Beastars 2nd Season – 09

As I’ve noted many times (if the shoe fits) Beastars is a genuinely deep series.  It’s patently clear that Itakagi Paru is a remarkably smart writer, and that this series is the product of some serious thinking about existence.  What’s also remarkable is how it combines cynicism and even misanthropy with genuine sentimentality.  It reminds me of a Randy Newman album in that sense – two-thirds is the sardonic and coldly humorous dissection of life and the fools we share it with, and the rest is the childlike optimism of a hopeless romantic.

It’s been a very reliable pattern that the episodes spotlighting Haru tend to be the emotionally resonant ones for me, but this week was a notable exception.  We’ve seen none of Haru for two episodes, or Louis either last week – though he plays a major role here.  But it seems as if Beastars reached a kind of nadir on the pessimism scale with the Tao-Kibi incident, and it seemed as if Paru was increasingly going to take the story into darker and darker corners.  But surprisingly the last two eps have been some of the most idealistic of the series where the carnivore-herbivore dynamic was concerned.

Legosi’s quest is, in a sense, a monument to his own idealism.  Gouhin obviously senses this, and gently tries to steer his young charge through the rapids of a world too dark and misguided for him to handle alone.  He urges Legosi to find allies, but Legosi can only think of one – and he seems very far out of reach.  The acts Legosi commits in assisting Gouhin are a form of justice, but they seem more symbolic than truly impactful.  The Black Market always goes forward, grinding the innocent in its gears all the while.  And no matter how Louis  tries to rationalize it, the Shishigumi are part of the problem (like their trade in elephant tusks, which I’m sure is not an accidental choice by Itagaki).

Meanwhile, Tao visiting Kibi in the hospital is one of the most moving scenes in the series so far.  Tao has been suspended from school, and he’s obviously reluctant to go anywhere near Kibi’s hospital room, but he forces himself.  There are a lot of questions being asked here, not least of which whether if Tao is genuinely contrite (which I think he clearly is) does it even matter after what he did?  But the fact it, Kibi finds it in himself to forgive him.  And I think the messaging here is that if he can do that after what he’s been through – and indeed have empathy for the person who put him through it – most of us should feel ashamed for clinging to our petty grievances.

The reunion between Legosi and Louis, long in coming, certainly starts out in rough fashion.  Wrongly suspected of being the one stealing the gang’s illegal ivory, Legosi gets roughed up by the pride as Louis looks on, shocked but keeping his poker face.  Legosi is smart enough not to blow Louis’ cover, but he can’t keep his tail from wagging even as he’s getting his ass kicked, he’s so thrilled to see Louis-sempai.  Whether Louis is deserving of the adoration Legosi holds for him is debatable, but it’s so authentically Legosi.  He’s an incredibly pure soul, utterly genuine, and that someone like him can exist in this series’ universe somehow gives you a sense of hope for its world as a whole.

Louis, however, has no wish to let Legosi drag him back into the light.  He believes his role is to do the dirty work and die young, and Legosi is the one to keep his hands clean and become the hero.  I’m glad the misunderstanding between these two wasn’t milked for unnecessary drama – Louis knows Legosi too well to really believe the things he initially thought about him.  Legosi hugging Louis when they were finally alone was utterly in-character, and he’s willing to put everything on the line to let Louis know what’s at-stake back at Cherryton.  But he really ought to have a little more faith in himself at this point.

Make no mistake, Riz is a big problem literally and figuratively, but Legosi seems to me to be the one to handle it.  Riz openly baits Legosi in front of the others, and Legosi allows it to happen – it’s only an intervention by Pina of all people that defuses an incident that was making Legosi look very bad.  But Riz’ facade is just that, a facade, and he doesn’t have the restraint to sit idly by knowing there are two students out there who have the power to ruin him if they figure out how.  He’ll force a confrontation whether Legosi is ready for it or not, and – ominously – I could even see him going after Pina as a means of killing two birds with one stone.

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6 comments

  1. N

    re: does it matter if Tai is sorry for hurting Kibi — I don’t think it does, honestly, but I suspect my reasoning might be different than yours. The details of the accident aren’t clear, but the impression I got is that Tai had no intention of hurting Kibi, not even a momentary lapse in moral judgment. He simply tugged too hard and pop came off the arm. He was just as shocked as Kibi was that it did. So even if Tai were like “yeah, I tore his arm off, but what can you expect when you put carnivores and herbivores in a drama club and have them practice fight scenes together?” I’d be like, that’s a shitty atitude, but he isn’t wrong.

    Can birds of prey really burst eardrums with their squawking? Never heard of this before.

    Are the two junkies that Legoshi kidnapped for rehabilitation the ones responsible for the task-theft? I didn’t quite get how Legoshi ended up the suspect.

  2. R

    If I recall well, Tao and Kibi are childhood best friends, that’s part of the reasons of why Tao was so devastated and scared. He truly cares and likes his friend in a healthy way. Indeed, the scene where the accident occurs is as sudden as it was, they were both cheerfully helping each other (as they’re often observes un the bakground of other theaterclub-related panela of the manga) when things went wrong in a natural yet breath-taking way. He was genuinely scared and worried about both, his own self and his friend. He even thought that their friendship was over, then Kibi saved him in that hospital scene (wich speaks a lot about their friendship and how well they know each other. They also represents part of Legosi’s ideal world).

  3. Did they cut out that background about them being friends? Because I don’t remember it.

  4. J

    Legosi is sexy as hell. I want to be Louis and have Legosi manhandle me and whisper into my ear that he needs me.

  5. N

    So I’ve been reading the manga and came back to say that until the scene where Tao rips Kibi’s arm off, they never appear in the same panel, nor is it ever claimed that they’re childhood friends or have any type of familiarity outside the drama club.

  6. Interesting…

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