Second Impressions – Yamada-kun to Lv999 no Koi o Suru

Yamada-kun to Lv999 no Koi o Suru is a series that I suspect would be close to a slam-dunk most seasons.  But it’s in the busiest season in a few years, on the busiest day of the season.  As such, the bar is going to be pretty high by necessity.  It could be that this is one of the shows that fall under the umbrella of those concessions I keep telling myself I’m going to have to make – more digests, shorter posts, few or no screencaps, not covering very bloggable shows altogether.  Or it could prove itself indispensable enough that I can’t do any of those things.  We’ll see.

What I can say for sure is I like it pretty well so far, even if it’s not quite riveting yet.  Asaka Morio’s visual touches add a lot to the experience, the BGM is nice, and the main couple are good together.  We see shoujo romance pretty rarely these days in anime, and there is a bit of disconnect with all these tropes I’ve kind of lost my feel for.  But at the same time we get shounen and seinen romances every season (though not as many as this one), so it’s nice have one that comes at the problem from a different angle.

Akane is a hell of a mess, thats for sure.  She’s relieved that nothing happened at Yamada-kun’s place (she’d be even more so if she knew then how old he was) but still – getting drunk, puking all over yourself and waking up in a guy’s apartment is a real bad look.  It’s dangerous for starters, and it’s a heck of an imposition on him.  I’ve kind of been in a similar situation (to Yamada’s) so I relate pretty hard – all things considered I think he takes the whole thing pretty well.

Akane’s spectacularly unsympathetic friend Momo isn’t much help.  I guess we could say this is tough love but damn, every time we’ve seen her Momo has been incredibly tactless and harsh.  And she appears to be Akane’s only friend, too, which just makes her seem like that much more of a basket case.  Akane’s latest drama is that she’s lost the necklace Takuma gave her, most likely at Yamada’s place (though he says he hasn’t seen it).  Akane’s attachment to the necklace is unhealthy, obviously – the dude dumped her, and is clearly a loser.  But it’s easy to say that from the outside looking in, I suppose.

When Yamada does find the necklace – underneath his foot, broken – he carries it around with him in the hope that he’ll run into Akane.  Which he eventually does at the train station, though she sees him first, as he’s obliviously shooting down a confession from a kouhai.  Akane doesn’t seem too shocked that Yamada’s a high schooler, and I suppose given that their ages are probably 18 and 20-21 it’s not that huge a deal.  She professes not to care that the necklace is broken, but even Yamada is perceptive enough to see through that.  He stops her and gives her his umbrella, urging her not to return it.

If it weren’t already obvious Yamada-kun is a pretty decent kid.  He’s unpolished in his social graces, but his instincts run towards doing the right thing.  That’s not much to build on, though.  He does make an impact on her with his “be more selective” online comment, which comes into play when Akane drafts Momo to help her clean the apartment after Akane’s mom unloads all her stuff on her so she can turn her room into a gym.  I have a hard time with sentimental attachments to things too, so I sympathize – but even I can see Momo is somewhat right here (though totally being a jerk about it).

At this point Akane’s appeal to Yamada has basically been getting drunk and annoying him twice, and I believe he’s not lying about being a little pissed off at the rerun (with Momo in tow).  He presents as asexual and she’s just basically pathetic, so their relationship has nowhere to go but up from here.  But that invite to jump back into “Forest of Savior”, even if not a tsundere statement of interest (and I don’t think it was) is a ticket to get Akane back into Yamada’s orbit (and another sign of his essentially sympathetic nature, which anyone dating Akane is clearly going to need to have).

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4 comments

  1. R

    I’m liking this show a lot — I have such a nostalgic feeling toward it. It’s so distinctively Moria-san — something that I missed and now reunited in this show. It’s a different story, but this show has the air of the first season of Chihayafuru. I guess that’s the magic of Moria-san and Madhouse combined.

    I like that the characters are flawed yet likable. The heart-broken Akane appears annoying to Yamada-kun (rightfully so), but the seed has already been planted in his heart. I will be sticking around to it grow.

  2. Morio is an auteur to an extent. He definitely has a signature style.

  3. N

    The second episode picks up immediately after the end of the first one as Akane recalls (vaguely) what happened the night before. It’s a series of unfortunate events that leads her to ending up at Yamada’s place (It was either to take her back or dump her on the sidewalk. He had to think about it…). Nothing happened there and Yamada was kind enough to clean her clothes. Even if not out of sympathy, it’s a practical matter; puke-covered clothes are going to stink.

    Akane gets dressed-down twice; first by Yamada online and then by Momo in real life. As you mentioned, the theme is “be more selective”, whether it comes to our stuff or to our relationships. Throwing out that necklace is hopefully a first step that she’s moving on. Yamada is indeed a decent chap, even if he’s lacking in social graces. It’s impressive he stayed around for a 7-minute confession (He was probably checked out for the first 5 minutes and thinking about the boss raid instead). There’s not much between them at this point and Akane shouldn’t have tried to get him online when he was trying to sleep, but baby steps, baby steps.

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