Kowloon Generic Romance – 11

I’ll say it again – this adaptation has done an admirable job finessing the pacing issue. Apart from a couple eps in the middle that showed the strain, Kowloon Generic Romance has progressed at a very natural pace. Not only is that remarkable given the effectively one episode per volume status, it’s a mystery with a ton of exposition and subterfuge to boot. It’s difficult to overstate how much harder that made an already hard job. Anyone would love to have seen this show with ideal pacing, and maybe that makes the difference between “great” and an absolute masterpiece. But great is still great, and Kowloon will certainly be prominently heard from when the year-end rolls around.

Speaking of exposition, we’re down to one episode left and most of the mystery has effectively been solved. Yuulong’s realization that the quality needed to see the third Kowloon is not nostalgia but regret – poignantly and poetically revealed when he was struck with his own – explains a  lot. Gwen, Yaomay, Xiaohei, obviously Kudou – all the “originals” are accounted for in that department. It’s rather fitting that the last big mystery is the existence of Reiko herself, which isn’t neatly explained away by anything we’ve learned so far. She is the protagonist, after all.

Reiko’s latest vision is seemingly of Kujirai-B buying some pills on the black market. Presumably they’re from Hebinuma Pharmaceuticals, and seem likely to be directly connected to her death. Reiko learning the true nature of that event seems like the obvious watershed moment for her character, and she’s determined to face it head on. Xiaohei-kun gets his watershed moment this week. Reiko finds him and drags him to see Xiaohei-chan, who’s having a problem with her smoke alarm. Given the likely (now confirmed) reason why Xiaohei-chan existed it’s unsurprising that she and Xiaohei-kun were able to meet. But that doesn’t mean the moment wasn’t existentially traumatic for him.

Unfortunately, Gwen spills the beans to Hajime about Xiaohei’s true identity. In doing so he effectively “kills” female Xiaohei, though he can’t really be blamed – there’s no way he’d made that connection yet. It’s when he sees the noraneko shelter he’d built behind the Goldfish Cafe appear after he mentioned it to Hajime that the scales are lifted from his eyes. Gwen probably doesn’t immediately consider the implications for Xiaohei-chan, but this does confirm what I’ve long believed – this Kowloon is connected directly to Kudou-san’s memories.

Even if we know that, and that Yuulong was correct in his “regret” analysis, we still don’t really know the why. But when Xiaohei (who never had it in him to kill Reiko, “real” or not) and Yaomay more or less come to accept their past and resolve to confront it head-on rather than keep running from it, their ability to see Kowloon disappears. What this says about Hajime – both in terms of his relationship with his own regrets and his future – is unsettling.

That leaves only Miyuki and Gwen, then – along with Hajime obviously – as originals in this Kowloon. Except that Yuulong can see it now too, having awakened his own regrets about his past with Miyuki. Miyuki’s revenge quest, Hajime’s feelings for Reiko and Kujirai-B, Yuulong and Gwen’s feelings for Miyuki – all are crucial elements. But ultimately it’s Reiko’s identity that stands as the central pillar of this entire mystery and the story surrounding it. In the end I think the Third Kowloon – like the two that preceded it – is doomed to disappear. It shouldn’t exist. That’s undeniably sad in itself, but it will be even more so if its disappearance takes Reiko with it. Until we learn the true nature of her existence, we won’t know what her fate will be.

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4 comments

  1. I’m glad I was right that two Xiaohei’s could coexist ’cause Kudo indeed misgendered Xiaohei. And continuing on from the previous episode, perhaps Kujirai B didn’t die after she was given these red pills from this episode. In The Matrix movie, choosing the red pill means learning about the truth and accepting it whereas the blue pill is about choosing to be ignorant and going back to before you knew about the Matrix. Maybe what happened to Kujirai B is that the pills we saw her take removed her from the simulation, freeing her from this fake world. That would be how things made in this generic Kowloon can exist in the real world too, and that’s ’cause the outside world we’ve observed also part of a simu, but others would mourn her, and she would leave the simulation.

    Last episode, I put it out there that the entire world is a simulation, and it may exist to help Kudo get over Kujirai B, which is why Reiko came into existence despite the world being replicated from Kudo’s memories. Maybe that is why she got a warning from the talismans to not look for it anymore since the ones who created the simulation want Reiko to stay firmly where she is and help Kudo get over Kujirai B, which would be her purpose for being born. If she were to take the red pills and leave the simulation if it were indeed a simulation, their plans would be ruined.

  2. I meant maybe when Kujirai B said that her story would neither continue but wouldn’t end either is ’cause her life as Kujirai B would end, but others would mourn her, and she’d start a new life outside of the simulation.

  3. L

    …”and Kowloon will certainly be prominently heard from when the year-end rolls around.”

    Oof, I sure hope not. Outright terrible adaptations like this should not be rewarded. I just feel bad for Jun Mayuzuki at this point. She crafted her narrative and characters so meticulously, only for Yoshiaki Iwasaki to vomit all over it.

  4. Anime-onlies like myself and Enzo love Kowloon and think it’s clearly the anime of the season. Just ’cause manga readers are disappointed doesn’t mean that the public at large thinks it’s terrible.

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