Skip to main content

Oldtaku no Radio # 022 – Robot Carnival

Anthology films — feature-length presentations comprised of multiple, stand-alone stories — afford their contributors great artistic freedom and, quite often, crucial visibility. Robot Carnival, which was initially released mid-1987, gathers some names you have probably heard of before, but for many, this was their debut. Including the bookend animation (a worthwhile story/anecdote in its own right), there are eight installments centered around the loose theme of “robots,” and Jared and Ink dig into each of them. (Spoilers via plot point run rampant, but enjoying these stories does not hinge on plot.) Join us as we talk for nearly the length of the anthology about the components thereof: their themes, their strengths and weaknesses, and how they complement each other and contribute to the overarching theme as it builds piece by piece.

Direct DownloadRSS Feed – StitcherGoogle Play: Music – iTunes
Send us Feedback!More episodes

Runtime: 1 hr, 29 min

Show Notes

  • Opening Song: “Through the Glass” by Kaz Mirblouk
  • 0:00:00 — General intro and discussion
  • 0:06:25 — Robot Carnival Opening Sequence – Katsuhiro Otomo
  • 0:19:15 — Franken’s Gears – Koji Morimoto
  • 0:26:43 — Deprive – Hidetoshi Omori
  • 0:33:00 — Presence – Yasuomi Umetsu
  • 0:48:26 — Star Light Angel – Hioyuki Kitazume
  • 0:56:38 — Cloud – Mao Lamdo/Manabu Ohashi
  • 1:03:05 — Strange Tale of the Meji Era (A Tale of Two Robots) – Hiroyuki Kitakubo
  • 1:12:26 — Chicken-Man and Redneck (Nightmare) – Takashi Nakamura
  • 1:18:50 — Twitter question!
  • Ending Song: “Money 1973” by NO FUTURE
  • Buy Robot Carnival on DVD or BD over at Rightstuf or Amazon.
  • Twitter: Ani-Gamers, Oldtaku no RadioInk, Jared
  • Ink also writes for Otaku USA Magazine and The Fandom Post.
  • Jared also writes for The Electrum Edition and Wave Motion Cannon.
    • Ink's profile

      Ink contributes his own pieces and edits those of others pertaining to anime, manga, and games. His reviews and analyses have also appeared in the pages of Otaku USA as well as online over at The Fandom Post and Taiiku Podcast.

    • Jared Nelson's profile

      Jared discovered anime in the early 1990s through stacks of third-hand fandubs and Streamline Pictures tapes. By the tender age of 16, he was humming Macross 7 songs in art class, dreaming of Asuka Langley and hanging Rurouni Kenshin posters on his wall. A few years later he moved to Japan where he worked as an ALT (assistant language teacher) in Ibaraki and Fukuoka Prefectures. While he returned home with a deep appreciation for Japan, its culture, and its public transit system, Jared fell out of anime fandom and only returned in 2010. A self-proclaimed 3rd-level bard, Jared enjoys tabletop gaming and game design, video gaming, giant robots, history, comics, and most recently manga. He is also eternally late to the party.

    Filed Under

    blog comments powered by Disqus