Eureka Seven/Fridge

Fridge Brilliance

 * In Eureka Seven, one of the many things in the end that bugged me was "The End" pulling a magical Heal-Face Turn and for some reason changing color. The solution seems so blatantly obvious to me now that this might have been obvious to everyone else from square one, but it’s taken me months to realize "The End" is a replica of Nirvash the way Anemone is a replica of Eureka and therefore has the same reality warping powers. I mean, if you’re going to go to the effort to make a copy of the best pilot in the world, it seems a waste not to have the best mech to go with her right? -Col. Schafer
 * On this subject, I discussed with a friend, telling him the turn was blatant and useless just to make a total happy ending (and to be fair, I still think that), and he said it was fairly foreshadowed before (it was, but still...) But on the subject of Fridge Brilliance (or Logic, at least), I have to admit for such a series, the moments of Reality Ensues, especially in the case of Anemone, were brilliant. At first she seemed unrealistic and bratty, but turns out it was just a mask and she knew what we knew, that  (. She also knew the price of failure and was well aware that Dewey could dispose of her if she became useless, outright mentioning she could be sent to be killed. This may seem like something thrown in for drama, but seriously, how many top henchmen can guess their fate if they fail? - A.A.
 * (Pyrite) Cross-posted from the WMG page: There were those who hated the movie for its Egregious use of Stock Footage while deviating from the series in others. But considering how a major theme of the Eureka Seven movie is about "rebirth" and "creating your own story" (e.g. Anemone's subplot, the movie's ending theme being titled "Storywriter"), it can be argued that the movie itself is a Subversion of the standard Clip Show movie, inviting you to draw parallels with the series:
 * In series, the characters of Holland and Talho are shown as being mentally immature adults, while in the movie
 * The new characterisation of the Sages as . On that note, the most level-headed members of the Gekko State, Hap and Stoner,.
 * Dewey, the series Big Bad,, and Anemone and Dominic are upgraded.
 * Renton
 * The book with the Contemptible Cover, originally The Golden Bough (a study of comparative mythology and religion), is now presumably a copy of Anemone's memoirs titled "New World Story".
 * I wondered why it was only Eureka's right arm and some of the right of her face changed when she her Coralian traits started showing, considering it didn't show any signs of spreading after the wings grew. It wasn't until rewatching the series that I noticed that the parts that did change were also the parts that had the most noticeable side effects from almost remerging with the scrub.
 * Another possibility is that it's connected to Nirvash. Remember that Nirvash is a double-cockpitted LFO, and that Eureka always sits in the left cockpit. My theory is that since both Eureka and Nirvash's Archetype are variations of Coralians, they have some kind of effect on eachother, causing them both to physically change, but since Eureka's right side is closer to the Archetype's center, the visible changes are only prominent on Eureka's right half. Likewise, Nirvash has Eureka sitting inside it, causing it to be affected by the full dose of whatever causes the transformation, leading Nirvash to change into the Spec-2 and (somehow) later, the Spec-3 (or in the movie, Spec-V). This may also be supported by the fact that whenever Eureka touches Nirvash on the outside, it's with her right hand.

Fridge Horror

 * Eureka Seven: At first glance, Anemone's consumption of jam doesn't seem to be a source of nightmares. Using Fridge Brilliance however, one can tell similarities between her jam... and blood. This makes perfect sense, since Anemone is a sadistically demented girl for the series.