Space Dandy – 10

Space Dandy - 10 - Large 07 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 22 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 37

The cream, as it usually does, is rising to the top.

The welcome news that Space Dandy will indeed be 26 episodes (split cour, with the second presumably coming in the Summer or Autumn) couldn’t have come at a better time, because the series is on a serious roll at the moment.  There’s no official word that the second cour will air on Cartoon Network as this season is, but it seems very likely – without the support of CN I don’t know if the series figures to generate enough revenue to support another season.  For a show with excellent TV ratings and (projected) mediocre disc sales to continue only in Japan would be a real surprise.

I’ve liked Space Dandy from the beginning (well, after the first 10 minutes at least) despite some peaks and valleys inherent to its narrative style.  But I’ve really come to appreciate just how adventurous it is, never treading the same ground twice and acting pretty much independently of anime storytelling convention.  Great directors usually produce top-rate anime, and Watanabe Shinichirou is one of the best.  He’s never tried to repeat himself, to cash in on his own success by self-plagiarizing – every Watanabe work is different, and he’s taking that to a new level with this series by sourcing top-notch talent from all over the anime industry to lend their vision to the individual episodes.

Compared to some, the names at the top of this week’s staff list are modest – the director is BONES veteran Miyaji Masayuki (who helmed the underrated Xam’d) and the writer Ueno Kimiko, with her fourth contribution to the series (including the classic zombie-themed Episode 4).  They may not have star power but they’ve teamed up for one of the best episodes of the season, coming on the heels of last week’s surrealistic masterpiece.  This one is totally different, quite traditional visually, striking perhaps the best balance of comedy and seriousness of any episode in the series.  And it offers up a plot twist that’s straight out of Hollywood, using it to gently offer some pretty deep philosophical insight.

The episode starts out with the Narrator breaking the fourth wall a bit, teasing us with the possibility that the reason why Dr. Gel and Bea are chasing Dandy might finally be revealed.  Instead it’s a brief refresher on the galactic conflict between the Gogol and Jaicro Empires.  The latter have just launched their supreme weapon, the A.L.E. (Armed Legendary Equipment – which looks exactly like the galaxy-destroying Ideon).  In response Commodore Perry (remember H x H fans, that’s the new Netero voicing him) launches the Gogol’s own C.O.R.E. (Cranium of Raiding Enemies) despite the fact that the “Pyonium control” is incomplete.  As with everything Team Rocket does the results are disastrous, but this rare pre-credits snippet is here for a reason despite being hilarious – the Pyonium released when the Ideon A.L.E. blows up the C.O.R.E. makes it all the way to Betelgeuse, where it plays a crucial role in the premise of the episode.

We haven’t gotten much background on Meow up to this point, but that’s corrected in a big way – what Episode 5 does a good job with for Dandy’s character, this episode does a great job with for Meow’s.  Meow is of course a Betelgeusean, and that happens to be the closest planet when the Aloha Oe breaks down beyond the abilities of an enterprising Roomba like Q.T. to fix it themselves.  Despite Meow’s protests – rather one might almost say gleefully in spite of them – Q.T. and Dandy take the ship to Meow’s homeworld, with the promise of free lodging and embarrassment for Meow far too much to pass up.  Also making its way to Betelgeuse is the aforementioned Pyonian energy, which zaps Meow’s hometown and traps everyone inside it inside a time loop (July 8th) straight out of Groundhog Day.

This whole sequence could have been cliche, saccharine, boring or any combination thereof – but it was none of those things.  The scenes between Meow (real name Me#$%*, Mii-kun for short) and his family are genuine, unpretentious, funny and surprisingly emotionally resonant.  Betelgeuse is a backwater – a planet with nothing much there except a “NO MICE” road sign – and Meow’s family, a working-class bunch living in a modest, somewhat ramshackle house.  There are several younger siblings, a kind and supportive Mom (Ichijou Miyuki), old pals and and old crush.  Most importantly there’s Dad (Yamaji Kazuhiro, genuine and utterly convincing), a simple, honest stiff who makes screws in a one-man workshop that not even he can tell you the use of.  But it puts food on the table and a roof over the kittens’ heads, and it’s clear from the beginning that Dad isn’t the complaining type.

It’s easy to see why Meow wanted to get away from this place – it’s the same story for kids from small towns all over the world.  But just as obvious is the emotional connection to his parents, who’re not at all angry or judgmental about Meow’s decision to flee, even though as the eldest son Meow should have taken over the factory.  Meow’s dilemma is a universal one – it kills him to be stuck in this place but leaving it behind he leaves part of himself, too.  It takes a while (108 loops, in fact) for any of the BBP trio (Baka, Bonehead, Pinhead) to realize that the days don’t just all seem the same – they actually are the same.

What to do when tomorrow won’t come?  One of Meow’s middle school pals says it’s easy, just go to Yahoo Answers – which they do, and quickly are given the reply “Google it, idiot!  You probably just forgot to tear the page off the calendar, LOL.”  That’s a brilliant gag on so many levels, but it does turn the trio’s attention to the calendar in Meow’s house, which stubbornly resists everything the BBP can throw at it.  It falls to Meow’s Dad – “I’ve been a metalworker all my life” – to save the day.  Literally, in this case.

I don’t want to make too much of it, but this episode is actually pretty deep.  You’d think that being forced to repeat the same day in a place he couldn’t wait to flee would be pure hell for Meow, but he actually begins to appreciate the appeal of it.  His old crush Katie (Matsuki Miyu) works as a hostess at “L’il Mama’s”, and there are wistful notions of settling down – though she crushes those by revealing that she’s a lesbian.  There’s also a chance to let Meow’s father know that he appreciates him and that’s he’s sorry he can’t follow his path, and a “grass is always greener” realization that a comfortable daily routine has its own charms.  The time loop is just a metaphor, of course, a stand-in for the daily routine that’s at the heart of so many lives – and highlights the choice so many young people must make between the lure of adventure and a new vista every day and the knowledge that you’ll never want for a bed, food on the table and people who care about you close-by.

After Meow’s father fixes the time loop (if only it were that easy) there’s a fairly low-key farewell with the family where Dad tells his son that he should live whatever life he wants to lead.  A return to the Aloha Oe means a return to that life – and it turns out that not recognizing time loops may be a more common problem than we realize.  It’s a beautiful way to close to loop on a beautifully written story, another winner for a show that’s really firing on all cylinders now.  It’ll be very interesting to see what sort of series this ends up being in the second season – will this episodic one have been the introduction, or will Space Dandy continue to put on a new guise every week, each episode only loosely connected to the others?  I’m not sure which I’d prefer, to be honest – as much as I’d like to see Watanabe tackle a larger plot I’ve become quite taken with the prospect of a completely different style and tone every week, and curious to see where else Watanabe and his team can take us.

Space Dandy - 10 - Large 11 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 12 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 13
Space Dandy - 10 - Large 14 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 15 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 16
Space Dandy - 10 - Large 17 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 18 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 19
Space Dandy - 10 - Large 20 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 21 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 23
Space Dandy - 10 - Large 24 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 25 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 26
Space Dandy - 10 - Large 27 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 28 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 29
Space Dandy - 10 - Large 30 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 31 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 32
Space Dandy - 10 - Large 33 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 34 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 35
Space Dandy - 10 - Large 36 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 38 Space Dandy - 10 - Large 39
Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

9 comments

  1. s

    So, Enzo, you really think Space Dandy is good, don't you?

    I didn't make it through the first 10 minutes. Hated them with a passion and dropped it without looking back.

    But if it is actually more than what it showed in that short span of time, I might need to give it another look.

  2. I find it rather surprising that you'd drop a BONES series by Watanabe based on 10 minutes. But those were certainly the weakest 10 minutes of the series.

  3. A

    The show is inconsistent by design; every episode is wildly different from the last, and certain episodes work more for certain tastes. I highly recommend giving it at least a few more episodes.

  4. s

    Well, I hadn't been paying attention to the hype surrounding the show, and thus was pretty much unaware of the pedigree behind the show. I don't even know if I knew it was a BONES series going in. Thus, all I was judging it on was the first 10 minutes, and for me it failed those 10 minutes badly.

  5. Z

    I gave up on it patiently after last weeks plant episode. I don't find the show that creative nor find it rip-roaringly hilarious. But that's me.

  6. A

    *be 26 episodes

    -not 'by' 😀

  7. s

    Damn, I might be overthinking it, but with this ep, i think it just pretty much clued us in that the pyonium that dandy and crew encountered in ep 1 really did create some sort of quantum effect that is relevant to the story-line (like the multiple realities theory that keeps floating around). I mean look at what the pyonium did when it hit the calender.

  8. M

    They managed to get a good measure of depth and humour out of an otherwise bland scenario based around a bland character. The best you could hope for at this stage – QT rocked it, most excited for their episode.

  9. G

    I'm not ashamed to say I teared up for this episode when his dad cut the page out of the calendar. I dunno how it can be this beautiful. The music, as always, is spot on.
    I haven't given a perfect 10 to a show in ages, and depending on how the final two episodes play out (and I'm really hopeful right with the masterpieces we've been treated to lately), it might just get that 10 from me.

    And YES for second season, I can't get enough of Space Dandy awesomeness. I also think we will have a second cour for Noragami. Definitely keeping my finger crossed. God of anime needs to help BONES win on the commercial front. So much quality from them that needs to rewarded.

    -GlassShadow

Leave a Comment