Giant Robo still gets some attention in top-favorite lists at least. (And well-deserved for that; though in many ways it isn't exactly a mecha show. It's more of a superhero team show, with one of the team being a giant retro robot.
)
The name of the WWII-era robot miniseries I mentioned, btw, is Kishin Corps. Also known as Alien Defense Force Geo-Somethingorothergeneric Kishin Corps.
It's based on a series of novels (I think), and the musical score was written by the composer of the Giant Robo series (also Super Atragon). However, while all those soundtracks are worth buying, BEWARE BUYING THE KISHIN CORPS SCORE!! The only production of it I am aware of, was an orchestral recording before a live studio audience, where someone forgot to turn on the amps for the one microphone hanging above the audience or something. Sound quality is horrible, the number of unique cuts is few, at least _half_ of the album involves the orchestra playing the underscore for a running film of the first important action scene (with dialogue and sound effects--terribly distracting). The weirdest thing about the album is that it ends with the orchestra and choir doing a rendition of the Space Battleship Yamato main theme. HUH!?!? (Same composer maybe ??) This would be marginally more bearable if the sound quality was better, but its inclusion adds insult to injury: I bought this album to hear the Kishin Corps music, you cretins!! (Note: don't get me wrong, I love the music to Uchuu Senken Yamato, aka Star Blazers. First anime I ever watched, back when I was a boy. I own all the original CDs.)
Anyway. Kishin Corps, the anime. Artistic quality is wildly variable (poor to outstanding.) Basic concept is at least interesting, but isn't always coherently delivered. The concept is that at the beginning of WWII, a rogue Japanese military unit absconded with Axis technology (borrowed originally from an alien crash site) to form a small multi-national Allied task force based on three robots built with about 98% WWII-era tech. (Vacuum tubes, etc.) The Nazis build an even better one (the Panzer Knight); Einstein is rescued so we can build The Bomb; aliens keep attacking periodically; and a little boy survives an initial assault on a train evacuating Manchuria (near the start of the war), growing up within the Kishin Corps over the course of the war, until he is allowed to pilot a fourth Kishin robot for the final assault on the alien/Nazi base.
The ending is ambiguous, and I'll put it in spoiler space:
[SPOILER] The Allies decide to nuke the enemy base with an alien-amped nuclear bomb. Instead of just allowing this perfectly sensible plan to proceed--it's out in the middle of nowhere, so civilians won't be hurt--the Kishin Corps volunteers to assault the base themselves first, with the understanding that the bomb is on the way to be dropped. Although they succeed, kind of, the bomb is dropped ON TOP OF THEM ANYWAY! After which there is a sort of nostalgic sequence with all the main protagonist characters dancing and celebrating in beautiful green fields and such, with the Kishin robots placidly standing around in the background. Did they somehow survive after all? Is this supposed to be heaven? What the flaming spew?!? [/SPOILER]
While I can't exactly recommend as a buy, it's worth a rental at least as a curiosity piece. Plus the music is frequently very good.
So--anyone with any word on Orguss?