SK∞ – 03

So far, week 3 of the Winter 2021 season has been kind to the overachievers on the schedule, and to the bubble boys as well.  Tenchi Souzou Design-bu continues to be entertaining, and 2.43: Seiin High School Boys Volleyball Team had its best episode so far (though by no means a great one).  Kai Byoui Ramune and SK∞ are a clear level above those shows for me though, and both of them had very strong outings as well.  Ramune was my out and out sleeper for the season, but SK∞ has definitely exceeded my expectations so far.  There’s some really good stuff happening here, better than I would have expected from this writer and director even with Bones’ involvement.

Basically, SK∞ is just fun to an illegal extent.  It’s Bones cranked up to eleven, all boyish enthusiasm and bombast and goofiness.  It’s also a reminder that Bones takes a back seat to no one when it comes to hand-drawn motion in anime.  While there is a smattering of CGI here, with a Bones series it never dominates, and the skating sequences are really beautifully shot.  I don’t think there’s a huge margin for error with a show like this, with its relative limited ambition.  You pretty much have to nail it for it to work, and SK∞ is nailing it.  It’s like preparing a recipe with only 3 or 4 ingredients – you better make damn well sure those ingredients are really high quality.

As we wade deeper into the story, it’s becoming clear that Langa is a prodigy to an extent that Reki is not.  Whether it’s Reki’s fate to basically become Langa’s equipment man I don’t know, but Langa is already surpassing him – and Reki is noticing – and Reki is showing considerable skill and intuition in board design.  He keeps tweaking things more and more to suit Langa’s snowboarding approach – swapping out the bindings for toe clips, swapping out standard wheels for spinners (like on luggage or office chairs) so turns will feel more like what Langa is used to.

All this is in service of his upcoming “beef” with Miya, on whom much of this episode focuses.  He’s a phenom, obviously, but Reki notes in ultra-Bones fashion that he doesn’t look like he’s having fun when he skates.  There’s a reason for that of course – Miya is already dealing with the pressures of being a star, and his elite status has cost him his friendships with his fellow sk8er boyz, especially former best friend Taka.  To be fair, from what we see it looks like the split was caused by their jealously rather than Miya’s arrogance.  But the result is that Miya has become a cocky little guttersnipe pretending to embrace his lone wolf existence.

When it comes time for the beef, Shadow decides to follow in his car to get a close look at what kicked his ass, and Reki tags along uninvited.  Shadow is already emerging as more a comic figure than true antagonist (someone else seems to be stepping into that role).  The beef itself is another tour de force of animation and cinematography, with Langa pulling out every risky snowboarding trick he knows to pip Miya at the finish.  After he does so Adam (Koyasu Takehito) shows up and rips Miya to shreds – interesting, as in real life he’s seemingly in charge of the skateboarding business empire sponsoring him.

A new friendship is born here, as Reki more or less kidnaps Miya into his party, and Adam would appear to be the villain of the piece.  I think that means everyone, including Shadow and the still largely unexplored Joe and Cherry Blossom, will wind up as allies taking Adam on, but in truth I’m not expecting things with SK∞ to ever get dark and serious.  This is the skateboarding anime the world needed, whether it knew it or not, and as long as it keeps attacking the audience with the same earnest ebullience it is now, things should be just fine.

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

4 comments

  1. a

    I think it already got “serious and dark” with the appearance of ADAM. I read many comments of people, who felt uncomfortable with his creeping of Langa, but the real stand-out for me was shredding Miya right where it hurt after he was no longer useful for ADAM. When a powerful politician, or businessman (or both) uses and manipulates minors for his personal entertainment, that’s even in such a fun series a deep red sign. Also, the whole scene in the end felt staged to provoke Reki into getting in a beef. Why? Perhaps ADAM’s price for winning (which he undoubtedly will), is something to drive a wedge between Reki and Langa. But let’s wait and see.

    Reki in Shadow’s pink car had me in stitches! “Drive old man!” “Hey, I’m only 24!” And the fact that Shadow taped over the name of the flower-shop where he works, was the cherry on top.

  2. Heh, I didn’t even notice the flower shop tape thing. And yes, that 24 thing made me LOL.

    Adam is definitely a dark character, but I don’t see his sort of mustache-twirling villainy in conflict with the overall vibe. We’ll see.

  3. Maybe its the colour scheme, or the wearing of masks to hide their identities but this show reminds me of Star Driver in a fun/silly way.

  4. That’s not among my favorite Bones shows but I could see that. Their series do tend to share a color palette across the board.

Leave a Comment