Movie
Description
Jomy Marcus Shin emerges from Education City Ataraxia, undergoing standard societal preparation until his adulthood exam at age fourteen reveals his latent Mu genetics. This discovery prompts an assassination attempt by the governing Superior Dominance system, which systematically eliminates psychics. Soldier Blue, leader of the persecuted Mu, intervenes to rescue him from execution and memory erasure.
Initially rejecting his heritage, Jomy struggles to accept his Mu identity and its responsibilities. His dormant psychic abilities, classified as powerful Type-Blue powers, awaken during this conflict. Unlike most Mu afflicted with physical disabilities, Jomy possesses an unnaturally robust physique, though prolonged power use eventually causes severe deterioration in the original manga, rendering him blind, deaf, and mute.
Following Soldier Blue's decline due to age and infirmity, Jomy reluctantly assumes leadership of the Mu. He commands their mother ship, the Shangri-La, protecting Mu children from extermination. His compassionate yet resolute nature fosters unity among the Mu as they seek their ancestral homeworld, Terra. Under Jomy's command, the Mu establish a colony on the planet Nazca. Here, he witnesses the first natural Mu births in generations, including Tony, whose rapid growth and extraordinary Type-Blue abilities surpass Jomy's own. Jomy acts as a parental figure to Tony, who affectionately calls him "Grandpa" despite lacking biological ties; the 1980 film depicts Tony as Jomy's biological son, while the manga and 2007 anime present a symbolic familial bond.
The destruction of Nazca by human forces, led by Keith Anyan, triggers a profound transformation in Jomy. Consumed by grief and rage—particularly after Tony's mother Carina commits suicide upon falsely believing Tony dead—he abandons pacifism. He authorizes militaristic retaliation, deploying Tony and other Nazca-born children in combat. This decision culminates in tragedy when Tony accidentally kills Keith's loyal aide, Jonah Matsuka.
Jomy's final arc focuses on reaching Terra. In the manga, he confronts and destroys the governing supercomputer Grandmother, sacrificing his life as his physical degradation culminates in sensory loss. The 2007 anime adaptation diverges: Jomy survives Terra's initial conflict but passes leadership to Tony. A DVD-exclusive epilogue common to both anime versions depicts Jomy and Keith reincarnated centuries later, meeting as children on a restored Terra, symbolizing hope for human-Mu reconciliation.
Initially rejecting his heritage, Jomy struggles to accept his Mu identity and its responsibilities. His dormant psychic abilities, classified as powerful Type-Blue powers, awaken during this conflict. Unlike most Mu afflicted with physical disabilities, Jomy possesses an unnaturally robust physique, though prolonged power use eventually causes severe deterioration in the original manga, rendering him blind, deaf, and mute.
Following Soldier Blue's decline due to age and infirmity, Jomy reluctantly assumes leadership of the Mu. He commands their mother ship, the Shangri-La, protecting Mu children from extermination. His compassionate yet resolute nature fosters unity among the Mu as they seek their ancestral homeworld, Terra. Under Jomy's command, the Mu establish a colony on the planet Nazca. Here, he witnesses the first natural Mu births in generations, including Tony, whose rapid growth and extraordinary Type-Blue abilities surpass Jomy's own. Jomy acts as a parental figure to Tony, who affectionately calls him "Grandpa" despite lacking biological ties; the 1980 film depicts Tony as Jomy's biological son, while the manga and 2007 anime present a symbolic familial bond.
The destruction of Nazca by human forces, led by Keith Anyan, triggers a profound transformation in Jomy. Consumed by grief and rage—particularly after Tony's mother Carina commits suicide upon falsely believing Tony dead—he abandons pacifism. He authorizes militaristic retaliation, deploying Tony and other Nazca-born children in combat. This decision culminates in tragedy when Tony accidentally kills Keith's loyal aide, Jonah Matsuka.
Jomy's final arc focuses on reaching Terra. In the manga, he confronts and destroys the governing supercomputer Grandmother, sacrificing his life as his physical degradation culminates in sensory loss. The 2007 anime adaptation diverges: Jomy survives Terra's initial conflict but passes leadership to Tony. A DVD-exclusive epilogue common to both anime versions depicts Jomy and Keith reincarnated centuries later, meeting as children on a restored Terra, symbolizing hope for human-Mu reconciliation.