Hoshi no Samidare – 05

I think this will be the last Hoshi no Samidare post, which is kind of ironic as it comes after probably its best episode.  If this show were a single cour I might grit my teeth and stick it out until the end (though a single cour Biscuit Hammer adaptation would be even more of an abomination).  But I just can’t see myself writing about twenty more episodes.  No way.  I’ll keep watching for the moment, so if anything changes dramatically (a scenario it’s hard imagine) I can always pop back in and make note of it.

The hardest part for me, honestly, is that I feel disloyal to Mizukami Satoshi for dropping this series.  But this isn’t the Water God I know – this adaptation doesn’t come close to doing the work justice.  I used to think that when it came to manga I loved, any adaptation would be better than none at all.  Time and experience has changed my mind, though never more dramatically than in this instance.

Shinonome Hangetsu did add a spark of life to things.  And his death was handled with marginally more dexterity than the first big emotional speed hump, Yuuhi’s ugly past with his grandfather.  But there was still a lot here that just wasn’t right (if you know, you know).  And there were a couple of material changes too, that while they’d seem minor if I pointed them out are actually pretty important.  And as torpid as this adaptation is on the production side, that’s the absolute last thing it can afford to do.

If this season is teaching us anything, it’s that no matter the source material if there’s no passion and eloquence behind an adaptation, it will fall flat.  It’s a sad way for Mizukami’s first foray into adaptation to end – I almost can’t even bear to think about it.  I can only hope it won’t be the last, because there’s so much more good manga in his repertoire crying out for a respectful treatment in anime.  This is the anime landscape in 2022 – interesting material does get adapted, but you get a half-dozen interchangeable isekai shows announced for every one of those.  And while to be brutally honest it doesn’t much matter if one of those gets  a crap treatment, when one of the good ones does it highlights everything that’s broken in the production committee system.

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

5 comments

  1. M

    I’m gonna say this, Biscuit Hammer’s adaptation makes me eternally thankful for Golden Kamuy’s S1. I used to think that CGI Bears was as low as half-baked adaptations of Seinen properties go, but at least the rest of the production was competent enough to capture the spirit of the story.

    If there is one silver lining, is thanks to this blog I can discover great manga stories, specially if the anime does a poor job at selling the story.

  2. I’m happy to be of service!

    The thing about GK was, even as awful as the CGI bear was (and the animation generally wasn’t great) it was still blessed with a director who had a soul. It was adapted with some wit and style, and a sense of what the material was really about. That soullessness – and it applies to Hataraku Maou-sama too – in a way is worse than the crap animation.

  3. P

    I haven’t read any of Mizukami’s manga and didn’t quite understand the hype behind Planet With (I thought was good, but not great- and never quite understood why you and others were gushing so much about Mizukami when blogging the show), but this show is engaging enough that I’m sticking with it. Yeah, the art and animation are a drawback, but I find the story more interesting than I did Planet With’s.

  4. Well, it is a better story than Planet With (which I still quite liked). Though that production was light years better.

Leave a Comment