First Impressions – Oooku

Oooku certainly isn’t a mass-produced model, as Midousuji (or me, ad nauseam) would say.  The LiA backstory here is that Samu picked it as his “best manga that will never get an anime” on the January 2022 podcast.  Needless to say he’s got egg on his face now, but his recommendation is no small factor in this series’ favor.  Likewise a Tezuka and Manga Taisho award (13 years apart).  I think it’s pretty safe to say Oooku would never have gotten that anime if it weren’t for Netflix – and neither would Pluto in all likelihood.  So anyone bitching about Netflix’ role in the anime industry is barking up the wrong tree IMO.

Oooku (as I noted in the preview, surely the first show I’ve ever covered with three of the same letter consecutively appearing in its name) has been run in both shoujo and jousei publications during its long (16 year) run.  It definitely comes off more as a jousei title, which is fine by me as jousei anime are even rarer than shoujo.  It’s the story of a Japan literally scarred by a mysteries smallpox-like disease which only afflicts young men, killing 80% of them.  The eventual result is a country where women represent 80% of the population and have assumed the reins of power.

Assuming the historical names referenced are based on reality, this all seems to have taken place around the 16th and 17th Centuries.   Netflix has chosen to release this one in dump fashion, with all ten episodes dropping today.  As always I’ll have to make a decision on how I want to cover a show like that, none of the options especially appealing.  They also decided to make the “premiere” about 80 minutes long, which seems kind of meaningless if you’re just going to release the whole thing anyway.  I get why they did it though, as this premiere amounts to a prologue, complete with a false main character.

That FMC is Mizuno Yuunoshin (Seki Tomokazu), a low-ranking samurai in an age with no war.  With women so outnumbering men only the most privileged females get to marry, and everyone else is desperate for “seed”.  Many if not most families in Mizuno’s situation sell their sons’ bodies for money, but his mother never did that – just tried to marry him off against his will.  He sees himself as a sort of spermatozoa Robin Hood, spreading it around to those in need, but his heart belongs to the wealthy merchant’s daughter O-Nobu (Saitou Miyuki) – a marriage that can never realistically happen in the current reality.

Eventually Mizuno talks his way (he could talk for Japan) into being accepted into the Oooku, the men-in-waiting at the shogun’s palace.  He can never leave, but his family will be taken care of, and he imagines a life where he can pursue his love of the sword and bed noble women to his heart’s content. The reality is very different – the Oooku is a den of back-stabbing and petty court politics, and the only sex the men are getting is with each other.  This is a pretty obvious role reversal of how court life is portrayed in more historically “accurate” anime, which I suspect is one reason for the mediocre rankings the anime is getting so far.

As it happens the current shogun is a 7 year-old girl, so the Oooku’s nominal role is basically moot anyway.  Things change when the child dies of illness and a formidable warrior from Kii named Yoshimune (Kobayashi Sanae) wins the struggle to take her place.  Yoshimune has little interest in the Oooku, preferring quickies in the garden to formal sessions in the bedchamber with attendants.  When she does finally agree to examine the Oooku she takes a shine to Mizuno, however, admiring his simple black kimono and fearless gaze.  Unfortunately for him her attentions come with a cost – as the “secret swain” her first lover is to be executed for defiling her (though no one has any doubt that ship has long since sailed).

I get that Mizuno is a creature of the prologue only,  but he makes an excellent focal point.  Seki is always fantastic, first of all, and Mizuno is quite a likeable guy with a lot of integrity. He’s even willing to accept his sentence as long as his family is taken care of, though he does beg to call Yoshimune by O-Nobu’s name during their fatal tryst.  Yoshimune, however, isn’t one to take pointless custom as immutable (very un-Japanese of her).  The death of any healthy young man in this society is a waste – of one as formidable as Mizuno a travesty.  She gives Mizuno his happy ending and good on her for doing so, though one suspect happy endings are going to be the exception rather than the rule in this series.

This is all quite interesting, and very well-directed by the redoubtable Noriyuki Abe.  It’s not one of those rare DEEN shows with lavish production values, but on the whole it looks fine, and certainly Oooku is lifted by the presence of Kawai Kenji’s score.  It appears likely we’re going to get a small portion of the manga adapted, and I don’t know how well it lends itself to that, but there are certainly no warning signs in the premiere.  It’s very good indeed, with an interesting premise and cast.  I don’t know how I’ll cover it, but as long as it stays at this level I’ll certainly do so one way or the other.

 

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5 comments

  1. S

    I doubt I’ll find much better than Oooku this season. I’m through episode three and find it fascinating.

    How anyone could complain about this show as being ahistorical escapes me. Of course, it’s ahistorical, but it’s a fascinating role reversal.

    I wondered if the effects of the one-child policy in China influenced the writing of this story. It certainly has echoes in modern Chinese life with its unbalanced sex ratios in the other direction.

  2. R

    I read the first two or three volumes of the manga after Samu’s rec and enjoyed them before getting distracted by the mangaka’s other series, What Are We Having For Dinner?, which I loved. I’m looking forward to this anime as I found the whole concept very compelling and interesting

  3. Samu from the future commenting here after binging the season (naturally). Like Enzo mentioned, I didn’t think this would ever get an anime – despite it being multi-award winning and well-acclaimed in Japan with several live-action adaptations over the past decade or so – it just never seemed that sort of series to get that attention, so major kudos to Netflix and co. Even if, like shown in this episode, the art isn’t perfect and it doesn’t exactly bring out a new dimension to the source material, it’s a very serviceable and extremely faithful adaptation of what I consider one of the best-written manga out there, period. In my own ranking this is my third favourite manga of all-time, so even if the anime is not exactly beautiful all the time, just the fact it’s adapted at a competent level is enough to make it a contender for the year, imo.

    As for this premiere, I’m glad it got the extended treatment to contain the first arc, allowing the rest of the series to go from there. I’ve seen a lot of slander from anime-onlys whose tastes I know this would never appeal to, but fans of the source material seem happy, especially with this first episode. I remember my first experience with this episode/volume and being slightly taken aback by Mizuno not being the main character and how his story wrapped up the way it did. Then again, I had a similar initial experience with Rakugo Shinjuu when it used the same story structure before jumping back to a lengthy flashback as the main bulk of the first season, and that turned out swimmingly. I appreciated the attention given to the m/m relationships that inevitably happen in the Ooku as well as the elements to that that Fumi Yoshinaga doesn’t shy away from. Yoshimune is also great, notably progressive in a way that from what I understand mirrors the policies and fondness of the real-life namesake.

    I will say too – the adaptation as a whole ended on the exact chapter I expected, and to put into perspective, if it stayed at its current rate it covered in 10 episodes, it would take 5 (if we got an extra-long premiere each time) or 6 cours to adapt the full story, so there’s a lot still to come.

  4. R

    Oooku is something that I would never expected to get an anime. I know the manga from a long time ago which only on my list but never started it.

    Ever since the recent seinen boom, I am glad there are other considerations for anime adaptations, like Ooku here. Anything is possible to get anime these days.

  5. J

    If I’m being honest here, I feel like Pluto is going to represent the end of an era for Netflix’s current anime phase. Much like how they’re massively scaling back their funding for prestige productions like The Irishman, I could see the same for prestige anime too after this year (and any remaining productions coming next year). Might as well cherish it while it lasts, but I doubt we’re going to see more shows in that same vein again, as they chase that blockbuster model instead to find viable tentpole franchises to compete with the major film studios and anime companies (who are also scaling back their streaming ambitions after how badly their competing services burned their pockets). That means safer bets instead of risky propositions like this or Pluto.

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