Hi Score Girl – 12 (End) and Series Review

You know I hate to bury the headline, so let’s get to the big news straight off – there was no Season 2 announcement at the end of this episode of Hi Score Girl.  There was, however, the news that we would be getting a three-episode OVA next March.  In some sense that’s the very definition of a mixed bag, but it’s certainly better than nothing.  Especially given that the new episodes will be released on Netflix (whether that’s just Japan or worldwide I don’t know), which means there’s a substantial chance someone will sub them.

The question every viewer should be asking is whether three eps is enough to adequately tell the rest of the story.  And my answer as a manga reader is no, it’s not – but that said, the anime staff has shown a deft touch with this adaptation and I think they can make it kind of work.  My sense is certainly that these OVAs are instead of a second season, not in addition to it – so as always with Hi Score Girl, I’m grateful for whatever I get.  Whatever Yamahata and Urahata can do with three episodes is almost certain to give us a more satisfying ending than what we got in Episode 12.

I need to clarify that, of course.  This ending was only unsatisfying because it wasn’t an ending at all.  There shouldn’t be an ending at this point in the story – we’re right in the middle of it.  In fact J.C. Staff ended this ep exactly where I think they should have, but then that was in-line with every other element of this finale.  It was basically note-perfect from my manga reader’s perspective – there were hugely important moments scattered all through the episode, and every one of them came off exactly as I would have wanted.  For me, it was a glorious experience.

Needless to say (that is, if you know me at all) this is a series that really puts me through the emotional wringer in a good way.  I mean, the fact is that I just love all the main characters here so damn much – Oshikiri-sensei has crafted a triangle that so exceeds the norm for such situations in manga and anime that it seems altogether of a different species than most of them.  And this final episode gave them equal parts and equal measure, with the A-part dedicated entirely to Oono’s relationship with Haruo-kun, and the B-part to Hidaka’s.

All of the road trip sequences in this series are great.  Hi Score Girl is always wonderful at expressing the feelings of adolescence, but these high-stress adventure moments are – as in reality – like life experience cranked up to 11.  Having missed the last train thanks to Oono’s reluctance to go home, Haruo is forced to call his mom for help.  She needles him a bit, then checks the phone book (if you need to, Google it) and finds them a hotel room.  A hotel room, mind you – but Haruo is far too much a gentleman to exploit the situation.  More than a gentleman, he’s a knight-errant – and no knight was ever more chivalrous than Haruo is towards Akira.

I love Hidaka, I make no bones about it.  But I mean, how charming and cute was that whole bit in the hotel, with the bathtub and the NES console and and the kids on their beds playing “Daiundokai” in 8-bit and bathrobes?  It was everything adolescence is encapsulated in a perfect on-screen moment – childhood and adulthood present in equal measures, the exhilarating and vexing power of attraction.  No matter how one feels about Hidaka, how could they feel nothing when they see Akira’s face as she stares at the sleeping Haruo, then tucks him under a blanket?  Or sleeps wrong-way round, to mirror him, or their parting in the morning as he goes off to work?  Hi Score Girl doesn’t need words to tell its story – we understand exactly, right down to the molecular level, why these two kids love each other.

It would be so easy to leave it there, to say “Game Over” – no one would begrudge Oshikiri that.  But he doesn’t – when he takes us back home Hidaka is waiting for Haruo there.  And once more, Oshikiri (and the anime team, without a doubt) could not be more comprehensive in showing us why Hidaka-san is in love with Haruo.  She expresses herself in words in a way Oono obviously doesn’t, but her face and eyes tell us as much as Oono’s do.  Yes, she sees Haruo as a man-child – but she loves that he’s still very much the boy she first met.  He’s true to himself and to others, passionate about what he loves, and – above all – possesses an inherent kindness that Hidaka can’t help but be enthralled with.  It’s a cruel irony (Hidaka’s life is full of cruel ironies) that it’s that very kindness which made Haruo fall for Oono-san in the first place.

Koharu had to be the one to confess – it was inevitable, true to her nature.  Hopeless or not, Hidaka is in a no-lose situation here really from a selfish perspective – she doesn’t register on Haruo’s romantic radar (to an extent neither does Oono, but it’s obviously different) and she knows it.  Even so Koharu is well aware that she’s complicating Haruo’s life immeasurably by doing this, and this troubles her.  The whole sequence with the exchanging of consoles in Haruo’s room is no less charming than the hotel scene (ah, the mystique of the original PlayStation – even I was not immune), but there’s no doubt it ends on a very serious note.  As indeed, does the episode.

I’m heartily glad that the series doesn’t end there, because that would have been too cruel – but it would have been even more cruel to hodgepodge together an ending out of nothing and have it fail to be true to the story.  No, this is best – even if it does end up being only three more episodes, an abridged telling of the fate of this trio of intertwined fates is far better than the alternatives.  The extent to which Hi Score Girl is a true memoir isn’t something we know and perhaps we never will, but the experience feels so authentically personal that it matters little.  The depiction of early adolescence on-screen just doesn’t get much better than this in anime.

The saga of Hi Score Girl has been a long and painful one for fans, and all the more so for Oshikiri himself to be sure.  But as far as I’m concerned we’ve been rewarded in a way that should leave everyone who loves this series feeling very pleased.  This adaptation was wonderful – from casting to direction to pacing, it’s been spot-on.  Even the CGI, which is never my first choice for any series, ended up being a positive at times because the series managed to cleverly incorporate it into the story it was telling.  It still wouldn’t have been my preference, but if any series could make a case why CGI made sense for artistic reasons, Hi Score Girl may just have been it.  The synergy between the 90’s gaming scenes and the main narrative was fluid in a way it might not have been with a mainly hand-drawn style.

Now the wait begins.  But compared to the wait we had for the series itself, six months isn’t even a blink – it like a year or even a century in geologic terms.  This wasn’t a strong anime season and 2018 hasn’t been a strong year, but Hi Score Girl has been a standout in both – just like the manga a remarkably witty and intelligent snapshot of a specific time in the world, and the lives of a few wonderful characters inhabiting it.  For Hi Score Girl fans the night has been dark and full or terrors, but that just made the dawn all the more rewarding.

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14 comments

  1. G

    The scene where she sees him sleeping, covers him with a blanket and just kneels watching him sleep says it all without a single word being said.

  2. The stopped at the exactly right time!
    The next three episodes must be to cover (deleted), and I have hopes that after that it’ll be announced a second season.
    When I first heard and see that HSG would be made bu JC Staff in 3D I was disappointed and skeptical, but oh man, how it surpassed my expectations. This show is just too charming, no way it’ll not be a success when streamed by Netflix.

  3. I hope, but I’m skeptical of any second season. I guess anything’s possible.

  4. R

    Your woes and cries about “that’s all we get from this fantastic show” reminded me back when you were blogging season 1 of Baby Steps. I didn’t want to say anything as not to jinx it, and lo and behold, more of this show!
    As they say, history doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes.

  5. 3 episodes is not exactly a 2-cour second season, like we got with Baby Steps. I’ll take it for sure, but if they really want to give the manga a proper adaptation there would be no substitute for a second season.

  6. As this episode was going on, I couldn’t help but feel bittersweet. The whole episode was charming and easily sucked me into the adolescence these kids were feeling(Like Haruo kicking his feet in the air while playing), but bitter at the fact this is all we’re getting. Granted at the end, we’re getting the OVA’s which I didn’t realize til’ the end. Definitely a top pick for me!

  7. J

    It’s been a long time since *any* media has made me feel this nostalgic. This has been an exemplary adaptation – even if it was to end right here I think the lack of rushing to a conclusion should be lauded in an age where most adaptations, even the most highly-rated and anticipated (hello there, BokuDake) have their plots shoe-horned into 11-13 episode schedule.

    BnHA has been as consistently great as it has ever been, and Planet With was marvellous love letter to mecha anime (in the end, Mizukami – and you, GE – won me over), but barring a real shock from Autumn or Winter, this will be the series I remember 2018 for.

  8. N

    When Oono waved to Haruo as he was leaving for work, I thought this moment cannot possibly be emotionally rivaled.
    And then Hidaka confesses, and I’m crying, and a second later she hits him on the head and he’s worried about his Saturn and I’m laughing. My god, what a ride!

    Thank you, Enzo, yet another gem of a masterpiece I would have missed (probably not even heard of) if not for you. The question remaining for me now is, can I just jump into the manga from this moment in the story and hope for smooth sailing?

  9. Yes, I think you can. But if the Amazon presale numbers are close to accurate, we may just get a second season to finish the story.

  10. N

    Here’s for hoping, but let’s face it, there was no way I could wait 6 months when the anime ended where it did…
    So having caught up with the manga, I see now what you were saying about this being that one special case where going full CGI might make more artistic sense. That hand drawn Zangief just doesn’t do justice to that hairy chest 😀

  11. this series was amazing! it would have totally flown under my radar, so thanks for the rec Enzo!

  12. P

    Thanks for blogging this. Your insistence on promoting this series encouraged me to watch it after I saw it on Netflix. I haven’t been this enthusiastic about a romance series for a long, long time. This is a masterpiece, thanks!

  13. My pleasure. I’ve loved HSG for a long time and was thrilled to finally see it gets its moment in the sun. Thanx, Netflix.

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