Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood
"In order for something to be obtained, something of equal value must be lost." Alchemy is bound by this Law of Equivalent Exchange—something the young brothers Edward and Alphonse Elric only realize after attempting human transmutation: the one forbidden act of alchemy. They pay a terrible price for their transgression—Edward loses his left leg, Alphonse his physical body. It is only by the desperate sacrifice of Edward's right arm that he is able to affix Alphonse's soul to a suit of armor. Devastated and alone, it is the hope that they would both eventually return to their original bodie…
🎬 Trailers & VidéosPreview
🎵 Music & Co-listeningPreview
🎨 Ton avatar inspiré de Fullmetal Alchemist: BrotherhoodPreview
📰 Articles fans · Fullmetal Alchemist: BrotherhoodPreview
📘 À propos de l'œuvre
Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood is a Japanese anime television series, serving as the second animated adaptation of the manga series Fullmetal Alchemist by Hiromu Arakawa, after the 2003 anime series. Produced by Bones, the series was directed by Yasuhiro Irie and written by Hiroshi Ōnogi, with music composed by Akira Senju. It was conceived to create a faithful adaptation that directly follows the entire story from the original manga, as the first anime adaptation strayed away from it to create a story exclusive to that series after running out of published manga material to adapt.
📚 Toute la franchise
5 œuvres liées📖 Side stories & OVAs (2)
🌿 Spin-offs (1)
🔄 Versions alternatives (1)
🎭 Personnages
🦸 Personnages principaux (2)
🎭 Personnages secondaires (23)
📚 Tout ce que tu veux savoir
Sources : Wikipedia (CC BY-SA) · ikigai.fan📖Synopsis & univers
Plot
Brothers Edward and Alphonse Elric are raised by their mother Trisha Elric in the remote village of Resembool in the country of Amestris. Their father Hohenheim, a noted and very gifted alchemist, abandoned his family while the boys were still young. While in Trisha's care, Ed and Al began to show an affinity for alchemy and became curious about its secrets. However, when Trisha died of a lingering illness, they were cared for by their elderly neighbor Pinako Rockwell and her granddaughter Winry Rockbell, the boys' closest friend. Ed and Al traveled the world to advance their alchemic training under teacher Izumi Curtis. Upon returning home, the brothers desperately decide to try t…

🛠Production & développement
Production
In the 20th volume of the Fullmetal Alchemist manga, released in August 2008, series author Hiromu Arakawa announced that a second anime adaptation was being produced; the previous series, Fullmetal Alchemist, had debuted in 2003 and featured an anime original story direction midway through its run after exhausting manga content to adapt. The Japanese title of the second adaptation is Hagane no Renkinjutsushi: Fullmetal Alchemist (鋼の錬金術師 FULLMETAL ALCHEMIST; abbreviated as 鋼の錬金術師FA), including the English translation as a subtitle to differentiate it from the 2003 series, while the English release uses the subtitle Brotherhood.
Bones produced and animated Brotherhood with Ya…

🏆Réception & ventes
Reception
Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood received near-universal acclaim and is widely considered to be one of the greatest anime of all time. On review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes, the series holds an approval rating of 100% based on 14 reviews, with an average rating of 8/10. The site's critic consensus reads: "With impeccable world-building, rollicking action, and emotionally intelligent themes, all the elements come together to make this Fullmetal Alchemist reboot a pristine distillation of the shounen genre." It was the top-rated anime on MyAnimeList, Anime News Network and IMDb, until being overtaken by Frieren on MyAnimeList and Anime News Network.
D. F. Smith, writing for…

Êtes-vous ayant droit ? Claim →
🎮 Engage avec cette œuvre
🏆 Tu es ayant droit de cette œuvre ?
Lance une campagne reward-based pour pré-financer la suite. KYC strict, testimony public, refund automatique 18 mois. Tu gardes 100% de tes droits éditoriaux.
Réclamer cette œuvre →









