![]() It’s animated by Toei Animation, and directed by Daisuke Nishio ( Dragon Ball franchise, and One Piece franchise.) This is a more humorous story about a Spartan soldier named 1337, who has a massive ego, but a huge case of bad luck as his body crash-lands on a planet and away from the ship on which he was riding. The plot is about a group of soldiers who are rescued by this female red-armored Spartan, and their attempt to escape a warzone full of The Covenant. The fourth story is called Homecoming, and is animated by Production I.G again, and directed by Koji Sawai ( Patlabor, Ranma ½, Trigun, and. The third is called The Duel, animated by Production I.G, and directed by Hiroshi Yamazaki ( Karas: The Prophecy, Eden of the East, and Ghost in the Shell.) The plot is set up like some kind of samurai short film where an alien known as an Arbiter seeks revenge for the death of his wife by the hands of The Covenant religion for not converting to their beliefs. The plot to this story is basically a briefing of the Halo universe from the original invasion of the Flood, the Forerunners, and the massive weapons known as Halos, to what happened in Halo 3. The first and second stories are called Origins, which are animated by Studio 4☌ and directed by Hideki Futamura ( Beyond, The Second Renaissance Part I & II, A Detective Story, Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust, and Perfect Blue). Let’s see if these criticisms are valid years after the release. ![]() The release of Halo Legends on February 16 th, 2010 got mixed reviews, with the criticism of the stories being uneven in quality, and making the odd choice to combine Halo and Japanese animation. I mean, technically, it’s seven, since two of them are part one and two of a single story, but still. Released in 2010, Halo Legends is one of the larger anthology films I know about, with eight individual stories by different animation studios. Now then, let’s take a look at another anthology film that is, sadly, not one of the better ones. If I had to look back and suggest getting one version over the other, I would get the Discotek version, but neither DVD has a lot of content to them. You get a crisper visual quality to the Discotek version, but overall, both are pretty much the same. So, to quickly follow up on my Robot Carnival review, I recently picked up the Discotek Media version, watched it through to the end, and compared it to the import copy I already had. If you want to, consider contributing to my Patreon at /camseyeview. (If you like what you see, you can go to to see more of my work.
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