed and even Al are taking questionable actions that pit them against other heroic characters. Armstrong, previously a stalwart hero, is forced against them by his duties to the military. We are engaging with a question posed at the beginning: Will Ed follow the military's orders, even if they are repugnant? He made a choice to become a tool of the military, and he can't just walk out on that when it's convenient.
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