Inuyashiki – 11 (End) and Series Review

Well, that certainly was a glorious clusterfuck.

It seems like it would be terribly unwise to start analyzing things in Inuyashiki now – expecting the series to hold up to careful scrutiny is pointless.  Of course that makes doing what I’m doing now rather problematical, doesn’t it?  It’s quite the problem, but Inuyashiki is what is is and it  certainly isn’t what it isn’t.  And as far as the whole NoitaminA angle is concerned, well- surely that ceased to have any meaning a long time ago.

Even so, a lot of strange things certainly went into this finale.  The series remembered that Ichirou’s son Takeshi existed after basically ignoring him for 10 episodes, and decided to try and give him some kind of character arc without having done anything to build it up.  Then it pretty much abandoned it and left him as if none of it ever happened.  That’s a larger problem with the ending, actually, because even in a series as bonkers as this one it’s kind of grating to have nothing that’s happened before really amount to much.  Was there any difference in the lives Hiro and Inuyashiki decided to live after they became supermen?  They both ended up exactly the same, after making exactly the same decision.

There was the nascent spark of something interesting in these characters, certainly, though it wasn’t anything Oku Hiroya seemed very interested in exploring in depth.  I think the best moment of the finale probably came when Ichirou-san tried to convince his wife that he was a fake, only to have her prove him wrong by asking him to answer questions only Inuyashiki Ichirou would be able to answer correctly.  I’m not just talking about factually, but emotionally – and it’s an interesting question the series is asking about humanity and what it means to be human.

Was the whole asteroid thing a Deus ex machina?  Of course, but then, pretty much everything in Inuyashiki is so it’s hard to get too upset about that.  Maybe the aliens who with no real explanation made Inuyashiki and Hiro into beings with the ability to destroy their planet decided to send the asteroid to cover up their screwup, and we were just supposed to figure that out ourselves?  It’s possible I guess, if it even matters.  It did at least give us a hilariously on-point Donald Trump appearing to tell everyone to fuck off and start acting like the world was about to end, because it was.  If such an event were ever to happen in real life, I imagine that’s just about the response we’d get from the man.

Hiro did get his moment of redemption, as you knew he would – it was clear the series was kind of rooting for him even as he was engaged in wholesale murder.  But ht still remained loyal to his friend so in in the end, he’s a decent guy, right?  Hiro and Ichirou vs. the asteroid was the ending I’ve been pretty much expecting, so no surprises there – though again, I did find it unsatisfying that in spite of the speech Inuyashiki gave to his son earlier in the episode (which was actually one of the finale’s stronger moments) there was really no difference in Inuyashiki and Hiro’s fate.  Life certainly doesn’t have meaning a lot of the time, but this is fiction and it does make one wonder what the point of all this was.

A final quibble – what sort of sense did it make to end on Mari winning the “Jump” manga contest?  I mean, in the context of the story is that really that big a deal?  Is Hiroya trying to make some sort of point here?  Her mother remains stuck in the same dreary job, her brother is still being brutalized by bullies, and Inuyashiki’s life seems not to have amounted to much – but Mari was a manga contest, so it all makes sense?  Here I am asking questions when I promised not to, but it’s hard to resist the urge sometimes.  That’s not doing Inuyashiki any favors, I know, so probably best to just leave it there.

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6 comments

  1. M

    Wait!! Is that dude jacking off to the news (or something else that’s clearly not pr0n) in that screencap of the ending credits?

  2. Um… No, pretty sure he’s not.

  3. His hand is in his pocket LOL, close up on it it’s obvious

  4. I think the son being brutalized by bullies has missed the point. What we did see of him earlier in the episode is that he always gives in without a fight. He was very passive and never fought back. At the end of episode, he did not give in and fought back. While it had him on the ground beaten up, the boys that beat him up had one of them being propped up as those 2 walked away after badly beaten as well. There is a change of attitude and resolve.

  5. That’s a fair point. I missed that detail, but it still kind of feels weak to me.

    And honestly – who gives a flying fuck about Mari and the manga, seriously.

  6. I think I did understand the point the creator wanted to pass in this episode, though yeah I thought there would be episode 12 making it more clear. The thing with Inuyashiki’s son is a reflection of how Inuyashiki felt before he got his powers, weak, meaningless, and unappreciated. If he didn’t get these powers that made him go do special things, he would have never known he had so much more to bring out of himself, and he would die without knowing that this is underappreciation and he was more than that. This is to make us realize the son is the same, but the son isn’t going to get super powers that will bring his quality out of him, he needs to believe that he has more than that in himself and start appreciating himself unconditionally to bring it out. Mari is the character that did this. Mari didn’t care what anybody says, she didn’t care that her brother underappreciates her and calls her extreme efforts to work on manga – a waste, she believed in herself uncoditionally and did what Inuyashiki’s powers made him do, without superpowers. That is the meaning of Mari winning the contest, it proves that what we thought the brother should do is right and shows the viewers that being like Mari is what we should aspire to.

    I personally experienced realizing I had more in me than what I believed, and that only once I believe in it, I can bring it out. We don’t do things we don’t believe in, so you have the things others believe you can do, that you do, and you have the things you have to believe you can do, to do. I think it’s very straight forward with this message, so I doubt I’m reading into this the way I want to.

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