About Me

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A lover of the liberal arts, especially antiquity in its diverse forms, I am nonetheless wholly devoted to, utterly transformed by divine revelation. I seek to know the thought of the past, articulate my deepest longings aroused by the wise, and understand the uneasy relationship between reason and revelation; all for the sake of proper action and contemplation, both now and in the future.

4.16.2018

New Project

Oregairu was the first series to make me write on every episode, but it might not be the last. Darling in the Franxx is proving to be a smash hit, and one of the most brazen things I've seen - in an era ruled by spiritual version of Marx in general, and the notion that gender is an act of the will in particular, a work of art hammering home the importance of being an embodied man and woman together feels like a groundshattering earthquake. It's making me hungry to dig in, and it's so well done - the use of parallels, time, color, and motion in the frame all serving the story of two people encountering one another. 

Evangelion used the apocalypse as a stage to understand the search for human connection. Franxx uses the apocalypse to as a stage to understand the love of male and female together. Nothing could be more appropriate. 

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3.19.2018

On Vapid, Flat (Male) Characters

Last year I saw most of the Monogatari series, and some of its arcs blew me away with their insight into and careful probing of the characters. Hanekawa, Hitagi, Sodachi, Shinobu, and Sengoku are fascinating, and in seeing their stories you begin to understand them completely. Dostoevsky does this in almost every book he writes (Aglaya and Myshkin in Idiot, Alyosha and Ivan in Brothers), and so does Jane Austen. Monogatari's writing isn't on their level, but its characters might be. 

Curiously absent on this list, I realized, was the male lead, Araragi. Contrasted to the layered, careful revelations of the girls he encountered, he himself received no such treatment (and his sisters don't really either, so they're also not very interesting) and always seemed rather flat, even bland. Kaiki, on the other hand? The con man steals almost every scene he's in, so it's not as if Monogatari is simply incapable of writing a good male character. Araragi is just boring. I began to think about other examples of compelling male leads and found something intriguing. Maybe I'm not giving him enough credit, so when I finish and rewatch Monogatari maybe I'll revisit this opinion.

Most of all I love tautly written, intense character explorations - where the drama of a series comes from the characters themselves more so than the events (Oregairu is a perfect example of this). That means I've seen a lot of romance anime, and while a significant minority of it has been terrible, when I turned my attention to the male protagonists vs the female, I often found that the female leads were better fleshed out, more layered, and more complex - in short, more interesting, more compelling, than the main (male) character. A great example is Nisekoi, where both lead girls, Onodera and Chitoge, as the series progresses, are both unfolded and revealed in interesting ways. Raku, on the other hand, mostly exists so that girls can adore him, and most of his screen time is spent reacting to the spunky antics of said girls. 

This pattern kept cropping up, especially in what I'd call mid-tier anime: the reasonably entertaining, worth-a-watch type of series. Amagami, Seiren, Eromanga Sensei, Konbini Kareshi, Gamers, Just Because, Hidan no Aria, Nisekoi, Radukai Kishi no Calvary, Guilty Crown, Oda Nobuna, Ore no Kanojo, Saekano, Golden Time, and so on. Miyazaki's films are almost always focusing on a female protagonist (Princess Mononoke is an outlier, and of course Ashitaka is an incredible hero, on the level of Nausicaa and Sophie), so for a bit I wondered where the great male protagonists were. 

Two things happened after that. I saw a lot of top-tier animation (Makoto Senkai's work, for one), and a little reflection on it found that there were plenty of well-written heroes - Shinji, Hachiman, Okazaki, Subaru, Takao, Taki, and Willem all come to mind here. Second, I played a psychological horror game called Doki Doki Literature Club - a twisted, demented version of something called a dating simulation (meditate on what a dating sim is and you will experience something called 'fridge horror'), where a number of heroines are present, each with their own route through the game. As it progresses, more about the girls is revealed, but the main character (i.e. you) is static. No change. 

Click. The lights came on. In the dating sim, you simply place yourself in the position of the main character, so it's actually intended that the main character there be flat and empty. And hence in a lot of romance/drama (especially harems), the same principle often applies. The male lead is just a self-insert for the audience. For instance, compare Raku from Nisekoi to Hachiman from Oregairu, or Eita in Just Because! to Re:Zero's Subaru. In the former, the main character reacts to hijinks around him; in the latter, he is fully alive, furthers the drama, and fundamentally changes. The reason I was seeing a preponderant number of compelling female leads was because the genres that attracted me the most were character-driven slice of life dramas/love stories, just like (you guessed it) Jane Austen and Dostoevsky, and those genres simply tended to follow the trope of bland main (male) characters as viewer stand-ins. And similarly in shoujo anime; the female lead is dull, bland, and the perennial object of a much more interesting male character, so that girls can place themselves in her position and enjoy the fantasy. 

That's not very good or very interesting art, and it vanishes with the greatest anime, but at least now I understand it. It's why dramas like White Album 2, Evangelion, and Oregairu are so much better than Saekano, Golden Time, and Konbini Kareshi. Getting beyond wish fulfillment fantasies is in some measure impossible, but that they be woven into great art is not. And in fact, the best anime (and film and literature) are usually some form of both. 

3.11.2018

Anime's Toilet Bowl Genres

I've now seen close to two hundred films and series, and probably thirty or forty were various levels of awful - from three through five stars out of ten. One persistently terrible genre, however, has been shoujo - i.e. adaptations from source material marketed towards young, i.e. adolescent females; shounen being the male equivalent. 

(Obviously there are other consistently terrible genres - harem and ecchi come to mind immediately. Hentai, like all pornography, I do not consider art at all) So for now, I want to crowdsource and compare shoujo series with the shounen series (usually another awful genre). Let the data mining commence. My results are likely to be skewed, since there are about 1800 shounen anime and only about 600 shoujo anime. No matter. For shounen I've got:
  • Attack on Titan
  • Your Lie in April
  • Samurai Champloo
  • Silent Voice
  • Claymore
  • Tsurezure Children
  • Shokugeki (guilty pleasure)
Some very fine material here (except for Shokugeki, of which I am kind of ashamed for enjoying. But I like cooking and boy does it make me hungry). Samurai is very good, Silent Voice is top-tier, and Your Lie has moments of pure, elegaic beauty. 

Okay, onto shoujo. I combed through the complete database of shoujo anime, and didn't find much there:
  • Shirayuki
  • Natsume Yujinchou (by reputation only - D recommended it to me, but I haven't seen it yet)
And that's it.  Of the shoujo I've seen, only Shirayuki comes to mind - the anime adaptation of Snow White. The first season was quite excellent, but the second was just barely watchable. All the other series seem the female equivalent of harems, except I have the sneaking suspicion that such shoujo series (e.g. Maid-sama, Wolf Girl, etc.) are also wish-fulfillment oriented towards high school boys. If they're not, then the Japanese female fantasy makes the male fantasy seem wholesome by comparison (e.g. the constant, omnipresent threat of and deliverance from rape/sexual assault is beyond twisted). Ore Monogatari, which I've seen half of, is pretty much the genre's last hope, and even that was a rainbow unicorn sugar-fest. I've dropped it for now because it was just a bit too much sweet, and because the female lead was barely a person (a good cook, kind and compassionate, and utterly devoted to the male lead. Somehow light-years away from Belldandy, who has many of those characteristics but has a steel core to her). Shirayuki is easily ten times better as a heroine. 

Ecchi is almost exclusively garbage, as is harem (Inou Battle and Nisekoi are really the only exceptions I've found, and they're only rewatchably-entertaining at best; and even then, only Inou Battle has a male lead who's not a self-insert for the audience). Sadly, shoujo seems to be the latest addition to the Anime Toilet Bowl, joining the swirling sewage of ecchi harem. 

1.25.2018

Potential Series

Monogatari is a very, very long series and makes loquacity seem laconic. Endless, endless exposition. Some very, very fine arcs, but I've set it aside for awhile. Owarimonogatari Season 2 will get watched eventually, but other things came first, like Fate/Zero, a series so black it makes Game of Thrones look like Disney Princess tea party. I'll write something on its finest episode, but I can only take so much despair.

Below are a lot of potential series, so while I wait for Saturdays, when the twelve or so series I'm following this season air, I'll pick some to watch during the week. Flip Flappers or Princess Principal, most likely.
  • Servant x Service
  • Iron Blooded Orphans
  • Flip Flappers
  • The Eccentric Family
  • Mushishi
  • Natumse Yuujinshou
  • Yama no Susume
  • Princess Principal
  • Paranoia Agent
  • Kino's Journey
  • Gatchaman Crowds
  • Ef Tale of Memories
  • Denpa Onna
  • Love Lab
  • Aria
  • Dagashi Kashi
  • Mitsubishi Colors
  • My Neighbor Totoro
  • Owarimonogatari S.2
  • Revolutionary Girl Utena
  • Ga Rei Zero
  • NHK
  • Kinmoza
  • Yuru Yuri
  • Net-juu no Susume
  • Is the Order a Rabbit?
  • Kimi to Boku
  • Classroom Crisis
  • Sora no Woto
  • Amanchu
  • Aoi Hana
  • Hourou Musuko
  • Time of Eve
  • Sukkite ii na yo
  • Ano natsu
  • New Game
  • Fireworks
  • Psycho Pass
  • Watamote
  • Terror in Resonance
  • Occult Academy
  • Requiem from the Darkness
  • Girlish Number
  • Ajin
  • ACCA
  • House of Five Leaves

1.04.2018

New Projects

Last year was the discovery that anime had become high art. I think it was the fall season of 2016 I first encountered Oregairu, which utterly transfixed me. Then followed gems like Steins;Gate, Shinsekai Yori, Hyouka, Re:Zero, Garden of Words, and Monogatari. Oregairu is currently battling it out with Evangelion (Episode 2.8 might be worth most, if not all, of Eva) for my #1 spot, with Shinsekai Yori and Hyouka right behind it, and it was the first series to inspire me to cover each and every episode. 

But now that I've finished writing about the finale, I feel a bit restless. I have a list of some thirty more series that look promising, but I don't want to stop writing, either. I could do more character sketches, and go into Hachiman, Yui, Yukino, and Haruno's characters again, from the perspective of the entire series, but I think I'll give Oregairu a rest for the time being. Also, this is my second year (out of ten) in what I'm calling my self-directed apprenticeship of preparation for eventual contribution to the intellectual/artistic/spiritual life as a whole, so reflecting about art in the media of anime and video games will play a distinct role in that, and I should think about what that is.

Thus, I probably won't cover another anime run in the way I did Oregairu, but I might well cover individual arcs at a time instead (e.g. Tsubasa Tiger from Monogatari), especially those which let you know a character inside and out -  and I might even cover standalone episodes that intensely, beautifully depict forms of love: family love in Clannad 2.18, and romantic love in Re:Zero 18 (and I'm still hunting for a beautiful, transcendent depiction of friendship in art). Posts on Breath of the Wild and The Last of Us are probably forthcoming as well. 

What captivates me has always been beauty: beauty in the art i.e. photography of anime, music, and writing. I want to be able to speak about the why something is beautiful, whether an image or a deed, and explain, at least to myself, why it is so moving, or why a character seems so real it helps me understand myself and other people; and when you can really understand someone inside out, loving them often becomes almost effortless. 

Speaking of beauty, there is sometimes beauty - awful, heart-rending beauty - in tragedy, so I might actually start writing on either the arcs or characters of White Album 2. That series had one of the most devastating turns I've ever seen, accompanied with an understanding, empathetic eye for each of the three main characters. No antagonist, no enemy, just three people fully realized, and complicated enough to make it a pleasure to try and understand them.