Ballroom e Youkoso – 21

I suppose it’s no revelation, but in many ways Chinatsu and Tatara are the worst possible pairing one could imagine in ballroom dance.  That’s always been the elephant in the room during the second cour of Welcome to the Ballroom, with an explicit expectation that there was some underlying factor that would eventually make them an ideal pairing (frankly, after this much foundering anything less would be a letdown).  The seeds of it have always been hinted at, certainly – I’ve written about them in prior posts – but damn, Ballroom is certainly taking its time in sprouting much from them.

Maybe, at last, we’re starting to see the worm turn here – though not before Tatara has been the victim of yet more highly dubious “help” from those he has no choice but to rely on for it.  It’s a truism in sports that the most gifted competitors usually make bad coaches (the best baseball managers are frequently former second-string catchers), and the likes of Sengoku and Hyoudo are certainly doing their best to prove it in Ballroom e Youkoso.  Hyoudo’s cavalier attitude can be pretty infuriating at times, and no matter how it works out, he did Tatara no favors by experimenting on his body – with zero explanation – literally in the middle of a competition.  It may wind up helping (that would be the shounen thing to do) but I hate to see dumb behavior that like rewarded.

That said, that there are much deeper problems with this pairing is obvious at this point.  This series can get pretty theoretical when it comes to dance, and this episode may have been the most striking example.  The idea that the tall, elegant Kugimiya pair would excel in standard a while the more dynamic (by necessity) Tata-Natsu pair would have a better chance in Latin makes a lot of sense.  As Hyoudo-kun notes, however, that kind of rivalry game really only matters when the skill sets of the two pairs are at a comparable level.  As to Mako’s assertion that standard people are like dogs and Latin people are cat-like, well – I can sort of see where she’s going with that, but I certainly know some cats and dogs that would dent the metaphor.

In order to become an ideal (or even serviceable) pairing, I think Tatara-kun and Chinatsu need to figure out what sort of pairing they intend to me.  It’s telling that not even the dance press (it exists, apparently) knows the name of Kugimiya’s partner (it’s Idogawa-san, for the record, and I don’t know if it’s been mentioned at all in the series).  That works for him – whether it works for her has not been shown to be relevant yet.  For Sengoku and Chizuru it’s quite different – they fight like, well- cats and dogs, but on the dance floor they mesh.  Chizuru was a partner who had a clear idea of how she wanted to dance – and had no patience for a leader who had no clear path in mind.

It’s not difficult to see which model makes more sense for Chinatsu and Tatara – but getting there certainly isn’t easy. The metaphor the series uses for this is fitting – a young and brash Chinatsu towering over a smaller and meekly affable Tatara who has no idea how to “open the door” for her.  A boy who can’t assert his own personality through his dance and a girl who can’t abide the thought of following someone else’s lead – again, it’s hard to imagine a worse partnership.  Each of them has to effectively become something they’re not in order for this to succeed, which from the perspective of making them confront their respective weaknesses might make sense.  But in practice, can that really work?

Maybe these two really can meet in the middle (empathy is the key) but we’ve never seen an example of a dance partnership that works that way apart from possibly Sengoku and Chizuru (and I’d argue that dynamic is quite different).  I suppose it almost has to end up working out that way or we don’t really have a story, but Ballroom e Youkoso can certainly never be accused of making it look too easy…

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3 comments

  1. D

    I can’t say that I really agree with your reasoning here.

    Would not an eager-to-please, affable male actually be the perfect complement to a perfectionist, aggressive female? An ideal yin-yang combination? Moreover, it plays pretty nicely into the newfound interest of the series in sexual politics and gender equity, making the point that there really isn’t a good reason why a female dancer couldn’t/shouldn’t be a co-equal in a pairing.

    I have to say that I despised the lazy fanservice, limited animation, and essentially wallflower women of the first-half of this series, but since the second-half began, I’ve completely changed my stance, as I absolutely ADORE Chinatsu’s character.

    Sure she’s abrasive and short-tempered. But she’s also passionate and strong-willed. And as this latest episode demonstrated, she’s also not truly mean, and truly wants to help meet Tatara’s needs.

    She’s been a fantastic addition to the series and has completely changed my opinion of it from a hackneyed shonen blunderbuss, to a pretty fascinating meditation of gender roles, leadership and compatibility. I just hope it can waltz to a satisfying conclusion.

  2. Maybe that combination would be workable in a romantic relationship (though I think it would depend on the people involved). But from what we’ve been shown of competitive dance, no – I would argue that rather than perfect it’s a disaster.

    I think the larger issue here is that both of these people have psychological issues that are manifesting in their struggles as a dance team. To simply ignore that and make it work as is doesn’t really speak to either of their growth as characters in my opinion.

  3. K

    Oh man, I was in love with this episode from start to finish. The visuals they used to represent their situation with the opening of the door worked incredibly well for me. I will say though, if this situation turns out well i don’t think that it will necessarily be rewarding Hyoudo’s dumb behavior. We’ve already more or less seen that he deems this a failure in what he was trying to do. It seems like it is because of that mess up he created a situation where Chinatsu is being forced to change in order to compensate for what happened and in turn it seems like it’s helping out their dynamic as a whole, but the girls have already acknowledged what he did was reckless and it’s really coming down to Chinatsu to save this performance.

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