A Darker, Edgier Bang Dreams? — First Impressions

It sure looks like it from the first three episodes. Bang Dream! It’s Mygo!!!!! opens with a band dramatically breaking up, against a backdrop of a suitably moody rainy night. The fallout of that breakup is present in all three episodes released so far, leaving psychological scars on its ex-members. Previous seasons of Bang Dream did not shy away from intra band conflicts, but those were mostly misunderstandings that could be resolved quickly, people acting with the best of intentions making mistakes. Here however there seems to be an actual villain if we take the opening scene at face value, something that the third episode, seen from the point of view of Tomori,who was hurt bad by the breakup, seems to confirm. To the point that when Anon asks her to start a band with her, she runs away.

Throughout these first three issues Tomori, the silver haired girl in the clip below, comes across as neurodivergent. You can see that on display in the background of this clip, in a wonderful bit of what Jo Walton calls incluing. As pink haired protagonist Anon talks to her class mates on her first day at school, she notices they all have guitars and everybody’s in a band. While she hasa talk about it with her three class mates, in the background Tomori is quietly ordering the magnets on the chalk board to be in the proper order.

At that point Anon and Tomori had already met once, as Anon found her collecting pebbles on the school ground, the first clue that Tomori is a bit different from most girls. Later, when they run into each other again and Anon gets a little scrape on her knee, Tomori offers her a bandaid with a penguin picture on it. When Anon is politely interested, it awakes Tomori’s hyper fixation as she starts explaining about the type of penguin it shows and how she collects these. Again, something very recognisably neurodivergent. There’s of course no real diagnosis given for her, but that third episode, which is literally from her point of view, does show that Tomori is aware she’s different and sometimes struggles with it. I couldn’t help but feel a bit sad for her after watching this. She seems such a lovely but easily hurt girl. Fortunately Anon at least is aware enough to pick up on her moods and kind enough to help her. I like what Bang Dreams is doing with this.

I also like the lack of characters from the previous series. So easy to put a lot of cameos in here, but that would’ve have stifled the series. It’s enough to just have the references and the occassional off screen cameo.

Setting the mood

One of the hidden strengths of anime are its backgrounds and how just a simple shot can convey a setting or mood. Case in point, this shot from episode ten of Yamada-Kun To Lv999 No Koi Wo Suru:

Tokyo cityscape at night. Two people are crossing a zebra while a car is driving past

This perfectly captures the feel of the city late at night. Darkness only broken by the artifical lights of the lamp posts, passing cars and shop windows. There are still plenty of people out, but they’re all on their way somewhere, nobody’s just hanging about. You can tell that the day’s heat hasn’t dissipated yet. No need for clock or caption to show what time this takes place. All of it shows just how odd it was for Yamada to show up at Akane’s apartment that night because he was worried for her. It immediately lends an intensity to the episode in a way that your average ‘your crush cares for you as you’re home alone sick with the flu’ just doesn’t have. The scene later in the episode, where he has to take her to the hospital in a taxi? I’ve been there.

An almost diametrically opposite mood is set in this scene from the same week’s Skip to Loafer episode, nine. It’s the Summer holidays and Mitsumi is back with her family, gotten out of bed late on her second day staying there, just munching on some water melon and letting her thoughts drift. As she eats her melon, she idly looks at her mother doing the dishes, before looking out of the window. There follows a series of landscape shots, with only the sound of her eating the melon for company. Again, it perfectly sets the mood. Haven’t we all had those moments of laziness, slowly waking up when you know there’s nothing that you need to do but relax?

golden retriever meets lost duckling — Skip to Loafer

Every Skip to Loafer review I’ve read uses this screenshot, so who am I to break a tradition?

Friendly Shima meeting a lost Mitsuki who imprints on him like a duckling on its mother as pictured in the background

It’s cute and it accurately captures the personalities of the two leads, which is why everybody has used it. Mitsumi is a book smart girl from the countryside, self confident until something goes wrong as it did here, while Shima is a good natured handsome boy, a golden retriever in human form to continue the animal metaphor. She is lost and confused, used to being a big fish (duck?) in a small pond, utterly defeated by the complexity of Tokyo’s public transport system. He on the other hand is just late because he got out of bed late, not too bothered by it. Infected with her urgency to get to the opening ceremony, the two race to school, just in time for the speech she has to hold as the representative of the first year students.

Shima and his old school friends sitting in a restaurant

what I like about the original Skip to Loafer manga was that it isn’t just the Shima/Mitsuki show. There’s large supporting cast that isn’t just there to provide rival love interests and each of the two leads has long established friends made before they came to their new school. Seeing this established in this first episode of the anime version leaves me confident that the staff adapting it understand the manga well enough. It was mostly about the childhood friend and family Mitsuki left behind this time, but I really liked the scene with Shima and his group of middle school friends as shown above. It was casual, but it shows an understanding of how these groups work.

Mitsuki's aunt

I also liked the anime version of Mitsuki’s aunt, Nao-chan. Anime doesn’t always have the best track record portraying queer, especially trans characters, but the show nailed it.

Visiting another world does wonders for your skin

Fellas!

Are you a disgusting, fat slob that’s bullied every day by your school mates, your family, every two bit punk you meet on your way home when trying to help a girl escape from them?

The protagonist as he was: fat, short, bleeding from being beat up, depressed

Do you want the body of an athlete and the face of a male model instead? Help is on the way! One word can change your life forever: ISEKAI!

The protagonist after visiting the other world: handsome, tall, abs you could grate cheese on

Yes, isekai. If you’re a hopeless nerd with an unattractive physique and people use that to bully you, there is hope. Get yourself a kindly grandfather who leaves you his home after he dies and then, when you’re in the pits of despair, hit your bathroom mirror so hard it reveals a door to a secret room. There you will find another door that leads to another world, which atmosphere is so powerful that spending less than a day there will transform you from has-been to he-man! Juast ask Tenjou Yuuya (pictured above), the protagonist of the far too longwinded titled Isekai de Cheat Skill o Te ni Shita Ore wa, Genjitsu Sekai o mo Musou Suru: Level Up wa Jinsei o Kaeta series of light novels, manga and now anime.

Yes, this is very much the sort of power fantasy where the ugly duckling bullied kid becomes a chadly swan and takes his rightful place among the elites. As with most of these stories, you get the impression that the real outrage is not that there’s a system in which some people can bully others but that it’s this particular person that gets bullied. That Yuuja’s reward for having been bullied is becoming a super stud through no effort of your own, with a bunch of neat isekai powers and items included as well, implies the system works. Just be patient and you too might receive super powers.

What saves it is that Tenjou isn’t out for revenge and still is the same kind person he was from before his transformation. Nor does he effortlessly lose his fear of the bullies that tormented him for so long. This is still a power fantasy, but one I can enjoy relatively guild free.

Ryuichi Sakamoto 1952 – 2023

Anime News Network reports that musician and composer Ryuichi Sakamoto passed away on the 28th of March. He was a composer for several classic anime movies including Wings of Honneamise and Appleseed as well as one of the members of Yellow Magic Orchestra, a pioneering Japanese electronica music group. I only discovered the YMO last year, when feeling nostalgic for Hibike Euphonium I went to watch clips of the music performances in it and found this clip again:



Until then I’d always thought that it, like much of the other music in it, had been composed for the series, but the comments on it showed that it was actually a rather well known song. So I finally googled it and found out it was a Yellow Magical Orchestra song. Hibike Euphonium just turned it into a marching song. Having finally heard the original that turned out to be excellent as well.



This is of course just the tip of the iceberg with regards to Ryuichi Sakamoto’s work. But without this song having been used in Hibike Euphonium, I might’ve never heard of him or the Yellow Magic Orchestra and that would’ve been a pity.