KIDOU SENSHI GUNDAM F91
MOVIE
Dubbed
SOURCE
ORIGINAL
RELEASE
March 16, 1991
LENGTH
120 min
DESCRIPTION
U.C. 0123. Mobile Suit Gundam F91 is Gundam creator Yoshiyuki Tomino's attempt to launch a new Gundam saga, set thirty years after Char's Counterattack.
The story of Gundam F91 revolves around teenage space colonist Seabook Arno, his friend Cecily Fairchild, and the efforts of the Crossbone Vanguard militia, led by Cecily's grandfather Meitzer Ronah, to establish an aristocracy known as "Cosmo Babylonia".
In keeping with Gundam tradition, the civilian Seabook is forced by circumstance to pilot the F91 Gundam, coincidentally designed in part by his estranged mother, Dr. Monica Arno.
(Source: Wikipedia)
CAST

Cecily Fairchild

Yumi Touma

Seabook Arno

Kouji Tsujitani

Carozzo Ronah

Masaaki Maeda

Meitzer Ronah

Takasugi Teppei

Monica Arno

Miyoko Shouji

Annemarie Bourget

Chie Koujiro

Drosie Mua

Ai Orikasa

Zabine Chareux

Kiyoyuki Yanada

Reese Arno

Sayuri Ikemoto

Migen Maujin

Chie Koujiro

Minmi Editoh

Eriko Chihara

Kochun Hein

Konami Yoshida

Emety Hayes

Yuuko Kobayashi

Dorel Ronah

Takeshi Kusao

Arthur Jung

Taiki Matsuno

Leah Mariba

Yuuko Kobayashi

Nanto Roos

Ryuuzaburou Ootomo

Chris

Akifumi Endou

Leslie Arno

Mikio Terashima

Cosmo Eigesse

Takeshi Watabe

Roy Jung

Tamio Ooki

Dina Jyok

Bobulz

Minoru Inaba

Dwight Camry

Takehito Koyasu

Nadia Ronah

Akiko Tsuboi
RELATED TO KIDOU SENSHI GUNDAM F91
OVA ActionKidou Senshi Gundam UC
MANGA ActionKidou Senshi Gundam F90REVIEWS

CodeBlazeFate
49/100This movie feels like the first special edition recap to a mediocre series we were robbed of.Continue on AniListSpoilers for Gundam F91
Potential is something that can be rather frustrating or even tragic when unfulfilled, depending on the circumstances. If nothing went wrong in terms of production and the product simply wastes its potential thanks to bad writing, it can be rather irritating. For better or for worse, Gundam F91, Yoshiyuki Tomino’s attempt at creating a new UC Gundam saga, is certainly the latter. It's like a rising college football player dying of CTE, with the victim being unable to tap into its potential for reasons far beyond its control. What was planned as a full 52 episode series reduced to a mere 13, and those 13 being gutted to create a film that was clearly not meant to be one. It's ultimately not the movie's fault that it's bad, it was never meant to be one in the first place until executive meddling damned this project.
Installments like this are a testament to the importance of pacing. Since the events of this movie were originally meant to be 13 episodes, it only makes sense that a lot of information and character/world-building would be taken out. Unfortunately, this is of huge detriment to the movie. I mean, starting your saga almost verbatim like the original and having other important similarities is already not much of a good thing, but when character progressions/decisions and deaths are unexplained or not explained well at all, that's when we have a problem. There are multiple emotional scenes in this movie such as the initial attack on the main cast’s homeland, the death of Seabook’s dad, and the reunion of Seabook and his mom, all of which don't leave nearly as much of an impact because the bad pacing didn't allow us to establish anything properly, giving us little time or reason to care before tragedy or even tear-inducing happiness strikes.
There are other problems, some of which also involve cutting. The subplot about Cecily’s earrings goes absolutely nowhere since I think it probably would've become more important later on if this were to have been the 4-cour series this was meant to be, at one point, they cut from the middle of a major battle to a scene way later where Seabook snuck out on his own (how and when did he do that, and where is the city he want back to in relation to the base he and his friends are at?) which raises a ton of problems, even aside from the ones above, since it's probably the worst and most unnecessary cut yet. There is no reason we couldn't have seen Seabook’s first major battle in full since it probably would've only lasted a few more minutes. Did they really need this movie to not go past the two hour mark? If so, there were probably other ways to trim the movie down a bit more. The finale is ok and probably the most interesting part of this movie, but the ride to get there got gutted badly. Regardless, we’re not getting a more fleshed out retelling of this (or the rest of what Tomino wanted this to originally be), and that saddens me because this movie really needed to be the way it was intended for it to actually be good.
As mentioned previously, part of the reason the characters aren't very good is that the pacing doesn't allow us to really get invested in them whatsoever, sullying a lot of the emotional impact behind the drama they face. When the introduction is a bunch of our protagonists bickering at each other, it's hard to really feel a sting when their homeland gets attacked, and when some of them die, not only is it not that impactful since we hardly get to establish a connection with these people before the attack that happens 5 minutes into the movie, but some of these guys we don't see until sometime into the attack, mere minutes before their death. The main villain is a typical royal imperial who doesn't remove his mask or have much of a personality, and the grandfather is only there for a few brief moments and is just a father who has to put on the royal guise of the Rohan family, but there’s hardly much to them. Like with the protagonists I’ll be mentioning, if they allowed this to be as it was intended, we probably could've fleshed them out a bit more to make them more interesting.
Seabook is basically another Amuro Ray in practically every sense of the word, including the fact that a parent of his left to work on the Gundam he would end up piloting by chance. Hell, his mom just appears in the movie with no introduction and then they bond but thanks to the aforementioned issues, it doesn't sell as well as it should. His sister is initially very perceptive of her mom’s true feelings and self for her age but then when she actually meets her she acts like her mom is not a good person, which is rather inconsistent. It's not like the former is realistic for a child but then to switch to the latter for no apparent reason other than their dad dying while escorting Seabook, is really jarring. Cecily is a princess character who hangs out with and sympathizes with the common people, enough so that she initially forsook the throne like her mother did and then did so again just to be with her friends after realizing that the Rohans are just as bad as ever. At least it's a fresh spin on a trope that would be as tired as a sloth. No other character is with really bringing up however, like the typical arrogant prince character, a girl who only switches to the good guy side because her master took interest in Cecily (why she has disdain for her, we'll never know), and her master who has a grudge against the Rohans and let's the good guys go in the end. I don't need to reiterate the potential lost for character building, do I? No? Ok, moving on.
Much like Char's Counterattack, while the writing is lackluster at best, the visuals are some of the best not only in the franchise, but in its respective decade. The character designs look pretty appealing, the mech shading is great, and the action and animation is all very fluid and simply a wonder to look at. The sheer detail and fluidity is something to grasp at and all of this simply executed the best of what 90’s animation had to offer, even though it came out very early into that decade, and it looks even better than Char’s Counterattack, which already had some of the best-looking and most fluidly animated visuals of the 80’s. The mech designs look great as well, especially the F91 and the Vigna Gina (what a laughable name by the way). Even with everything bad I've said about this film, at least it was able to look so gorgeous that to this day, it is still a top contender for the title of most well-animated Gundam anime.
Another similarity between the two films is that the OST isn't that memorable. The OST for F91 is at least better than CCA's due to it sounding more cinematic. I also prefer this film's ED titled "Eternal Wind" to CCA's ED. It's a peaceful yet somewhat emotional track, though I do find it a bit odd that it sounds like it was recorded live instead of how songs usually sound in all non-live venues. Regardless, this is a decent OST for the movie.
Bad pacing and cutting aside, this film feels rather milquetoast, minus the emotional scenes that invariably fail to strike a chord with me. The action was somewhat entertaining and well animated, and it was pretty cool to see all of the new developments in technology since the events of CCA (I especially love the laser flag) but overall, my experience felt rather meh, not even in a borderline zen way but like when you watch a show with your kids and feel nothing other than just “well this is a thing I'm watching”. The fact that I have no real emotion at all during the film barring certain minor points really sells how ineffectual this film really is. It's basically a throwaway movie.
This movie feels like the first special edition recap to a mediocre series we were robbed of. It's a real shame since this was supposed to be a grand and involved jumpstart of a new saga in the Universal Century timeline. We all know the story now, and I think it's really sad what happened here. Now, all we're left with is this unfortunately mediocre movie, regardless of how visually stunning it is. At the same time, what was presented here might not even be compelling if it went as planned. I'm not sure if that hurts more or less than the idea that the material was at all promising. Well, with all that said, I think it's time to bury this one and hope for a revival. Either we hope for that or hope for an adaptation of the Crossbone manga.

09philj
20/100F91 is a sad, butchered mess.Continue on AniListMobile Suit Gundam F91 just made me sad. This is barely a film. It's a collection of scenes from an unfinished TV series hastily slapped together into the shape of a film. There's a chance I might have quite liked that series. It's really rather nicely animated, and the almost coherent first half hour is a pretty engaging depiction of an invasion of a space colony that's suitably brutal and gritty. Then it runs out of road, the wheels come off, and it overturns into a ditch. It feels almost pointless to discuss anything about it beyond how it looks. The mobile suit combat is fast and frenetic and beautiful, as you'd expect from Yoshiyuki Tomino with a good bit of money behind him (except not actually enough to finish the thing), and the new mobile suits are rendered with lovely intricate animation. I like the look of the F91 itself, it's a good solid basic Gundam design, and I appreciate the foldaway beam rifles as a distinctive flourish that sets it apart. However the look of it is the only bright spot because the plot is so hacked to pieces that it's fairly difficult to follow in parts and everything is the worst possible version of what it might have been. There's characters you don't get to spend much meaningful time with, characters that appear and disappear with minimal fanfare, arcs that get compressed into nothing or left unfinished, and constant jarring transitions from one scene or location to the next because either there wasn't space to fit in the scenes that went between them or they simply weren't finished in the first place. Most of the cast end up feeling barely defined because the screentime they were meant to have has been robbed from them, including the protagonist Seabrook. The deuteragonist Cecilia gets more development but since she's the one with the most complex story, one involving a hidden heritage and switching sides multiple times, it's a complete mess. The whole thing feels rushed to an inch of its life, because it is. The main antagonist's plan seems fairly silly and has to be executed with some fairly silly looking devices. I'm not sure that would have worked even in in the extended form of a TV series. As far as I can tell within the confines of the mess that's been served up, I think Tomino seems to have managed to have gotten a slightly better grasp of how normal human beings interact compared to some of his prior entries in the franchise. However that may simply be because I am attributing some of the weirdness to F91 fundamentally not being a finished piece of work, and if it was actually finished it would actually be just as bad as always. Watching the twelve episodes that had been planned with literally just the screenplay to fill in the gaps would be a better experience than this. It is only worth watching for the sake of completion and to imagine what could have been. Just buy the Gunpla of the F91 and do not think about the work it came from any further.

IsNotAChar
60/100A nice looking movie that had potential, but is painfully unfinished.Continue on AniListI was unsure what to score this movie, between 5,6 or 7. Some parts of this movie are really excellent and the art&animation are phenomenal. However, the production disaster behind the movie is on display with the incredibly rushed and patchy plot. I settled on a 6 mostly because, while it is a disaster, it was enjoyable. If you are a gundam fan, it's worth watching if only to see the amazing animation and mobile suit fights and dream of what could've been.
The first 1/4 of the movie is genuinely great as an opening for a gundam series, the middle 1/2 is a complete disaster with some good ideas, the final 1/4 kinda pulls it back together but suffers heavily from a lack of proper build up.
Having watched this, 08th ms team and unicorn all in the English dub, I noticed basically immediately that Seabook (the protagonist) has the same english VA. Overall the dub voice acting was good.
For the first 1/4, there is some of the best looking mobile suit fights in any gundam with a fantastic first battle in the colony primarily from the perspective of civilians. If that had debuted today as the first episode of a new gundam series, I would be very excited. Honestly, it might be worth watching for just that first 40ish minutes.
As it goes on from that amazing start, it quickly starts to fall apart. Things just happen and it's pretty obvious that massive parts of the plot had to be cut. It ends up feeling like watching a clip show or recap of a series. There were a few moments where I had to pause and rewind because I thought I must've missed something, only to find that it was just the movie that had not included whatever scenes were needed to link things together.
Mild spoilers, but there is a character who switches sides in the movie and they're only on screens a couple times before that happens. It feels like it comes out of nowhere. So much of this movie feels like it just comes out of nowhere or, perhaps more accurately, like whatever scenes were meant to build up to that thing were cut.
For the final 1/4, it's a decent conclusion that suffers from lack of buildup. The final villain is painfully underdeveloped. The movie also does the ultimate sin a piece of media can do by ending on a cliffhanger with a "This is only the beginning" only to never get a follow up. (I know crossbone is technically a sequel type thing, but I haven't read it and it isn't animated).
The MS designs were all quite visually appealing. The Crossbone Vanguard MS were all appropriately villainous and avoided being too overtly Zaku clones (Though they were obviously inspired). The final boss MS reminded me of a much much smaller dark/devil gundam, but has this much more inhuman shape - I quite like it. On the Feddies side, an updated Jegan is the main good guy grunt unit. I like the F91 itself, although I'm not picky when it comes to gundams.
Overall, this movie represents a massive waste of potential. It is still somewhat enjoyable, but it is painfully unfinished.
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SCORE
- (3.15/5)
TRAILER
MORE INFO
Ended inMarch 16, 1991
Main Studio Sunrise
Favorited by 131 Users













