SK8 the Infinity – 03 [Undesired Hero]

The list of anime tropes I hate is considerably longer than the list of those I love. Even during shows that are largely enjoyable, small annoyances tend to derail episodes or even whole character arcs in my head. I think that’s what happened with SK8’s third outing, about which I’d noted a meager number of positives and one overwhelming negative by the time the credits rolled. As far as tropes go, there were plenty to turn up your nose at: strawman bullies who try to embarrass the object of their jealousy, women fawning over the banter of two handsome men, a Char Aznable clone foreshadowed to be the final boss. But those were minor enough to come out in the wash, unlike the one that prevented me from embracing this episode: an antagonist who repeatedly decried the concept of friendship, then learned the error of his ways after losing to a pair of best friends.

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SK8 the Infinity – 02 [Awesome for the First Time]

Am I watching a 2021 anime series or a 2001 Jimmy Eat World music video? That’s the question I had to ask myself at a couple points during this episode, so similar were its guitar-heavy soundtrack and punk-lite style to the bands of my youth. SK8 the Infinity isn’t merely a nostalgic trip, though – its use of CG backgrounds and approach to color design (“just use all of them”) are exceedingly modern. The frequent cuts to cartoon versions of the characters bear a loose resemblance to street graffiti, as well, giving the show a unique brand of visual comedy. All of this is wrapped in a love for skateboarding that even an energetic anime like SK8 can scarcely contain. It’s a sophisticated production with a simple story, which could make for tough blogging, but I’m enjoying the hell out of the series so far, so I’ll give it a whirl.

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Taiso Samurai – 7-8 [Training Camp Samurai/Intensive Samurai Training]

This is the end of the road for my full Taiso Samurai writeups. Cobbling together this post was like trying to build a bird house with a hammer but no wood, and I’m not interested in repeating the experience. With just three episodes left, I’m very likely to finish the show, and there’s a decent chance it’ll be mentioned in our weekly recap columns, but its meandering story isn’t something I’m willing to spend too much brain space on next month. December already has a winter preview to write, a Best of 2020 post to plan, and a real life holiday season to prepare for (among other things). Meanwhile, Taiso Samurai’s narrative feels less diverse and more distracted the closer we get to the end. Accordingly, this will be a bit of a “Why I Dropped It” post, but my thoughts on both episodes can be found after the jump, too.

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Taiso Samurai – 06 [Samurai Father and Daughter]

I’ve been opening these posts with some variation of, “I can’t believe Jotaro wasn’t the focus of this episode!” for three weeks now, so it’s about time I stop being surprised whenever it happens. His training camp’s overlap with Rei’s birthday is the origin of the conflict here, so he’s at least involved in the plot, but it’s his daughter’s feelings that Taiso Samurai is interested in exploring. Quite simply, she’s overburdened. Going to school, doing the shopping and cooking for the family, putting on a smile for her dad even when he puts himself first… It’s too much for a nine year old girl to bear. Though this week’s resolution sees her cling tearfully to her father, I couldn’t help but feel like he got off easy. No parent enjoys seeing their child cry, but such a straightforward and cathartic expression of sadness made their subsequent reconciliation a piece of cake. We probably won’t get a story about fatherhood to follow up this depiction of a difficult childhood, and that’s a damn shame, because it’s precisely what Rei deserves.

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Taiso Samurai – 05 [Battling Samurai]

Here’s another Taiso Samurai outing where the script sidelines Jotaro, who seems to be the main character in name only. Last week it was all about Leo and Rei, and this time we’re focusing on Tetsuo and… the NHK Cup broadcasters? I’d have said “the other competitors,” but they’re so lacking in presence, both in screen time and personality, that they hardly factor into my memory of the episode. Given the upcoming Chinese training camp plot, this new crop of gymnasts are certain to recur – even if they’d been created merely to get steamrolled by Tetsuo, though, they ought to have been given decent designs. Without a reason to remember them, it’ll be tough to generate interest in any Japanese gymnasts apart from Jotaro or Tetsuo going forward.

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Taiso Samurai – 04 [Samurai Daughter]

Is Leo the stealth main character of Taiso Samurai? This episode certainly pointed in that direction, taking a prime opportunity for father-daughter bonding and making it a ninja-daughter pairing, instead. Once the Parent’s Day plot began to move toward center stage, I thought for sure that Leo would urge Jotaro to attend his little girl’s school event, but the show threw me for a loop and kept its lens on the freeloader until the end. I’m not displeased with the result, either, though I imagine that plenty of viewers are wondering where the gymnastics part of “gymnastics anime” wandered off to this week.

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Taiso Samurai – 03 [Dueling Samurai]

Here’s a more conventional sports anime episode for you. Leo still refuses to take off his ninja headgear and Big Bird is still squawking up a storm in the Aragaki household, but those oddities were baked into the show from the outset. If you were to tinker with the structure of this week’s Taiso Samurai, you’d be hard-pressed to make it more ordinary. There was a strategy session between Jotaro and his coach, an 80s training montage, an injury surmounted by hard work and dedication, and a showdown with an angry rival (whose constant outbursts were the low point of the episode). If straightforwardness is what you wanted from this very quirky show, congrats on the fulfillment of your wish. Here’s an equally straightforward blog post to match.

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Taiso Samurai – 02 [Rock-Bottom Samurai]

I may have jumped the gun on this one, y’all. Taiso Samurai’s first episode was so strange that I couldn’t help but root for it, but the second one’s weirdness was of a less fun variety. Personally, I’d take ‘rooftop chase scene between wannabe ninja and three secret agents’ over ‘transgender acupuncturist chews scenery’ any day of the week. Jotaro’s hastily conceived training menus were kind of funny here, and the introduction of a temporary antagonist in Tetsuo might give the show a little spark next week, but I bought very little of what this episode was selling. (There’s one exception to my disappointment, but we’ll get to that in a bit.) I signed up to blog this on an episodic basis, but unless it can wow me again before we reach, say, mid-November, there’s a better than decent chance it’ll end up dropped.

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Chihayafuru Season 3 Review – 82/100

Back in October of last year, I wondered whether Chihayafuru’s foundation of unceasing karuta matchups and unrequited love would have lost its luster by the third season’s end. Now that we’ve reached that point, I have to say that the series approached that limit several times over these last 24 episodes. When it first reappeared on screen after a six year hiatus, I was taken aback by its consistency, but small issues cropped up as the story ran its course (more on those in a bit). These problems were cause for reflection – was the 2019 incarnation of this show really that different, or had my expectations changed? After some thought, I arrived at an answer: the show was, in fact, different, but it still met my primary expectation. Despite some stumbles in its third season, Chihayafuru’s continued success aligns with my core belief about narrative fiction: character is king.

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Chihayafuru S3 – 24 [When Winds Send Waves Crashing]

Now *that’s* how you use a callback to finish an anime season. As a long-running series, Chihayafuru has both the history and the cast of characters necessary to echo itself in a satisfying way, and the conclusion of this episode is proof. Better yet, it involved all three main characters in the process, repeating Taichi’s past encouragement to Chihaya through Arata in the present. Even when those three are far apart, even when their minds are distracted and their hearts are broken, there’s something about the time they shared as children that keeps them connected. It’s no coincidence that the OP for this third season opened with an image of them as grade schoolers, or that both boys flash back to their elementary days once every few episodes. This finale worked to connect them in a more present sense as well (despite their physical separation), but I have to say that Arata’s text message mirroring Taichi’s faith in his old rival put a beautiful bow on this surprisingly-structured episode.

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