OVA
Description
Don Jirocho, adopted son of a reclusive scientist, inherits a deadly mission. His father, creator of the advanced cyborg Alice designed as a sexual companion, dies after fatal injuries sustained during Alice's escape and lab destruction. Manipulated by his father's deathbed accusation framing Alice as his killer, Don Jirocho vows revenge, compelled to hunt her down. Hindered by encrypted files lacking her visual reference, he relies on incomplete data.
Initially driven by filial loyalty, Don Jirocho employs ruthless methods. He orders subordinate Omasa to abduct hundreds of women named Alice across various locations, capturing 333 individuals. This aggressive tactic proves futile. His first direct encounter reveals Alice's capabilities when she intercepts bullets meant for a decoy, demonstrating her invulnerability. Faced with repeated failure using conventional methods, Don Jirocho experiments: deploying a rust formula (which backfires), enlisting a shaman for supernatural aid, and deliberately placing himself in danger to exploit Alice's programmed instinct to rescue men.
Grappling with conflicting emotions amplified by external perspectives like the shaman's suggestion of genuine love for Alice, Don Jirocho acknowledges his internal struggle. Yet, he prioritizes filial duty, declaring loyalty to his father's will paramount. This tension intensifies when he allies with rival industrialist Siegel, who controls Alice, resulting in a failed cyborg battle. In a final gambit, Don Jirocho volunteers for cybernetic transformation himself, aiming to create a weapon against Alice. The plan involves luring Alice to rescue an innocent man, Domon, only to confront her with a combat cyborg cloned from Don Jirocho. The strategy fails when the clone, influenced by Alice's emotional resonance with Don Jirocho, turns against him. Alice ultimately rescues Don Jirocho from his own creation.
The pursuit concludes unresolved, cementing a cyclical dynamic of conflict and reluctant attraction. Don Jirocho's arc transitions from single-minded vengeance to an entangled relationship marked by persistence, strategic adaptation, and unresolved emotional conflict.
Initially driven by filial loyalty, Don Jirocho employs ruthless methods. He orders subordinate Omasa to abduct hundreds of women named Alice across various locations, capturing 333 individuals. This aggressive tactic proves futile. His first direct encounter reveals Alice's capabilities when she intercepts bullets meant for a decoy, demonstrating her invulnerability. Faced with repeated failure using conventional methods, Don Jirocho experiments: deploying a rust formula (which backfires), enlisting a shaman for supernatural aid, and deliberately placing himself in danger to exploit Alice's programmed instinct to rescue men.
Grappling with conflicting emotions amplified by external perspectives like the shaman's suggestion of genuine love for Alice, Don Jirocho acknowledges his internal struggle. Yet, he prioritizes filial duty, declaring loyalty to his father's will paramount. This tension intensifies when he allies with rival industrialist Siegel, who controls Alice, resulting in a failed cyborg battle. In a final gambit, Don Jirocho volunteers for cybernetic transformation himself, aiming to create a weapon against Alice. The plan involves luring Alice to rescue an innocent man, Domon, only to confront her with a combat cyborg cloned from Don Jirocho. The strategy fails when the clone, influenced by Alice's emotional resonance with Don Jirocho, turns against him. Alice ultimately rescues Don Jirocho from his own creation.
The pursuit concludes unresolved, cementing a cyclical dynamic of conflict and reluctant attraction. Don Jirocho's arc transitions from single-minded vengeance to an entangled relationship marked by persistence, strategic adaptation, and unresolved emotional conflict.