Some stories didn't become hits, but left a mark in the hearts of those who saw them. We've collected seven old anime that almost no one remembers — and in vain. They have everything we love about the genre: crazy ideas, sincerity, and a little bit of madness.
Controlled humanoid machines are fighting a huge monster in the geofront, but no, this is not Evangelion.
PS Thanks to Wikipedia: Geofront (English geofront, also geofrontier — English geofrontier) is a term that urban planners and builders in Tokyo used to refer to urban objects underground. This was the name given to the underground infrastructure, water pipes and sewage systems, electric cables and gas pipes laid underground, the subway, as well as the underground shopping galleries of large shopping malls such as in Shinjuku, and the underground levels of new high-rise buildings. The construction of non-residential facilities underground made it possible to increase the area of commercial real estate in conditions of overcrowding and high land prices in Tokyo. The term geofront has also gained some popularity in science fiction, mainly Japanese, as a designation of a significant underground space used for the location of cities and non-residential facilities, military, scientific and others.
The original anime clearly hinted that they had something and it didn't work out, and the relationship there was warmer. But here there is neutrality, and there is some kind of understatement throughout the series.
PS: I wonder how many years later someone will read this comment, considering that this series has only 50 views))
PS Thanks to Wikipedia:
Geofront (English geofront, also geofrontier — English geofrontier) is a term that urban planners and builders in Tokyo used to refer to urban objects underground. This was the name given to the underground infrastructure, water pipes and sewage systems, electric cables and gas pipes laid underground, the subway, as well as the underground shopping galleries of large shopping malls such as in Shinjuku, and the underground levels of new high-rise buildings. The construction of non-residential facilities underground made it possible to increase the area of commercial real estate in conditions of overcrowding and high land prices in Tokyo.
The term geofront has also gained some popularity in science fiction, mainly Japanese, as a designation of a significant underground space used for the location of cities and non-residential facilities, military, scientific and others.
The original anime clearly hinted that they had something and it didn't work out, and the relationship there was warmer. But here there is neutrality, and there is some kind of understatement throughout the series.
PS: I wonder how many years later someone will read this comment, considering that this series has only 50 views))