Synopsis
Legendary assassin Train Heartnet, alias Black Cat, kills villains in cold blood for the greater good. Young as he may be, Black Cat is skilled in his craft, eliminating his targets as stealthily as a fleeting shadow, and inspiring fear and awe in those who have heard of him. While Black Cat is faithful to the orders of Chronos, the paramilitary organisation whose employ he is under, he begins to doubt their methods when one of his missions involves killing a young girl. The girl, Eve, has been implanted with technology that enables her to shape-shift at will, turning her into a bio-weapon that Chronos deems a threat to humanity. Black Cat chooses not to kill Eve nevertheless as she has not harmed anyone.
As Black Cat deviates from Chronos, he finds alternative mores in a group of people called Sweepers, who likewise seeks out villains but only to incarcerate, not kill them. The Sweepers and Chronos never combine, but the two groups wage separate battles against a mutual enemy, terrorist organisation Apostles of the Stars.
Themes
Peace
This anime looks at different notions of peace through the lenses of the three groups tangled in conflict – Chronos, the Apostles of the Stars, and the Sweepers.
From the viewpoint of Chronos, peace is to be obtained in utilitarian fashion where “bad guys” should be killed on sight to protect the general law-abiding public. For the Apostles of the Stars, peace is only possible when a perfect society has been created via the elimination of those considered unworthy by the leader of the group. The Sweepers, however, believe in the value of human life and conceptualise peace as a philosophy of goodness and forgiveness, hence their practice of capturing criminals without killing them.
These three different views throw up some interesting questions:
What is the price of peace? Some, like Chronos and the Apostles of the Stars, insist that the price to be paid is the sacrifice of human life. But if this is so, does the apparent irony undermine the idea of peace?
What is a terrorist? Is it someone who kills? If so, then Chronos would be in the same league as the Apostles of the Stars, but in the show, Chronos is portrayed much more positively in comparison to the latter. The show then seems to suggest that a terrorist is one who is morally depraved, perhaps even mentally unsound to some degree, when in reality the line is much thinner since both Chronos and the Apostles of the Stars take innocent lives.
The paradox of modernity
Black Cat critiques modernity and questions its beliefs.
The first tenet of modernity that it debunks is that science and technology lead to human progress. Chronos uses technology in the manufacture of a virtually indestructible metal called orichalcum, which is used to construct the weapons it bestows on its assassins. Eve, the girl bio-weapon, is made part-human, part-machine through the technology of devious men who dream of world domination. In this way, science and technology, though progressing in terms of sophistication, take human progress many steps backwards as they are used as tools for destruction.
Secondly, Black Cat shows how science and technology weaken the human environment instead of strengthening it. The proliferation of weapons turns the landscape into one of danger and despair, resulting in alienation from society (embodied by Train Heartnet, who does not trust anyone) and alienation from oneself (Train represses his innate sense of community and chooses to work in isolation).
Finally, rationality, held by modernity to lead to progress, is not necessarily good in Black Cat as it can be wielded to evil ends. The Apostles of the Stars for example, aspire to a utopian society, but using rationality as their guiding principle, the solution they conceive is the arbitrary elimination of “inferior” humans.
Dawn of the cyborg
This anime is also an exploration of the human body and its potential in combination with foreign elements. In cyborg theory, the body surmounts rigid boundaries when it is supplemented by technology to achieve a more superior form. Black Cat contains many examples of this – Train Heartnet and other Chronos assassins are almost impossible to defeat when paired with their orichalcum weapons; Eve is a force to be reckoned with as her body is toughened by the infusion of nanotechnology; and the Apostles of the Stars, by ingesting an elixir called Shinkitou, approximate immortality.
Personally
I think this is a really well-drawn piece. In particular, I like the way the eyes are animated with specks of light. I’ve not seen this commonly used in other Anime so far.
Also, I like the way it’s directed – transitions are very smooth and logical, and sequences have an artistic quality to it because of the arrangement, juxtaposition, and the leitmotifs that are weaved into the narrative. The action scenes and the mounting of tension are fantastic.
Rating
Fabulous stuff. Watch it!