Postby the_wolfs_howl » Mon Jul 23, 2007 5:53 am
Finally got to read the not-so-new-anymore chapter. I like the MangaHelpers version, but I think I like the ZOMGFTA version just slightly more. Still, MangaHelpers is a lot faster than ZOMGFTA ^_^
[spoiler]I really liked this chapter. There were quite a few moments, especially towards the beginning, where Ed almost looked...grown up. Mainly around the part where Winry was suggesting becoming Scar's "hostage," there were some parts when I almost forgot that Ed is still only around 16/17 years old (how old is he, anyway?). It's in moments like that where he really looks like his father.
I liked how the captured chimeras actually had more to them than "I'm a bad guy!" Arakawa-san really does a good job with her antagonists. And I must say that I really liked how Yoki has started being useful. I wonder if Arakawa-san had been planning this for a long time, or if it just sort of came up when she decided they'd be going to a mining town, and that was the obvious solution to their problem. It's rather like Gollum; even the despicable, pitiable ones have a purpose.
And then Al was pretty cool in this chapter. I like how he urged the chimeras to not give up (when, a chapter or two ago, they'd been fighting each other), and how he came up with the solution to the dilemma with Marcoh's group. It was such an obvious solution, yet I didn't even think of it till I saw the frame where Al kinda straightens up and says, "There is one way." And then I smiled, because I instantly understood what he was going to say. The knowledge that the armor is starting to reject his soul is a little frightening, but I think it's pretty safe to say that even if he does go through a rejection, his soul will be reunited with his body. It's a lot more certain and possible than it was in the anime.
And then the ending! It's always tantalizing to see what Father's up to, and this time is no exception. We know that he needs five human sacrifices, and that they're Ed, Al, Hohenheim, and possibly Izumi - besides the one he hasn't decided on yet. The thing in common with these four people seems to be their exceptional skills in alchemy. Ed, Al, and Izumi are able to transmute without a circle, and though the only alchemy we've seen Hohenheim do was that weird thing when he pulled souls out of his chest or whatever, I'd venture to say he can either transmute by clapping or without even moving, like Father. So actually I don't think the final sacrifice will be Marcoh or Kimbley. They're both good alchemists, but they don't seem to me to be on par with those who can transmute without a circle. I just had an interesting idea right now: What if the final sacrifice will be Scar? We already know Father's intrigued by his different branch of alchemy, and Scar's ability is quite impressive. Anyway, just a thought, because after Scar I can't think of another really good alchemist, unless it was Mustang.
Did anybody else notice the one frame on the last page, where Ling/Greed is lounging about with a couple chimeras? It struck me as odd that Greed would be shown when he doesn't say anything, doesn't really have much of an expression, and Father isn't really talking to him either. Is there some significance to this frame, or am I trying to read too much into it? Maybe Arakawa just needed another frame, so she drew Greed because he was the Homunculus most likely to be with Father.
Another thing I noticed with this chapter was that it wasn't quite as funny as some other ones. Usually, when I read an FMA chapter, I'm very serious on one page, and then on the next I'm bursting with laughter. But I didn't even really laugh with this chapter. Did you experience the same thing?[/spoiler]
You can find out things about the past that you never knew. And from what you've learned, you may see some things differently in the present. You're the one that changes. Not the past.
- Ellone, Final Fantasy VIII
"There's a difference between maliciously offending somebody - on purpose - and somebody being offended by...truth. If you're offended by the
truth, that's your problem. I have no obligation to not offend you if I'm speaking the truth. The truth is
supposed to offend you; that's how you know you don't got it."
- Brad Stine