Friday, December 24, 2010

So I just finished watching Corpse Princess, or Shikabane Hime if you don't like the English title. It was the horror-moe Gainax show from a few years back, one of a number of shows in that period featuring dead girls killing monsters & providing male-oriented fanservice. I took a disliking to the show when I saw the first episode in fansubs, but went back this fall when the FUNimation half-season sets hit the semi-discount bins.

Most of the things I didn't like the first time were still there in the whole, two-cour, 26-episode series, plus a few more irritations which I'll get into later. But the whole ended up more engaging and likable than I first gave it credit for. They did themselves a real disservice by opening up the series with a charismatic-polygamist hipster-villain as the first "monster of the week". It gave the show the apparent character of extreme misogyny, which it didn't really deserve, I guess. Now, mind you, there's a lot of female villains, especially monstrous mother-figures. Since the whole show is about murderous, unnatural corpses and the virgin-sacrifice animate corpses who kill them, it's a little hard to avoid that sort of thing, but it definitely is a consistent undertone - not an overt, constant presence.

The story is about a Japanese esoteric Buddhist sect which is built around "handling the dead", which is, after all, one of the major functions of the real-world Buddhist faith in Japan. Traditionally, one is "born Shinto, married Christian, and die Buddhist". This came about because of the extreme revulsion and doctrinal incapacity of Shinto when it comes to death. The fundamental corruption and defilement of the dead is a core concept in "classic" Shinto, and the various folk-religion clusters which make up Shinto break down heavily in the face of the corruption of the dead. Basically, because Shinto was a religion which emphasizes purity over morality and sanctity, death and death-rites became by default the preserve of the imported Buddhist traditions which didn't really care about purity. But here in the real world, that "handling" is a ritual and practical thing, not the fantasy-world extermination of the revenant dead which this show plays around with.

Corpse Princess is nominally a Buddhist show, in that most of the characters are members or chattel of a rather hide-bound (made-up!) Buddhist sect, and the scripts are full of Buddhist terminology and (extremely twisted) Buddhist doctrine and ideology. The heart of the story is more Shinto than Buddhist, anyways, like a doctrinal skin of Buddhist cant over the decaying, rotting Shinto meat and bones. The characters talk Buddhist but act Shinto. There are a lot of furious ranting about defilement, which is a pretty non-Buddhist concept as I understand the faith.

As the show wears on, it's increasingly obvious that the Buddhist cant is, indeed, Marxist-definition ideology - intellectual super-structure constructed to justify necessary practices within an existing cultural tradition. The man who created the "Shikabane Hime" system existed within a culture and a period where radically esoteric Buddhist ideas were the "new wave", history-on-the-march. He built his demonic-corpse-combating system from the materials he had at hand - the "fact" of violent, sentient revenants, and the faith and doctrines which he felt to be true. "An institution is the lengthened shadow of one man" - no doubt, if he had been a Soviet commissar, the Shikabane Hime system would have been built on tenuous palaver about the dictatorship of the mortal proletariat and the immaterial dialectic.

The animation was a shared production between the renowned (if problematic) Gainax, and some company I've never really noticed all the much before, feel. (That's the name, feel. Lower-case pretentious.) I seem to remember hearing before that Gainax did the first cour of 13 episodes - "Aka", and feel did the last cour, "Kuro". The two seasons don't really "look" different, and I'm guessing that the creative staff carried over for the whole production, and the division of labor was more of a management, production thing. The scripts waver between absolutely vicious, sharp material, and soppy, long-winded wittering on about feelings. It verges on schizophrenia, but when it's on, it's on.

Art slops around a bit at times, but visually, the worst sins are there at the beginning in the first episode - the fight-designs are too hyper and unfocused. There's a lot of swirling about & incoherent action. They chose to give the heroine a pair of sacrilized sub-machine guns (a gun otaku would have to tell you what they were, I'd class them as sort of "mini-Uzi" deals, but I'm not detail-fixated enough to go track down what they were supposed to be). This might have looked "cool" in the character-design stage, but what it does in animation is weaken impact and soften the fight scenes. "More dakka" may be a game-fanboy cliche that some people love, but in a supernatural monster-fighting show, SMG fire has all the dramatic impact of turning a garden-hose on a rabid dog. It just drops into the red-black swirl of the action, and ends up looking ineffective. It's the supernatural Buddhist-monster-hunter equivalent of sending in the tank battalions and fighter-bomber squadrons in a Godzilla movie, or dropping a nuke on an Angel in Evangelion.

Finally, not to be a spoiler, but the ending of the series is abrupt, incoherent, and disjointed. Second-to-last episode, we close out on heroine beating in the face of the Big Bad. Last episode? Flashback episode about two dead, secondary characters' origin stories. Total non sequitur. Don't get me wrong, as a standalone, that last episode was great, fired on all cylinders, did what it was written to do. It's just that this was *not* the place in the series for this particular show. It *should* have been placed fifteen episodes earlier. I don't know if it was actually a mis-labeled OAV pitchforked into the disc-set as "episode 26", but nothing in the presentation suggested it. The second-to-last episode declared "to be continued", which definitely suggests that *somebody* intended there to be a real episode 26.

Oh, well. It's worth watching, but it's not deathless art, or even particularly great.

8 comments:

Mark said...

Wait a minute, an anime series ended in an abrupt, incoherent, and disjointed way? Stop the presses. :)

ザイツェヴ said...

What, no mention of Akina's bare butt in the OP?

I shot MAC-10 once. It was the "new" or "long-receiver" 9mm version that they made out of the .380 variant. Supposedly it shoots better than the short-receiver original, but I would never tell. It is next to impossible to control. I was only able to score hits by holding the silencer with one hand (it is a reciprocating design, so it stays cool).

Mitch H. said...

I suspect the MAC-10/mini-Uzi family of super-small machine guns are mostly intended for the bridge-and-tunnel crowd and for display. They seem designed to make spray-and-pray shooters of even the best-disciplined individuals.

And I don't really remember a particularly fan-servicy shot in the opening animation. Perhaps I was distracted by the incredibly exploitative ending credits animation? It is a fanservice-intensive show. What can you say, really? I mean other than "damnit, Japan!"

Unknown said...

You know, maybe I'm wrong for saying this, but that ending was satisfying even if it was a massive WTF. With what was learned in the last few episodes, there really was no other major alternative and there would be no truly happy ending.

It was still a much better ending than the one we got for Soul Eater, you agree? Awesome blog, by the way.

Mitch H. said...

I suppose. Honestly, I don't remember much about the Soul Eater ending - it was one of those shows that are more about the journey than the destination. I think I was watching Soul Eater and Full Metal Alchemist Brotherhood in tandem, and only really remembered the plot from FMA:B. Since one was a straight-up shounen supernatural fighter, and the other was a tormented Frankenstein epic in the flayed skin of a shounen supernatural fighter, I ended up retaining an impression of all the design flash from Soul Eater and the actual story from FMA:B.

Unknown said...

I just binged watched both seasons...the last episode literally just made me wtf out loud....why did it end like that.. so disappointed but it was a good watch. I just wish I didn't watch the last episode

Anonymous said...

Oh shut up about the fan service and misogyny. Honestly hate PC liberals like you complaining about the dumbest shit ever.

Mitch H. said...

If you look around here, you'll find I'm just a hair to the right of Genghis Khan. I've been accused of being 'safely conservative', which I took great offense at...