First Impressions – Tengoku Daimakyou

 

Spring 2023 hasn’t hit the ground running, it’s hit screaming like a Bugati Chrion Supersport 300+.  Possibly my top 2 series (#1 for sure, and #2 is a tossup) are right at the gun, and Mix was pretty high up my list, too.  We’re in for a hell of a ride this season – and with Tengoku Daimakyou specifically.  Like BokuYaba, this is a series which presents serious blogging challenges for me as a manga reader.  The reasons are quite different – much more conventional in this case – but the essential conundrum of what and what not to say is very much a common thread.

It says something about what kind of season this is – and what kind of series Boku no Kokoro is – that Heavenly Delusion isn’t flat-out my top pick.  Nothing stokes the fires of fandom like seeing a beloved manga adapted, and I’ve been a big fan of this one since the beginning.  And it’s been clear since the first teasers that Production I.G. is pulling out all the stops here.  Director Mori Hirotaka is a relative unknown, but the visuals don’t lie.  And the rest of the staff is stellar, most especially Art Director Kaneko Yuuji, one of the absolute legends in the business.

This premiere is, in a word, great.  I fully expected that, but it’s nice to see the reality match the hype.  Ishiguro Masakazu’s manga is full of mysteries but it’s no slow starter – it fascinated me right from the very beginning.  Ishiguro-sensei is one of those mangaka other mangaka revere, which is a tell if ever there was one.  His Soredemo Machi wa Matteiru is by far his most famous work (it was so good even Shaft couldn’t ruin it), but in Tengoku Daimakyou he’s gone off in a very different direction.  To say the least.  And the least is probably all I should say, though I can’t resist noting that this series is very, very weird.

In many ways Tengoku reminds me a fair bit of the legendary sci-fi anime of the 90’s and noughties.  It even puts me in mind of Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou a little – a post-apocalyptic series by a genius mangaka which presents a gorgeous vision of our own world through the lens of decay and decline.  But it carves its own path, in no small part because of Ishiguro’s unique sensibility.  His offbeat sense of humor pervades the work, no matter how bizarre and graphically disturbing it gets (and it gets).  The end product is as close to unique as you’ll find in a medium that’s inherently and unavoidably derivative.

There are two main threads followed here, as the premiere lays out.  There are a bunch of kids living “inside” – in a school of some sort, with robot teachers and no overt connection to the outside world.  And there are a pair of teenagers roaming that outside world, an indeterminate time after “the collapse”, when most of the trappings of modern civilization seem to have, well- collapsed.  Maru (Satou Gen), appears to be a pretty normal 15 year-old boy apart from some unreal combat skills.  Kiruko (Senbongi Sayaka) is a little older (“18 – no, 2o”), a little more cautious, and carries a battery-powered gun which doesn’t shoot bullets.

I would love to discuss the plot further, but again, it gets very difficult to do so safely.  Think about what you see, I’ll say that much – and enjoy being swept along by the majesty of it all as you do so.  One of my favorite moments in the premiere comes when the innkeeper (the kids are amazed to find an inn still operating) makes a faulty assumption sabout Kiruko and Maru, because it’s such a classic Ishiguro moment in a context we’re so unused to seeing them.  That disconnect goes a long way towards driving the charm of Heavenly Delusion, at least for me..

All the pieces click here.  The music by Ushio Kensuke (who also does the soundtrack for BokuYaba) complements the material nicely, the animation (the CGI is not minimal, but well-integrated) and choreography are excellent.  And most especially the world created by Kaneko is as beautiful as it is unsettling, immediately burning itself into the brain.  This is Production I.G. at their best, which is some of the best in the industry.  It’s surprising to me that this relatively obscure manga is getting such a first class treatment, but it deserves it – between Ishiguro’s writing and the fantastic production this will certainly wind up as one of 2023’s best series.

ED: “Dare mo Kare mo Doko mo Nani mo Shiranai” (誰も彼も何処も何も知らない) by ASOBI Doumei

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9 comments

  1. R

    I am one of the few Soremachi fans, and I love this series.

    Ishiguro has that unique sense of humor and I missed this so much, because it’s been so long after Soremachi.

    He takes a very different direction after that manga, but I’m liking this. Seems like it’s kind of different with the usual ‘teenager surviving in a post-apocalyptic world’

    Thanks for the review, Enzo.

  2. Oh, i think it has quite a few fans, especially in Japan. That series would fall under the “cult classic” heading for me. Not a commercial monster but pretty well-regarded.

  3. M

    I’m the kind of person who rarely enjoys anime adaptions more than their original manga, but I was really impressed by this first episode. The post-apocalyptic cityscapes are really gorgeous here, and I love the color palettes they’ve chosen. Only nitpick was that I wasn’t jiving with Maru’s voice performance.

    PS. I’m definitely going to check out Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou, thanks for the rec

  4. A strong contender for my favorite manga of all time.

  5. Y

    Same… Although, for me, the “vibe” and the lingering feeling you get afterward is more reminiscent of something like Mushishi than this new show. But don’t get me wrong… Tengoku Daimakyou is basically checking all the boxes for me. I haven’t been that enthused about an anime after just one episode in a very long time. It looks great, the animation is on point, the world building is perfectly balanced between mystery and smart exposition. This should be gooooooood… 🙂

  6. J

    There’s a bit of an irony that perhaps the best show of the season is on a service that like Summertime Rendering, is on a streaming service that doesn’t care about anime. Disney at this rate, doesn’t seem to care about anime outside of trying to boost domestic numbers in Japan. I’ve seen no promotion for this show outside of one promo on Hulu, and despite that it’ll be simulcasted (which avoids the issue that STR had last year), it’s likely that its visibility will be next to non-existent in the West.

    Then there’s the possibility of Iger coming in during his wave of mass layoffs, which will surely affect Disney+ as well (including laying off the people who made the Kodansha deal to begin with)…

  7. Yes, but least folks in the U.S. can watch this one more or less in real-time.

  8. J

    I literally had to search it up on D+ with the romaji name, something that I didn’t need to do with shows on Crunchyroll or Hidive, where I can just type in the official translated name of a show and it comes up. You say that people in the West are able to watch it weekly, but will they even notice it’s there? After all, despite the series being massive on D+ in Japan to the point that Disney locked it down exclusively (because there were other anime non-exclusive to the service), I’m not sure that people here knew that ToMan s2 was even on that service because most fans watched s1 on CR, and don’t want to spend any money on a service with other content they don’t care about just to watch one or two shows on there.

  9. B

    Great in every respect, what more can I say? There’s plenty of setting elements directly up my alley.

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