Ongoing Investigations: Case #208

narutaki Sweet Blue Flowers is a show I caught the first episode of and then put in the “I’ll finish this sometime” pile. Luckily, Right Stuf pushed me into it by sending us a copy! I’m very grateful.

Sweet Blue Flowers is about two childhood friends who reconnect again when Fumi moves back to town. They are attending different high schools but make sure to meet up for their shared commute. Each make and share friends as their all-girl schools team up to perform a play. Akira is carefree while Fumi is more introverted as she begins to deal with her feelings for another girl at school.

More than anything, I was drawn in by Akira and Fumi’s friendship. It is really rare in anime to see a character “come out” to a friend, worry about being judged, and then finding understanding and acceptance on the other side; it just isn’t dealt with at all usually. Whether this honest and tender friendship ever develops into more will be left in the hands on the manga.

I love Akira, she is a great friend and has an infectious joy about her. There were a lot of wonderful moments of her supporting those around her with an ease, it just comes natural to her. She is also hilarious and has great expressions. I felt a kinship with her which solidified the characterization of this show.

This is from the creator of Wandering Son which feels very close to Sweet Blue Flowers in its ability to handle complicated issues of sexuality and the growing pains of youth while featuring how the bonds of friendship pull you through.

Sweet Blue Flowers is an unusual animal in the menagerie that is manga about girls falling in love. You tend to think of yuri manga as the equal and opposite of yaoi manga. A genre about homosexuals mostly for the titillation of heterosexuals of the opposite gender with little grounding in real relationships. But both genres have titles that deal with said relationships in a realistic fashion. The original Sweet Blue Flowers manga is by Takako Shimura who also writes Wandering Son. That makes sense as Wandering Son takes the topic of transvestism and gender identity and makes them real subjects for drama and not fetishes. She does the same with lesbians with Sweet Blue Flowers.

I think one of the most interesting things about Sweet Blue Flowers is that while Fumi’s sexual orientation is fairly clear on the Kinsey scale we don’t really get a good sense of where Akira’s preferences lie. In a show were we delve so deeply into the sexuality of the principal characters I think that Akira’s lack of examination is notable. Even when Akira goes on the group date she seems far more interested in it as a nonsexual social interaction than as an opportunity to find someone to date.

I think it would be easy to assume that Akira exists as a blank slate that solely exists to validate and support the fragile Fumi. But see a good deal of depth and nuance to her character outside of her interactions with Fumi so it is not like she is just a device and not a person. I feel that in that sense this has to have been done for a deliberate reason. Considering that the manga is still ongoing I wonder if this is a topic that is be saved for later examination.

That observation aside I think that anyone interested in a romantic drama with something beyond the standard boy meets girl story there is a good deal of material to sink your teeth into. There is heartbreak, drama, self-examination, and tender love. But there is also genuine and uncomplicated friendship with humor and fun. Sweet Blue Flowers is also just able to explore a good deal of issues outside of the normal romantic fare by stepping outside of the standard mold.

As a side note Reverse Thieves favorite Kunihiko Ikuhara was the unit director for the opening. That alone should make it worth checking out.

The Ongoing Investigations are little peeks into what we are watching and reading outside of our main posts on the blog. We each pick three things that we were interested in a week and talk a bit about them. There is often not much rhyme or reason to what we pick. They are just the most interesting things we saw since the last Ongoing Investigation.

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Ongoing Investigations: Case #207

So we enter the final batch of episodes of Scooby Doo! Mystery Incorporated S2 with 16-17. While I will miss the show I’m glad they were give the chance to end the series in a tidy manner. Plus I feel overall two seasons feels like a good length for the series. While I would have liked more I don’t feel like I was robbed of anything. But we shall see how much those feelings remain when the series is actually over. Until then we have Aliens Among Us and The Horrible Herd.

After a show goes on break it is always nice to transition back into the series as if you had just watched the previous episode last week. Mystery Incorporated transitions from its big “should have been accompanied by an ominous pipe organ” revelation from Theater of Doom with a general mystery that they solve pretty quickly so they can add in some detective work on the overarching mystery.

Aliens Among Us proved that the funny was still in the series as well. Sheriff Bronson Stone seemed to be taking lessons from Giorgio Tsoukalos this episode. Also Scooby seems to imply that he is so frequently asked to dig up graves as part of their investigations that he has become slightly tired of it. Also the fact that the villains of the episode apparently lives in Frodo’s house for no well explained reason is a quick blink and you miss it gag.

Random Trivia: It seems that the GPS coordinates for Gatorsburg would put in a Warner Bros warehouse in Burbank, California which is amusing little inside joke.

The Horrible Herd on the other hand proves that Professor Pericles is playing for keeps (although killer German Stormtrooper robots is not exactly kid gloves.) There were an interesting amount of subtle Aliens homages in this episode. I am curious how much they are going to deal with the fact that a good deal of town was destroyed in this episode or will they mostly just hand wave it away. With this series either scenario is possible.

I glad to see the series is still going strong entering the endgame. I think this is really destined to be a series people look back on and wonder why it did not have a bigger fan following when it was on the air. Its lovely mixture of parody and homage make it far smarter than you would assume at first glance.

Scooby Doo! Mystery Incorporated how I’ve longed for you!!! Even after a long break, the series hasn’t lost anything. Fred still has the most amazing moments, Daphne is still awesome, and all the mysteries and oddities just keep getting piled on.

Easily the best part in either of these episodes is when Fred and Sheriff Stone have a sleepover because the gang is trying to protect the Sheriff from aliens he believes abducted him. Fred’s insights about love and how the only thing better is traps is full of sage wisdom.

Daphne’s cheese expertise, which I had totally forgotten about, comes back into play when the mass of skeleton-bee-piranha-cows descend on the town.

Throwing in the Space Kook was an excellent nod.

The Ongoing Investigations are little peeks into what we are watching and reading outside of our main posts on the blog. We each pick three things that we were interested in a week and talk a bit about them. There is often not much rhyme or reason to what we pick. They are just the most interesting things we saw since the last Ongoing Investigation.

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Ongoing Investigations: Case #206

narutaki I read Akira Toriyama’s one-shot Kintoki. Toki believes he is the last of his clan the Kine known for their fighting prowess. One day while collecting money in town, a girl from Venus helps him, later when she gets in trouble with a local lord Toki rescues her.

It is pretty straight-forward. The battle panels look great which is no surprise. The character designs are just so-so, though I did like the girl’s weird suit. There are dinosaurs and Toki uses a bow so that’s fun to me!

But it doesn’t really feel like a one-shot; it doesn’t come a satisfying conclusion. It feels like the setup for a larger story which a lot of times one-shots are! But I don’t think that was really the goal here.

sep-anime

Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure is entering the final part of part two of the series otherwise known as Battle Tendency. Since this part is fairly well regarded they have definitely slowed down the breakneck pace they had with Phantom Blood but by the same token they have not drawn out anything out as well. So everything has been moving along quite nicely.

Joseph Joestar is a very different protagonist than his grandfather. He is cocky, brash, street smart, and just more fun that his predecessor. Plus who cannot love when he predicts the next line his opponent is going to say. It always comes off as slick when he does it. Hirohiko Araki does it enough to make it Joseph‘s signature trait but makes sure that the gimmick does not wear out its welcome.

The main villains of Battle Tendency are the Pillar Men and they take already on the nose names like Robert Edward O Speedwagon and brings them to the next level. I mean when you have a vampires named ACDC and Wham you are not playing your cards to close to your chest with your references. But in a way that makes it all the better. While they are still vampires they come off as very different than Dio which is good for the story overall.

Lisa Lisa is probably one of the strongest female characters in the series. It is a shame that not many of the female character in the series really reach her heights until part 6. It is amusing to see how many characters in other series she went on to inspire including Rose from Street Fighter and Iku Nagae. Caesar Anthonio Zeppeli keeps up the tradition of Zeppeli family members who befriend the protagonist and then die horribly. Rudol von Stroheim is probably the only Nazi you will ever root for (but still feel dirty about it.)

The animation is cheap but I have long since accepted that. That is just part of the show’s makeup at this point and no amount of popularity is probably going to change that. I’m mostly just happy the series is being animated in the first place.

I really want to know if they are going to continue onto part 3. They might stop here or as hinted by the trading card game we might get a new version of Stardust Crusaders. I have my fingers crossed. I mean we all want to see D’Arby! again.

The Ongoing Investigations are little peeks into what we are watching and reading outside of our main posts on the blog. We each pick three things that we were interested in a week and talk a bit about them. There is often not much rhyme or reason to what we pick. They are just the most interesting things we saw since the last Ongoing Investigation.

Continue reading