I hope to be as petty as her some day — Yorimoi ep 5

Because this really is amazing but well deserved pettiness.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: Shirase is petty

It’s typical of any school to take the credit for the hard work of their students after the fact, having done nothing to help or encourage them and considering how long Shirase has been mocked and laughed at for wanting to go to Antarctica, it’s not surprising she keeps her speech to a short and simple “I’m going”. It’s a wonder she didn’t rub everybody’s faces in it more. But she stays calm, cool and if people don’t understand that this is her rubbing it in how wrong everybody was, that’s fine with her. She knows what she meant and that’s good enough. A far cry from how nervous she’s recording one of the promos for the expedition together with Mari and Yuzuki in literally the next scene. When Yuzuki wonders why Shirase is so nervous but was fine at the assembly, Mari theorises it’s because she can only be confident if she thinks she’s surrounded by enemies and her “screw you” switch gets flipped…

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: Takahashi Megumi

But this episode isn’t really about Shirase or any of the four going to Antarctica. It’s about this girl, Mari’s best friend (only friend?) until she met Shirase: Takahashi Megumi, who’d always been there to support Mari. Throughout the series so far she’d been the voice of caution, tempering Mari whenever she gets a bit too enthusiastic about her plans to go to Antarctica, pointing out how it all might happen. Megumi keeps telling Mari not to get too invested, to not try too hard or it will hurt all the more if she fails again. Her concerns are understandable, considering she’s been Mari’s friend since childhood and always had to support her and until now, she always had to pick up the pieces when Mari failed to go through with what she set out to do (as in the first episode, when she wanted to skip school and ended up going there anyway, because it rained). Yet as Mari’s plans to go to Antarctica became more and more concrete, the less convincing Megumi’s concerns became. She has become more of a wet blanket than she’s helpful. Mari takes her advice at face value, but as a viewer you know there’s clearly something going on with this girl.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: four friends

Meanwhile take a look at those four, on their way back from the promo that Shirase had so much problems with. Discussing their luggage quota of a hundred kilograms — which includes themselves–, Mari boasts that she can take “upwards of fiftyeight kilos” with her. Which is such bullshit. I couldn’t even ship myself with that quota. In any case, Hinata on the right immediately goes “not with that arm flab, sister” but you can tell it’s all teasing rather than meant seriously. I really like how the series portrays those four, with Hinata and Mari slightly more sarky than the other two, Yuzuki in particular more serious than the other three and Shirase prone to switching between serious and panicing, as said. Even in this screenshot you can see some of their character shine through. As for Mari, she’s clearly more at ease with these three now than she is with her childhood friend, even as she tries to get her involved. There’s a distance between the two that Mari must’ve subconsciously noticed

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: I came to break up

It all comes to a head on the very morning that Mari leaves for Antarctica, after having her goodbye karaoke with Hinata, Shirase and Megumi, not to mention her farewell diner with her family. When she walks out of the door, Megumi is there, waiting for her. When asked what she wants, Megumi tells her she comes to break up with her. They can no longer be friends and as Mari stares at her uncomprehending, she spells it out for her. She tells her how much of what she warned Mari about she actually spread around, like the rumours about Shirase carrying around a million yen. She tells her how scared she actually is to see her relationship with Mari changed, how she liked being the dependable one but now she no longer had her as a crutch to boost her self esteem. She needs to let go, even if Mari forgives her for her jealousy.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: break up cancelled

Mari has other ideas.

It’s a brilliant scene, the climax of five episodes of buildup, a real serious spot in a series that’s been mostly light hearted. You can so understand Megumi’s frustration, of seeing somebody who has always been dependent on you go their own way, leaving you behind as they find new friends. Her insecurity and jealousy is nasty, but you can sympathise with her; she’s not a total asshole, just scared of losing her friend and therefore deciding to burn her bridges herself. But Mari has other ideas. She understands where Megumi is coming from and can forgive her for it. In any case, they’ll be away from each other for three months, so any resolution can wait until she’s back…

We need a training montage — Yorimoi ep 4

Last episode the team was finally complete and they’re finally going to Antarctica. But of course you cannot just send a gaggle of high school girls there without preparation, which means this is the training camp episode.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: school girls go to Antarctica

With financing for the Antarctic expedition secured in episode three by having a high school idol join it and with Shirase and co joining as her companions, the time is now right to go on trainings camp. The episode starts with Mari marveling at the idea that they’re actually going no, no dream, no lie and she can’t help but gush about it to Shirase. When two passing girls giggle at this, she wants to say something but Shirase stops her. It’s not like they would believe them now anyway, but she fully plans to rub it in their faces when they are finally going. But first they need to ask for time off for the actual trainings camp. Which is a bit of a problem for Mari, as she hasn’t actually told her parents yet…

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: asking mum for permission to go to Antarctica is scary

Mari enlists the moral support of her younger sister as she goes up to ask her mother for her approval, first trying to figure out what kind of mood she’s in. As you maybe can tell from the screenshot above, this is pretty much shot as a horror scene. One of those where the heroine is in the same room as the person she suspects to be the psychotic killer and she tries to confirm this without alerting him. The scene starts off with normal, warm lightning and no music as the two sisters deliberate whether this is the right moment to ask, but the second their mother asks Mari to take the bath salts out of the shopping bag to put them in the bathroom and they turn out to be Antarctica styled bath salts, the light gets darker and cue the horror music. Worse, you get those cut shots of perfectly normal things — mum chopping vegetables, a pot boiling on the fire — with sinister lightning and the mood goes full horror when mum asks Mari is something on her mind — Antarctica perhaps? Little sis immediately closes the kitchen door, Mari scrambles to appease her mother, but fails, she runs out of the kitchen into the hallway and smack into the front door. As her mother, slowly, menacingly, walks towards her she might be saved as her father shows up and opens the door. Salvation is short lived as he takes one look and closes the door again. It’s the perfect horror scene, miles above anything the actual horror series this season has produced. Some people disliked the scene because it felt like making comedy out of domestic abuse, but it never read this way to me, just Mari facing the (deserved) wrath of her mother.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: unsympathetic friend

Case in point, as she discusses it the next day with her rather unsympathetic friend, there’s no comedy bump on her head or anything that shows her mother hit her. It’s just Mari complaining that now she has to pass all her tests if she wants to go. Her friend asks her if she’s alright going on the training camp next week, what with the expedition still being unsure or so she heard. For Mari this isn’t something she can do anything about, so she just has to do her best. As she rushes off to her part time job her friend, Takahashi Megumi again pours cold water on her enthusiasm, telling her not to work too hard because she will regret it if it all falls through. It’s not the first time she’s done that; throughout the series so far she has been the dedicated skeptic, not entirely scoffing at going to Antarctica, but still continually telling Mari not to push herself too much. Whether she’s doing so out of genuine concern or something darker is unclear, as we never see her other than when she’s talking with Mari.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: shut up idiots

A few days later, the girls meet up to wait for Maekawa Kanae to pick them up and drive them to the training site. One failed attempt by Maki to recruit Shirase and Hinata in helping her study and Yuzuki getting shirty about her modeling image later, they’re picked up by Kanae, who is one of the two women they met in episode two. During the drive the conversation naturally turns to the financing problems the expedition has and Kanea is blunt in her disdain of such concerns. Note by the way that Mari’s recruitment effort is about the last time we hear of her having to pass all her tests. The series doesn’t waste any time in showing her actually doing so, which helps keep up the tempo. The entire sequence here is a good example of economic storytelling, no time wasted on regurgitating things we should already know, instead using the time & humour to further flesh out everybody’s character by how they interact with each other.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: expedition captain Todo Gin

As the girls settle in for a day of lectures and presentations, they’re introduced to the expedition captain, Todo Gin. You can immediately tell she’s a no-nonsense hardass woman. Well, she has to be as expedition captain, especially as a woman. She wastes no time in laying down the ground rules for Shirase and co, telling them that she’s going to treat them like any other expedition member and are expected to do the same sort of jobs when needed.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: Gin and Kanae thinking about the past

It’s clear (but not spelled out) from Shirase’s reaction to captain Gin that she and her have a history together. Something that doesn’t go unnoticed by Mari, though she doesn’t say anything yet. Kanae meanwhile does ask Gin how it feels to see “that girl” again after so long, who answers that she won’t treat her any different from the other members. She also makes clear that she didn’t really want her on the expedition and wonders why Kanae got her on anyway. Kanea then explains it was her own efforts that got her on the expedition. This is somewhat of an exposition scene but it works because it does only the bare minimum of what needs to be explained, without characters telling each other what they already know and again fleshing out Gin and Kanae’s characters a bit more.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: finally doing the training

For all that this is the training camp episode, the actal training gets short shrift. We only get to see the girls go on one orienteering exercise. More isn’t needed, because the series trusts the viewer to get the point. In any case it’s a good way to see the girls’ teamwork and individual strengths in action. It’s also an excuse to put in some more exposition about the dangers of traveling in Antarctica.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: there is always one sleeping like this

Part of the training has the girls camping together in one tent. To nobody’s surprise Mari is that kind of person, restless in her sleep, eager to talk all night and in general thoroughly irritating the other three. But she was also sharp enough to see that Shirase must’ve known captain Gin already, so she asks her about it. Shirase’s explanation is simple: Gin and her mother were high school friends, then team mates on the same Antarctica expedition. Gin came back. Her mother didn’t. It’s a poignant moment, made better by being embedded in an otherwise mostly comedic sequence. Various small touches, like Hinata gently restraining Mari when she wants to comfort Shirase, or earlier Yuzuki mangling her words when wanting to blow off Mari and remain polite but ending up having Mari and Hinata giggle at her as a result, make this an almost perfect scene.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: Mari and Gin having a heart to heart

The episode ends with the girls watching the sunset together, but not before Mari has a heart to heart with captain Gin. Mari asks her about Shirase, both agreeing she can be trouble, but trouble is the best. Or at least Mari thinks so, while Gin thinks that attitude will serve her well in Antarctica, asking Mari if she’s only going because Shirase is going. Way back in episode one we saw that Mari only latched on Shirase’s dream in the first place because she wanted a dream of her own and anything would do. Now however, she’s going to Antarctica not because she wants to be anywhere but where she lives, but because she really wants to go to the South Pole. It’s a sign how much she’s grown since the series started. It’s a measure of how well Yorimo picks its scenes and tells its story that this development feels completely natural in such a small span of time.

Getting the band together — Yorimoi ep 2-3

In episode one Tamaki Mari –our heroine– despairing of her eventless high school life met Kobuchizawa Shirase who wanted to go to Antarctica to find her missing mother. But since we have four school girls going to Antarctica, so episode two and three of Yorimoi are about getting the band together.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: school girls in Antarctica

Episode two starts where episode one left off, with Kimari and Shirase in Hiroshima, going on a tour of the ship for the upcoming expedition to Antarctica, before discussing the financial realities of going to Antarctica, mainly needing to pay for a plane ticket to Fremantle Australia, where the expedition would leave from. So Kimari starts looking for a job and after some difficulties finds one at the local convience store near hear school. Meanwhile Kimari’s friend Megumi has done some research on the proposed expedition that shows it might actually not happen due to financial problems. When Kimari asks Shirase about it, it leads to a short falling out between them, which is luckily quickly resolved.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: Miyake Hinata

And it’s thanks to this argument that Miyake Hinata, Kimari’s coworker at the convience store, gets involved. Having overheard them earlier, she asks Kimari about their plans and decides to join them. She and Kimari hit it off immediately, sharing the same sort of humour and having the same sort of outgoing personality, as opposed to the much more serious seeming Shirase. Unlike Kimari though, who is a bit airheaded and inclined to go along with the flow, Hinata hides a much determined, adventurous personality behind her happy go lucky exterior. She deliberately dropped out of high school (mandatory education in Japan only covering up to middle school) and started working, but still planning to go to college, having already gotten her high school certificate. As such, she’s less inclined to just follow Shirase’s lead, more inclined to challenge her when her plans are …less than well thought out.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: not the best laid plan

Such as Shirase’s plan to infiltrate the expedition’s meetup, draw the attraction of one of the male members and seduce him into smuggling them aboard. Hinata and Kimari go along with the idea, but their skepticism is quickly justified when Shirase is spotted by one of the female expedition members. One hilarious chase scene later and Shirase and co are explaining themselves to the two expedition members, with things turning serious as Shirase explains again how she wants to find her mother there. I like how well Yorimoi balances its general upbeat lightheartedness with that undertone of sorrow and grief Shirase is occassionally caught up in. It doesn’t dwell on it, but it’s there.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: Shiraishi Yuzuki

All in all this was a very strong episode, that managed to pack a lot into it, from Kimari getting serious about going to Antarctica with Shirase, Hinata joining and Shirase putting her seduction in motion, only to see it fail and Hirata and Kimari stripping her of her leadership as a result. When I first watched it I was a bit disappointed with this episode, finding the whole seduction thing a bit too anime for my liking, but rewatching a few times to write this, I got more and more impressed with it. The same also goes for episode three, which I also had mixed feelings about after first viewing, but which was much more impressive having seen it a second time.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: Shiraishi Yuzuki is an idol

Because episode three not only introduced Shiraishi Yuzuki, the final member of the team, but her introduction also served as the deus ex machina to get the girls onto the expedition. Yuzuki has already been induced into the expedition because Yuzuki is an idol and having her onboard is good publicity. She comes looking for Shirase to trade places with her, as Yuzuki actually doesn’t want to go to Antarctica, but rather wants to go to school like a normal girl. Unfortunately her mother & manager interferes before they can actually go ahead with the swap, but fortunately she is willing to recommend that Shirase and co go along with Yuzuki as her companions, if they can convice her to go.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: Shiraishi Yuzuki needs a hug

Yuzuki turns out to be a bit of an anime cliché: the lonely high school idol who is too busy to be able to make friends. When Kimari and co meet up with her to try and convince her to go on the expedition, she ends up pouring out her heart to them about trying to make friends and how she always failed to do so. Which prompts Kimari to hug her, saying she understood how she feels. Yuzuki doesn’t believe her because clearly these three are best friends, right? In any case, she’s so impressed by them and especially Kimari that she dreams about them coming to rescue her. As indeed they do the next morning, or at least take her to Tokyo, to visit the polar exploration museum, before she has to go to her idol job. It’s enough to get her to agree to join the expedition.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: Shirase and Hinata share a moment

On the one hand I didn’t like the idol ex machina used here to get Shirase and co a place on the expedition, but on the other it means that the rest of the series can concentrate on them getting ready for and then finally going on the expedition, rather than having to spent more episodes trying to be accepted. It helps that it’s a fairly realistic solution. One other thing that stuck with me from this episode was the scene with Shirase and Hinata going home on the train together, having a little heart to heart of their own, with Shirase admitting she’s a bit selfish and Hinata accepting that. It’s the first scene in which they’re together without Kimari there, showing they can be friends together without her too. That’s something which tends to be overlooked in anime sometimes, friendships between multiple people that don’t depend on one central figure.

Altogether these were two strong episodes that packed in a lot beyond just getting the band together, episode three especially. The quality and sense of humour of the first episode was kept and with the next episode promising to get into the nitty gritty of training for the expedition, I can’t wait.

School girls go to the South Pole — First Impressions

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: high school girls go on a visit to the South Pole.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: school girls in Antarctica

Tamaki Mari is a very ordinary second year high school girl who one day suddenly realises that she’s a very ordinary second year high school girl. Which puts her in the mood to go on some big adventure, so she decides to skip school and travel to Tokyo. But then it rains so she doesn’t. She talks to her friend about her frustration of always failing to take that first step and always chickening out. Then, as she goes home, she notices the girl running past her to get her train drops an envelope. Tamaki picks it up and runs after her, but the girl’s gone. So she looks into the envelope to see what’s in it and finds:

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: one million yen

One million yen!

That’s her first encounter with Kobuchizawa “Antarctica” Shirase, whose mother wrote a book about visiting the South Pole, but disappeared when Shirase was in middle school. Ever since she’s been working and saving up to make enough money to pay for a trip to Antarctica. For Tamaki Shirase’s dream is exactly what she wanted for herself, but never found or had the courage to go look for. But this time it’s different.

The ordinary school girl frustrated with her own ordinariness is not a new character type of course, often seen as the protagonist in school club series like K-on or Amanchu!, their frustrations driving them to try something, anything new to not be ordinary, overcoming their own fears in the process. They tend to be either enthusiastic go-getters (like Mikan from Love Live Sunshine) or shy fraidycats dragged into something almost against their will (Ami Kurata from Long Riders). Tamaki Mari is a mix of both, afraid to try new things and knowing this about herself, frustrated with it, but pushy and enthusiastic once she has made up her mind.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: Kobuchizawa Shirase is grateful

Kobuchizawa Shirase meanwhile looks like the typical well put together long black haired school princess, serious and driven. Having set herself a life goal, she’s dilligently working towards it while most of her peers are satisfied with just playing around. But she isn’t stoic or emotionally withdrawn; rather she wears her heart on her sleeve, most noticably when Tamaki hands her back the million yen she had lost. I like how aware she is how her dream of traveling to Antarctica to find her lost mother comes over to other people, that she isn’t deluded to how hard it would be to realise it, but accepts it and moves on.

Both Maki and Shirase than are archetypes I’ve seen in dozens of anime before, but with enough originality and character to come across as actual people you’d want to spend time with. There’s a good sense of humour, that doesn’t come at the expense of either of them and I like the pacing of this episode. All we saw was Maki coming to grips with her normalcry and wanting to do something about it, getting to know Shirase and the both of them deciding to go on a trip to Hiroshima where a polar exploration ship was holding an open house. There’s a sparkle to the animation, which is just that bit better than it needs to be, sharing some of its style and realism with last year’s Tsuki ga Kirei and Just Because.

Very much a recommendation. If this level of quality keeps up, this may be the sleeper hit of the season.