Paradigm City: Difference between revisions
cleanup |
more cleanup |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
<!-- End of AfD message, feel free to edit beyond this point --> |
<!-- End of AfD message, feel free to edit beyond this point --> |
||
[[Image:Paradigm City.JPG|thumb|240px|An [[aerial shot]] of Paradigm City. The city is based on the island of [[Manhattan]] and is suggested to be [[New York City]] itself.<ref>''The Big O Visual'': Official Companion to "The Big-O" TV series (ISBN 4-57-529579-5), p. 39.</ref>]] |
[[Image:Paradigm City.JPG|thumb|240px|An [[aerial shot]] of Paradigm City. The city is based on the island of [[Manhattan]] and is suggested to be [[New York City]] itself.<ref>''The Big O Visual'': Official Companion to "The Big-O" TV series (ISBN 4-57-529579-5), p. 39.</ref>]] |
||
'''Paradigm City''' is the main setting of the |
'''Paradigm City''' is a fictional city-state which serves as the main setting of the [[anime]] series ''[[The Big O]]''. Located on a sea coast and surrounded by a vast desert wasteland, the partially [[geodesic dome|dome]]d city is wholly controlled by the monopolistic Paradigm Corporation. ''The Big O'' takes place forty years after "The Event," an unknown occurrence which destroys the world outside the city and leaves the survivors with no memories. |
||
In the final episodes of the series, the city's is implied to have been a fabrication produced by an unknown power. |
|||
The city is is essentially a city-state, characterized by severe class inequity; the higher-income population resides inside the more pleasant [[geodesic domes]], with the remainder living outside. At times during the series [[List of the Big O characters#Alex Rosewater|Alex Rosewater]], head of the Paradigm Corporation, suggests that he is either indifferent to those living outside the domes or that he believes the city would be better off without them. Crops are grown on fields contained within outlying domes, such as the fields of wheat and tomatoes owned by the retired Gordon Rosewater. |
|||
⚫ | [[Android]]s coexist with the human inhabitants of Paradigm City; while their numbers are fairly low, and they're something of a rarity, there are enough of them that denizens of the city are not shocked by them and don't consider it particularly unusual to encounter one.<ref>{{citation |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=WiLuAAAAMAAJ |title=Television cartoon shows: an illustrated encyclopedia |volume=1 |author=Hal Erickson}}</ref> |
||
In the final episodes of the series, enormous, megadeus-sized stage lamps were observed suspended from a structure high above the city, reinforcing the suggestion that the city is a stage, although the population is unaware of them as they are normally concealed by clouds. |
|||
== Location == |
== Location == |
||
Several buildings and structures shown in the series |
Several buildings and structures shown in the series suggest that Paradigm City may be modeled after or even that ''be'' [[New York City]]: |
||
* In episode 1 (''Roger the Negotiator''), as Roger is traveling to the site of the meeting with Beck, the [[World Trade Center]] towers can be seen in the distance. (The series premiered in Japan before the attacks of [[September 11, 2001 attacks|September 11, 2001]].) |
* In episode 1 (''Roger the Negotiator''), as Roger is traveling to the site of the meeting with Beck, the [[World Trade Center]] towers can be seen in the distance. (The series premiered in Japan before the attacks of [[September 11, 2001 attacks|September 11, 2001]].) |
||
Line 26: | Line 22: | ||
* Whenever he visits Big Ear, Roger drives over what appears to be the [[Brooklyn Bridge]] |
* Whenever he visits Big Ear, Roger drives over what appears to be the [[Brooklyn Bridge]] |
||
* In one of the last two episodes Roger sees Vera in what appears to be [[Lincoln Tunnel]]. |
* In one of the last two episodes Roger sees Vera in what appears to be [[Lincoln Tunnel]]. |
||
Although Paradigm City might be New York City, or an imitation of it, it is much more expansive than the New York City of today. While there are recognizable landmarks from New York City's past, (i.e. the Grand Central Terminal) building apparently expanded in all directions and within the old boundaries itself. Because the city's population only fill about half the city, giant robot battles that cause massive property damage aren't much of a problem, as they either destroy abandoned buildings, or people displaced from destroyed buildings can easily find more that are available. |
|||
== City layout == |
== City layout == |
||
=== Domes and main city === |
=== Domes and main city === |
||
Each dome in Paradigm City has its own |
Each dome in Paradigm City has its own "sun," a source of artificial light that orbits along a track along the inside span of the dome (bright and direct sunlight is considered something of a luxury, the city having been under a near-constant state of overcast ever since the Event). The structure of the domes is conventional; they appear to be built of heavy steel girders. The largest is Paradigm Dome at the city center; it contains the Paradigm Corporation headquarters. Crops are grown in certain outlying domes, such as the fields of wheat and tomatoes owned by the retired Gordon Rosewater. |
||
In the final episodes of the series, enormous, megadeus-sized stage lamps are observed suspended from a massive gridlike structure high above the city, suggesting that the city may be stage set. Prior to |
In the final episodes of the series, enormous, [[megadeus]]-sized stage lamps are observed suspended from a massive gridlike structure high above the city, suggesting that the entire city city may be an elaborate stage set. Prior to this the population is unaware of them, as they are normally concealed by clouds. |
||
=== Underground === |
=== Underground === |
||
Subways and other tunnels predating the Event are abandoned, as the entire population harbors an irrational fear of going below ground. Roger Smith shares this phobia, though he is willing to use the old subway system as a method of quickly transporting Big O around Paradigm City as needed: an immense tank-like vehicle that contains the Big O, the Prairie Dog, uses the subway tracks to deliver and (on a platform) elevate the Big O, so that it may burst forth from underground. The phobia prevents anyone from tracking Big O's movements to Roger's house. In episode 4, Roger ventures further down than he ever had before, and finds that the deeper one goes the newer the surroundings become; more recent installations exist below older ones. Thus while the tunnels near the surface are simply old subway lines, one very deep down are from right before the Event itself, and house remnant exotic technologies unknown on the surface such as the ruined Archetype megadeus found by [[Schwarzwald]]. |
|||
=== Coastline === |
=== Coastline === |
||
A large portion of the city is also submerged in shallow water just off the coast. It appears that during the Event there was either a massive rise in sea levels or an earh movement causing a large portion of the city to sink into the sea, or both. Taller buildings can still be seen protruding from the water. The submerged city acts as a large artificial reef, attracting a large amount and variety of fish and other ocean life, which is harvested to help feed the city's population. Submarines are largely unknown, though the Paradigm Corporation |
A large portion of the city is also submerged in shallow water just off the coast. It appears that during the Event there was either a massive rise in sea levels or an earh movement causing a large portion of the city to sink into the sea, or both. Taller buildings can still be seen protruding from the water. The submerged city acts as a large artificial reef, attracting a large amount and variety of fish and other ocean life, which is harvested to help feed the city's population. Submarines are largely unknown, though the Paradigm Corporation a operates a corps of frogmen. |
||
In the final episodes of the series, Roger (in Big O) falls into the sea. Deep below the submerged portion of the city, he sees what appears to a system of gigantic gears and mechanical equipment below the ruins, lending support to the theory that the entire city itself, even the old submerged ruins, may just be a fabrication. |
In the final episodes of the series, Roger (in Big O) falls into the sea. Deep below the submerged portion of the city, he sees what appears to a system of gigantic gears and mechanical equipment below the ruins, lending support to the theory that the entire city itself, even the old submerged ruins, may just be a fabrication. |
||
== Inland == |
|||
⚫ | Beyond Paradigm City, there is nothing, with the possible exception of the Union: the Event forty years ago apparently turned the rest of the world into an endless desert. However, a settlement called "Electric City" exists inland, in a stretch of hilly forest beside a large lake and river that appears to lead to Paradigm City, whose domes and skyscrapers can clearly be seen a short distance off. It is possible that Electric City was a [[suburb]] or fringe city of Paradigm. Big O is able to be transported to this area via the underground, suggesting that Electric City has access to the Paradigm City subway system. |
||
== Culture == |
== Culture == |
||
The inhabitants of Paradigm City appear to only remember bits and pieces of what religion was like before the Event, though numerous episodes show its inhabitants practicing [[Christianity]], or at least Christianity in some shape or form, as people congregate in meeting places with crucifixes prominently displayed. However, it is revealed in episode 11 that almost no one remembers [[Christmas]]. Several cathedrals stand in ruins and forgotten, although some of the elderly occasionally feel compelled to stand in front of them and sing scraps of hymns. Half based on vague memories of a holiday on December 25th, and half as a celebration to commemorate the founding of Paradigm City, Christmas is known as "Heaven's Day". |
|||
⚫ | The city is characterized by severe class inequity; the higher-income population resides inside the more pleasant [[geodesic domes]], with the remainder left in tenements outside. [[Android]]s coexist with the human inhabitants of Paradigm City; while their numbers are fairly low, and they're something of a rarity, there are enough of them that denizens of the city are not shocked by them and don't consider it particularly unusual to encounter one.<ref>{{citation |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=WiLuAAAAMAAJ |title=Television cartoon shows: an illustrated encyclopedia |volume=1 |author=Hal Erickson}}</ref> |
||
Heaven's Day is a secular holiday, which started out as an annual celebration of the founding of the city by giving bread and wine to the poor. As the city grew more prosperous over the course of 40 years, people started giving presents to the ones they loved, and it grew into a commercial shopping extravaganza not unlike modern day Christmas celebrations. The inhabitants of the city still put up generic Christmas decorations like decorated Christmas trees and streamers, but they don't really know the underlying reason behind all of this. |
|||
Several episodes show inhabitants of Paradigm City practicing some shape or form of [[Christianity]], as people congregate in meeting places with crucifixes prominently displayed. A cathedral is shown in ruins and forgotten, although some elderly people occasionally feel compelled to stand in front of it and sing scraps of hymns. However, it is revealed in episode 11 that almost no one remembers [[Christmas]]. |
|||
⚫ | Alex Rosewater seems to be the only character with knowledge of pre-Event Christianity. Dastun at one point mentions that Rosewater had in his |
||
⚫ | A holiday is observed on December 25th, but as a celebration to commemorate the founding of Paradigm City, known as "Heaven's Day." The inhabitants of the city still put up generic Christmas decorations like decorated Christmas trees and streamers, but they don't really know the underlying reason behind all of this. Alex Rosewater seems to be the series' only character with knowledge of pre-Event Christianity. Dastun at one point mentions that Rosewater had in his possession fragments of a "[[Book of Revelations]]," although neither Dastun nor Roger had previously heard of it. It is possible that Rosewater also has other fragments of [[The Bible]], as Rosewater describes the real meaning of Heaven's Day as being "the day God's son was born." |
||
== Factions == |
== Factions == |
||
=== Paradigm Corporation === |
=== Paradigm Corporation === |
||
[[Image:Paradigm_Corporation_Emblem.png|thumb|90px|Paradigm Corporation logo]] |
[[Image:Paradigm_Corporation_Emblem.png|thumb|90px|Paradigm Corporation logo]] |
||
⚫ | The Paradigm Corporation is run by Alex Rosewater, son of Gordon Rosewater, the original founder of both the city and corporation. Though there is a Senate, the Paradigm Corporation <i>de facto</i> runs the city; the Military Police are answerable to it (through its "Justice Division"). The company contains other divisions, such as Paradigm Press and Paradigm Laboratories. |
||
⚫ | The Paradigm Corporation is run by Alex Rosewater, son of |
||
The company's logo is a stylized P, in a combination of [[Art-Deco]] and interwar [[Modernist]] styles. Its headquarters are in a vaguelly [[Babel]]-like axial tower, at the center and protruding through the top of the city's largest dome. |
The company's logo is a stylized P, in a combination of [[Art-Deco]] and interwar [[Modernist]] styles. Its headquarters are in a vaguelly [[Babel]]-like axial tower, at the center and protruding through the top of the city's largest dome. |
||
=== Military Police === |
=== Military Police === |
||
The Military Police act both in a military capacity, in defense against exotic (i.e. gigantic) threats, and as a police force, in |
The Military Police act both in a military capacity, in defense against exotic (i.e. gigantic) threats, and as a police force, in the course of regular law enforcement activities. The series' most visible MP officer is Major Dan Dastun, later promoted to Colonel. Roger Smith was once a member of the military police, and partner to Dastun. The Military Police is fragmented by a crisis of loyalty near the end of the series, with Dastun and a large fraction of the force supporting Roger Smith against an insane Alex Rosewater. |
||
=== The Union === |
=== The Union === |
||
The Union is a group of |
The Union is a group of foreigners, believed to be the last remnants of the global civilization that was (outside of Paradigm City) destroyed by the Event. They are unknown to the city's inhabitants, who consider the idea of surviving "foreigners" a myth. Though their exact location and origin are unknown, many appear to be European (some appear familiar with the [[French language]], which is a dead language to the residents of Paradigm). Like the residents of the city itself, the members of the Union also apparently lost their memories after the Event, suggesting that the mass amnesia was a worldwide phenomenon. Some members of the Union live in Paradigm City, posing as regular citizens of almost all social classes and careers (including the Military Police). Angel is a citizen or member of the Union, though Roger is fairly soon after meeting her able to discern that she is not a native of Paradigm City. |
||
The Union's goal is seek out and recover their lost memories, which they believe may reside in Paradigm City, towards which end they engage in a combination of violence, namely terrorist bombings, and subterfuge, namely a secret treaty with Alex Rosewater. Although they apparently have control of a contingent of Megadei that they have found in the wastelands, as well as an impressive air force (something that Paradigm severely lacks), they are numerically and materially at a great disadvantage compared to the city. |
The Union's goal is seek out and recover their lost memories, which they believe may reside in Paradigm City, towards which end they engage in a combination of violence, namely terrorist bombings, and subterfuge, namely a secret treaty with Alex Rosewater. Although they apparently have control of a contingent of Megadei that they have found in the wastelands, as well as an impressive air force (something that Paradigm severely lacks), they are numerically and materially at a great disadvantage compared to the city. |
||
Towards the end of the series, the true nature of the Union and of their status as foreigners is brought into question; indications are given that the group may have been created and manipulated by the Paradigm Corporation all along. There are also indications the Union agents' memories of having grown up in a foreign land may be fabrications, and that their entire childhoods may have been |
Towards the end of the series, the true nature of the Union and of their status as foreigners is brought into question; indications are given that the group may have been created and manipulated by the Paradigm Corporation all along. There are also indications the Union agents' memories of having grown up in a foreign land may be fabrications, and that their entire childhoods may have been falsified. High-ranking Union member Vera Ronstadt suggests that the Union infiltrators are really Gordon Rosewater's "tomatoes," clones of the city's founding senators, supposedly possessing their memories, though Gordon himself contradicts this. If this interpretation is true, it suggest that there is literally nothing beyond the wastelands that surround Paradigm City. |
||
== Electric City == |
|||
⚫ | |||
== Beyond the city == |
|||
Beyond Paradigm City, there is nothing, with the possible exception of the Union: the Event forty years ago apparently turned the rest of the world into an endless desert, and the city is believed to be all that remains, to the point that its inhabitants scoff at the idea of surviving "foreigners" as simply myth. |
|||
== References == |
== References == |
Revision as of 04:38, 11 March 2010
An editor has nominated this article for deletion. You are welcome to participate in the deletion discussion, which will decide whether or not to retain it. |
Paradigm City is a fictional city-state which serves as the main setting of the anime series The Big O. Located on a sea coast and surrounded by a vast desert wasteland, the partially domed city is wholly controlled by the monopolistic Paradigm Corporation. The Big O takes place forty years after "The Event," an unknown occurrence which destroys the world outside the city and leaves the survivors with no memories.
In the final episodes of the series, the city's is implied to have been a fabrication produced by an unknown power.
Location
Several buildings and structures shown in the series suggest that Paradigm City may be modeled after or even that be New York City:
- In episode 1 (Roger the Negotiator), as Roger is traveling to the site of the meeting with Beck, the World Trade Center towers can be seen in the distance. (The series premiered in Japan before the attacks of September 11, 2001.)
- In episode 5 (Bring Back My Ghost), it is mentioned that Officer Fraizer fell into the Hudson River.
- In episode 8 (Missing Cat)), the antagonist's base is in what appears to be the American Museum of Natural History.
- In episode 12 (Enemy Is Another Big!), one of the battle scenes is supposedly fought at the ruins of the JFK airport and is mentioned as JFK Mark by Dan Dastun (the ruins are at the edge of the wastelands, which suggests that almost everything beyond the airport ruins has been destroyed).
- In episode 17 (Leviathan), the remnants of the Coney Island amusement park and the Cyclone roller coaster are clearly shown.
- In episode 19 (Eyewitness), an android killer is shown wearing a New York Yankees baseball cap.
- In episode 20 (Stripes), Angel finds herself drawn to the ruins of Grand Central Terminal.
- In episode 21 (The Third Big), Big Fau rises out of the ground through the Washington Arch.
- In several episodes Roger pays Big-Ear for his services with what would appear to be US currency.
- Whenever he visits Big Ear, Roger drives over what appears to be the Brooklyn Bridge
- In one of the last two episodes Roger sees Vera in what appears to be Lincoln Tunnel.
City layout
Domes and main city
Each dome in Paradigm City has its own "sun," a source of artificial light that orbits along a track along the inside span of the dome (bright and direct sunlight is considered something of a luxury, the city having been under a near-constant state of overcast ever since the Event). The structure of the domes is conventional; they appear to be built of heavy steel girders. The largest is Paradigm Dome at the city center; it contains the Paradigm Corporation headquarters. Crops are grown in certain outlying domes, such as the fields of wheat and tomatoes owned by the retired Gordon Rosewater.
In the final episodes of the series, enormous, megadeus-sized stage lamps are observed suspended from a massive gridlike structure high above the city, suggesting that the entire city city may be an elaborate stage set. Prior to this the population is unaware of them, as they are normally concealed by clouds.
Underground
Subways and other tunnels predating the Event are abandoned, as the entire population harbors an irrational fear of going below ground. Roger Smith shares this phobia, though he is willing to use the old subway system as a method of quickly transporting Big O around Paradigm City as needed: an immense tank-like vehicle that contains the Big O, the Prairie Dog, uses the subway tracks to deliver and (on a platform) elevate the Big O, so that it may burst forth from underground. The phobia prevents anyone from tracking Big O's movements to Roger's house. In episode 4, Roger ventures further down than he ever had before, and finds that the deeper one goes the newer the surroundings become; more recent installations exist below older ones. Thus while the tunnels near the surface are simply old subway lines, one very deep down are from right before the Event itself, and house remnant exotic technologies unknown on the surface such as the ruined Archetype megadeus found by Schwarzwald.
Coastline
A large portion of the city is also submerged in shallow water just off the coast. It appears that during the Event there was either a massive rise in sea levels or an earh movement causing a large portion of the city to sink into the sea, or both. Taller buildings can still be seen protruding from the water. The submerged city acts as a large artificial reef, attracting a large amount and variety of fish and other ocean life, which is harvested to help feed the city's population. Submarines are largely unknown, though the Paradigm Corporation a operates a corps of frogmen.
In the final episodes of the series, Roger (in Big O) falls into the sea. Deep below the submerged portion of the city, he sees what appears to a system of gigantic gears and mechanical equipment below the ruins, lending support to the theory that the entire city itself, even the old submerged ruins, may just be a fabrication.
Inland
Beyond Paradigm City, there is nothing, with the possible exception of the Union: the Event forty years ago apparently turned the rest of the world into an endless desert. However, a settlement called "Electric City" exists inland, in a stretch of hilly forest beside a large lake and river that appears to lead to Paradigm City, whose domes and skyscrapers can clearly be seen a short distance off. It is possible that Electric City was a suburb or fringe city of Paradigm. Big O is able to be transported to this area via the underground, suggesting that Electric City has access to the Paradigm City subway system.
Culture
The city is characterized by severe class inequity; the higher-income population resides inside the more pleasant geodesic domes, with the remainder left in tenements outside. Androids coexist with the human inhabitants of Paradigm City; while their numbers are fairly low, and they're something of a rarity, there are enough of them that denizens of the city are not shocked by them and don't consider it particularly unusual to encounter one.[2]
Several episodes show inhabitants of Paradigm City practicing some shape or form of Christianity, as people congregate in meeting places with crucifixes prominently displayed. A cathedral is shown in ruins and forgotten, although some elderly people occasionally feel compelled to stand in front of it and sing scraps of hymns. However, it is revealed in episode 11 that almost no one remembers Christmas.
A holiday is observed on December 25th, but as a celebration to commemorate the founding of Paradigm City, known as "Heaven's Day." The inhabitants of the city still put up generic Christmas decorations like decorated Christmas trees and streamers, but they don't really know the underlying reason behind all of this. Alex Rosewater seems to be the series' only character with knowledge of pre-Event Christianity. Dastun at one point mentions that Rosewater had in his possession fragments of a "Book of Revelations," although neither Dastun nor Roger had previously heard of it. It is possible that Rosewater also has other fragments of The Bible, as Rosewater describes the real meaning of Heaven's Day as being "the day God's son was born."
Factions
Paradigm Corporation
The Paradigm Corporation is run by Alex Rosewater, son of Gordon Rosewater, the original founder of both the city and corporation. Though there is a Senate, the Paradigm Corporation de facto runs the city; the Military Police are answerable to it (through its "Justice Division"). The company contains other divisions, such as Paradigm Press and Paradigm Laboratories.
The company's logo is a stylized P, in a combination of Art-Deco and interwar Modernist styles. Its headquarters are in a vaguelly Babel-like axial tower, at the center and protruding through the top of the city's largest dome.
Military Police
The Military Police act both in a military capacity, in defense against exotic (i.e. gigantic) threats, and as a police force, in the course of regular law enforcement activities. The series' most visible MP officer is Major Dan Dastun, later promoted to Colonel. Roger Smith was once a member of the military police, and partner to Dastun. The Military Police is fragmented by a crisis of loyalty near the end of the series, with Dastun and a large fraction of the force supporting Roger Smith against an insane Alex Rosewater.
The Union
The Union is a group of foreigners, believed to be the last remnants of the global civilization that was (outside of Paradigm City) destroyed by the Event. They are unknown to the city's inhabitants, who consider the idea of surviving "foreigners" a myth. Though their exact location and origin are unknown, many appear to be European (some appear familiar with the French language, which is a dead language to the residents of Paradigm). Like the residents of the city itself, the members of the Union also apparently lost their memories after the Event, suggesting that the mass amnesia was a worldwide phenomenon. Some members of the Union live in Paradigm City, posing as regular citizens of almost all social classes and careers (including the Military Police). Angel is a citizen or member of the Union, though Roger is fairly soon after meeting her able to discern that she is not a native of Paradigm City.
The Union's goal is seek out and recover their lost memories, which they believe may reside in Paradigm City, towards which end they engage in a combination of violence, namely terrorist bombings, and subterfuge, namely a secret treaty with Alex Rosewater. Although they apparently have control of a contingent of Megadei that they have found in the wastelands, as well as an impressive air force (something that Paradigm severely lacks), they are numerically and materially at a great disadvantage compared to the city.
Towards the end of the series, the true nature of the Union and of their status as foreigners is brought into question; indications are given that the group may have been created and manipulated by the Paradigm Corporation all along. There are also indications the Union agents' memories of having grown up in a foreign land may be fabrications, and that their entire childhoods may have been falsified. High-ranking Union member Vera Ronstadt suggests that the Union infiltrators are really Gordon Rosewater's "tomatoes," clones of the city's founding senators, supposedly possessing their memories, though Gordon himself contradicts this. If this interpretation is true, it suggest that there is literally nothing beyond the wastelands that surround Paradigm City.
References
- ^ The Big O Visual: Official Companion to "The Big-O" TV series (ISBN 4-57-529579-5), p. 39.
- ^ Hal Erickson, Television cartoon shows: an illustrated encyclopedia, vol. 1