Follow us on Google News
Get the latest updates directly in your Google News feed
TheFullmetal Alchemistanime series, both the original one and the remakeBrotherhood, are some of the most invaluable projects that anime fans have ever been gifted with. Encircling around the inevitable theory of how every gain requires a sacrifice, the series won a lot of hearts along the way throughout the time that it aired onscreen.

But despite being created on the same manga, both anime series differ drastically, especially when it comes to their finales. While the originalFullmetal Alchemistanime had an extremely dark and unhappy ending, its remakeBrotherhoodmore or less rectified it six years later in what can be described as“more faithful to the source material”manga remake. And now we know why.
Fullmetal Alchemist to Monster: 5 Anime That Actually Deserve a Live-Action Netflix Adaptation Instead of Avatar: The Last Airbender
The OriginalFullmetal AlchemistAnime Had A Brutally Dark Ending
TheFullmetal Alchemistmanga originally circulates the storyline of two brothers from the country of Amestris, Edward (Ed) and Alphonse Elric (Al), who are on the receiving end of the gift of alchemy — the supernatural ability to transform matter. However, this very alchemy takes a toll on them when they try to resurrect their mother who dies from stress cardiomyopathy.
While performing the ritual of alchemy, Ed ends up brutally severing his right arm and left leg, and his brother Al’s entire body becomes unusable. Thus, to heal themselves back to their original forms, Ed puts on prosthetic limbs while binding his brother Al in a large steel armor to replace their deformities, becoming‘Full Metal Alchemists’who set out on their journey to seek out the Philosopher’s Stone.

Marvel Reveals a Mutant Stronger Than Even Colossus – His Powers are Basically Fullmetal Alchemist on Steroids
In the original anime series and the continuing filmFullmetal Alchemist the Movie: Conqueror of Shamballa (2005),Al sacrifices himself to bring his brother Ed backfrom the dead using a human transmutation, as the Law of Equivalent Exchange states:“Man must pay an equal price in order to obtain anything.”While this brings back Ed with all of his limbs back as well, Al dies in the process.
When Ed wakes up and realizes that his brother sacrificed himself just to save him, he does another transmutation to sacrifice himself to bring back Al, taking an unprecedented leap of faith in the hope of bringing everything back. Except this time, because of some unexplained magic, Ed manages tonot dieeither, and live until the end.

Yet this was hardly a happy ending as even though Al gets brought back from the dead, he gets reverted back to the age he was before the start of the series, losing all of his memories about everything that happened afterward. On the other hand, while Ed continues to live and even gets his limbs back, he stands on the other side of the gate: in Munich, Germany, 1923, to be more precise.
“It’s just not how I do things”: Unlike Eiichiro Oda, the Fullmetal Alchemist Creator Never Liked Giving Notes for Live Action Adaptation
Written and illustrated byHiromu Arakawa, this manga story notably went into production for an anime series in its very early days. Since anime versions are quicker to cover the storyline as compared to the manga, this original anime from 2003 soon ran out of source material to adapt, and the remaining content in the anime’s story was comprised of original material created for the same.
Because of this very reason, the finales of both the original series from 2003 (and film) and the manga’s second anime series adaptation version six years later, i.e.Fullmetal Alchemists: Brotherhood, differ so much in their respective themes and end plots, with one adapting a brutally dark end while the other leaving the space for a happy ending.

“Music expresses the unseen qualities”: Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood Composer Knows Why its Soundtrack Trumps Over Rest of the Anime
Fullmetal Alchemist: BrotherhoodAllowed Ed And Al A Happy Ending
While the original one-season series from 2003Fullmetal Alchemistleft audiences heartbroken with a brutally dark and devastating end, its manga remake six years after the original one (and after the manga series was notably more progressed than when the original anime was created) changed everything and rectified this veryending to a happier one.
As compared to the original one which saw the law as an absolute and unchangeable one,the 2009Brotherhoodanime seriessaw the two brothers interpreting the Law of Equivalent Exchange differently and as something imperfect that could be rebelled against and proven wrong. As Al narrates at the end ofBrotherhood:

“Man cannot obtain anything without paying a price,” he said. “By paying the price of effort, everyone will certainly be able to obtain something.”
All in all, through this bittersweet message and a considerably happier ending,Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhoodgave the brothersas well asthe fans the very thing that the original anime series robbed them of:Their sweet, cherished brotherhood.
You can streamFullmetal Alchemiston Netflix, andFullmetal Alchemist: BrotherhoodandFullmetal Alchemist the Movie: Conqueror of Shamballaon Crunchyroll.
Mahin Sultan
Senior Writer
Articles Published :2478
Mahin Sultan is a Senior Writer at FandomWire, where she brings a fresh perspective to entertainment news. Having been in the field for over 3 years now, she has already written more than 2,000 articles across a variety of niches, from entertainment to health and fashion. This diverse experience has allowed her to quickly build a solid foundation and a deep understanding of the industry.