

A virtual world in a scab coral (coral-like information life form) created by Eureka. Ten years have passed since the people of the virtual world appeared on this earth with the collapse. As a result of this “great fusion”, human beings in the virtual world call themselves “Green Earth”, and human beings on the old Earth call themselves “Blue Earth”, and various collisions will be repeated under the surface of the water. And Dewey Novak, a high-ranking official of the Green Earth Army, raises up with his colleagues to protect their dignity and finally puts into action a large-scale terrorist program.
Direction
Kyoda's messy ambition—weird, gorgeous, occasionally incomprehensible.
Cinematography
Underwater mecha battles that look like drowning in stained glass.
Score
Still using 'Days' to emotionally destroy you, thank you very much.
Director
Tomoki Kyoda
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Hi-Evolution trilogy spent years in production hell; this final film was delayed twice and reportedly had significant staff changes mid-production.
The 'Green Earth/Blue Earth' split mirrors real-world discourse around climate refugees and resource nationalism—deliberate, but the film is too busy being pretty to fully explore it.