TAILENDERS
MOVIE
Dubbed
SOURCE
ORIGINAL
RELEASE
October 16, 2009
LENGTH
27 min
DESCRIPTION
On Tellus, a half-explored planet inhabited by immigrant pioneers and plagued by terraforming machine-induced earthquakes known as the "Stampedes", a promising young racer named Shiro suffers life-threatening injuries while chasing after the legendary "Loser King" alongside his lifelong rival, Goodspeed. On his deathbed, he is visited by a mysterious woman calling herself Tomoe, who gives him a second chance in life in exchange for participating in The Planet Re-Development Race - an annual event where daredevil mavericks from all across the globe gather not just in pursuit of an enormous amount of prize money, but to explore what lies in the unexplored parts of the planet.
Note: An unfinished pilot version was shown at the 2009 Sapporo International Film Festival, and a preview screening of the completed pilot version was held on November 27, 2010. On January 28th, 2011, it was released on Blu-Ray and DVD.
CAST
Tomoe Mikagura
Ryouka Yuzuki
Shiro Tomoe
Wataru Hatano
Goodspeed
Kenta Miyake
Izou Hinomoto
Ryuusuke Oobayashi
Johnny Needle
Kyosuke Suzuki
Donguri Bros
Hideki Nakanishi
Loser King
Ryuusuke Oobayashi
Max Safety
Kenta Miyake
Joshu
Kyosuke Suzuki
Donguri Bros
Kazuya Kobayashi
Old Man
Nobuaki Kanemitsu
Guero London
Nobuaki Kanemitsu
Narrator
Kazuya Kobayashi
REVIEWS
megafat
78/100An anime that might not be quite as good as Redline, but tries it's hardest and succeeds.Continue on AniListBack in 2009, when Redline was released, it got a lot of praise and attention for it’s fantastic animation and artstyle as well as it’s great fast paced action and colorful characters. But there was another similar highly stylized and fast paced racing anime that was released around the same time. That went relatively unnoticed due to the attention that Redline was getting. That anime was Tailenders, released only two months after Redline.
The plot takes place on planet Terulus, long after terraformers were used to try and repair the environment, only for them to go haywire and ravage the surface of the planet for centuries, creating mutations to the wildlife and devastating earthquakes. Because of this, giant cities that could drive around the planets surface were created to house what was left of the population.
One of the biggest past times is a racing competition. The dream of every racer to beat the track records held by Loser King, who disappeared a century ago. Shiro, one of the top racers, is horribly injured by a stampede. A mysterious woman walks in and offers him the chance to race again by replacing his heart with the engine from his own car. Soon, Shiro finds himself trying to win the Planet Redevelopment Race and try to beat the Loser King’s record times.
Even though it’s not much longer than the average episode of a TV series, Tailenders tells a satisfying enough story in it’s run time that i didn’t really mind it’s length. Sure, it’s not going to have a lot of character or story depth, but Tailenders wasn’t trying to have that. The characters are well defined enough within the constraints of the short that all of them are enjoyable despite their simplicity.
The short’s world definitely feels like a world despite simply being a setup for it’s plot. Tailenders wants to tell a simple fun story and it does it pretty well. I wish it was slightly longer so it’s pacing could be a bit better, but it’s a minor issue. I can’t really talk about the plot beyond the initial premise since it’s less than 30 minutes, but it was satisfying for what it is.
The art and animation is top notch. The artstyle is a little more over the top than Redline’s, which helps differentiate it enough from Redline that you won’t mistake them from each other. I could see how it could grate on someone more than Redline’s artstyle, as it seems less refined. But it comes down to personal preference, and i had no problem with it.
Tailenders didn’t have the budget or development time that Redline did, and it doesn’t quite reach the peaks that Redline did, but it does fit a lot into it’s scant 27 minutes long running time. It also didn’t recieve quite the same attention either, which is a shame, because Tailenders is definitely worth a watch, as it’s can be just as fun as Redline.
CaptainZaimon
100/10027 minutes of pure high-octane awesomeness and raw emotion, brought to you by a small team of talented artists.Continue on AniListMade over the course of two years by Picograph, a team of just four(!) incredibly talented people, Tailenders is a short yet surprisingly stylish and warm story about two things - the way people resonate with each other and the way people change, or rather - adapt. And how constant that change is, how we cope with it, and whatnot.
Set on a planet vastly different from ours, most of which consists of a scarcely populated desert wasteland, the "Wheeled Cities", populated with immigrant pioneers, travel across the planet, with their goal always being the same - getting away from "Stampede", a natural phenomenon caused by a machine that humanity once tried to use to terraform the planet into a less hostile environment - indeed, it's not just a regular animal-induced stampede, but a gigantic earthquake that destroys entire cities and leaves pure chaos and ruin in its wake.
Unfortunately, it occurs during a race which our protags attend - one of them, Tomoe, happens to be watching the event together with her pushover sidekick assistant, and Shiro, an ambitious racer, well, drives right into the Stampede's epicenter together with his lifelong rival Goodspeed, the two trying to beat the mythical racer Loser King's record and ultimately falling to their doom in pursuit of their dreams, sustaining life-threatening injuries.
Tomoe, however, sees this as a perfect opportunity - the time has come for her to test out the Tomoe Drive, an experimental half-heart implant half-engine thingamajig. Interrupting Shiro's emergency medical procedure, she gives him a once-in-a-lifetime (quite literally) opportunity - either he stays here and dies on the operating table he's lying on, or she gets to save his life and, in the process, fulfill her vision of being the perfect candidate to make use of her latest invention.
All he has to do in return - if he accepts - is to take part in the Planet Re-Development Race, an annual event that brings together criminals, aristocrats, madmen, TV personalities, explorers, pizza delivery guys and everything in between (no, seriously - every single racer has a full name and bio on the official website and they range from a parody of The Stig to a prisoner on death row who rides in her own execution room on wheels hoping to get pardoned for her streak of murders if she wins - I find it incredible how even background characters with 5 seconds of screen time have entire backstories, goals and gimmicks, however brief their appearances and how minor their roles might be). On top of that, it's said Loser King will be there too, as mysterious and unexplained as his sightings are. Naturally, this tempts Shiro enough to sell his soul to this devil of a woman, and the two embark on what's not just a race, but a test of their resolve, ambitions and ideals alike.
As for how the race goes and what the two get from it - I'll leave that for you to explore. There are a few things of note that I'd like to direct your attention towards, though.
1) The art direction in general. TAILENDERS is not just profoundly stylish and over-the-top, but uniquely charming in both its aesthetics and vibe. Part of me wants to say it feels like a mix of several different 90s-2000s aesthetics: you have the stylish urban punk look that evokes something like the Jet Set Radio series, No More Heroes or Dead Leaves, you have the over-the-top cogs, piping and machinery that call forth the vibes of Tim Burton's works, American McGee's Alice series, or even obscure tabletop RPGs of that era, such as Malifaux. I wouldn't say they were 100% directly inspired, but rather, that Tailenders feels VERY MUCH like something made in the late 2000s in the best way possible.
Funnily enough, though, I can't help but notice a similarity between the Planet Re-Development Race's logo and the Desire Grand Prix logo from 2022's Kamen Rider Geats. Goes to show some aesthetics are eternally charming and liked by artists and graphic designers alike, I think.
I've seen some comparisons being made to REDLINE - and frankly, much as I agree with that sentiment, I wouldn't call it a better/worse/discount REDLINE by any means. Rather, they are two pieces of media that embody the time period they were made in, and it just so happens both of them tell the story of a race taking place on an alien planet, where all sorts of freaks and weirdos compete - I'd say the similarities just show us that things like racing, alien planets and cheering on for candidates of a competition are something so widely appreciated and deemed cool that it's no surprise many different artists would make use of them. If anything, it's interesting how vastly different two movies made with a very similar idea in mind manage to be, and how distinct their respective focus is, what different themes they explore. I will say, though - if you loved REDLINE, you'll most likely love TAILENDERS, and vice versa. Even if they were inspired by each other, I think it's very much a "two cakes!" type deal.
On top of that, I can't help but notice how much of a role colors play - scenes full of hype and action are kept in warm color schemes, ones with a more relaxed or mysterious atmosphere are kept in a variety of colder ones, and the desert keeps treating us to an array of yellows, blacks and grays, often complimenting the wide plethora of colors and aesthetics each different racer adopts.
The vehicles all look like they were either Lego Racers rejects, or a Transformers character from Japan's Superlink series. In fact, the car Tomoe and Shiro drive together instantly made me think of Red Alert from that line! I can't help but wonder if the creators were influenced by him - there's a photo from their makeshift studio of sorts available on the official site that seems to have a bunch of robot figurines on one of the creators' shelves, so y'know, maybe. Just maybe.
2) The characters. As I've said, I already find it nice that even 5-second Literal Whos get a little bio and writeup on the official site - even if we disregard that, the movie itself's cast is nothing to sneeze at, either. Neither Tomoe nor Shiro feel like the "true" main character, nor are they accessories for one another - it feels like they're both given equal importance, making for a remarkably fun experience, as we're given insights into the personality, goals and inner thoughts of our male and female lead in equal amounts. You can interpret it as the hotblooded protagonist and his manic pixie engineer girlfriend just as much as you can interpret it as this stylish dominant genius woman and her musclebrained himbo boyfriend going on a ride that blends their ambitions and circumstances into a grand adventure. Their personalities bounce off each other extraordinarily well, making for a fun dynamic that I can't get enough of.
As I've mentioned, while I wouldn't compare Shiro to Sweet from REDLINE and rather say that he's an embodiment of many 90s-2000s protag vibes that permeated the era, I do have to admit Tomoe reminded me heavily of another extraordinarily well-written female character - Devonea "Dr Necro" Violet from KEYMAN. Without going into spoilers for either work, I just think it's interesting how they're both geniuses with insane amounts of charm, but also, a bit of regrets, stemming from their creatorial - perhaps equally motherly, even - links to their settings' respective antagonists, as well as the issues and vices that come with an intellect and passion held back by inherently human parts of themselves and embodied by their lifelong regrets.
Oh, and they smirk the same way.
Loser King and Goodspeed are inherently fascinating, too - with Loser King being not just a character, but rather, an embodiment of an unattainable goal for many, as well as a haunting reminder of many people's past mistakes and dreams, and Goodspeed being more of a simple man that never loses track of what's important in life no matter how much he changes or what new records he beats. He's also a very honorable man, playfully having a little back-and-forth with Shiro rather than openly mocking him and treating him like he's any worse than him for challenging something unbeatable and insane to try and fathom.
3) The worldbuilding and narrative. Despite being just 27 minutes, we're given more than enough info on how the world works, unique concepts like the Wheeled Cities, Stampedes and the Terraformer, and none of it feels inserted randomly or tacked on last minute - it all feels so awesomely planned out that I feel like the four creators truly had not just a vision, but unbridled creativity that, thankfully, found an outlet in the form of this short flick. On top of that, it's not just purely focused on its inherent stylish-ness - there's also a story being told, and one hell of a story at that - a philosophical rant about how things change, how people resonate with each other, and how humanity adapts to anything life throws at it, and will continue to do so however long even a single human's left alive, no matter how much they're told "oh, it's pointless", "oh, you're insane", "oh, nothing will ever change" and so on. In a way, this whole movie feels like an adaptation of Insane Clown Posse's song Forever:
This life is tricky, mean, and strange
You can only be sure about one thing: change
For worse or for better... Maintain
Catch wisdom, try to gain brainsMix a melancholic yet profoundly warm life lesson with a quartet of thoroughly dedicated and unique artists, and you have a winning combination - a story that not only manages to be a perfect product of its time in the best way possible, but also, have an identity of its own that I can't help but love anytime I come back to it. In just 27 minutes, you get all the 2000s energy you could wish for, as well as a really sweet story of two people (and a third wheel) understanding how change is an inherent part of life, and nothing feels quite as satisfying as finding somebody who shares your ideals in an ever-changing world and never abandons their dreams the same way you do.
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TRAILER
MORE INFO
Ended inOctober 16, 2009
Main Studio Picograph
Favorited by 29 Users