Angolmois: Genkou Kassen-ki – 04

If this was the day I settled on a decision (yes) with Kyoto Teramachi Sanjou no Holmes, I’m still not quite there with Angolmois: Genkou Kassen-ki.  I certainly enjoy it more than the vast majority of new shows this season, but there are still a few quibbles which trouble me enough to stay on the fence.  The story it’s telling is one hell of a tale though, that’s for damn sure.  And that’s a pretty solid head start.

A lot of this really comes down to that very point, though.  The reality (or at least the most widely accepted version of it – that’s survived the telephone game of historical documentation of legendary events from this era, anyway) is fantastical enough.  The less we see of characters catching arrows in their teeth, and the less Jinzaburou’s “strategy” is to charge into the Mongol camp outnumbered 50-1 and come out unscathed the better.  There are other loose ends – I’m still not sure how I feel about the parchment filter effect NAZ is using here, which seems a little more obtrusive every episode – but nothing that strikes me as a potential deal-breaker.

This episode was as if someone had a seiyuu convention and a Mongol army invaded.  Hayami Show, Sakurai Takahiro, Koyasu Takehito…  It’s quite a group.  And it’s about time the Mongol hordes started to have a few more faces, because this was not a mindless mob but a brilliantly-led strategic strike force that systematically conquered much of the medieval world.  And they’re clearly not a united front – there are divisions within the ranks, those engaged in their own pursuits rather than meekly following orders.

For all his success in making his tiny band an irritant to the Mongols, Jinzaburou seems to have no overarching strategy beyond stalling for time until his reinforcements arrive.  He does receive from unexpected help from the Toibarai – supposedly a group of secretive descendants of ancient guardians of Tsushima who don’t answer to the Daimyou and rarely leave their mountain fastness.  As far as I know no such group existed or was ever purported to exist, and this does come off as one those fictionalizations that Angolmois really doesn’t need.  Their intervention (it’s hinted on orders from the Emperor) buys Jinzaburou enough time to allow his men to rescue most of the women and children prisoners about to be taken to the Mongol ships, including Sasamaru, the son of the man who stabbed the princess as part of selling out to the Mongols to try and save his family.

The problem for Jinzaburou and his allies is that he has to stall for a full seven days – an eternity on an island occupied by a huge invading force.  A journey across the mountains to the capitol reveals a terrible truth – the Mongols have beaten them there, and razed it to the ground.  Where this leaves the survivors is an open question – trying to hang on by hiding in the mountains, occasionally harrying the Mongols in guerrilla fashion?  That doesn’t necessarily strike me as the best basis for a narrative, so I suspect the hero is going to come up with a more direct and proactive strategy – hopefully Angolmois will do a good enough job of keeping it real to avoid a total historical disconnect.  Whether it can pull that off is probably the most important unanswered question about this series.

 

 

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5 comments

  1. D

    I honestly don’t get how someone could love Golden Kamuy and be on the fence about this show. I actually agree with some of your objections to Angolmois, but the bottom line is that this show has a pretty good sense of story-telling – one that, unlike Golden Kamuy, isn’t marred by a seemingly endless parade of distracting and unnecessary boner jokes and goofy “stunt” characters. Something like catching an arrow with your teeth, as silly as it may be, is pretty de rigueur in modern action adaptations. Shining boners, thank God, aren’t. As well, I’ll take the gratuitous filter over ridiculously bad CG any day.

  2. Apples and oranges to me.

  3. e

    – Well… now we can see and say the big dude wasn’t born with those shark teeth and possibly projectile boogers for nothing :°D . Maybe we need to adjust our expectactions and steer them more towards Shounen Extra rather than relatively grounded realism with just some odd touches here and there after all.
    – Teruhi hime with a little help of wounds fever is going dere real quickly. So flustered. So anointed by the hero’s magical saliva. Hmmm.
    – Talking of the hero… charades was going noticeably off model in a handful of scenes . Oh what a difference for the worse an unintentional nose job maketh. #savethenose #alsosavethefisherwoman’sboobstheyreallylookedunnaturallystiff
    – Tsushima cat appears again!
    – I liked the drumming shaman bit :,)
    – Colourful general with eyeshadow, a taste for music and of course a taste for blood. Guy-in-chief on the boat with shadowd face and rather freaky eyes. Another comparatively and anachronistically scantily clad female warrior appears. Ooooook. Expectations reset. Bring them on.
    – given the state of the capital I do wonder how and where the adopted son fits now…
    – I do wonder if I’d be so eager to tune in if the OP song wasn’t so catchy :,)

  4. K

    So many great voice actors gathered in this show (at least four easily recognizable voices), that’s one more reason for me to stick with it. Other than that yeah the story continues to be pretty good.

  5. d

    Do keep in mind that most of the troops the “Mongols” have used until now are Korean or from main land china hell even the big bad ass spear user vice- commander is more Chinese than Mongolian the real horde is still to come.

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