Hi Score Girl – 07

At the risk of overstating the point, the authenticity level of Hi Score Girl is really off the charts.  There are many admirable qualities about this series but that’s the one, I think, that most stands out as remarkable.  It begs the question – why is this so hard?  One thing everyone has in common – we were all kids once.  We should, at least on some level, remember what that experience was like.  Yet it seems a near-impossibility to recreate that experience in anime (a medium created in the main by relatively young people, usually in adaptation of the works of relatively young writers).

That the overall track record is so subpar in this respect is all the more reason to appreciate this series for what it’s able to accomplish.  Hidaka who expresses every thought in her head, Oono, from whom we hear nothing directly and must connect the dots ourselves.  And Haruo, the fulcrum on which the story is balanced.  They’re a wonderful study in contrasts, each fully realized characters on their own but endlessly fascinating as a trio.  It’s a dynamic I find to be quite unlike any I’ve seen in manga or anime.

It’s easy to fall into the trap of seeing Hidaka as a mere object for audience sympathy, but that trivializes her character and misses very important elements of her arc.  Don’t get me wrong, I do feel sorry her sometimes – like when she gets a copy of the Famicom version of Final Fight with the dream of Haruo begging to come over to play, only to have him ask to borrow it instead.  Being in love with someone whose heard nor heart is totally present when he’s with you can’t be easy, but recognize Hidaka for who she is – someone who’s proactive and actually does something about her desires.  And after all – who’s gotten to spend more time with Haruo than Hidaka has?

Hidaka is fighting two very strong opponents here when it comes to Haruo, tougher even than Gouki himself – the idealized version of Oono-san and the allure of gaming.  Hidaka’s own commitment to gaming is an interesting element to consider – she purports to pursue it only as it brings her closer to Haruo, but is there more there?  I would argue yes, and that she has the soul of a gamer herself, even if perhaps not the pure-pure extreme version that is Haruo.  She’s right that Haruo is in his own world where both games and Oono are concerned, but she’s gotten a lot closer to that world than she herself realizes.

Haruo himself is an intriguing mass of contrasts.  After constantly being told he’s a loser by the adults and classmates in his life he seems to have absorbed it into his self-identity (his question to Hidaka about her being worried about being known to be with an “idiot” like him shows this very well).  But he thing about Haruo is, he’s totally at peace with who he is – which is rare for anybody, much less a kid still in middle school.  Cynics would say it’s a lack of ambition, but he doesn’t concern himself with how others see him, and I think this is a big part of the attraction for Hidaka (more so than for Oono, I’d argue).  As Hidaka herself says, “There’s something strangely fascinating about boys that are totally dedicated to something” (to me, the most important line of dialogue in the episode).

The class trip to Kyoto is yet another example of the amazing degree of authenticity this series brings to the table.  Every moment of this rings true, and it features Haruo and Hidaka being utterly themselves.  The circumstances themselves feel very realistic to me (I’ve always been terrified to get off the Shinkansen at one of those short stops), but so do their reactions to what’s happened.  Hidaka freaks out at first, but Haruo isn’t remotely bothered.  For him, this is another opportunity to do his own thing, not what everyone else is doing – and that’s before he realizes there are game centers and consoles to be found on their path.

A chance to see Lake Biwa when the rest of the class trip zooms directly to Kyoto?  Hey, that’s a bonus level.  And since Haruo doesn’t give a shit about his image or his status, he’s not fazed at the idea of being scolded – his comfort level with himself gives him a freedom few people will ever possess.  And Hidaka eventually comes to love this detour too, because it’s a chance to truly be alone with Haruo.  An adventure like that for a couple of ninth-graders, in the safest county on the planet?  There’s not that much downside, really – unless you’re Oono, of course…

 

 

 

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10 comments

  1. s

    Sigh….i feel bad for Koharu. There’s such an authentic sentimentality to the ensuing drama happening between these characters; but most of all, i can just relate to the difficulties our blonde little buster is going through.

  2. Y

    By far my favorite show this season. The characters are so on point. Everything feels authentic. Beside this stupid 3D… Such good writing deserved so much better than this glacial mechanical animation. It’s like a crime against humanity or something… It could have been a quiet little masterpiece. Such a shame…

  3. That is what it is. I’m not in love with it, but the actual direction is quite clever which does help.

  4. T

    On a season chockfull of under-the-radar shows, this might be my favorite one right here. It’s a shame, really. People claim to want more compelling stories and better writing, but where are they now that said stories are being delivered?

    I personally feel the CGI is doing more disservice to Hi Score Girl than any streaming issues. I know for a FACT a lot of anime fans illegally stream their anime (I only say this because anime-related piracy wouldn’t be such a big problem if a sizeable portion of the community WASN’T pirating), so the streaming rights shouldn’t be too much of a hurdle for fans to watch. But the CG? That’s like a cardinal sin in the eyes of many anime fans. It happened not too long ago to Ajin’s popularity and earlier this year with BearGate. Sad really, but that’s how Thebes’s cookie crumbles.

  5. T

    The*
    Damn autocorrect

  6. Don’t forgot though, in this day and age even fans who illegally stream are used to having their releases on time and on a very set schedule. The irregular releases of an unstreamed series definitely work against it, too.

  7. You know, the manga is ugly as sin, so it’s actually cuter in CG.
    Just hardcore otaku bothers with the 3DCG, “normal people” don’t. The only reason more people aren’t watching is the lack of subs. I took the subtitles to a retro gaming forum and the people there loved.

  8. Disagree on both counts. The art style is unique, but Oshikiri’s “anti-cute” designs are quite intentional and his background detail is superb (and that’s not all lost in the anime, even in CGI). And it’s far from only hardcore otaku that care, at least as far as my anecdotal experience tells me.

  9. Y

    Is there a way to watch this legally? I’m using Anon subs and I don’t have any issue with late subs… I don’t really care about watching the exact day it’s released in Japan though… Maybe that’s why?

  10. G

    I don’t understand how all these game cabinets can be left outside all year round, even in snowstorms.

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