setsuled: (Skull Tree)


Happy Christmas Eve, everyone. This seems like a good time to talk about all the shows this year that had a humanoid with a deer skull for a head as a protagonist. Really, that's only one show, Production I.G.'s beautiful The Ancient Magus Bride (魔法使いの嫁), which concluded its first season yesterday. Consistently strong production quality on every level--animation, music, design, backgrounds--assist in making this sweet story about lovers with communication problems truly memorable.



The setup in the first few episodes gives us a variation on Beauty and the Beast--the fellow with the deer skull head, Elias (Ryota Takeuchi), purchases the shy red headed Japanese girl, Chise (Atsumi Tanezaki), at an auction. Elias is a magician and he intends for Chise to be both his apprentice and his bride.



As in most versions of Beauty and the Beast, the story quickly finds ways to push against the inequality inherent in this setup. Elias seems to think nothing of taking off Chise's clothes to bathe her--he seems neither lustful or sadistic, and her self esteem is so low she doesn't make any objection. But a visit to a witch friend of Elias' in the second episode, Angelica (Yuuko Kaida), provides an opportunity for a character to voice exactly the objections to the scenario most viewers would be thinking. Angelica, a young mother, wastes no time rebuking Elias for his presumptions. As with Beauty and the Beast, though, it's not surprising Elias doesn't see a more effective way of getting a bride, given his physical appearance.



But the characters' psychological issues become far more pertinent than physical appearance as the series progresses. Elias and Chise find their instincts to express affection for each other blocked by bad self image, cognisance of the strangeness in their artificially arranged relationship, and a fundamental inability to access emotions. The middle episodes of the series introduce a series of stories that reflect disconnected relationship dynamics in different ways--a man who loses his soul trying to save his sick wife without regarding her wishes on the subject; Chise's dog familiar, Ruth (Koki Uchiyama), and his inability to connect with his dead former mistress; and, the most amusing of the lot, an elderly gardener who doesn't know he's the object of affection for an invisible succubus.



Chise's past is only hinted at--her parents abandoned her and her shyness and the suspicious readiness with which she accepts offered affection and the semblance of family are ascribed to her abandonment issues. Elias' past is shown in more detail in the season's penultimate episode and we see how, like Frankenstein's monster, he was met by hatred and suspicion from villagers. Hatred and suspicion that may not be unwarranted.



Elias tells his mentor, Lindel (Daisuke Namikawa), with only mild concern, about how everyone else seems so distant and he has trouble understanding connexion. His concern is scarcely greater when we divulges he may have done some truly monstrous things which aren't left ambiguous.



There's effective tension in all the issues presented--a lot of fantasy anime handles the monster-guilt love story with too many caveats, usually amounting to the "monster" never having done anything truly wrong, resulting in a very simplistic world of justice. This series effectively creates the tension in ambiguous questions about how much monstrosity is someone responsible for, about how much suffering and restriction one truly deserves, and about whether or not affection needs to be justified. It's all effectively couched in a lovely fantasy world with side stories about dragons turning into trees and communities of cats that give the characters further opportunities to show how their instincts are reflected in an outside world. A very good series.

Twitter Sonnet #1067

A rising lake returns the boots at last.
A footless fish's late return unmarked.
To miss a lucky fin condemned to fast.
It had no hand to hold nor ear to hark.
A bleeding candy stripe obscures the red.
In turning holly scarlet leaves're sharp.
A fitting cider wet the waiting sled.
The giggling aether taunts a ghostly harp.
A stocking rain for feet bestowed the gift.
In needle trees a time ignites the wick.
For rodent's rest the dog creates a rift.
The ducks of mice return as clocks'll tick.
A desert fleece confers a snowy thought.
The boiling peppermint stirs in the pot.
setsuled: (Default)


I'm taking a third semester Japanese language class at the moment so I thought this would be a good time to catch up with the world of anime. I watched the first episodes of several recent series, mostly from the current 2017 fall season, and was pleased to find a few shows I didn't hate and two I actually liked.



Sangatsu no Lion (3月のライオン)

Released in the U.S. under the cumbersome title March Comes in Like a Lion, the title is more accurately translated The Lion of March, this series focuses on a shy professional shogi player named Rei Kiriyama (Kengo Kawanishi). Coming from Studio Shaft, this series began last year. Having only watched the first episode, I can say I don't hate it. There's a too precious feeling in shots of Rei on the train accompanied by delicate piano but the visual design is gorgeous, exhibiting a strong Impressionist influence, and the character design is good.



Code: Realise

With a title seemingly designed to attract Code Geass fans, this is a rare bird, being a josei series (aimed at women) based on a video game. It's funny how often series aimed at girls and women seemed like series aimed at boys and men but with all the genders swapped--this one could even be called a harem anime with a selection of attractive stock male characters--a wild guy, a stuffy scientist, a sincere bodyguard--all in love with a central female character named Cardia Beckford (Saori Hayami). Like many female protagonists of such series, she seems to have no personality but is possessed of moral purity, hidden magical power, and is at the centre of a grand destiny. In this case, the show has the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen style premise mixed in as the guys happen to be Arsene Lupin (the original literary character of no relation to the hugely successful anime character), Abraham Van Helsing, and Victor Frankenstein. Based on one episode, the show is fun if not remarkable with an average visual style apart from the lovely, complicated character designs likely inherited from the video game.



Children of the Whales (クジラの子らは砂上に歌う, "Whale Calves Sing on the Sand")

This series from JC Staff looked a lot better before I saw the first episode. The intriguing premise of a civilisation living on a floating island turned out to be a pretty generic looking Hayao Miyazaki knock-off with flat characters. Everyone on the island conforms to a system, they have magic powers, one boy starts to rebel after meeting someone from another island, etc. The visual style looks good sometimes but corners cut with computers start to show through with too clearly repeating patterns of artificial grain.



Shokugeki no Soma (食戟のソーマ)

Now this series, also from JC Staff, is a lot of fun. Sort of like Eat Drink Man Woman on a sugar high, it's the story about a young cook (Yoshitsugu Matsuoka) who aspires to become a great chef. The comedy here is in how much this is played up into a broad action adventure. Gratuitous flames and winds of fate accompany the adding of oil or herbs and successful dishes provoke orgasm in the tasters. The recipes the characters come up with are surprisingly detailed, a dish at the climax of the first episode involving potatoes wrapped in bacon is put through a complicated cooking process to allow the juices from the bacon to soak into the potatoes in a particular way, something that makes the show intriguing and even funnier.



Mahoutsukai no Yome (魔法使いの嫁)

By far my favourite so far, I'm actually all caught up on this one, the newest episode, seven, having aired a couple days ago. From Production I.G., the visuals on this show are all top notch--character design, animation, and especially the gorgeous backgrounds. The story, too, is refreshingly weird, being a sort of Beauty and the Beast tale of a Japanese girl named Chise (Atsumi Tanezaki) who becomes the apprentise and prospective bride of a strange humanoid with an animal skull head named Elias Ainsworth (Ryota Takeuchi). Set in England, the story reflects a real love for western fairy tales and gothic horror with episodes involving tragic murder. The fourth episode introduces H.P. Lovecraft's town of Ulthar where cats are revered. The cats, like all animals on this show, are extraordinarily well animated and have beautiful, distinct designs. In Ulthar, Chise uncovers a ghost story about a man who murdered cats in an effort to prolong the life of his dying wife. With the ongoing story of Chise and Elias' strange relationship, the episodes feature them encountering shorter problems often involving murky and provoking morality which reflects the relationship between the two protagonists themselves. This is one I will very happily continue to watch.

Twitter Sonnet #1056

Across the thinnest ice a lantern glows.
A passing song reports in vivid clouds.
Behind the morning veils are tender rows.
Ideas of post repair 'neath soil shrouds.
The fading bulbs suspend above the bowl.
A gleam implies inverted worlds of food.
In tightened scribbles notes become a whole.
The story tells no plot but lots of mood.
Remembered pens amend the threaded shape.
The growing skull resumes a fractured height.
In faded chalk the marks direct the ape.
A mall repels the shopper's pastry light.
A glass contrived of flaked croissant illumes
The work of solemn breakfast breading looms.

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