Los Angeles Times

Day-Glo fantasia of bright action

- — Charles Solomon

In contrast to the detailed realism of many recent American animated features, Hiroyuki Imaishi’s “Promare” explodes onto the screen in a dizzying burst of flamboyant color, stylized designs and overthe-top action.

“Promare” is set on an Earth that was partly incinerate­d when some humans mutated into the “Burnished,” who wielded powerful flames. The ensuing conflict ended with the Burnished being relegated to the fringes of society.

When elegant Lio Fotia (Johnny Yong Bosch in the English-language version) organizes the surviving Burnished to fight their oppressors, he comes into conflict with the Burning Rescue Fire Department and ace firefighte­r Galo Thymos (Billy Kametz). Like Kamina in Imaishi’s popular series “Gurren Lagann,” Galo charges headlong into action, proclaimin­g he’s gotta do what a guy’s gotta do.

Much of the film is devoted to the frenetic battle between Lio and Galo, until a more insidious villain is unmasked. The story takes some odd turns, but most viewers will be too mesmerized by the Day-Glo colors and bizarre visuals to care.

After seeing every leaf on every bush in so many features, it’s fun to sit back and enjoy a film that pushes its look and palette beyond mere reality to create a fantasy world that could exist only in animation.

“Promare.” In Japanese with English subtitles; also dubbed in English. Rated: PG-13, for some violence and language. Running time: 1 hour, 51 minutes. Playing: AMC Citywalk Stadium 19, AMC Galleria At South Bay 16, Redondo Beach; AMC Ontario Mills 30, Ontario.

 ?? GKids ?? GALO is an ace firefighte­r in the Burning Rescue Fire Department who charges headlong into the fray.
GKids GALO is an ace firefighte­r in the Burning Rescue Fire Department who charges headlong into the fray.

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