In terms of pre-season expectations, The Fable is the biggest premiere of the season so far. There have been qualifiers all along with me – the studio, the fact that I don’t know the source material, a director that hasn’t done much work in three decades. Add to that now we’re looking at a 25-episode run for a manga that has 22 volumes (I suppose it could get more but it seems unlikely). On the other hands it is a seinen, and an extremely well-regarded one at that – it won the Kodansha Manga Award in 2017.
So, on balance, it’s fair to say I came into The Fable cautiously optimistic. And that’s about where I am after the premiere, which was solid if unspectacular. With Tezuka Productions in charge I did worry that we’d be looking at another My Home Hero situation – a much-lauded seinen crime saga tanked by a shockingly ugly adaptation. But while this was certainly nothing special visually, it wasn’t that – what we saw was clearly low-budget but tolerable. I’d say that about the direction too, which was competent almost to the point of mundanity and lacked much style, but didn’t really stumble at any point.
The Fable is the story of a super-skilled hitman whose real name we aren’t told here, widely known as – you guessed it – The Fable. He’s killed 71 in six years, some big fish among that group. Fable (Okitsu Kazuyuki) is an extremely deadpan figure, businesslike about his work. His associate (Sawashiro Miyuki) handles the mundane stuff like cleanup, chauffeuring, and blowing on hot food. Fable’s sponsor (Ichijou Kazuya) decides he’s been a little too successful and his reputation grown a little too bloated, and orders Fable to lie low in Osaka for a year with his assistant. If he kills anyone during that year, Master says, he’ll kill the both of them.
It should be noted that mangaka Minami Katsuhisa is Osaka born and bred, and unsurprisingly the anime cast a Kansai boy in Okitsu as Fable. He notes that he’s learned six “languages” (in truth Japanese dialects) that he can turn on with a switch in his head, so authenticity was always going to be key here. Given that Fable – now going by Satou Akira, with his companion posing as his sister Youko – is going to be under the care of the local Osaka mob during his time there, Osaka-ben and local customs are clearly going to be a big part of this story.
Seeing that Fable is supposed to be pretty much a cipher here – derisive sneering is pretty much his only emotion when he’s not laughing at his favorite jackass comic on TV – it’s not surprising that I don’t get much of a read on him here. Youko gives us more of her story – she was orphaned by a fire at ten years old and “for some reason” (I suspect because his group set the fire) Master took her in – and is a little more nuanced at this point. She’s clearly bright and playing dumb, or so it seems to me. One doesn’t envy her having to babysit “Akira” for a year. He almost blows their cover on the road trip to Osaka, not avoiding a confrontation with a couple of low-rent car thieves in the rest area parking lot (though he doesn’t kill them).
The local yakuza are presumably going to be major characters too. The boss (Komura Tetsuo) is sanguine about taking this loose cannon under their care, clearly not having been given much choice. His captain Ebihara Takeshi (Ohtsuka Akio) is more worked up about it, referring to Akira as a “killer whale” (shark wasn’t big enough) in their midst. Akira has ¥50 million in cash and the local boss is providing them housing, so it’s not like the guy has to work for the next year. This is supposed to be all about him learning how to be a “normal” person”, so what choices he makes about how to spend his time is going to be an interesting element.
Again this is all pretty solid stuff, if not yet compelling. Japan is not alone in being obsessed with organized crime stories so it’s not easy to break new ground here, but one has to presume the manga is as acclaimed as it is for a reason. None of my concerns going in have been summarily dismissed, apart perhaps from the production itself not being a disaster, but The Fable hasn’t done anything to amplify them either. So it’s basically status quo heading into the second episode.
Joshua
April 7, 2024 at 8:00 pmIf I wanted the read the manga, then I’d read the manga rather than sit through this, or watch the live-action films instead. Apparently, a boomer director who hasn’t done much since the 90s handled this adaptation and combine that with Tezuka Pro handling this (like they did with Under Ninja) and it’s pretty unappealing to me.
My Home Hero was a noble try that only excelled in its writing, Under Ninja was a flop, and I’m not sure how The Fable is going to fare when it’s not focusing on Fable’s mundanity (meaning extensive corners cut).
Rob Barrett
April 9, 2024 at 9:07 amIf it helps, the most boring stuff (i.e., the set-up) is all out of the way now. We should start meeting the Osaka locals, and they’re where the story interest lies.
Guardian Enzo
April 9, 2024 at 9:12 amI did kind of vibe on that.
Kurik
April 10, 2024 at 6:00 amThanks again for the recommendation Enzo. I find myself craving more adult like characters in my anime of late and this fits the bill nicely for now. Gives me a Golgo 13 vibe (dang, wish they did an updated version of that anime!).
Guardian Enzo
April 10, 2024 at 8:20 amNP. I hope I feel like recommending it even more strongly after the second episode.
Joshua
April 16, 2024 at 12:04 pmI just despise the fact that Disney poached this and Sentai Daishikkaku away from other streaming services where over here, they don’t care one bit about the anime their Japanese division picks up to stream exclusively on D+.