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For a while now, I've actually been covering shows that I at least found to be decent.
It's a little weird considering what started getting me attention in the first place were
me just tearing into Tonari and Clannad. I suppose the infamy made me not want to be
known as "that guy that hates everything", which I'm definitely not. Hell, I'm probably
the most lenient "harsh" critic out there.
However, it has been a bit too long, so it's time for another installment of Riyoga's Unpopular
Opinions.
Before everyone lynches me, I should start with what the movie did right.
As per usual when it comes to KyoAni, the animation is fantastic. Honestly, what do
you expect when you give those guys a movie-sized budget to work with? It's obvious they put
a lot of love and care into making the movie: the backgrounds look nice, the lighting is
done extremely well in the scenes that need it, the breath of the characters in the cold
air is nicely done, and the characters... uhm, look good.
Okay, it might be the inner cynic in me towards what the show stands for, but as some other
people have said, I feel like the Haruhi character designs keep looking more and more K-ON-ish.
They just look more... blobby than they used to. Then again the first season aired back
in '06, so maybe it's just a result of new animation techniques or animators.
Other than the animation, the story in regards to Kyon was done very well. He's a guy that's
been consistently defined by his snarky retorts towards Haruhi's ideas and actions, so having
him go through a "trial" of sorts to come to terms with the fact that he actually does
enjoy being around her was the perfect way to develop his character.
Though I'm not entirely sure why everyone goes absolutely crazy for the scene near the
end where it goes all symbolic and Kyon beats a confession out of himself. Granted, it was
a well-done scene, but people make it seem like it was the first time a physical representation
of an internal struggle has been done ever, which is certainly not the case. This isn't
really the movie's fault, it's a more meta complaint, but I just wanted to briefly mention
it because I just hear people praising it so much.
But now we come to the fun part: the things that I hated about the movie. Though perhaps
oddly enough, I really only have two major complaints with it. The thing is that they're
big enough to completely ruin the movie for me, one more so than the other. It's just
that since I'm in a vast minority, I have to explain these two problems as best as I
can so people know where I'm coming from.
Oh who am I kidding, there will still be people demanding blood no matter what I say.
The first problem I have with the movie is a problem I often have with movies in general:
the pacing is jacked up. Fun fact: I rewatch older stuff when I review them, and it took
me multiple days to get through the first hour of this movie. Then again horrible pacing
is hardly surprising coming from the team that thought Endless Eight was a brilliant
idea.
I know people like to argue that it drags on to impress upon you the atmosphere of Haruhi
being gone, but honestly, I was bored even before the universe was changed. With a title
like The Disappearance of Haruhi Suzumiya, you kind of know what's going to happen, so
you're just stuck there waiting for it to happen.
In all fairness, it's obviously necessary to have the beginning of the movie be before
everything changes, so I don't have a problem with it as a whole or anything, I just think
it dragged on a bit too long. However, the pacing is still awful after the change too.
There's a point in the movie where it's obvious to the audience that Haruhi has disappeared,
but it takes Kyon about an extra seven minutes before he also gets the picture. That's a
bit over a third of the length of a normal episode of something. Again, I get that it
was trying to say how Kyon could never even consider the possibility that Haruhi would
vanish, but you don't have to take seven minutes to send that message. Taking longer is not
equivalent to making a message more impactful. If that was the case, everyone would think
that the walking scene in Flowers of Evil was the greatest scene ever made by man.
That's not all though, from the moment Kyon understands that Haruhi is gone up until the
next big event happens (when he finds out Haruhi is at another school), thirty minutes
pass. That is an absurd amount of time to ask your audience to wait for something to
actually happen.
This is also the chunk where, as already mentioned, people argue that it's trying to impress upon
you the atmosphere of Haruhi being gone. That's still no excuse for boring your audience for
so long (again, taking longer does not make something more impactful), but even if we
take that into account, most people will probably get that message about fifteen minutes in.
At least, that's when it was for me. So that's an extra fifteen minutes people have to wait
after they already get the message the movie is trying to send.
Unlike me, there are people who will drop movies without finishing them if they get
bored, and with the horrible pacing in the first hour of the movie, they'd have every
right to.
Now, to the movie's credit, the pacing after the first hour is a hell of a lot better.
Almost perfect, I'd say. While it took me multiple days to get through the first hour,
I blasted through the last hour and a half in one go. I think the only thing that bugged
me about it was the botched time travel mechanics. It tries to follow two different ideas for
it that don't work together at all.
It tries mainly to follow the pre-determined idea of time travel where everything is already
written in stone, which is why adult Mikuru knows where Kyon is all the time and why he's
there, but then she keeps telling him about how he can change things, which is the philosophy
that time travel re-writes history as you do it. The two diametrically oppose each other
so you can't really use them together, but the time travel stuff isn't that big a focus
so it's mostly something you can ignore. Just saying that it makes absolutely no sense since
it contradicts itself.
While I had pretty big issues with the pacing, my other problem is the one that killed the
movie for me, and is also probably the one people will want to *** me over: I hated
what they did with Nagato's character.
I liked the idea of what they wanted to do with her: she's a weird robot thing, but she
can also display human traits at times, so you're not sure exactly what she's supposed
to be, so the events that transpire are due to these emotions building up in her and such.
I like that, and I like the concept of her character, it's interesting.
What's not interesting is when you butcher that character by trying to say she's actually
some stupid moeblob trapped inside her existence as a robot-cyborg-thing due to Haruhi's godly
desires.
Constantly being unsure of whether to view Nagato as a human or a robot was what made
her interesting, not... this.
I think I'd be more accepting of this movie if Nagato was shown as kind of a normal person,
or hell, they could have still gone for the cute angle, but the blatant otaku pandering
personality they gave her (namely the lack of one) was just so offensive to me considering
the strength of her usual character. She just followed Kyon around and did whatever he said.
She's completely devoted to him and gets all sad when he rejects her club application because
in the past he sort of helped her get a library card? That's *** stupid.
This Nagato was just... christ she wasn't even character. You know what she was? A ***
puppy.
You might think, "Wait, what's wrong with that? I love puppies!" It's because people
aren't puppies. Again, I seem to be stating the obvious, so I'm going to explain this
in unnecessarily excessive detail, since it also serves to explain why I hate cutesy moeblob
characters in general.
Puppies and dogs are entirely defined by their loyalty and dedication because that's the
most complicated mindset they're capable of. Other than basic things like anger and sadness,
pets in general don't really think on a complicated level. They don't worry about relationships
and jobs and education and anything else humans have to deal with on a daily basis. Sure,
maybe they have some thoughts swirling around in their heads if we could understand what
they're thinking, but even then we are two different species and are viewed differently.
Let me give an example: when you bring a puppy home for the first time and it follows you
around and watches you do stuff, that's cute. When a person you just met follows you around
and watches you do stuff, that's creepy.
Unlike our pets, we have societal rules and norms and other complicated *** that makes
it so we judge our actions on an entirely different level than other animals. However,
shows sometimes try to take advantage of this different mindset towards animals and will
give characters sort of quirks that try to draw on those emotions, and it works most
of the time. It's something anime can pull off easily due to the type of medium it is.
It can add to this effect visually by giving the characters big eyes and small hands and
fingers and such.
But when you're someone who views anime the way I do, or at least to a somewhat similar
degree, you see these moves for what they are: shallow ploys to try and get you far
too attached to a character with no actual personality. Generally a good test for character
writing is asking yourself, "Would I care as much about this character if they looked
completely different?" It can be hard to detach yourself, so it's not a test that will work
for everyone, but if you find yourself answering "no", the character might not be as great
as you first thought.
You know what, maybe it would just be easier if I pointed out exactly which scene pissed
me off in regards to her character.
When Kyon is first looking for members of the SOS Brigade after finding out Haruhi has
disappeared, he eventually winds up finding Nagato in the room. After questioning her
a bit, it gets to a point where he pretty much has her pinned against a bookshelf and
she can't get away. She's pretty much freaking out but can't say anything, and Kyon only
stops berating her with questions when he notices it looks like she's practically about
to pass out. He apologizes (I think), and a bit later he goes to leave. Before he can,
however, Nagato stops him and hands him a club application form.
That scene was when I gave up all hope of enjoying the movie. No sane person would have
done that after what he did! You know why the movie thought it could get away with it
and why you might be yelling at me that I'm wrong right now? Because the script tried
(and apparently succeeded) to cheat by using the audiences previous knowledge of characters.
You see, you know Kyon isn't actually a bad guy when he does this because you already
spent two seasons with him. You know he's just frustrated and trying to get answers,
he's a bit flustered is all. But from Nagato's perspective, this is only the second time
they've met. She knows next to nothing about this guy, and he's pretty much forcing her
up against a bookshelf.
It's easier to imagine it as if a brand new character had come into the clubroom and done
this. Wouldn't you see him as a gigantic creep or *** or both? Nagato should be at least
wary of him after it, but no, apparently getting someone a library card makes you a ***
angel who can do no wrong ever.
Maybe it normally wouldn't bug me this much, but when this movie first came out people
would not shut up about how adorable Nagato was in it.
I know the movie shares the spotlight between Nagato and Kyon and I already mentioned Kyon
was done well, but I just hate when stuff like this is done to characters, especially
female ones. It's the whole reason I got pissed off at Tonari back when that was airing. I
mean it's one thing to have a weak female character, but it's another thing to make
that character weaker and act like you're making them better. It just pisses me off.
This is one of the very few times I hope a movie is just filler and never gets brought
up again in the story that will inevitably continue. The series will be better off for
it.