Tag: Code Geass

Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion R2

Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion R2

Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion R2 anime series cover art
Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion R2

Season Overview

Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion R2 (Code Geass: Hangyaku no Lelouch R2 / コードギアス 反逆のルルーシュ 続編) is the second season of Code Geass. I reviewed the first season way back in 2018, and I’ve only just recently gotten around to watching the second. So naturally, there were a lot of things I forgot.

However, one thing I did remember from the first season was how it ended. It ended with a standoff between Lelouch and Suzaku, with a gunshot ringing out after the screen cut to black. This was a great ending for that season because of the suspense it left the viewer with.

Unfortunately, R2 does away with that suspense by effectively retconning the end of the first season. It wasn’t literally retconned, but it was revealed that neither of them was shot, Lelouch’s memories were sealed, and the series continues on as if that scene didn’t happen. The scene is still canon, it just no longer matters.

I’m also pretty sure that there’s a year gap between the first season and R2. Nothing much happened during this gap though because, without Zero (Lelouch) to lead them, the Black Knights’ rebellion came to a standstill. It’s not until Lelouch regains his memories (this was obviously going to happen so it’s not a spoiler) that things pick back up.

Once the rebellion starts rolling again, it’s back to business as usual. Lelouch is using people as pawns and playing 5-D chess with them to achieve his goals. This can be entertaining at some points, but I definitely wasn’t as much of a fan of it this time around compared to three years ago.

I guess that’s to be expected though, considering I feel the same way about Death Note. I liked that series more years ago than I do now.

Things I Don’t Understand

From here on out there are going to be major spoilers for the series. If you don’t want everything to be spoiled, including the final episode, I suggest you stop reading at this point.

Now, many of the things I didn’t quite understand are probably my own fault for waiting 2.5 years to watch the second season. I’m sure there were a lot of things that would have made sense if I had just watched the seasons back to back. And one of those things is how people get Geass in the first place.

I understand that Lelouch received his Geass from C.C. and the emperor received his from V.V. That much is clear. But was it ever explained how the other people got their Geass? What about Rolo and Jeremiah? And I think there was some other random Geass user in the first season.

C.C. eating pizza from the anime series Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion R2
C.C. eating pizza

The next thing I don’t understand definitely isn’t my fault. Why does everyone trust Lelouch so much? There were multiple times when Lelouch outright betrayed people and then they forgave him and trusted him again just because he said he wouldn’t do it again (he did).

Lelouch betraying people and not even trying to hide the fact that he was betraying them became such a major recurring event that I could no longer suspend my disbelief when people trusted him.

There was also the whole thing about Suzaku nuking a city that infuriated me to no end. Nina built the weapon and repeatedly told Suzaku to use it. Then once he used it, suddenly she was shocked by the damage it caused. You can’t be shocked that your weapon of mass destruction caused mass destruction. Oh, and then Nunnally somehow wasn’t vaporized even though she totally should have been.

End of Lelouch

Honestly, I wasn’t much of a fan of R2. I liked the first season back when I watched it. But R2 just seemed to have so many contradictions and unnatural developments that I couldn’t get properly invested in the story or most of the characters. That is, until the end.

The end of Code Geass is often considered one of the best endings to any anime. And now that I’ve experienced it, even though I already knew what was going to happen since this is an anime from 2008, I can see why. The fact that I knew what was coming didn’t matter — it was still a great ending.

At the end of the series, Lelouch becomes the ruler of the world, only to be killed during his victory parade by Suzaku dressed as Zero. This was all planned beforehand by Lelouch and Suzaku — probably around three-quarters of the way into the season.

Zero killing Lelouch from the anime series Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion R2
Zero killing Lelouch

Why does this ending work so well? Because it resolves a lot, but not all, of the loose ends of the series. I mean, I don’t remember what happened to C.C. in the end, for example. But I also don’t really care about her anyway.

This ending allows Suzaku to get his revenge on Lelouch, it allows Lelouch to create a peaceful world for Nunnally, it removes the perceived antagonist of the world from existence, and it restores Zero as the champion of the people. And it does all of this without feeling like a Deus ex machina because we already knew that there was some agreement between Lelouch and Suzaku.

Honestly, I think R2 is worth watching specifically for the ending. Sure, the rest wasn’t that good, in my opinion. But the ending makes up for it, which isn’t something I often say.

Conclusion

Overall, I think Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion R2 is a 7/10. That’s lower than my score of the first season. But I get the feeling that if I rewatched the first season I would lower my score for it.

As for the OPs and EDs, I didn’t think any of them were that special. I don’t remember which of the OPs it was, but one of them had a poorly drawn/animated horse that I thought was funny. And all I remember about the EDs is that they had nice art, but there wasn’t anything else to them.

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Code Geass

Code Geass

Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion anime cover art
Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion Cover Art

Overview

Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion is an anime I put off watching for far too long. I thought the title “Code Geass” sounded dumb, and the protagonist’s name “Lelouch” sounded even dumber, but I’ll admit that I was wrong about this series.

The series follows protagonist Lelouch Lamperouge, formerly Lelouch vi Britannia, as he leads an uprising against the Britannian Empire to avenge the murder of his mother and to create a world of peace for his sister. To do so, Lelouch creates the persona of Zero and starts a war to end all wars.

While the series is in the mecha genre, the focus is more on the complex political relations between a variety of warring factions and empires. There’s the Britannian Empire, the Chinese Federation, and the EU as far as “empires” go, but in Japan alone, now called Area 11, there are a variety of different rebel groups vying for power as well.

That said, despite there being a bunch of warring factions, the best part of the series is that none of them are really the good guys. While some of the groups can definitely be viewed as the “bad guys,” there are both good and bad people fighting for every side, and often times their reasons for fighting are completely justified.

There could be someone fighting on the side of what essentially amounts to slavery and oppression, and yet still be considered one of the “good guys.” At the same time, there can be a mass murderer with no regard for civilian casualties on either side, and yet they’re fighting for freedom.

This blend of ideologies makes just about every situation or decision in the anime a shade of grey rather than black or white. After completing the first season, I’m still not entirely sure who the “good guy” is, although I definitely have a preference for a particular faction as a whole.

Characters

Lelouch Lamperouge, formerly Lelouch vi Britannia, is the protagonist of the series, and yet also a villain. He’s a member of the Britannian royal family, and yet he’s leading a rebel army of Japanese against the Britannian Empire.

The Britannian Empire overall is clearly the “bad” side, and yet Lelouch is arguably more evil than anyone who fights for the Empire. He wants to destroy the Empire to avenge his mother’s assassination, and yet he doesn’t care about the Japanese whom he leads. To him, they’re just expendable soldiers.

Lelouch is kind of like if Ainz Ooal Gown from Overlord was actually a super villain instead of just playing the part of one. While he doesn’t always want to do certain actions, such as killing those who were once his friends, if that’s what needs to be done to accomplish his goal, so be it.

He also has a magical ability known as Geass in his left eye. With this power, he can command anyone to do any one thing, and they have to obey him. This results in the afflicted person’s memory being erased surrounding the time when the Geass was used on them.

The very first time he uses his Geass, it’s to order a military squad to kill themselves, showing just how ruthless he has the potential to be. Later on, he loses control of his Geass and accidentally causes mass genocide as a result, but since he’s Lelouch, he figures out a way to turn genocide to his advantage.

Suzaku Kururugi is Lelouch’s foil character. While Lelouch is a Britannian fighting for the Japanese, Suzaku is a Japanese fighting for Britannia. Despite fighting for the “bad” side, Suzaku is an arguably “good” guy because he wants to change the Empire from the inside.

He fights for the overall good of humanity rather than for himself the way Lelouch does. Suzaku and Lelouch also happen to be childhood (and current) friends, which makes the dynamic between the two all the more interesting.

Kallen Stadtfeld is half Britannian and half Japanese, which means she can fit in to either side of the war. However, she sides with the Japanese rebels and becomes Zero’s (Lelouch’s) right hand. She’s yet another foil character to both Lelouch and Suzaku by being a combination of them both.

She believes in fighting for the independence of Japan, like Lelouch is doing (although for him, the independence of Japan is just a side effect of his main goal), yet at the same time she understands Suzaku’s argument for changing the empire from the inside and knows he’s a good person.

While Lelouch and Suzaku are set in their ways and won’t give in to each other, Kallen is a bit more conflicted and doesn’t know which side is really right. In many ways, Kallen is the embodiment of the viewers because she sees both good and bad in both sides.

C.C. is the final main character of the series, but she honestly hasn’t done all that much so far, so I assume she becomes more important in the second season. She’s an immortal being of some kind who is responsible for first granting Lelouch his Geass power.

It’s implied that she’s either part of, or fighting against, an organization of others like her, but we have yet to actually find out anything substantial about that. She and her kind are also immune to Geass powers themselves. Finally, she loves pizza.

Lelouch Lamperouge from the anime Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion
Lelouch Lamperouge

Conclusion

Although I could have mentioned her in the character section, I want to briefly discuss one of the supporting characters here before I end. Nina Einstein is probably my most hated character in the entire series, and yet she’s one which I think is also the most relevant.

She’s a Britannian citizen who fears the Japanese above all else. Although the anime frames her as being afraid of them, in reality her fear is due to a deeply ingrained hatred of them in the form of racism. She believes that the Japanese are all murderers who want to kill her, even though they have never expressed this desire, and are actually the ones being killed themselves.

The reason I find her character so relevant is because I’ve seen this same kind of thinking in the US. Some people are so fearful of those who are different from them, that they convince themselves those who are different are an enemy trying to do them harm, even though that isn’t the case.

In the end, I kind of view Nina the same way I view Asuka in Evangelion. I hate her as a person, but as a character she’s extremely interesting to me. And although many of the characters in this series are terrible people, that’s kind of what makes it so good.

It’s so refreshing to see characters who are willing to commit horrible crimes, as strange as that sounds. In too many anime, everyone is a white knight who would never do anything wrong, and even the villains who would, don’t actually do anything which harms the heroes of the story in any real way.

Because Code Geass is such a more realistic depiction of a world ravaged by a complex war, I think it’s easily an 8/10, and the second season could even become a 9 if it continues on the same way. I just hope the series doesn’t become too supernatural with various Geass powers.

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My review of the second season is available here.