29 November 2012

Ergo Proxy - 1: Pulse of Awakening/Awakening

I've watched the series enough times in both subtitles and dubbed English that I have no idea which I saw first. Both have their merits and both reveal some insights. If I can, I will watch both, but seeing as how good the dubbed English is and how that will be the most consistent, I will try to rely on that one most.



Pulse of Awakening
(Section One)
The anime starts with a series of scenes, which all seem separate for the time being. Each of the characters are introduced, and the city is revealed as some kind of dystopian future. The action begins and the stage is set. Already you can tell that this series is not very straight forward. I remember wondering if this episode was mysterious and action filled to suck me in, because it worked that way. The art too, was one of the reasons I had such a good first impression.
I'm going to have be blunt here. I read that Ergo Proxy could not be understood on the first viewing. I didn't believe it, "I'll just pay close attention and think about it" past Elusive thought. Future Elusive sighed and waited for past Elusive to find out. Past Elusive found out. This series is filled with self reference and hints and clues. You cannot understand them on the first viewing. Sorry. It is physically impossible, and you can't figure it out by being smart or paying attention.
It withholds vital information until, yes, literally, the last few episodes. And then it tells you a ton so quickly that you can't make head nor tail of it until you watch the series again and piece it all together one step at a time. Is this terrible design? I don't think so, but it demands a lot of effort on your part. That's why I want to help you, and maybe I can do enough to make it start making sense before you are forced to start all over again.
Now, back to the episode.

Character introductions:

The Regent, His Excellency. The "king" of the entire city, called Romdeau, is aided by four statue artificial intelligences that are called Entourages despite their form. Together they form the Administrative Bureau and are the highest authority. They make decisions such as assigning heads of the other Bureaus and monitoring their work. He is called Donov Mayer, and he is Re-L's grandfather. More on this later.

Raul Creed is the Security Chief of the Security Bureau. He is essentially the man with the most power, subject only to the Regent. His job is to protect the citizens, control the security of information, and keep the city stable. He is a very important character, and although I used to dislike him, I now find him one of my favorite characters.

Kristeva is his entourage, or personal autoreiv. She, as all the autoreivs are, is linked to the Administrative Bureau and can serve as eyes and ears for them at any time. Kristeva is not much of a character, so you don't have to pay much attention to her until far later in the series, but she is always in the background working.

Re-L Mayer is high ranking in the Intelligence Bureau. She is just under the power of the Security Bureau and the Health and Welfare Bureau. Her job is to gather intel, but the Administrative Bureau sometimes deems information too sensitive even for her, and there is a lot of power struggles going on between the upper bureaucracy. Originally she was not the main character, but now she plays a larger role in the script.

Iggy is Re-L's entourage. He is a likable character, but don't think he is the comic relief. He is just as much a character as anyone else, despite being a robot servant.

Daedalus is the boy doctor. For some reason I was convinced he was evil the first time I watched Ergo Proxy. He's not, but he is a convoluted character. He seems far more honest than I want to give him credit, so when he says things, you can believe him. He is something of a genius, and head of the Health and Welfare Bureau. This position holds a lot of power as well, and Iggy sometimes calls him "Prince" because of it.

Vincent Law is an immigrant who is attempting to become a citizen of Romdeau. He, thus, is serving as a garbage man and hunter of autoreivs that have malfunctioned. He is a complete pushover. He was shot during duty and wrote an extremely submissive letter begging for a lenient punishment for his failure. This is "the perfect citizen" as Re-L put it. His only flaw in the eyes of the city? He is a clutz. The flaws in the eyes of a normal person? There is nothing likable about him because he is nothing. No character, no thought, no creativity. A hard worker who does not question, he seems unimportant, but is actually a main character. Just wait, you'll see.

Pino is the autoreiv child. She is not infected with Cogito as we see Vincent verify.

"What could be important enough to change my schedule?" This sums up Raul Creed perfectly. He is the perfect chief, he does his job well, follows all protocols, and is a bit of a prick. *cough* stringent. He is, however, very effective, to put it mildly.

Re-L, if you care to read her journal, is very nosy to the point of paranoia. She is researching the Cogito Virus, the new Security Bureau head, the autoreiv disposal (including Vincent Law), keeping tags on everything she can and doing more than a little of her own research into it all. She distrusts everything. And she is pretty stuck up. She programmed Iggy with his personality, "Turing application," and has him doting on her and calling her princess. Despite her attitude and annoyance at him, he is exactly how she wants him to be, which is a lens into her own character. She disobeys orders, gets in trouble with her grandfather (the head of the city, remember) and in general operates independently of authority and everyone.

(Click to enlarge)

Creepily, the lives of the citizens are not valued in comparison to this secret monster proxy thing. At least 41 have died in this paradise, and yet the proxy is not to be killed. "We can always up production." Raul doesn't even react to these cold pronouncements.

Raul gets some information about the proxy from both the Regent and Daedalus, but not its reason for existing in the first place. Daedalus and Raul both exchange looks when they realize that they both seem to operate independently, intelligently, and they both seem to be interested in power. Probably both power of the literal kind and of the knowledge kind. They are not mindless drones, but leaders with motivations and objectives of their own making. Daedalus is shown to have some kind of connection to Re-L and Raul does not, but becomes aware of her general activities.

That was Vincent passing Iggy going the opposite direction, who then dismounts and pursues an infected autoreiv, killing it.


Then Iggy sees Re-L's notebook open with an alert, and turns around in a rush. Presumably there has been a murder or an infected autoreiv sighting or something of the like to alert him of danger.


And Re-L is attacked by two monsters. Proxies. They do her no harm, in fact the first seems to act fascinated or lovingly, shedding tears. The second just seems to attack the first, perhaps in protection. It seems to shove the first away. Or else just in anger. They fight oddly, jumping with grace and swiping with claw-like hands. They are very, very alien with strange forms and disguises.

And that is it for the first episode.

So much is said to introduce you to the world and set the scene. I think all of the characters are introduced, and their initial personalities revealed. The mysteries are laid on thick, and the plot set into motion. A few things I have pointed out will come up later, and some of the themes are already delved into rather deeply.

On that note - what is the ideal society?
What makes humans different from robots?
What is independence and can humans be so mindless that they lose all worth?
What is better, to serve society or to serve the individual? What makes someone a good person?
Can a paradise ever be worth living in? Isn't it boring by definition?
Romdeau's structure seems to suggest that leaders cannot be mindless, but have to be thinking people. Is that necessarily true?
What is the purpose of rights if not to serve society and the individual? If it is to serve them, then shouldn't people be willing to give them up for their own greater good? If not that, then what about for society's greater good?
Do people naturally stop thinking when they have nothing to strive for, or fear? Or is that a product of the way Romdeau is run? Or is it the way the autoreivs make thinking optional?
Is it necessary to have a lower class in a perfect society, to make it run smoothly both mechanically and socially? Already they are devoid of danger, so aren't some harmless goals or punishments necessary? When there is no danger of cruelty, is discrimination alright?




DO NOT VIEW SPOILERS UNTIL YOU HAVE WATCHED THE ENTIRE SERIES. SERIOUSLY. I do not hold anything back and reveal things from the last episode all the time. It is part of Ergo Proxy to be confused, see them revealed, and then re-watch it to understand all the double meanings that were thrown everywhere. Maybe it sucks, but it will seem far fetched and childish and nonsensical to read it now, and will remove all of the interesting way the story is operating on two levels at once. Both are interesting to experience, but they gain value for each existing independently. Plus, just getting a handle on the basic plot is necessary before you can understand all the background motivations and situations. Besides, I can totally be wrong about some things, and you're going to want to have some basis for your own opinions and interpretations of the less concrete stuff. There is plenty to work with on the first viewing. Save the weird extra-meaning stuff for after you have finished it, then read to your heart's content. Please, please, I beg you. I'm not just saying this as some sort of rigid fan about "The one true way to watch it." I really mean that reading all of the spoiler stuff will make the series unenjoyable and confusing without any real benefit. Boring and not worth watching at all if it is just a cross-reference-to-things-you-have-never-seen, with so much information and straight up plot points you don't understand, but reading it afterward and seeing how it ties together and is revealed without ever being said is interesting.

[VIEW SPOILERS]

[/SPOILERS] ///////My Reaction
The advertisements on the walkway feels like deja vu to me. I think it is referencing something but I cannot figure out what.

Vincent Law is beyond a pushover. He wrote this apology when he failed to bring in the infected autoreiv because it punched him meters into the air, probably seriously injuring him... (from Re-L's investigation).

5 comments:

  1. I finished reading this post and I'm going for the next ones, and I just want to say that you did a wonderful job gathering all this information and writing your thoughts about the series. I really, really appreciate your goood job here.

    ReplyDelete
  2. This is looking very interesting, this has been my favourite series for a long time and I can already tell this analysis will be very entertaining. There is a point in your SPOILERS section where you imply Vincent has been created as a "copy" of Proxy One already being in Romdeau. I don't think this is the case. In episode three he dreams of what I presume was the destruction of Mosk and he sees Proxy One/Ergo Proxy's silhouette before collapsing. I think that was the moment he was "born". Also I always interpreted both him and Proxy One being copies or "oddments" of the original Ergo Proxy: Vincent as the human side (but who eventually awakens too due to being made of Amrita cells) and One as the Proxy side (we never see his human or unawakened form). So this is my analysis: Ergo Proxy "died" when Mosk was destroyed and Monad kidnapped and somehow he split into two different beings. Do you think it's plausible?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. SPOILERS:




      WARNING:
      SPOILERS:
      I could never figure out whether Vincent/Ergo Proxy were puppets or clones etc of Proxy One, nor when or why exactly he originated.

      I saw the same scene in episode three and decided it was from Romdeau. I assume that is Romdeau firing off other "rapture" missiles to destroy Mosk or attack the Boomerang.... The destruction at Mosk may have been from the raid for Monad and the comment that it has recent destruction may be from the final Rapture missile. Thinking of it now, that one rapture missile made a huge crater, so these other missiles probably were not involved in the Monad-raid-destruction. (orrr the dome shield may have absorbed some and after it had no defenses the final missile had a larger impact... I really don't know enough) But if the missiles are not for Mosk. The missiles firing in that scene may be from either Romdeau or Mosk and are likely attacking the Boomerang or other off-world people.

      I also could not figure out if Vincent/Ergo began back in Mosk or sometime in Romdeau. Vincent thinks his memories originate in Mosk. But those memories seem to be false and he doesn't recognize a lot of Mosk and that troubles him a lot. He also puts off all questions about what his life was in Mosk and is confronted about it a few times. So I guessed Romdeau. It could be either and I think your interpretation is very plausible.

      Delete
  3. Didn't Monad try to kill Re-L in the abandoned building? It looked to me like she was attacking her from above and Re-L realized it at the last moment, and beat Monad off with her gun. I thought she wanted to kill Re-L out of jealousy because Vincent has feelings for her.
    And when she appears the second time, she interrupts the encounter between Vincent/Proxy One and re-L for the same reason, I thought.
    What do you think about this interpretation? (In case you're still interested and active here after 12 years. :D)
    PS: Your work is amazing!

    ReplyDelete