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Hunter x Hunter: Phantom Rouge Review - Hit or Miss? | Anime Movie Critique

Hunter x Hunter: Phantom Rouge – A Missed Opportunity Despite the Hype!

Hunter x Hunter's Phantom Rouge: Why the First Movie Fell Short

Hunter x Hunter, created by the legendary Yoshihiro Togashi, is famous for its complex plots and clever twists on shonen tropes, becoming a truly timeless story! The 2011 Madhouse adaptation totally nailed it, leaving fans begging for more. Then came Phantom Rouge, the first Hunter x Hunter movie.  While it looks great, it lacks that signature Hunter x Hunter magic–the deep storytelling, those powerful emotional beats, those surprising reveals that made the show amazing! Non-canon anime movies often serve as great introductions, but Phantom Rouge fails at condensing Togashi's genius into a mere 97 minutes.

The entire series, Hunter x Hunter, is about a world filled with crazy beasts, where the Hunter Society regulates the strongest humans (like the awesome Gon and Kurapika).  Phantom Rouge focuses on Kurapika's revenge against the Phantom Troupe (those dangerous Nen users who killed his whole village). This creates problems; it steps directly onto territory covered in the Yorknew City Arc (which most fans already know).  And instead of improving things it adds pointless plot devices and hollow character growth, failing completely at introducing newcomers AND satisfying longtime fans alike! What a mess.

Also Read: My Hero Academia Ending Is Giving It What Most Shonen Manga Don't: Closure

A Rushed Mess: Pacing and Lore Fail to Deliver

Hunter X Hunter franchise poster Image

Hunter x Hunter perfectly balances Nen's complex mechanics with amazing power displays. Great adaptations like Evangelion 1.0 streamline stories and perfectly work; they brilliantly create entry points for newcomers into really strange and unique worlds; however, Phantom Rouge gets crushed under the sheer weight of its own lore, cramming too many plot points and characters into this very short runtime; making for an extremely messy viewing experience that completely doesn't live up to the show’s expectations and lacks any of those powerful emotional aspects which makes Hunter x Hunter great. This poorly thought out attempt makes the movie a disaster. It doesn't improve its source material; It just poorly recreates them instead.

Here's the basic plot: Someone stole Kurapika's eyes (another clan survivor is to blame, naturally!). Gon and Killua investigate, which brings in the Phantom Troupe.  Then the completely pointless plot details get brought into play – Retsu (this seriously unimpressive character), Omokage and his soul dolls. Those characters don't add value– instead, Retsu's power to create soul doll copies of the Phantom Troupe feels like lazy, wish-fulfillment plot writing.  The movie's attempt to copy a fight between Gon/Killua and Uvogin (from the Yorknew City Arc) completely fails—that original fight had tons of emotional impact, and its copy fails horribly and the scene isn’t anywhere as impactful. The movie completely failed to create that level of intensity and that particular storyline lacked any of the importance expected.

Also Read: Jujutsu Kaisen vs. Naruto: Which Shonen Manga Reigns Supreme?

Overstuffed and Hollow: Animation and Storytelling Fall Flat

That "Hunterpedia" intro is totally needed to explain everything; yet this serves to showcase a deeper, underlying problem: Phantom Rouge splits focus, focusing on Kurapika AND Killua’s mind-controlled storyline taken from the original, completely failing to make any significant use of the extra time available or make changes that might’ve changed things around in a better way; this particular plotline fails at generating that kind of impact originally shown; and ends up completely unmemorable in the larger scheme of this whole series! Even worse, those Soul Doll copies—the film shows tons of characters who get needlessly slaughtered with absolutely no real dramatic tension at all. What's the point?

The animation's off, too! The animation typically uses high-end quality yet looks lesser.   The character models sometimes look kinda messed up, a sign that its production probably suffered cuts or other delays which affected quality, not exactly ideal for what fans might have expected from a higher-budget feature length movie and not quite matching those similar-length productions in those comparable categories.

Also Read: Hunter X Hunter: Unraveling the Mysteries of the Succession War Arc

A Return to the Source Material (That Doesn’t Work Very Well): Manga Revival and Future Possibilities

That entire movie is largely based on unpublished work by Togashi himself – that Kurapika origin story makes the best parts; demonstrating how significant Togashi’s own personal direction on creative aspects truly is for fans. Shonen Jump's decision to give him freedom– releasing his chapters after they’re ready–will greatly affect that consistency for new material going forward, allowing a higher chance for newer adaptations based on the original author's material which is generally something most people prefer! The earlier anime ended at Chairman Election Arc. Yet that’s not the entire Hunter x Hunter story, which could include many more iconic confrontations, like Chrollo vs. Hisoka, the crazy Dark Continent expedition, or that Kakin Empire succession war!

Also Read: Hunter X Hunter Chapter 401: Release Date, Spoilers, and Predictions

Conclusion: Phantom Rouge, a Bleak Reminder of What Could Have Been

Phantom Rouge is a sad missed opportunity! It’s an okay filler, not particularly bad, yet that movie feels as if it is not worthy of its status. That intense pressure that these kinds of high-end products might generate doesn't work without producing quality material and this film failed to live up to those already existing very high expectations. The new Hunter x Hunter manga material however has a high chance of leading to more amazing adaptations! The movie showed only small, trivial sparks which were sadly disappointing and mostly unmemorable for anyone other than those individuals deeply dedicated into the storyline.

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