Locke the Superman (1984) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
3 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
LOCKE THE SUPERMAN - classic Japanese sci-fi animation
BrianDanaCamp14 July 2002
LOCKE THE SUPERMAN (released in the U.S. on VHS as LOCKE THE SUPERPOWER) was one of a number of highly touted space-themed sci-fi animated features made in Japan in the early 1980s, a group that included SPACE ADVENTURE COBRA, ARCADIA OF MY YOUTH, CRUSHER JOE and the GUNDAM and YAMATO movies. LOCKE has a very unusual look and feel and tells a solemn, if action-packed story. Its character design and character movement deliberately hark back to a 1970s style, perhaps reflecting the look of the manga on which it's based. Locke himself, for instance, has the characteristic pointy chin and oversized eyes, topped by huge unwavering tufts of green hair, plus an equally unwavering deadpan expression.

Anime fans who can get past the odd character design will be rewarded with a thoroughly unpredictable tale involving a super psychic in the far future who sides with the Earth Federation against a hostile galactic organization of super psychics in training. The story takes its hero to all sorts of planets and orbiting space stations for a series of confrontations with a crew of killer psychics recruited by the elusive Lady Kahn and her chief lieutenant, Cornelia Prim, who develops an attraction to Locke in the course of their sparring. It all culminates in a suspenseful climax aboard a massive sphere housing Lady Kahn's inner circle that faces an outer danger that can only be averted if the combatants join their powers and work together.

Locke is a most intriguing anime superhero who is over 100 years old, so we're told, yet maintains the image of a teenaged boy. He is adorned in a series of attractive costumes that can best be described as futuristic medieval. He is a super-powered psychic able to teleport himself, create force fields, read minds and project thoughts. He is powerful enough to defeat any opponent until he encounters Lady Cahn's prize pupil Jessica, who is tormented by a repeated flashback of Locke shooting and killing her parents, all a result of psychic manipulation by Lady Kahn. Jessica is sent to infiltrate the good guys by having her enter a Federation hospital as an amnesiac so she can get close to the Federation's chief operative, and Locke's contact, Ryu Yamaki. The plan goes awry when Jessica and Ryu fall in love, creating a sweet romantic subplot in contrast with the otherwise frenetic goings-on.

LOCKE THE SUPERPOWER, the English dubbed version available on VHS in the U.S., had its title changed from LOCKE THE SUPERMAN for obvious reasons--no one wants a lawsuit from the Man of Steel!--although all the dialogue still refers to the character as "Locke the Superman." It is considerably shorter (by 29 minutes) than the 120-minute Japanese release version. A comparison with the Japanese-language tape reveals many additional dialogue scenes that might have cleared up some of the confusion arising from the overplotted screenplay. Also, numerous bits of violence, gore and nudity are edited out of the English dub to make the film more family-friendly (it was marketed by Celebrity Home Entertainment as a children's video!). The color is somewhat muted in the U.S. tape. Another major problem is the extremely poor quality of the English dub, with the voice actors reading their lines as if for the first time. Furthermore, the soft, sparing, romantic quality of the original music has been drowned out by an intrusive, tacked-on electronic score. If any anime feature cries out for re-release in its complete form in its original language, it's this one.

ADDENDUM (12/21/15): Since the above review appeared, this film has come out in a sparkling new DVD edition under its original title from Discotek/Eastern Star, complete and uncut, containing both the Japanese language track, with English subs, and the same English dub as the VHS edition, although the music track sounds better. Watching the film in Japanese on DVD was like seeing it for the first time. As anime sci-fi features go, LOCKE THE SUPERMAN is definitely in the top tier.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Brilliant for its time.
TJThayer3426 August 2002
For the 1980's, this classical piece of Japanese animation was well-done & brilliant. A unique form of character design helped it stand out from the rest of the animated features of its time. This was one of the few features that got me hooked on Japanese animation. It was in 1992, when I lived in Rockland, Maine, that I found this video in a small family-owned video store and was in a desperate search for Anime stuff & saw this on a sale rack for $9.99.....I got it a week later and that's what started my collection! The sequel, "Space Warriors" was not as exciting in story-line, but the animation was still true to the original. The voice-acting wasn't too exciting either. BUT, Locke the Superman from 1984 will still reign supreme for its time!
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Lovable classic!
tjranma18 May 2004
With the earlier forms of Anime, or Japanese Animation to the uninitiated, from Voltron, Tranzor Z, and Yamato, I have to say that Locke the Superman was among the uniquely done animated features of its time. I purchased a copy of the video back in 1992 for a mere $10.00 from a local video store. I had been searching all over Maine for something Japanese animated after watching Osamu Tezuka's "Unico" on the Disney channel. I became instantly addicted to the style! That was in 1988. After finding the feature, I watched it once & was surprised at how well-done Yuki Hijiri did in creating Locke & the other characters! KUDOS to Hijiri-san for a job well done!
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed