Categories
First Impressions Reviews

Summer 2018 First Impressions – Happy Sugar Life

Beautiful high school girl Satō Matsuzaka believes she has finally found the meaning of love when she begins living with a younger girl. Previously, Satō never refused the advances of any guy around her, but that changes when she meets the girl Shio. The background and age of the mysterious girl are unclear. When Satō is with Shio, she experiences a very sweet feeling, which she understands as love. In order to protect that feeling, Satō is willing to do anything, even if it means committing murder.ANN

Streaming: Amazon

Episodes: 12

Source: Manga

Episode 1 Summary: Satou used to sleep around with various guys, but ever since discovering true love, she’s left the revolving door of men behind her. The object of Satou’s affection is Shio, a young girl of indeterminate age who lives with her. Now that the two are on their own, Satou is the primary breadwinner, so she quits her lower-paying maid cafe job to become a waitress at an upscale restaurant. As an attractive young lady, Satou draws the attention of one of her male coworkers, but as with all other potential male suitors as of late, she rebuffs his advances. Afterwards, she sees him entering the female manager’s office. Suddenly the manager starts giving Satou significantly more work than the other employees, ostensibly in order to make up for having declined her coworker’s advances and causing discord in the restaurant. The long days keep Satou from seeing Shio, and she begins to experience some intense negative feelings towards the manager for keeping her away from her love. Payday is the final straw – Satou doesn’t receive any pay related to the overtime she’s been forced to work. But Satou knows the manager’s dark secret and threatens to blackmail her. Satou has some secrets herself, though; her “happy sugar life” as she describes it may not entirely be based in reality, and the blood-covered garbage bags in her back room may have their own tale to tell.

Categories
First Impressions Reviews

Summer 2018 First Impressions – Grand Blue Dreaming

Iori Kitahara is a college student living along in a coastal city who meets scuba-diving and fun-loving upperclassmen.ANN

Streaming: Amazon Prime

Episodes: 12

Source: Manga

Episode 1 Summary: Iori is about to start college, so moves in with his uncle and cousins so he can be closer to campus. He’s got an image in his mind of how he wants his school life to be, and that image includes none of the juvenile antics he experienced while attending an all-boys high school. Unfortunately he seems destined to repeat the past, since the school diving club members use his uncle’s diving store as a hangout – they spend their evenings drinking alcohol and taking off their clothes, and now they’re eyeing Iori as a potential new member. As much as Iori tries to resist, the guys trick him into drinking and then blacking out. He wakes up the next morning on campus in his underwear, leading to several uncomfortable situations throughout the day. Vowing never to repeat this debauchery, but in need of clothes to wear, he ends up in cahoots with his diving upperclassmen again to trick another freshman into joining the club. Their “victim” is Kouhei, an obvious otaku, who they literally grab off the sidewalk. The club welcoming party is – you guessed it – another excuse to get black-out drunk, and Iori and company end up making the same mistakes as last time.

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Book Club Special Features

Anime Book Club – Kino’s Journey ~The Beautiful World~ Week #6

Good afternoon, all! I decided to take a writing break yesterday to get some errands done. While I’m sure you were anxiously-awaiting this post (maybe?), I wanted to take time and make sure I was happy with it. Since I have the day off anyway, I figured it wouldn’t hurt to postpone it a day. Thank you for waiting.

I’m very pleased with how this book club “session” worked out. While I think active participation diminished over the weeks (this is pretty common from my experience, no worries), I hope that the people who wanted to watch until the end got the chance to do so, and that it was a fun and worthwhile experience. It’s always my goal to broaden people’s horizons with anime, so for those of you who might not have watched the show on your own, I thank you for giving it a try.

But I’m getting ahead of myself. There are still two more episodes to talk about, after all. Last week a joked that this series doesn’t really have a climax, but I suspect that episode 11 might fill that position for some of you. It’s one of only a couple stories that have been animated in both the previous animated series and this one. I think, considering how perceptions about identity have become more important over the last several years, that story in particular might resonate even more now than it did then (or maybe I’m just revealing my prior ignorance on the subject by saying so. Who knows?). I should leave the discussion for after the episode recaps, though.

Below are all the previous weeks’ posts and discussions, for those who are interested:

Week 1 – Episodes 1 and 2

Week 2 – Episodes 3 and 4

Week 3 – Episodes 5 and 6

Break Week

Week 4 – Episodes 7 and 8

Week 5 – Episodes 9 and 10

I’ll do a wrap-up post next week as well, just to share some final thoughts, and perhaps announce my next choice of title. I don’t think I’ll go through the trouble of holding a vote again; instead I think I’ll just pick something and people are welcome to participate or not as they feel up to it. If anything, these re-watches give me a chance to put together some substantial content for the website and practice my analytical writing, so it’s a win for me either way.

 

Episode 11 – Country of Adults – CrunchyrollFunimationHulu

CW: Stabbing.

Kino and Hermes are traveling through a field of deep red flowers, when Kino decides to stop for a while. This is a place of long-ago memories, some of which Kino decides to share.

Many years ago, Kino was a child in a country near this place. They were a girl with a floral name that’s been lost to memory. In the day’s before Kino’s official transition to adulthood, a traveler arrived in the country – a skinny man named Kino. Looking for a place to stay, he asked the girl her advice – she offered her parents’ inn. While staying there, the man acquired an old motorrad and set to work repairing it. As a traveler, he explains, he and the motorrad enter into a pact for their mutual benefit – the motorrad can take him places much more quickly than he could reach them on foot, and the traveler offers the motorrad the chance to be useful and fulfill its purpose. The conversation shifts to adulthood, and what that will mean to the young girl. She talks about the surgery she will undergo on her twelfth birthday which will “remove the child” from her, allowing her to become an adult and hold a job. Kino is troubled by this, and offers an alternative – perhaps adulthood can be obtained through means other than a surgery. Perhaps adulthood means something more than being able to tolerate drudgery and perform a difficult job. Perhaps adulthood isn’t a concrete thing at all.

The girl seems affected by this revelation, and tells her parents the next day that she would prefer not to undergo the surgery and asks to become an adult some other way. This goes against all teachings of their society and the girl is berated as a sinful creature by her parents and the other adults in the room. Her father retrieves a kitchen knife to dispose of his defective “property.” Kino, the traveler, is blamed for poisoning the child’s mind. As the girl’s father lunges with the knife, Kino blocks him and is stabbed in the heart. As the adults attempt to interpret this turn of events, the girl hears a small voice telling her to get on the motorrad and ride off. As she escapes to a field of red flowers, she offers her name – Kino, like the traveler. The motorrad’s name is Hermes, the name of the traveling man’s old friend.

 

Episode 12 – Fields of Sheep – CrunchyrollFunimationHulu

CW: Animal Cruelty

Kino and Hermes are in between towns, riding across beautiful verdant land and enjoying the lovely weather. In the distance they spot a herd of sheep sleeping among the trees. Though they make efforts not to disturb the creatures, the sheep wake up and are soon following the traveler and motorrad. In a short time there are sheep stalking them on either side of the road, and it becomes evident that they’re not the gentle creatures one might expect. Their aggression is certainly out of character, and Kino makes some evasive maneuvers to avoid them. Unfortunately, Kino reaches a literal impasse – a ravine cuts through the land and there’s nowhere to go. Kino separates from Hermes to descend into the ravine and hopefully find a solution to retrieve the motorrad later.

Kino finds an abandoned vehicle stuck trying to cross where the ravine is much more narrow, and discovers how its driver met a tragic end. Kino gets the truck un-stuck and returns for Hermes, going to extremes to cut through the herd and prevent the sheep from attacking. Unfortunately in this situation, violence is really the only answer and Kino has to use both a persuader and some good old-fashioned gas-fueled fire to keep the sheep at bay. After an exciting ramp-aided launch across the ravine, Kino and Hermes make their way to the next town, somehow still in one piece. They learn from the town guard that the sheep are descended from fighting sheep, bred to battle for the sake of gambling. They were released to the wild once activists began to protest. The guard is happy to learn that the sheep are still living their lives out on the plains, and Kino doesn’t have the heart to tell him the truth of the encounter.

 

Discussion Thoughts and Questions (feel free to share additional ones in the comments!)

Episode 11 is a fascinating episode to me in a lot of ways. Speaking from a “meta” perspective, the timing of the episode within the series as a whole has definitely been a point of discussion within the fandom. There’s an argument that the story, which reveals Kino’s former life and thus their original gender presentation, is treated as a sort of “prize” for viewers; that it over-emphasizes the fact that Kino was once a girl (something that has come up through other characters’ observations once or twice already throughout the series). I can see how that might be the case – several times, in response to being asked about their gender (or called a gender-related term like “boy,” for example), they’ve responded that they’re “just Kino” (the implied interpretation being “stop that, and it’s actually none of your damn business.”). Having this story occur so late in the game, after we as viewers have likely become unattached from the notion that Kino’s gender is some information that we need to know, only brings it to the forefront again and muddies the waters, or so it’s been said.

Having watched the entire series a second time at this point, I feel a little bit differently now. As a viewer I feel like I was effectively disconnected from needing to know about Kino’s gender, and watching this episode didn’t really change that. I had no moment of “Oh wait, Kino is a girl! This changes my entire perception of the series as a whole!” Perhaps it’s partly because I made a conscious decision going in that, even though I already knew this “secret” from past viewings of this anime and the 2003 Kino series, that I would respect what I thought the intent of the character was. The little girl feels like some other person from a long, long time ago, a person half-asleep or not fully-formed. Definitely not the Kino that we’ve grown to know over the last several episodes. Considering that the episode’s core seems to be focused on asking the question of what truly defines someone as an adult, I think it makes a lot more sense to look at it from that perspective.

I think in our society we have a bit of an obsession with trying to define adulthood while also having a troubling lack of awareness of what being an adult actually means in a substantive sense. We try to set an age of majority – 18 years to vote and fight, 21 to drink, 16 to drive a car (but much later to rent one). I suppose for legal purposes there has to be something concrete and numerical in place, but numbers ignore the incredible range of maturity that exists among different people at various ages, as well as some other things like biological brain development (I’ve heard that the brain doesn’t reach a point of full maturity until around age 25 in most humans, and yet we ask people much younger than that to make life-altering decisions on a regular basis). It’s not as if a switch flips at certain ages and everyone who has that number of years under their belt is suddenly capable of taking on a new set of responsibilities.

Our ideas of what an adult should be like and what adulthood ought to entail are often confused; they’re also focused around activities and expectations that aren’t achievable for everyone, or if they were would severely limit our society if everyone chose to adhere to them. These beliefs are expressed plainly in this episode – hold a job (and remember, it’s not “work” if it doesn’t completely suck!), get married, have children (and raise them to believe what’s proper and correct), and uphold the tenets of society to live a proper adult life. Spoken by the young girl to Kino the traveler these things come across as decidedly negative, and yet they aren’t far off from the expectations we have for ourselves if we’re being completely honest. Kino the traveler doesn’t fit the definition of adulthood since he enjoys his life and lives it freely and without limiting himself to one place and function, and yet he’s clearly not a child because he’s physically grown beyond childhood and he’s not controlled by anyone. I think many of us would find his way of life admirable, if not actually attainable; whether that’s a limit of our own minds or the knowledge that that type of freedom, if acted-out by everyone, would also not bode well for society as a cohesive unit, is up to interpretation.

There are some other thoughts I have about this story, but I think I’m going to save them for next week’s wrap-up rather than introduce them here because I think they fit in more widely with some of the series’ broader themes.

  1. What, if anything, defines adulthood for you? Is it a specific set of traits, an age, or something completely different?
  2. Do you think that this episode is specifically commenting on any specific cultural attitudes, or do you think it’s broader than that?
  3. What’s your opinion on Kino’s backstory and the timing of this episode?

Episode 12 is certainly amusing. I’m not sure how I feel about it as a note of finality considering how so many other episodes sparked a lot of conversation about various aspects of our society, but in a way I can’t fault the creators for wrapping things up on a decidedly lighter note. Episode 11 is definitely kind of an endpoint; we learn about how Kino’s journey started after seeing them in action in so many different situations. Episode 12 is sort of like a bonus OVA that didn’t fit in with the tone or arc of the series as a whole.

Despite being goofy, I think the episode does introduce yet another situation where people who think that they’re doing things for the purposes of good might not have taken the consequences of their actions into consideration. I’m mostly against using animals for sport, especially violent sport; I agree that they shouldn’t be imprisoned and used for the purposes of betting any longer. But the sheep were bred for a certain temperament and even in the wild they continue to express that; they’re fearless and strong, and aren’t deterred by threats from human beings. To put them out to pasture and expect them to live a happy life as normal sheep is foolish, and to expect them to treat humans, the beings that captured them and caused them to be how they are, with respect is ignorant. They are what they know how to be, and unfortunately Kino (as well as the traveler that came before them) ends up at the wrong end of things.

I also want to note that this scenario reminded me of the video game Oblivion – there’s an empty village filled only with sheep, and as it turns out the sheep are all people who were transformed into their current form in some sort of accidental magic way. The very silly, human-like bleating of the sheep as they’re run into and tossed-aside by Kino and the truck just made me remember that from long ago.

I do like how this episode wraps up, with Kino taking a well-deserved nap in a hammock. Kino says something that got me thinking a little bit – “You can change your situation however you like, depending on how you think of it.” While I don’t buy into the idea that one’s life can magically be transformed through the power of positive thinking (I’ve been told by people much of my adult life that I just need to “choose not to be depressed” and have a better attitude about life – excuse my language but those people can kindly go fuck themselves), I do think that some situations benefit from being examined from a different perspective. A situation might seem disappointing, but may also offer up a different opportunity in the place of an intended one. Sometimes someone may seem to be rude or unfriendly, but they may have something difficult going on in their life and it might not be all about you. And sometimes a journey comes to its end, but that end opens up the possibility of a new beginning. It can be sad to finish a favorite book, manga, film, or anime and it might be difficult to leave those beloved characters and settings behind. But there are always new books and manga, and the internet is jam-packed with hundreds of new anime to watch, in amounts un-consumable by any one person. I think that’s a good way to look at things.

As usual, feel free to sound off below. I’ll be back next week with a wrap-up post, and I’ll try to come up with a great entry for the next Anime Book Club!