Overtake! – 10

It’s really going to suck when Overtake! ends in two weeks.  I have a pretty good idea how that’s going to go down, and I do think it will be in a way that honors the development we’ve seen over these past ten weeks.  But there’s so damn much tread left on these tires – this is a story that has endless possibility.  The only saving grace is that at least as an original series, the writer can craft an ending that makes sense in the time they’re allotted to do so.  That’s better than a truncated adaptation with a nonsensical ending (or none at all), but it still leaves so much unfulfilled potential.

There was no way Overtake was going to try and follow up last week’s emotional blockbuster – that would have been pointless.  But that was designed as both an episode that could stand on its own and feel complete, and one that set up the final arc of the series.  There’s a lot of unfinished business at the racetrack, and it starts with Haruka turning down Belsorriso.  I don’t think anyone could call that a huge surprise – narratively it makes perfect sense.  But I don’t think it’s a slam-dunk decision.  There’s more to life than ambition, and credit to Haruka for having more to him than that.  But maybe you do have to be that ambitious to really make it as a star driver.

From Haruka’s perspective, he is right about one thing.  If he wants to be governed by sentiment, this is the time he has to do it, because as he gets higher up the ladder there will be no place for it.  I can’t possibly fault a kid for being as sweet-natured as Haru is, and loyalty is something to be admired.  He wants to take that first step up the ladder (to the podium) with the people that got him this far – a group that now includes Kouya.

The domino effect of Haruka’s choice seems to have impacted Tokumaru the most.  “Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown”, indeed.  Tokumaru is finding being the one with the target on his back extremely unsettling, especially without Haru there to goad him forward.  So much so that he tells his zaku #2 driver to go ahead and take the lead in the next race just to avoid the burden of leading the pack and to slip into his comfort zone,  Haruka only qualifies 14th for that event, rendering it unlikely it can be the one that sees his dream come true.

As for Kouya, he’s certainly not all the way back, turning down Sae’s offer to send him model shoot work.  But he does seem to have walked away from last week’s events with an air of acceptance that wasn’t there before.  He determines that the first photo he takes is going to be of Haruka on the podium – a noble sentiment indeed, though a cynic might suspect that it’s partly a convenient excuse to delay confronting his demons.

Once the green flag comes out, Tokumaru quickly lets his domestique pass him and Haru quickly sets about proving that qualifying was a fluke.  The grass is always greener, and it’s not so pleasant for Tokumaru to be in second when the one in front of him is slower than he is.  Especially when Haruka starts scything through the field, eventually barking right at Belsorriso’s heels.  Tokumaru winds up in front after the pressure drives his kouhai to a mistake, and Haruka surges all the way to second.  The problem is that in passing 12 cars in an 11 lap race. you’re going to use up your tires – and that’s exactly what he does.  If the race had been a couple laps shorter, that podium might have happened.

This is the path Haru has chosen, and it’s going to be the harder one for as long as he chooses to follow it.  It fits his relationship with Kouya, for whom the past dozen years have been a constant struggle.  I have no doubt Haruka will find that podium finish a lot more satisfying having earned it with his surrogate family than if Belsorriso had handed it to him on a platter.  What comes after that is another matter, but – sadly – that’s not something that’s likely to be a part of Overtake’s story.

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3 comments

  1. N

    We’re back to the track in this week’s episode. Futoshi is about the put up the car on sale as it still has enough life left for another driver. That’s when Haruka comes back and lets Koutarou and Futoshi that he turned down Belsorisso and is coming back to Komaki. Indeed, it makes sense narratively, and he understands that he’ll have to leave Komaki if he wants to go pro and race in the higher circuits. Max Verstappen was already racing in F1 at the age of 17, but he’s definitely a unique case (He’s only 26 and has already rewritten the record books).

    He’s right that now is a good time for sentimentality and to try to get to the podium with his own strengths. With Haruka out, Belsorriso has to find another No. 2 for Tokumaru. It seems that Ena-san was hoping for Haruka to push Tokumaru to better heights. Tokumaru is still not used to being the lead driver and tells his new No. 2 to take the lead if he feels like it. A bad qualifying race means that Haruka has to start in the middle of the pack, which is a long way from the podium.

    Kouya is still trying get his groove back, first by doing some practice at his apartment. Should Haruka get on the podium, Kouya should ask for the Ferrari look as it would be perfect for the occasion. He still wants his first photos to be Haruka first. The race day conditions look perfect and it begins. He passes a big chunk of the field after a sluggish start from them. In the meantime, Tokumaru’s No. 2 does take the lead but quickly succumbs to the pressure of being in the front and makes a mistake. In the hospital, the still recuperating Satsuki is watching the race and he knows that feeling. Even when playing racing games, there is pressure being the leader. The “Mario Kart” games (except for the original one for SNES), took this further and made being the race leader the target for the infamous Blue Shell.

    Haruka manages to make it all the way to 2nd and is just behind Tokumaru. However, that’s when his tires tap out and is forced to drop back. The podium photo will have to wait for another day for Kouya. And, yep, that’s the challenge for Haruka and he has to deal with the very limited resources of Komaki. I too am going to miss this show once it reaches the checkered flag in two more weeks.

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