Beastars 2nd Season – 03

It almost defies belief, but Beastars is actually getting more weird, mysterious, and psychologically dark.  I miss Haru being more prominent in the narrative, because she and Legosi are great together and she’s really the redeeming element of the story in some ways.  But she’s become mostly a concept in this season, the series’ dark matter – and that’s allowed her to influence the direction more profoundly than she could if she were omnipresent.  It’s fascinating and counter-intuitive, as Beastars so often is.

It’s pretty hilarious that all Legosi’s fellow carnivores want to know is, “what’s it like for a wolf to fuck a bunny?”  But as funny as it sounds to say it, if these animals were real and effectively human in terms of intelligence and emotions, that’s exactly what those boys would be obsessing over.  Of all the allegorical facets in the symbolic funhouse mirror that is Beastars, the one that most consistently reflects truly is “carnivores = males herbivores = females”.  It doesn’t always sync up perfectly with Itagaki’s writing, but it makes too much sense for there not be be at least a grain of truth to it.

Meanwhile, Louis’ journey into the dark continues to be possibly the season’s most fascinating thread.  I confess I’m not fully certain I understand why, but via flashback we now see that he went to the Shishigumi base fully intending to die.  Not before taking out their leader in stone cold fashion of course, a last act on Haru’s behalf.  I still don’t think Louis loves her – or anyone – the way she does him, but it’s clear she did mean something to him. With the task completed he basically orders the Shishigumi henchmen to eat him, but things don’t come together in quite such a straightforward fashion.

It’s funny that the whole leader thing was a complete accident, the by-product of the outside-the-box thinking Shishigumi #2, because Louis is a natural born gangsta if ever there was one.  At first he totally resists the idea, and even turns the gun on himself to take the choice out of their hands.  But he survives, and the deputy persists – eventually setting up a meal where Louis is forced to eat buffalo steak.  This scene is profoundly disturbing even more than it ought to be (not to mention Louis would get physically sick eating that), but damn, it’s powerful.  And I think Louis comes to realize the truth, that this development fits him like a glove.  And the power it affords him is not entirely unwelcome either.

Back at school, there’s a new playa at the drama club, a Dall Sheep named Pina (Kaji Yuuki, not quite right for the role as usual).  He seems an obvious candidate to fill Louis’ prospective beastar role in some ways – a glib and handsome guy with majestic horns – but apart from their lasciviousness they seemingly couldn’t be more different.  Pina creates drama of a different sort with his arrogant and splashy arrival, exactly the sort of distraction Legosi would rather avoid as he investigates Tem’s death, and I suspect an ulterior motive at play with this bighorn.

The carnivores – at whose meeting Legosi makes a rare appearance, because he basically assumes one of them murdered Tem – continue to press him over his night with Haru.  Eventually Legosi more or less admits nothing happened (which I figured), and declares he’s content to remain a virgin for life sustaining himself of the memories of that night.  But as always with Beastars, things are not quite as simple as they might be.

This whole notion of Haru being Legosi’s “religion” takes the story into some pretty difficult psychological places.  “My heart is always with the herbivores”, he muses to himself.  And after another chaste evening with Haru (it aborts even before they can kiss), Legosi asks her if she still loves Louis.  He resigns himself to “protecting her from afar”, but is that really what either of them want?  Legosi is a rare breed indeed, a strange and complicated person who doesn’t fully understand himself any more than we can fully understand him.

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3 comments

  1. n

    Legosi is, like Rokume said, a combination of pure heart and devilish body. His gentleness overall and especially towards Haru is so disarming. And he tries to follow the rules of coexisting with herbivores so hard that it seems should conflict with his wolf nature. It’s hard not to empathize with him.

  2. D

    The author’s progress can be seen, wether the progress is preferable or not is subject to subjectivity

  3. N

    This season of Beastars is picking up steam like crazy — and I’m loving it.

    re: does Louis loves Haru — I think it’s somewhat unfair to judge Louis according to normal standards, considering his upbringing. From my rather grim experience of growing up where everyone is either a Holocaust survivor or their descendants, people who go through that type of trauma early in life often struggle to express love in an easily recognizable fashion, and in more extreme cases never allow themselves to feel it because it’s inexorably linked with unbareable pain. For my money, Louis does care some for Haru, but he’d be willing to sacrifice her in a second for the greater good, as he perceives it. What made him crack and go into the lion den is that the particular way in which he was asked to let her be sacrificed ran against what he was attempting to accomplish and rang too close to home. It would be one thing to let her be run over by a truck, let’s say, if it meant that herbivores and carnivores would get along. But to allow her to be eaten so that herbivores don’t get eaten doesn’t really compute.

    Also, learning that the lion from the ending song is shishigumi#2 and not dead boss lion makes it a bit less awesome, in my opinion, but still plenty awesome.

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