Tokyo Revengers – 03

This series seemingly always has a couple of niggling issues for me, but keeps me thoroughly engaged every week.  It’s not quite the same as Mashiro no Oto – there, the annoying things are a lot more annoying but perhaps less critical to the long-term success of the story.  The ledger with Tokyo Revengers is definitely balanced to the positive on the whole, as it’s one of the most interesting shows of the season.  But I still worry about a few things and only time will show whether I’m right to.

Let’s start with the resolution of last week’s cliffhanger, which was both pretty spellbinding and a little troublesome.  First off, if the series is going to be Takemichi (is it me or does he look older as a 14 year-old than as a 26 year-old?) getting beaten to a pulp every week, that will quickly get tiresome.  It already is, in fact.  Maybe the developments this week signal that pattern is changing, though.  A larger problem I have is this – what was Takemichi’s plan, exactly?  I appreciate his guts, but what was the endgame?  If it weren’t for that Deus ex Mikey maybe Kiyomasa really does kill him, or at least put him in the hospital.  This is not a 14 year-old kid here – it’s a 26 year-old man who should have had an answer to those questions, IMHO.

I get that Takemichi is desperate here, so maybe he’s just a desperate guy throwing a Hail Mary pass.  It works, thanks to the aforementioned Sano “Mikey” Manjirou (Hayashi Yuu).  He and his lieutenant Ryuuguuji “Doraken” Ken (Suzuki Tatsuhisa) blow through Tokyo Revengers like a sirocco you know will leave things forever changed.  Their arrival is fortuitously timed to say the least, especially as Mikey takes a liking to “Takamitchy” for his seemingly foolhardy courage in battle.  Mikey and Ken quickly reduce Kiyomasa to what he is, a small time thug, and Mikey declares that from this point forward he and Takemichi are friends.  This also saves Akkun from having to stab Kiyomasa and possibly do hard time.

Mikey is a very charismatic character, no question, and so is Doraken for that matter.  Mikey would have to be to take command of a major gang given his stature, one assumes.  The best scene in the episode comes when the two of them show up at school to take Takemitchy out for a field trip, leaving behind a trail of corpses (not really) in their wake.  Hinata, having no idea who they are, decides to put a stop to all this nonsense and initiates their showdown with a slap to Mikey’s face.  This is pretty tense, very well brought-off, and satisfyingly resolved.

I definitely get why someone like Mikey would take an interest in Takemichi.  As Ken notes brawlers are a dime-a-dozen but a guy who stands up against hopeless odds on principle is considerably more rare.  It probably doesn’t hurt that Takemichi also makes a fool of Kiyomasa (who I’m assuming winds up allied with Kisaki), who Mikey and Ken clearly find to be contemptible.  Takemichi, being 26, understands that this new development isn’t a golden road for him – he’s in just as dangerous a place as before, albeit for the moment more pleasant.

What I’m hoping doesn’t happen and I fear will happen is that we see a “good vs. evil” scenario playing out with the noble Sano and the dastardly Kitta fighting for control of the Manji gang.  In Japan banchou tend to get romanticized a lot for (in my opinion) the reason that the modern nation is a country where civilized behavior and decorum is stressed above all else, and the Bushido ideal of the past is long-gone but not forgotten.  These people represent the samurai to an extent, even up to and including the Yakuza themselves – their romanticization in manga and anime has been a sore point for me for years.

Are there differences between gangsters sometimes – could Sano truly be a more principled dude than Kisaki?  Sure – but that doesn’t make Sano a hero.  Things may very well not go in that direction with Tokyo Revengers but if they do, it would be a problematic development.  There’s no nobility in extortion and assault and theft, only degrees of ignobility, and what I hope we see is Takemichi rising above the way of the gangster altogether.  Whichever way things go from here, though, Tokyo Revengers is a compelling story that thoroughly commands your attention.

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8 comments

  1. S

    The gangs are more portrayed as a downward spiral that the characters need to get out of, so I wouldn’t worry too much about rose-tinted positivity for gang crimes. But I eventually dropped the manga because Takemichi’s foolishness irks me to no end. It’s a wonder that a 26 year old man can’t ever think to call cops or ambulance when things get out of hand, especially considering his relation to Naoto.

  2. It’s a wonder that a 26 year old man can’t ever think to call cops or ambulance when things get out of hand, especially considering his relation to Naoto.

    At the time that he has jumped back as a 14 year old delinquent, Naoto is still a young kid. With his looks then and him getting deeper into the gang, he is in greater danger if he gets the police involved.

  3. A

    As someone who is currently obsessed with the manga, I will admit that there is certain level of suspension of disbelief required to enjoy this story, yeah. Its strength definitely lies in its characters and their struggles, but not necessarily in their intelligence…

  4. Interesting comments, thank you. I’m proceeding with caution, but I can’t deny I find the story pretty riveting in spite of its flaws.

  5. K

    The story is actually growing on me. First week I didn’t really like it until the hook at the end but each episode gets better as new characters are introduced. I really like Hina’s brother, Hina and now these two new Gang Leaders. Tachemichi’s friends are also growing on me.

    The only thing that does worry me as I’ve seen quite a few comments from manga readers that the manga goes downhill which is not very encouraging but anime is its own product anyways so if the anime ends at a satisfying point what happens to the manga shouldn’t matter.

  6. Yeah, but I think there’s a wide range of opinions on the manga’s direction. And frankly some of the comments on the manga get just a little too specific for comfort.

  7. R

    Time travel stories always seem to irritate me at some level–here, it’s because I have trouble buying the fact that Takemichi could so seamlessly blend back into his middle school life with the mind and experiences of a twenty-something-year-old. Obviously, he is behaving differently in key moments, but there is so much more to a daily life than just that. I mean, what’s happening at his home? With his parents? However, I find the characters and situations compelling enough to overlook it and go with the flow (for now).

  8. “Compelling enough to overlook it” pretty much sums up Tokyo Revengers’ appeal for me. But I’ve definitely thought about the parents and wondered what the hell was going on there. Probably should at least acknowledge it?

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