LILULU goes silent. For the first time, she looks at a fallen Steel Troop – its red eye flickers weakly, like a candle in rain.
The emotional core of Steel Troops is not Doraemon or Nobita, but a small, yellow robot chick named Pippo (referred to as Riruru in the original 1986 version, though distinct in role in various adaptations). In the 2011 remake, Pippo serves as the "brain" of the giant Zanda Claus robot. doraemon steel troops
This film is a direct spiritual successor to Osamu Tezuka’s Astro Boy . Doraemon: Steel Troops asks a single question repeatedly: LILULU goes silent
The climax of both films does not end with a bang; it ends with a conversation. Nobita argues with the supercomputer not using weapons, but using the logic of love. It is one of the few children's movies where you can cry because a robot learns what "goodbye" means. In the 2011 remake, Pippo serves as the