Migi to Dari – 09

This series really is fantastically off the hook.  The balance is pretty exquisite – the ante keeps getting raised, but it never slips into outright farce.  This seeming randomness is actually a very intricately woven web that hold together through all the stress the craziness puts on it.  Doing that – and having really outlandish characters who are also relatable and even believable most of the time – is quite an accomplishment.  Full credit to the anime staff for their excellent work here, but it’s such a shame we’re never going to get to see what else Sano Nami would have dreamed up.

This was the episode where all the answers really started to flow.  Hitori’s secret didn’t get out, somehow.  But Dari has taken to Hitori’s bed, distraught, and Eiji is slowly recovering from his pumpkin trauma.  Migi decides to take matters into his own hands and find out the truth of why Eiji saved him, and dons the Sali cosplay to do it.  A brother dressing like the girl he fell in love with who was actually his brother in disguise is a deliciously bizarre turn of events, and Migi is hardly the smooth method actor Dari is.  But he does manage to fool Eiji (who had to force Reiko to let Sali in) long enough to get thee truth (as he believes it) out of him.

Eiji’s version of events is that he saved Hitori out of guilt – to atone for his sins.  We know by now that that sin was, of course, and Eiji tells Sali (Reiko has been sent off to buy sourdough bread) that the whole diorama and secrecy is his mother trying to hide his crime.  This is complicated (well, it’s all complicated) – Reiko apparently doesn’t know Metry is dead.  And not only that, we later find out from Karen (the little sister) that Reiko is unable to bear children and that both she and Eiji are not hers (though it’s not clear whether Eiji knows this or not).

The absurd spectacle of Reiko menacing Sali with a baguette is only the appetizer to the craziness brewing here.  It’s when he’s hiding in Karen’t room (after he’s been de-wigged and outed) that she tells him about Reiko.  Eventually Reiko goes to the Sonoyama house and spikes the tea, then heads upstairs and captures Dari.  He’s bait – she clearly suspects the truth now – and Migi takes it, revealing it 100%.  She captures him too and offers the boys the opportunity to choose one to die, which Dari unsurprisingly stakes claim to.  Things are looking mighty grim until Micchan finally shows up.  And what an entrance it is, too.

I hated to see Micchan go – she’s one of the funniest in this cast.  Her death certainly establishes the stakes her with certainty.  Reiko is a killer and full-on psychotic, and the boys flee town with haste, leaving their stepparents and the beast behind.  Eventually they hole up in an Inari Shrine (with room service) but Migi isn’t content to leave their old lives – and the old couple to fend for themselves.  He was always the one longing for a normal childhood, more or less caught up in the wake of Dari’s lust for revenge.  Now the pair of them are forced to make a choice, and Migi’s uncharacteristic defiance leads to a rather vicious fistfight in an irrigation ditch.

Migi to Dari really is an elegant construction, a real funambulist of a series in so many ways.  It flies ever closer to the sun with each new twist, but these wings aren’t made of wax – at least not so far.  It strikes me that this is going to be a pretty tricky landing to stick, and I didn’t feel that Sakamoto desu ga? totally did that.  But this is a better series in every sense, at least for me, and it’s earned a good deal of trust with these first nine episodes.   For obvious reasons, I’m even more strongly hoping it gets the ending it needs than usual.

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3 comments

  1. N

    Man, this episode was wild. Indeed, the secret of Hitori somehow didn’t get out and I’m assuming that everybody was paying attention to the injured Eiji instead. I didn’t expect to see Sali for a 3rd time, but she’s being played by Migi this time around. Migi isn’t really that convincing as Sali, but it’s enough to get into the Ichijou household again. Mom is watching carefully until Eiji gets her to go on a sourdough run. That’s when we get the first of some big reveals from this episode.

    Eiji brings Sali to the attic with the miniature town and to explain the purpose of it. Reiko has been keeping track of everybody to make sure that nobody in the village knows about the incident with Metry. Reiko managed to convince Eiji that he saw a ghost that night until his memory of that night came back while under hypnosis (From Sali, but the other one). That’s when Reiko comes back. She doesn’t have the sourdough but has got a baquette. Yep, I’ve never seen a baguette made to look like such a dangerous weapon before. Sali makes a run for it and it’s clear that Migi isn’t used to it as his wig and dress gets caught. He manages to escape into Karen’s room, and she tells him that Reijo isn’t her real mother. Having seen “Hitori’s” face, Reiko sprints towards the Sonoyama house like the T-1000 from “Terminator 2”.

    She gets there before Migi and has not only drugged the Sonoyamas’, but also captured Dali. She learns the truth about who “Hitori” really is and indeed doesn’t seem to know that Metry is dead. She’s about to make Hitori as a singular person until Micchan suddenly shows up. Reiko tried to bury her alive (Really one of the worst ways to die), but Karen helped dig her out. Micchan has been doing a bit of digging of her own too. She tells the boys that Reiko is infertile and she’s not the biological mother of either Eiji or Karen. Oh, and Eiji is their… But she never gets to finish that sentence. She buys enough time for the boys to escape, but at the cost of her life.

    They leave Origon Village far behind, not knowing if Reiko is tailing them. They eventually find a shrine to take shelter. Dali is willing leave it all behind after all that has happened, but Migi craves that normal family life, which includes the both of them and not just “Hitori”. They eventually air out their grievances in a fist fight, which seems to put them both in the same page again after getting it out of their system. They decide to head back, but Reiko seems to have framed the brothers for the murder of Micchan back in Origon Village. They’re headed back as wanted criminals and now they have the police to worry about along with Reiko. With 4 episodes left, there’s still a lot to untangle.

  2. C

    No, Micchan! She really did end up being an awesome character.

    Unless there’s some other twist then Eiji is likely their brother which is what I’ve been thinking for a while now. It would explain why Metry went to his window that night, and what Reiko meant when she asked fake Metry if she was finally back for “it”.

    As it is the way the story slowly built up the differences in the twins, and then tore them apart before bringing them back together was rather masterful.

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