The rehabilitation of Miranjo has been a major theme of the current run of episodes of Ousama Ranking. I’m highly resistant, but it doesn’t look as if Touka-sensei is going to be backing off this angle, so it demands to be reckoned with. She remains the closest thing this series has to a true villain as far as I’m concerned, but she’s at the center of seemingly everything that happens, both good and bad – you just can’t write her off and be done with it. Bojji is the protagonist but in truth, Miranjo is the primary plot mover.
Is Miranjo’s backstory tragic? Sure, but those grow on trees in Ranking of Kings. And among other things, it casts Bosse in a light that’s pretty hard to forgive too. He killed her father, so doesn’t get any points for taking a protective (or otherwise) interest in Miranjo or her mother. What the Gyakuza did to Miranjo was certainly horrible, but does that justify Bosse going on a murder spree than included their children? I don’t know exactly what happened in the aftermath of that – maybe he got her “fixed” somehow, but in the process she seems to have gone over to the dark side.
There are – as ever – a ton of questions surrounding Miranjo. What exactly is it in that purgatory with Daida? It’s clearly connected to the mirror Miranjo, just as Daida is connected to Bosse. But the relationship doesn’t seem to be precisely the same. It’s also interesting to speculate on what happened to the Houma Kingdom after it was defeated by the Gods. Did they simply disappear off the face of the Earth, or are they in hiding somewhere – or perhaps connected in some way to the Shadow Clan?
The other big question is what’s going on in Miranjo’s head, as she clearly seems to be wavering in her outlook (and it’s effecting her fragment in purgatory). It was implied that she preferred to see Bojji and Kage survive last week, and this episode seems to pretty much prove that. Kage’s act of swallowing Ouken doesn’t do much good, as the immortal simply slices his way out. He and Despa are already on death’s door, and Bojji soon joins them after Ouken stabs him using his usual method. Bebin is on his way to help, but not quickly enough to prevent what looks like tragedy.
Kage, Bojji, and Despa all appear in the land between life and death (complete with the River Styx), and it seems as if it was Miranjo’s power that brought them there. Despa delivers a couple of great one-liners here, but the headline is Kage crossing the river to join his mother in the afterlife. These two have given us the most emotionally powerful moments in the series so far, and this one was really heartbreaking. Kage was ripped away from his mother at a young age – of course he’s desperate to be with her. And she him – perhaps selfishly, but no less understandably. It’s Miranjo who calls Kage back from a crossing he can only make once, once again implying that her motives are shifting.
I’m going to assume it’s Miranjo (who’s left the mirror) who has the power to save the deathbed trio (implying that Hilling may also be of Houma stock). But before that can happen Ouken must be dealt with, and for the first time in the series we see Bosse’s big four fighting together on the same side (Bebin strikes me as the strongest by far). Ouken is truly a miserable opponent – even his equipment is immortal – and he attacks fearlessly and with cruel intent. But the fact that he still has memories of his old self suggests to me that Despa’s hope that he might one day be restored and redeemed may not be totally impossible.
There are two themes we see repeating themselves over and over in Ousama Ranking. People do terrible things for what they believe to be the cause of good, and people do terrible things because they’re justifiably enraged by the cruelty of others. It makes for a fascinating story with a tremendous amount of moral and ethical shading, but I’m very curious to see whether the series ever embraces any absolutes – whether what is wrong is simply acknowledged as wrong, transcending any extenuating circumstances.
BluBlu
February 26, 2022 at 4:07 amThis is so funny how that series started from awesome level to…well whatever. I already said it but before the second part started, I have even stated to one friend “is there anything that series can do blatantly wrong?”. I was hyped as hell when I saw that second opening (beautiful song by the way) but since exactly that second part (episode 13 to be precise), the magic really decreased for me.
I really don’t know if it is because part of the manga are skipped (I have zero idea, never read it but I highly doubt that this is not the case because 12 volumes in 24 implied skipping) but anyway. The character who interests me the most since the beginning is Kage and even within his interactions with Boiji since the beginning, I can see only Kage. Yeah, I never cared about Boiji but that never bothered me at all for enjoying it. Weirdly enough, Kage and his mom scene did nothing for me this time.
But maybe it was because of that super smart writing of Bosse and Miranjo characters which brings more questions than answers (I am ironic). Last episode, I couldn’t resist but laugh when Bosse was shown killing Miranjo’s father and…OK that’s it. I mean, so he killed him just for the sake of fighting and she forgave him because she’s so pure (at least, this is what we are supposed to understand considering how she almost never talks) and Okay this is it.
Anyway, I have always been intrigued (and still intrigued) by the “lore” of that series, so understanding exactly what the “gods” want (and also why Houma managed to stay for so long in Gyakuza, reshaping almost everything in the city peacefully before “gods” appear once again after such a long time).
And also, eager to see if Kingbo (yeah, I don’t forget that he’s still alive like everyone in that show and angry at Ouken) will do a last nano-second save…(and of course, Bosse who’s peacefully sitting in jail because of contrition).
On another matter, just saw on ANN another “polemic” regarding Houma and Gyakuza depiction and Japan-Korea history. I won’t enter into that territory…
Marty
February 26, 2022 at 4:46 amIf I remember correctly, the Shadow Clan are cursed people. I wonder if the Gyakuza were transformed into the shadow clan or if their descendants come from that Kingdom Kage is originally from.
Either way, it was pretty epic seeing the Big 4 come together as a squad, even though it was against an impossibly tough opponent.
blargnobia
February 27, 2022 at 10:35 am“I hope Shiina kicks Miranjo’s spirit butt.”
That part had the same energy as the Star Wars parody where a redeemed, dying Darth Vader sees force ghost Samuel L Jackson (and several angry children) and decides “actually I’m not gonna die right now. I have some, er, stuff to do.”
Maybe Miranjo wants immortality because she knows Shiina’s going to punch-ify her face the moment she dies.
I really don’t get Bosse. On the one hand, I like that the author points out the idiotic extremes of the “I gotta be the strongest”-shounen mentality. (I guess, in his youth, Bosse was like Russel Crow in that “Fightin’ ’round the World” episode of South Park.) But he runs the gamut in terms of extreme reactions. He killed Miranjo’s dad for basically no reason; felt bad about it and became weirdly attached to Miranjo and her mom; and then flipped out and murdered Miranjo’s tormentors. It’s hard to reconcile this guy with the current Bosse, who seems hesitant and tormented.
I wonder if his devotion to Miranjo is what motivated him to make a deal with that demon.
Alex Leon
March 3, 2022 at 9:57 amThanks for sharing this