Legato Bluesummers (anime): Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
no edit summary
imported>Whyitskai
m (→‎Gallery: image added)
imported>Katie5000
No edit summary
Line 19: Line 19:


=== 1998 anime ===
=== 1998 anime ===
In the 90s anime, no mention is made of Legato's past or how he came to know [[Millions Knives (disambiguation)|Millions Knives]]. He is first seen telling [[Monev the Gale]] that it is now his time to go challenge [[Vash the Stampede (anime)|Vash the Stampede]]. Later on, he finds Vash and tells him that he'll be visited by the Gung-Ho-Guns. After this, he ends up in the saloon at [[Jeneora Rock]], where he catches the eye of a gang member's girlfriend and is challenged to a fight. At first he ignores the challenge, but is finally provoked enough to do something. He makes the challenger quite literally rip his own heart out, and then gets the rest of the gang members present to shoot each other (notably, he spares the gang member's girlfriend, along with two other women who were present). He then proceeds to travel to the top of a rocky spire housing the town's giant windmill, where he is confronted by the rest of the gang. The other Gung-Ho-Guns meet up with him here and they kill half of the gang members - the half that were spared are explicitly told that it was only so that they could bury their dead. Legato sets [[Dominique the Cyclops]] to fight with Vash and then leaves.
In the 90s anime, no mention is made of Legato's past or how he came to know [[Millions Knives (disambiguation)|Millions Knives]]. He is first seen telling [[Monev the Gale]] that it is now his time to go challenge [[Vash the Stampede (anime)|Vash the Stampede]]. Later on, he finds Vash and tells him that he'll be visited by the Gung-Ho-Guns. After this, he ends up in the saloon at [[Jeneora Rock]] alongside some of the [[Roderick Thieves]] and their girlfriend-captives. He catches the eye of one of the girls, which enrages her gang-member boyfriend and makes him challenge Legato to a fight. At first Legato is indifferent, but once he's provoked enough he makes the challenger quite literally rip his own heart out. He then makes the rest of the gang members present shoot each other to death (notably, he spares the girls). Legato leaves the saloon and travels to the top of a rocky spire housing the town's giant windmill, where he is confronted by the rest of the Roderick Thieves. The other Gung-Ho-Guns meet up with him here as well, and they all proceed to kill half of the remaining members - the half that were spared are explicitly told that it was only so that they could bury their dead. Legato sets [[Dominique the Cyclops]] to fight with Vash and then leaves.


Legato then goads Vash into coming to the city of [[Augusta]] to fight with him. When Vash gets there, he is confronted first by [[EG Mine]] and then challenged to a fight with [[Rai Dei the Blade]]. Rai Dei is surprised and disgusted to find that Vash really doesn't want to fight with him, but is even ''more'' surprised when Vash's Angel Arm begins to activate. Legato invades Vash's mind and pushes him into fully activating the superweapon, annihilating the city of Augusta in the process. Legato and Midvalley watch the mayhem unfold from atop a distant scarp of rock, where Legato reveals that the events of July happened 23 years prior before creepily licking his hand.
Legato then goads Vash into coming to the city of [[Augusta]] to fight with him. When Vash gets there, he is confronted first by [[EG Mine]] and then challenged to a fight with [[Rai Dei the Blade]]. Legato invades Vash's mind and pushes him into fully activating his Angel Arm, annihilating the city of Augusta in the process. Legato and Midvalley watch the mayhem unfold from atop a distant scarp of rock, where Legato reveals to him that this was the exact same thing that caused the annihilation of [[July]] 23 years prior.


Legato appears again in "Flying Ship" when [[Leonof the Puppetmaster]] infiltrates the floating ship and reports back to him what's going on. This is when he realizes that [[Nicholas D. Wolfwood (anime)|Nicholas D. Wolfwood]] has turned traitor, and also realizes how he can really make Vash suffer...His plan plays out in the episode "Paradise", when he has [[Chapel the Evergreen]] confront Wolfwood about killing Vash and then challenge him to a duel. Chapel loses, but initially spares Wolfwood. Legato, however, takes control of Chapel's body and makes him shoot Wolfwood in the back, killing him. Chapel is angry enough to try and seek vengeance by killing Legato, but is unsuccessful. Knives has healed by this time.
Legato appears again in "Flying Ship" when [[Leonof the Puppetmaster]] infiltrates the floating ship and reports back to him what's going on. This is when he realizes that [[Nicholas D. Wolfwood (anime)|Nicholas D. Wolfwood]] has turned traitor, and also realizes how he can take advantage of that to make Vash truly suffer. Legato's plan presumably plays out in the episode "Paradise", when he has [[Chapel the Evergreen]] confront Wolfwood about proving his loyalty and killing Vash. Chapel challenges him to a duel, but surprisingly loses. Wolfwood decides to spare Chapel, trusting that his old mentor won't shoot him when he turns his back. Legato, however, takes control of Chapel's body and makes him shoot Wolfwood anyway, killing him. Chapel is angry enough to try and seek vengeance by killing Legato, but is unsuccessful. Knives has healed by this time, so Legato presumes that he's no longer needed and decides to go out in dramatic fashion. He has Vash meet him on a scarp of rock above LR Town, where he forces Vash to deliberately kill him. He dies smiling, knowing that he's likely broken Vash mentally.
 
==Character ==


===Appearance===
===Appearance===
Line 62: Line 60:
==Notes & Trivia==
==Notes & Trivia==


* The word "Legato" comes from the Latin term ''ligare'', which means "to bind". It's where the terms "ligand", "ligament", and "delegate" come from. The character was probably so named because he acts as Knives' emissary, or ''delegate'', for most of the series - he is the tie binding Knives to his brother. (His weapon of choice in the manga also makes use of strings, but that hadn't yet been revealed at the time the 90s anime was produced.)
* The word "Legato" comes from the Latin term ''ligare'', which means "to bind". It's where the terms "ligand", "ligament", and "delegate" come from. The character was probably so named because he acts as Knives' emissary, or ''delegate'', for most of the series - he is the tie binding Knives to his brother. (Note: His weapon of choice in the manga also makes use of strings, but that hadn't yet been revealed at the time the 90s anime was produced.)
** ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legato Legato]'' is also a type of musical notation used to indicate that a series of notes should be played in a smooth and connected way.
** ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legato Legato]'' is also a type of musical notation used to indicate that a series of notes should be played in a smooth and connected way.


Anonymous user

Navigation menu