
あらすじ
幼い頃からフットボール選手に憧れ、ノートルダム大学の名門チームでプレーすることを夢見ていたルディ。経済的な事情と学力不足から進学を諦めかけていたルディだったが、唯一の理解者だった親友の死をきっかけに、再び夢に向かうことを決意する。
作品考察・見どころ
AIが作品の魅力を深く読み解いています

幼い頃からフットボール選手に憧れ、ノートルダム大学の名門チームでプレーすることを夢見ていたルディ。経済的な事情と学力不足から進学を諦めかけていたルディだったが、唯一の理解者だった親友の死をきっかけに、再び夢に向かうことを決意する。
AIが作品の魅力を深く読み解いています
It started off with a big war and lots of action. Ships, canons, battles and massacres, but that was only for the first 5-6 before dialing back the clock to the very beginning of the ML's childhood days and turning the drama into a massive snoozefest. That was a massive bait to hook the viewers in. It took 1 singular eternity before the drama managed to pick itself back up. The entire first half was the admiral backstory with little to no action. You don't get to see the admiral in action and you don't get to see what the drama promised until the second half which is way too delayed to stick around for. The production value is acceptable when taking into account that this was made 20 years ago. It's a bit scuffed but they had to work with what they had. It wouldn't matter much because that only shows with the action/battle scenes of which there were only a few (out of the 104 episodes). One of the most jarring things that is holding the drama back, aside from the aforementioned points, is its characters. A lot of characters got benched regularly regardless of their importance, relevance and prior investment. Making emotional scenes less impactful and key characters less memorable. Which also takes away from every climax and transition period. This is due to a combination of uneven pacing, long runtime, and frequent transitions. By the end, it seemed everyone was expendable, other than the male lead of course. On the other spectrum, the drama had a lot of anime-esque villain moments that I wish we had a lot less of.