SSSS.Gridman – 05

My goodness, but there’s a lot going on in SSSS.Gridman.  A lot of popping hormones, a lot of subtext, a lot of crazy, a lot of fanservice, a lot of visual poetry, a lot of Gainax.  The phrase “never a dull moment” certainly applies here because where there have been many times I’ve been a bit bemused by what’s happening on screen, I haven’t been bored once in five episodes.

The other thing there’s a lot of, of course, is mystery.  And Shinjou Akane certainly seems to be at the heart of all of it.  Maybe she isn’t directly responsible for Yuuta’s memory loss since she doesn’t even know for sure he’s her enemy, but she seems to be behind everything else.  It was striking how she complained to Alexis about how much “more work” this encounter was going to be because she had to go out to the mountains for a class field trip.  What does that mean, exactly?  Does she just hate bugs and leaves in her hair or is something else (world-building, so to speak) being suggested here?

That field trip involves the kids going on a rafting trip, which reveals for Yuuta another annoying element of amnesia – not remembering where his bathing suit was.  There’s plenty of equal-opportunity service here, starting with Akane, and Yuuta makes note of how “pudgy” Shou is.  There’s sunscreen-play in both locker rooms and lots of that double-agenda “kids being kids” vibe, but you know something is going to happen once they actually arrive in the mountains – especially since the new kaiju Akane shows Alexis looks very much like a mountain itself.

Like his mentor Anno Hideaki, Amemiya-sensei clearly loves trains, and they’re a major supporting character in this episode.  It would be hard to overstate how much I love the scene where the train Shou and Yuuta are riding on zips into the sunshine and suddenly, enormous kaijou can be seen towering over the city – it’s just so gorgeously shot.  That Yuuta-kun is only impressed by the width of the river is a sign both of how jaded he’s become to the kaiju, and how his amnesia has robbed him of context – as far as he can remember, this is his first time on a train.

Having failed to get to the truth through Rikka, Akane cuts out the middleman and goes directly to Yuuta when she finds him along during the trip.  And through a very simple bit of leading the witness she confirms what she suspects – though I’m not sure Yuuta understands what’s just happened (though he suspects).  It’s clear that Akane has no idea how Gridman works, because she’s puzzled by the fact that he seems to be taking forever to show up once she has Alexis unleash her mountain kaiju.  And what an impressive beast it is – something out of a Shinto nightmare, shooting balls of magma and sending the kids scattering.

The class does manage to get rescued, but the SSSS of course has to stay behind – and getting Gridman to Yuuta is more than a minor problem.  Junk is back in the city, the cell phones are at the station and there’s a killer mountain in the path.  It’s impressive that kids this age actually know how to use a public phone, though those are far less common here than in America – after a quick call home (thanks to Rikka not running away), Rikka-mama rips off the Chuugakusei squad for the cost of Junk and they head off for the mountains to try and help.

This fight is a showcase for Bora (now that it’s established he’s a boy, let’s get the spelling right – that’s how it’s written in katakana on the official site, though there was apparently an original Gridman character named “Borr” so who knows).  His signature is a drill, as expected, though in this fight he relies on missiles (some of which put out fires in the woods).  Anti shows up to complicate matters again – he still hasn’t given up on winning over Akane, clearly, though there’s more eye contact with Rikka.  His status remains an interesting wild card, but the biggest factor that changed over the course of this episode is that Akane now knows what she once suspected about Yuuta, and he suspects what he never suspected about her.  That’s going to make keeping up a facade in school pretty difficult, so I expect matter between the two of them to heat up rather quickly.

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

5 comments

  1. M

    Still loving this series, but I really wasn’t a fan (heh) of the fanservice this episode. I’m not against fanservice in general, but the way they went about shoving random butt/chest shots into every scene they could felt pretty low-effort.

  2. T

    Yeah, considering how short this show is, if things don’t complicate between Yuuta and Akane, it might as well never do.

    By this time I can say I’m warming up to this show as well (first Planet With and now this? I should anticipate these kinds of situations tbh) because it’s going fast and it’s mostly sober in terms of… pretty much every element it borrows from its inspirations. I was even amazed that the fanservice arrived until now, considering it’s a Trigger show – and I’m glad it didn’t start up with bullshit the way FranXX did (and FranXX played a huge role in me not trusting this show would be any good, actually).

  3. I don’t disagree with either above about the fanservice, but there’s an element of silliness about it here. And paired with the fact that it sort of cut both ways takes some of the sting off of it in terms of crassness.

  4. B

    Going from that dream/flashback Yuuta had, I’d guess that the exploding star Akane saw back in episode 1 was Gridman decombining from all four of the add-ons after taking that spear to the chest. Perhaps Gridman (and Yuuta) fought against Alexis and they both ended up weakened a la All for One and One for All? Yuuta may have lost his memories as a result of the damage.

    As for the show itself, I don’t see it as having the depth that Franxx seemed to have for a while and that Kiznaiver somewhat achieved, but it’s very well done and enjoyable to watch. I’m wondering where Rikka’s conflict between jumping into the action and staying out of things/being the emotional center of the Gridman Alliance is going to go. If the show has aspirations of moving beyond a well-executed saturday morning cartoon/toy commercial, next episode is where I assume they’re going to show.

  5. S

    Not sure if you want to count this as a spoiler, but I think the speculation that this is a digital world has floated around enough and the last scene with the field trip zone breaking apart was not subtle about it. The quartet just plugging gridman into that mountain station hit me as bizarre on the first watch, but it’s not until other viewers point out that the zone is just made for the purpose of the field trip (Yuta’s group leaving triggered the breakdown) that it hit me the station is just an empty prop. Connecting that with Akane’s complaint about “more work because it’s outside the city” she probably is responsible for maintaining the digital world of the city for its unaware residents. Also Yuta’s parent not being in the city probably means that…yeah, just delete if you think this is speculation is too spoilery.

Leave a Comment