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A 17-year-old math prodigy gets roped into pretending to be his crush's fiancé at her great-grandmother's 90th birthday party. Then he accidentally cracks an encryption code on his phone, a rogue AI takes over the world's most popular social network, and tries to end the world via meteor. This is, somehow, one of the most emotionally grounded films Mamoru Hosoda has ever made.
This week on Toonami Absolution, Alyx, Jon, and Sam cover Summer Wars (2009), the Madhouse-produced film that cemented Hosoda as one of the defining voices in modern anime.
Kenji Koiso moonlights as a low-level moderator of OZ, a sprawling, billion-user virtual world that has become so deeply embedded in daily life that hospitals, governments, and infrastructure systems all run through it. When Kenji unknowingly solves a math puzzle sent to his phone, he hands the keys to a rogue AI called Love Machine, which proceeds to hijack OZ and start causing real-world chaos.
What follows is a film that swings between giant multiplayer avatar battles inside OZ and a surprisingly tender, lived-in portrait of an enormous extended family coming together. It is also, structurally, a spiritual successor to Hosoda's earlier Digimon Adventure short Our War Game!, expanded into something far more ambitious.
We talk about how Summer Wars balances its sci-fi spectacle against its family drama, what the film says about technology's place in everyday life nearly two decades on, and where it sits in Hosoda's filmography.
🔔 Subscribe for our ongoing watch-through of Toonami and Adult Swim's most iconic anime films and series!
****
Toonami Absolution is a weekly podcast where Alyx, Jon, and Sam revisit the Toonami and Adult Swim shows that made them, and you, you.
From the block's early days with shows like Space Ghost: Coast to Coast and Transformers: Beast Wars to the imported anime that made Toonami and Adult Swim appointment television for a generation of kids, such as Cowboy Bebop, Sailor Moon, and Dragon Ball.
****
See more Toonami Absolution stuff (including the video version of the podcast) by checking out our Linktree!
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Toonami AbsolutionA 17-year-old math prodigy gets roped into pretending to be his crush's fiancé at her great-grandmother's 90th birthday party. Then he accidentally cracks an encryption code on his phone, a rogue AI takes over the world's most popular social network, and tries to end the world via meteor. This is, somehow, one of the most emotionally grounded films Mamoru Hosoda has ever made.
This week on Toonami Absolution, Alyx, Jon, and Sam cover Summer Wars (2009), the Madhouse-produced film that cemented Hosoda as one of the defining voices in modern anime.
Kenji Koiso moonlights as a low-level moderator of OZ, a sprawling, billion-user virtual world that has become so deeply embedded in daily life that hospitals, governments, and infrastructure systems all run through it. When Kenji unknowingly solves a math puzzle sent to his phone, he hands the keys to a rogue AI called Love Machine, which proceeds to hijack OZ and start causing real-world chaos.
What follows is a film that swings between giant multiplayer avatar battles inside OZ and a surprisingly tender, lived-in portrait of an enormous extended family coming together. It is also, structurally, a spiritual successor to Hosoda's earlier Digimon Adventure short Our War Game!, expanded into something far more ambitious.
We talk about how Summer Wars balances its sci-fi spectacle against its family drama, what the film says about technology's place in everyday life nearly two decades on, and where it sits in Hosoda's filmography.
🔔 Subscribe for our ongoing watch-through of Toonami and Adult Swim's most iconic anime films and series!
****
Toonami Absolution is a weekly podcast where Alyx, Jon, and Sam revisit the Toonami and Adult Swim shows that made them, and you, you.
From the block's early days with shows like Space Ghost: Coast to Coast and Transformers: Beast Wars to the imported anime that made Toonami and Adult Swim appointment television for a generation of kids, such as Cowboy Bebop, Sailor Moon, and Dragon Ball.
****
See more Toonami Absolution stuff (including the video version of the podcast) by checking out our Linktree!
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.