Ōban Star-Racers
Ōban Star-Racers (2006) is an Animesque racing series created by Savin Yeatman-Eiffel, co-produced by French and Japanese animation studios.
Every 10,000 years, teams from all over the universe are gathered by the mysterious Avatar to compete in the Great Race of Oban, a race with much more at stake than just honor or prize money. According to legend, the winner is awarded the Ultimate Prize, which is rumored to grant any wish, from large-scale destruction to, perhaps, the resurrection of a loved one. Some want it for glory, others as a way of universal domination. However, the true nature of the Prize is shrouded in mystery, and things are not what they appear to be...
Eva is caught in the middle of it all while trying to find her father, who had abandoned her after the death of her mother. Under the name of "Molly", she joins her dad's racing team to the outer reaches of space, where they take part in the Great Race. Having learned of the Prize, she hopes to win it to bring back her mother and put her family's life back together.
Deciding working for another company would not give him the creative control he needed, creator Savin Yeatman-Eiffel founded his independent own animation studio, spent years raising funds and years more perfecting the animation in cooperation with Japanese studios. Yeatman-Eiffel worked hard to secure the best talent available from both France and Japan, wrote the scripts for all 26 episodes in several languages and was personally involved in every level of the project, sparing no expense and spending years polishing the final result to a mirror shine. Start to finish, almost a decade.
- The Ace: Rick Thunderbolt, who is taken out of the race in the second episode and eventually incapacitated so he'll never race again
- Action Girl: Molly and all other female pilots in the show, though her rivals are definitely in the Dark Action Girl category.
- Alien Invasion: Type 1. Before the start of the series, Earth was attacked by the Crogs. The aliens retreated only because of the 25 year Truce of Oban, and they have every intention of trying again.
- Aliens Speaking English: Averted only by Spirit, Muir and O, only because they can't speak.
- All or Nothing: There is only one prize at the end of the race, so only one out of 96 challengers from across the galaxy can take it.
- All There in the Manual: The Art of Oban Star-Racers features an in-depth timeline and backstory on racers like Toros and Ceres - and explains in full the significance of Jordan's grandfather.
- Alternative Foreign Theme Song: The English opening is called "Never Say Never".
- Amusing Injuries: Don Wei hurts his right arm in episode 3 by punching a hard surface while arguing with Molly during her first race. Said arm is in a sling later in the episode, and it's still the for the entirety of the next.
- And I Must Scream: Sul
- Animesque: Is it an anime with a Western director/creator or a Western animation series with a lot of anime talent? This series blurs the line.
- Anime Theme Song - Actually in both Japanese and French, for the French, British English and Japanese versions. The American English release used a somewhat generic English-language song, though they left the end theme the same.
- The DVD simply uses an entirely English version of the original song.
- Anime Hair: Molly, Jordan and Don Wei all have Multicolored Hair; Molly's red is really Delinquent Hair, Don's white stripes are from old age. Meanwhile, Rick and Maya both have Rapunzel Hair, with the latter being a Rose-Haired Girl.
- Anti-Villain: Ning and Skun, after it's revealed that they want the ultimate prize to reunite their people. The same can be said for practically any of the opposing pilots in the Oban cycle except for Lord Furter, Sul, and Kross.
- Hell, the worst you could call Sul is a Jerkass. He isnt actually evil, he has simply done everything-except win the Ultimate Prize, that is-and wants to win just for the sake of doing it. He's actually a fairly nice for someone who's almost god.
- The Archer: Aikka's magic arrows are his greatest weapon during races.
- Arrogant Kung Fu Guy: Ceres constantly hurls verbal abuse at his opponents and likes to reiterate his superiority by playing his flute to make them hallucinate and probably crash. Grooor plays it similarly, focusing on humiliating his opponent and disabling their star racer. He confronts Molly after his loss with the serious intention to kill her.
- A-Team Firing: Inverted; Jordan's phenomenal aim is offset by his inability to conserve ammunition.
- Awesome McCoolname: Rick Thunderbolt. Jordan C. Wilde qualifies, too.
- Badass Biker / Biker Babe: Molly on her rocket seat, which she grafts on the the Arrow's steering column. Ning and Skun's star racers are both essentially flying motorcycles - one is a racing bike and the other's a chopper, based on the handlebars.
- Bar Brawl: Molly and Jordan get into one of these with Grooor. Aikka intervenes before too much stuff gets broken.
- Barehanded Blade Block: Kross does this in episode 17 with one hand, and even breaks the blade.
- Bare Your Midriff: Eva/Molly in her Earth Team outfit.
- Barrier Warrior: Sul's star-racer is pretty much just a pyramid of pure energy that, along with letting him fly, shields him from all attacks. Not even multiple direct hits from Kross's BFG, or the combined firepower of four other pilots, does anything but slow him down a bit.
- Benevolent Precursors: The Creators In short, they made everything that exists and set up a system to keep it safe before they died out
- Betty and Veronica: For Molly, Jordan is the former and Aikka the latter. She's initially more attracted to Aikka, but starts to feel more for Jordan later, yet she doesn't get either of them in the end.
- Big Bad: Canaletto
- Big Brother Mentor: Rick becomes this for Molly.
- Big Ol' Eyebrows: Jordan gets his from his grandpa, apparently. And Satis has a pair as long as his beard!
- Bittersweet Ending: Jordan Wilde becomes the new Avatar, destroying Canaletto and restoring Oban. However, he does this having just admitted his love for Eva. The last shot of him is one of him silently crying, as the chances of him ever seeing Eva again as the Avatar are unlikely. Everyone else, however, returns home to happier lives.
- Eva, for her part, failed to bring her mother back from the dead, but she did finally come to accept her loss and reconcile with her father.
- BFS: Crog vehicles are basically flying versions of these. Powered up, their blades are able to slice through metal.
- Blessed with Suck: The Avatar. Being a godlike being with a 10,000 year lifespan and immense magical powers sounds cool at first, but it comes with the price of protecting the galaxy alone until a new Avatar replaces you
- Boisterous Bruiser: Rush.
- Boring Invincible Hero: Averted quite nicely; The Earth team is not only a dark horse at best, they've also spent time at the very bottom of the rankings and lose against better racers often.
- Butt Monkey: Jordan. Poor, poor Jordan.
- Calling the Old Man Out: Quite literally! When Don Wei reveals that he's discovered Molly's masquerade, she unloads a decade's worth of hurt on him.
- Card-Carrying Villain: Lord Furter
- Catch Phrase: Molly uses "Here goes nothing" and "Not good" quite a bit.
- Chainsaw Good: Rush's Star racer has a laser chainsaw, and his pick-axe has a similar feature.
- Chekhov's Gunman: O
- Combat Tentacles: Muir and his bio-ship, though Muir's are also used for telepathy.
- Combining Mecha: Ning and Skun's space-bikes can fuse together to form a BFG that shoots heat-seeking plasma missiles.
- Conflicting Loyalty: The main source of Aikka's problems is this; he values his friendship with Molly, but his loyalty to his kingdom and his "alliance" with the Crogs keeps getting in the way.
- Cool Old Guy: Satis/Super Racer
- Cool Shades: Rick wears these.
- Cool Ship: Whizzing Arrow I-III, and some of the alien ships are pretty cool, too.
- Dark Is Evil: The Crogs.
- Dark Is Not Evil: Spirit
- Dark-Skinned Redhead: Prince Aikka, whose reserved personality largely averts the standard traits. Stan, though, plays the trope pretty straight.
- A Day in the Limelight: Stan and Koji in episode 12.
- Deadpan Snarker: Most of the main cast except maybe Aikka (unless he's talking to Jordan).
- Death Course: The race track in episode 4 is this. The first trap is a series of huge spinning turbines, the second is a giant, rolling boulder that can only be bypassed via flying through a whole in its center. This is followed by tunnels with swinging blades, a guillotine door, collapsing buildings and then a whole freakin' labyrinth of guillotine doors.
- Detached Sleeves: Nourasians seem to be fond of wearing these.
- Doing It for the Art: And how!
- Drives Like Crazy: More flying than driving, actually. Be glad Jordan only flew the ship once.
- Eccentric Mentor: Satis.
- Eldritch Abomination: Canaletto.
- The Empire: The Crog Imperium, which prior to the Great Race had already plundered the resources of Rush's planet, forced Aikka's planet into submission, and attacked Earth simply because they thought humans were getting too powerful.
- Epic Race: The whole premise of the show.
- Executive Meddling: Completely averted when Savin Yeatman-Eiffel refused to give in to demands from potential investors to rewrite the main character as a boy. He states on the behind-the-scenes documentary on the DVD's that this is (one of) the reason(s) why production on the show had been delayed.
- Facial Markings: Molly, Maya. Word of God confirms that they're tattoos, in case you were wondering.
- Fake Ultimate Hero: The flamboyant Flint is the track favourite on his homeworld of Alwas, and, along with his gunner, Marcel, is believed by everyone there to be unbeatable. However, when Molly actually races him, she quickly learns his true secret to success: the judges fix races for him by deploying traps that only affect the challenger. When trying to play fair fails, Molly decides to goad Flint into proving his "skills" by flying into the traps; he promptly crashes.
- Falling Into the Cockpit: When Rick is unable to fly the Arrow, Don Wei stubbornly refuses to let Molly take his place, despite the fact that she is the only other person on the team with any hope of success. So what does Molly do? While Don's not around, she uses her Wrench Wench skills to reconfigure the Arrow's controls and hijacks the ship for the next race. She barely manages to win, but Don is still so angry with her disobedience that he wants to withdraw the whole team from the race. It takes a direct order from the President of the Earth Coalition to keep him from doing so, and another disaster with Rick to make Molly the team's permanent pilot.
- Fantastic Racism: Inverted, every alien race seems to hate humans, or just treat them as inferior.
- Femme Fatalons: Skun has these.
- Five-Man Band: The Earth Team especially after Rick leaves
- Flying Seafood Special: Oban has flying manta rays, and some of them are really huge.
- Freudian Trio: Molly, Jordan and Aikka are officially designed to fit this trope.
- Frothy Mugs of Water: Several instances of this occur throughout the series. In the first episode, Rick is holding a champagne bottle that had its color changed to blue in the US broadcast but was left unchanged on the DVD release. Likewise, the tavern on Alwas is a popular hang out for the heroes, but none of their beverages are ever referred to as alcohol (Molly's drink is "grenadine milk," Rick's drink is "o-fish soda.")
- Jordan also drinks coffee a lot, but the one time he actually called his brew 'Jordan's Java Jolt', the line was cut from the US broadcast.
- Genki Girl: Para-Dice, an energetic gaming Catgirl whose star racer is controlled by a Dance Dance Revolution-style gamepad.
- Gentle Giant: Rush; Oban has the Drudgers (those huge singing creatures).
- Ghibli Hills: Mostly Oban, though Alwas has elements of this, too.
- Giant Enemy Crab: Muir, and his even bigger bio-ship.
- Glass Cannon: Prince Aikka's arrows are very powerful, but his
shipbeetle is easily harmed. - Goggles Do Nothing: Eva wears hers over her eyes sometimes, though they are more of a keepsake/fashion statement than anything else.
- Golden Snitch: The later races of the second tournament are worth much more than the earlier ones, naturally allowing the Earth team to catch up in the rankings.
- Good Is Not Nice: Most of the characters that aren't villains are like this.
- Good Scars, Evil Scars: Kross' scar across his right eye is partially used to differentiate him from Toros, but also makes Kross more intimidating that him.
- Happily Married: Don Wei and Maya were this, which made her death all the more devastating.
- Hartman Hips: Eva/Molly.
- Heroes Want Redheads: Molly toward Aikka, and later on Jordan toward Molly.
- Heroic Sacrifice: O. And Jordan, sort of.
- Heterosexual Life Partners: Stan and Koji.
- Hide Your Lesbians: Ning and Skun are strongly implied to be a couple. Since they come from a One-Gender Race it makes sense. Of course, since this show was playing on Toon Disney and ABC Family, the most romantic thing we see them doing is holding hands.
- Hometown Hero: In the preliminaries on Alwas, the home team of Flint and Marcel are given the edge with traps activated to foil their opponent but not them.
- Humans Are the Real Monsters: Aikka gains the opinion that humans can't be trusted after the race between him and Molly. Before the race both had promised not to shoot as long as they other didn't, Aikka because his mount had been hurt in the previous race, Molly because one of Aikka's arrows could disable their ship. They go most of the race doing this, but just before the finish line Don Wei unlocks Jordan's turret (which Molly had shut down at the start of the race and locked the techs out of). Jordan immediately shoots, Aikka disables the ship, then insults Molly before finishing the race.
- Humongous Mecha: Ondai, the robot from the Oban arc of the show, flies a spaceship that can transform into a bipedal robot with a Laser Blade!
- Jerkass Facade: Don Wei was a very nice man before his wife was killed. He started acting mean to protect himself from the pain, and other people, too.
- Idiosyncratic Episode Naming: Most episodes are named using a pattern of "adjective Like name", most of which are alliterative.
- International Coproduction: France and Japan.
- I Shall Taunt You: Used a few times. Molly defeats Flint by taunting him into taking on the traps judges had been rigging in his favor. Toros defeats Rush by this method as well.
- Large Ham: Satis as Super-Racer.
Satis: I see you tried to top the fabulous design of my Super Star-Racer! Your attempt has failed!
- Lord Furter as well. See Small Name, Big Ego.
- Laser-Guided Amnesia: Rick's encounter with Canaletto in the Alwas Cycle is erased from his memory.
- Last of His Kind: Ceres, who subverts the usual angsty portrayal by being extremely proud to be the last surviving member of one of the oldest races in the universe. The art book establishes that this is mostly a front and he's actually bitter about being so alone.
- Lightning Bruiser: One of the reasons Toros and Kross are so formidable - their star racers have great cruising speed and powerful offensive capabilities.
- Line-of-Sight Name: Eva chose the name "Molly" from a signed poster of pin-up model she saw in Don Wei's hangar.
- Living Ship: G'dar (Aikka's giant beetle), Spirit (he IS his ship), Muir's ship, and O's ship.
- Love Confession: Jordan tries unsuccessfully to tell Molly his feelings multiple times. Until the last episode, that is...
- Love Triangle: Molly, Jordan and Aikka; they seem to be a Type 7 in Triang Relations. She doesn't pair up with either of them in the end.
- Luke, You Are My Father: Though Don Wei puzzles it out on his own.
- Macross Missile Massacre: Para-dice's racer fires swarms of missiles, tipped with cat emoticons.
- Magical Native American: More like "Magical Indigenous Person", but Ceres is an ancient creature designed after totem carvings and such. His star racer is propelled by planetary magnetism and he can hypnotize people with his flute or use sound from his star racer to slice things in half.
- Mighty Glacier: While it might seem counter to the idea of a race, Grooor's star racer has very poor speed but phenomenal defense. This fits in nicely with his usual strategy of crushing his opponents against a wall.
- Missing Mom: Maya
- Multi-Armed and Dangerous / Multi-Armed Multitasking: Ceres' six arms allow him to multitask impressively.
- Musical Assassin: Ceres
- Necromantic: Molly and Muir both want to bring back a loved one with the ultimate prize. When it's revealed that this isn't possible, Muir drops out of the race completely.
- Neck Lift: Grooor does this to Molly in one episode, and Kross does this to Aikka in another.
- Never Say "Die": Played straight most of the time, with one notable edit in the US broadcast; in episode 14, all lines about Toros comitting suicide were cut out.
- Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: Molly's race with Aikka. Given that Aikka is a Glass Cannon who rides a giant bug instead of an easily repaired vehicle, he was resigned to blowing Molly away in accordance with his government's orders. When Molly approached him with an offer of a straight-up race, he was moved by her competitive yet friendly attitude and was willing to take a loss as long as his wounded mount wasn't killed. She locked down Jordan's turret as the race began, and was winning soundly - until Don Wei unlocked Jordan's turret and ordered him to open fire. Cue humiliating defeat.
- As well as a Humans Are the Real Monsters comment from Aikka.
- Nitro Boost: Aikka uses a spell on G'dar to the same effect; the Whizzing Arrow's hyperdrive.
- The Noseless: The whole cast. No, they're not mutants, it's just the art style.
- The artist apparently hated drawing noses.
- Novelization: There is a novel adaptation that covers the first six episodes of the anime, but it's only available in French and there's no word as to whether the remaining twenty episodes will be novelized.
- Opt Out: Molly and Muir before the final race.
- Obviously Evil: The Crogs. Pitch-black skin? Check. Red clothes? Check. Deep voices? Check. Yellow eyes? Check. Love of sharp, pointy weapons? Check.
- And Canaletto, of course.
- Paper-Thin Disguise: Satis as Super Racer. His Avatar disguise is much better.
- Parents as People: Don and Maya Wei managed to subvert this while Eva was little; despite having successful careers and being very in love with each other, they somehow still had enough time to dote on their only child. Don plays it painfully straight after Maya's fatal accident, leading straight into the next trope.
- Parental Abandonment: Don Wei stuck his daughter in boarding school and did his best to forget about her after the death of his wife. To his credit, he does get better in the end.
- Petting Zoo People: Paradice, sort of. She's very catlike in appearance and mannerisms, but her head looks like a computer screen.
- Physical God: The Avatar (that is, Satis, and Jordan after his death), Canaletto, and possibly Sul.
- Pilot: Molly Star-Racer http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sZT3rbtKWBM
- Pinocchio Syndrome: For all his boasts about mechanical superiority, Ondai wants to use the ultimate prize to become an organic creature.
- Playful Hacker: Paradice
- Posthumous Character: Maya
- Proud Warrior Race Guy: The Crogs, and the Inna.
- Put on a Bus: Rick Thunderbolt, put on a giant flying stone egg at the end of the Alwas cycle.
- The Quiet One: Spirit, and later O (yes, that's his name).
- Redeeming Replacement: Jordan isn't a direct replacement, but his grandfather William Wilde is regarded by history as a traitor on the order of Benedict Arnold. At least in part, this motivated him to join the military in the first place
- Ridiculously Cute Critter: The blue 'jelly-bunny' creatures that stick to Molly's windshield in episode 17.
Jordan: What are those things? They're really cute! I want one!
- Rookie Red Ranger: Molly joins the Earth Team as a stowaway. Even when she proves herself as a pilot, the Chilly Reception doesn't fully wear off until halfway through the show.
- Secret Keeper: Rick is the first character to figure out that Molly is Don Wei's daughter. He tells her he knows, but leaves it up to her to tell Don.
- Secret Test: The entire Great Race of Oban is this. The contestants can use any tactics short of murder to win the Ultimate Prize and have their wishes granted. However, the real prize is becoming Avatar for the next 10,000 years
- Sensual Spandex: Rick Thunderbolt, when he's not a Walking Shirtless Scene.
- Shouting Shooter: Jordan has a tendency to yell at whoever he's shooting at, whether they can hear him or not.
- Single Biome Planet: Played straight with Alwas, but strongly averted with Oban.
- Skintone Sclerae: The Nourasians have this.
- Small Name, Big Ego: Lord Furter proves to have a severely inflated opinion of his own racing ability, even though he knows he cheated his way into the finals.
- And before him there was Flint, whose victories were only due to the judges fixing the races in his favor.
- The Smurfette Principle: Molly is the only prominent female for much of the series, but she subverts the trope by being The Protagonist and The Hero.
- Space Elves: The Nourasians, Type I. Sul qualifies, too.
- Space Pirates: Lord Furter and crew, to the point that he chooses to explain it to Molly when he attacks her during a race.
Furter: I'm boarding your ship! That's what pirates do! They board ships!
- Spikes of Villainy: Crog ships.
- Starfish Aliens: Pretty rampant, especially once they get to Oban.
- Team Dad: Don Wei for the Earth Team. The especially strict, disciplinarian type.
- Telepathy: Spirit and Muir use their own variations of this. Sul does it, too.
- That Man Is Dead: Sort of. In the final moments of the series, Eva comments that it was fun to be Molly, but is glad to be Eva again.
- Third Person Person: Grooor routinely lapses into this.
- Tournament Arc: Two: the Alwas cycle and the Oban cycle.
- Twenty Minutes Into the Future: The events of the series take place in the year 2082 AD, but aside from some of the technology and making contact with aliens, Earth is exactly the same as it is now.
- Underdogs Never Lose: Played with. On Alwas, the Earth Team won seven out of ten races and had the lowest points of the three playoff teams headed for Oban. After that, they won only TWO out of nine races, and both wins were due to a Golden Snitch.
- The Unintelligible: Muir.
- Vague Age: Aikka's age is never specified. He looks like a teenager, but Word of God states that Nourasians have longer lifespans and slower aging than humans.
- Wacky Racing: Very much so.
- Walking Shirtless Scene: Rick Thunderbolt 60% of the time; otherwise, he's in Sensual Spandex.
- Well-Done Daughter Gal: Eva's motivation for most of the series is to get back the love Don Wei denied her for ten years. The irony is that Don doesn't know she's his daughter at all until well into the latter half of the series.
- What Could Have Been: In The Art of Oban Star-Racers, it's revealed that when the story was first conceived in 1997, the genders and personalities of the main characters were different. A younger and less confident Rick Thunderbolt was the Earth Team pilot, an older Molly was the gunner, and Aikka was a princess.
- Wholesome Crossdresser: Eva was this while at boarding school by wearing a boy's uniform. This caused Don Wei, who hadn't seen in her in ten years and did not recognize her, to mistake her for a boy.
- Winds of Destiny Change: Sul is famous across the galaxy for this power. However, Canaletto has the same power, and he's been using it a LOT longer than Sul has.
- The Wise Prince: Aikka, also a Warrior Prince.
- The Worf Effect: Sul vs Canaletto. Sul is almost a god and shoots a really powerful blast at Canaletto, but Canaletto is unaffected and drags Sul into some kind of portal, never to be seen again. Before that, a number of other racers had attempted to eliminate Sul during the race, but he was not only undamaged by any of their attacks, he took them all down easily.
- Wrench Wench: Not only did Molly build her own rocket-seat by herself, but she later grafts it onto the Whizzing Arrow's steering column!
- Xanatos Roulette: Canaletto's plan involves emotionally scarring a girl with the right background, then ensuring she is the one to represent her planet during the races, and counting on her to win so her scars will cause her to reject the role of Avatar so he can steal it for himself.
- He does have limited prescience. Too bad that doesn't include what Jordan would wind up doing.
- You Have Failed Me...: Despite making it through to Oban, Toros is implied to have killed himself for his "unacceptable" loss to Molly, the first loss of his racing career.
- You Killed My Father: Molly's attitude towards Spirit, the racer who she thinks is responsible for her mother's death. She wrecks the Whizzing Arrow when she faces him, only to learn the truth when he shows her the events of that day through his eyes. Later, however, it turns out that Canaletto was responsible for Maya's death.