2017-10-11
Looking back at the Summer 2017 anime season
Once again it's time for my traditional look back at what I watched in this past Summer season, to follow up on my early impressions and my midway views. Overall I would call this a decent season with one clear stand-out show that is far ahead of everything else I watched.
Excellent with an amazing finish:
- Made in Abyss: While the show wasn't flawless, it was always
beautiful and full of the strangeness of the Abyss
(and often tense), and it built up to a jaw-droppingly
stunning and emotional final episode. I have no words.
The last track of Kevin Penkin's beautiful soundtrack is going to stay with
me for a long time.
(In both its last episode and an earlier episode, Made in Abyss managed to achieve the kind of genuine emotional power and impact that very few shows can even approach.)
I would love to see a second season of Made in Abyss that was as well-made as this one, but if we never get any more, the send-off we got was everything I could have asked for. It is and feels like a real turning point and transition point in the story, and that's a good place to stop.
Pretty good once the dust settled:
- Princess Principal: The show's overall execution was very good,
but in the end I stand by my view that it's more of a prequel than
a story,
and that somewhat lessens the impact. It's not as simple as there
not being enough story and plot; the very short version is that while
everyone is a dramatic character
and they all had character development, none of them went through a
full character arc.
(The character who comes closest to having no development is Beatrice, but the show goes out of its way to show that she's working to change herself.)
- Senki Zesshou Symphogear AXZ: By now you're either on board for the Symphogear experience or you're not. If you are, this was a fine installment, full of all of the elements that make the show itself. I liked how the show was spared the need to give things a big ending and wrapup due to there already being a fifth season on the way. See also Evirus's writeup.
Enjoyable:
- My Hero Academia: I enjoyed the show overall and I do generally
like hanging around with the characters; I'll probably miss them while
they're gone (there's yet another season coming, of course). I'm not
really happy about the cast being pulled into epic, world-spanning
plots and stories; I would rather see them living a high school life
and occasionally being on the periphery of greater events. But this
is a Shonen Jump title, so we get what we get.
(I continue to be happy that MHA didn't try to give Bakugo any sort of tragic backstory.)
Fine popcorn watching:
- Knight's & Magic: It was very earnest and did what it set out to do pretty well. It was also surprisingly forthright about the fundamental irrationality and unreality of giant robots, and in the context of the show I don't object that romanticism won out because the thumb of the plot was clearly on its side; the plot has been on Ernesti's side all along.
Survived to the end of the season by the skin of its teeth and then dropped:
- Fate/Apocrypha: I finished out the nominal season and turning point (episode 12) and then stopped because there was very little about the show that I was interested in. I think I may finally be done with the Fate ride as a whole; it basically always ends the same way and I can read about the plot twists and the spoilers on my own if I want to.
By the end of the show, Made in Abyss single-handedly justified this season (to the extent that seasons of anime need any justification). I'm generally happy with everything else that I watched except Fate/Apocrypha, and continuing to watch that past the first episode is my own fault. I knew what F/A was from the start, but I let myself be talked into continuing with it for the splashy animation; by now I should know that that doesn't work for me.
2017-09-16
Made in Abyss and characters going through brutal things
So what happened is that I saw someone on Twitter wondering if they should catch up on Made in Abyss, because they'd heard (and seen from screenshots) that some brutal and unpleasant things happened to the characters and were partly wondering if the show was being gratuitous with them. This sparked a stream of thoughts on Twitter:
Made in Abyss's latest episodes are wrenching and powerful, but are they necessary? And is this a question that matters?
I don't think MiA's events were gratuitous or overdone & things mostly focused on the emotional impact. The body horror was probably needed.
'Body horror' is not quite the right description for 'people getting hurt badly', but Twitter has length limits. The show definitely presented the situation in a way that was intended to make it wrenching; this was not pleasant, pretty, antiseptic stuff, it was visceral and cringe-inducing and painful to watch. Within the context of the episodes I don't think the show dwelt on things in a way that would have made it torture porn or pain porn; the focus was very much on how all of these horrible things affected the characters, especially Reg. The horrible things got shown to give Reg's reactions context and weight, and the show framed things claustrophobically to focus on this (cf, which has spoilers).
(See Nick Creamer's description in his week in summary post for more concrete stuff, but note that it has spoilers. He calls episode 10 'viscerally excruciating' and I would have to agree with that.)
As for the overall necessity, we have to wait and see how the story develops. I think there are early promising signs based on Nanachi.
That the events in the episode are non-gratuitous doesn't necessarily mean that the episode itself (and those events) are actually necessary. We won't know how necessary the events were overall until we see the story and the show's themes develop more. However, I think there are already clear promising signs, because the course of the story has clearly shifted after the events of episode 10.
Story elements don't necessarily have to have a point; they can be there for emotional impact. But terror and pain are empty w/o a meaning.
Made in Abyss certainly delivered emotional impact. Whether it used too much terror & pain for that is still open and also a personal call.
This is the question of whether the question in my initial tweet even matters. If Made in Abyss episodes 10 and 11 evoke such a strong emotional reaction from us, do they have to be 'necessary' in the larger scale of the plot? After all, stories are in large part about the emotional reactions they evoke and episode 10 certainly did that.
I don't have an answer but I do have an opinion, which is that some ways of evoking emotional responses are cheaper, easier, and more shallow than others. Kicking a puppy is a bad cliche for a good reason. Tormenting characters just to get a reaction from the audience is lazy and unappealing, and in the process it lessens the impact of the entire work. I personally don't think that Made in Abyss has crossed this line, but then I'm a jaded anime watcher.
(And I will admit that there are caution signs in some things in Made in Abyss, things that came up in passing that I'm not sure really needed to be there. Some of these questionable bits have been there from early on in the show.)