Yeah, I’m pretty much on the bubble with this one. I like a good zombie comedy as much as the next guy, and there’s no denying that the premiere was a work of art. And it’s not as if the two subsequent episodes have been bad, or anything. But the magic hasn’t quite been there, either. Overall they’ve been a mix of interesting elements and stuff that’s kind of annoyed me, and if that’s what the next ten weeks are going to be like, that’s pretty much the definition of a bubble series.
That description pretty much applies to Akira too. On a basic level, I like the design of the character – a guy whose life was so horrible that this is an improvement. He’s so out of it that his phone is full of LINE messages he’s only now reading, because he’s been in Hell for three years. Among those are ones from rugby buddy Kenchou (Furukawa Makoto), apparently the only “friend” Akira took the time to meet after his ordeal began. Unfortunately those meetings seemed to consist of Kenchou bragging about his life and encouraging Akira to quit (easy for him to say), and Akira getting increasingly resentful as he gets drunker.
Still – I guess this guy would count as the best friend. As for Kenchou, he’s been trapped in the S&M room of a Shinjuku club for three days with only water (and a zombie who’s fortunately in bondage). Also in Shinjuku we meet a host named Shou (Miyano Mamoru – a seiyuu who knows his way around zombies) who’s given refuge to a little girl, and seems to have formed a sort of anti-zombie militia. He’s about to bite it (pretty literally) when he’s saved by Akira luring the zombies away with a car alarm and a booby trapped car. I’m quite curious how Akira would have known that would work to draw the zombies away – it has a strong whiff of plot convenience to it.
Now, this is one of the issues I have with Zom 100 – and Akira. He seems to be hit with a stupid stick when the plot requires at, and be weirdly clever at other times. Him being physically capable I get – he’s a jock. As for the car alarm trick that was not for Shou’s benefit but Kenchou’s, and it does allow the latter to escape the S&M dungeon. But then Akira wastes about three minutes crying about what a bad friend he is at the top of his voice, which – duh – attracts the zombies back. I get that he’s not the smartest guy in the room, but Akira having no sense of context gets seriously irritating sometimes. That whole bit was just really dumb.
That was pretty much the turning point of the ep for me – everything before I liked a lot, and the rest of it fell flat (which Kenchou almost did). Like, how did Kenchou’s clothes magically fly off him when he was jumping between buildings? Yes, it’s a comedy, I know. But a comedy has to have ground rules, just like any other genre – especially one driven by a plot like Zom 100’s. And it has to choose what sort of comedy it is, at least to an extent. A lot of stuff just seems to be happening for its own sake here, and that’s not a good look.
The next couple of weeks are probably going to tell the tale, but it’s looking increasingly likely that the brilliance of the premiere was a one-off. But a show that has that in it always has the potential to repeat it, by definition – and that basically forces you to give it a longer leash than you otherwise would. It’s the hope that gets you.
Nicc
July 25, 2023 at 2:17 pmIt’s day… something of the zombie apocalypse and it looks like the Internet is back up. It’s a good news, bad news situation. It’s good to have the Internet usable again, but that’s because lots of people are no longer using it and the undead aren’t capable to using devices. Lots of messages come rolling in and with some of them probably being last ones. He remembers his best pal, Kenchou, who seems to be about the only person outside of work he interacted with during the past three years. They were college buddies and teammates on the rugby team. His natural charisma landed Kenchou a good job after graduation and all of that bragging seemed like it was just rubbing it in for Akira.
After a brief phone call, it seems that Kenchou is holed up Shinjuku and Akira heads that way. His name is Akira and he’s riding a motorcycle. I believe he’s legally obligated to perform a motorcycle slide at least once and we got one. While at Shinjuku, we also see a host club that has been acting as a refuge for survivors. Shou is the last person standing as everybody else is either dead or zombified, but something gets their attention.
Regarding the car alarm, my guess that he was following gaming tropes. I used to play “Left 4 Dead” and the zombies were sensitive to movement and loud sounds. Thus, the pipe bomb was fun to use. Toss the fella, watch the zombies crowd all over the flashing and beeping bomb and there’s a whole lot of destruction. Maybe that was what he had in mind, but then you’re right that he made too much noise himself when meeting with Kenchou again and that brings in the zombie swarm that he wanted to avoid. Where’s the gaming savvy, dude?
The both of them have a nice heart-to-heart when they reunite. To escape, they’ll have to do a Jackie Chan-worthy jump onto the next building. Akira makes it, but for Kenchou it comes down to a leap of faith (His boasting was just for show. He really wanted to do stand-up. There’s a good deal of observational humor that can be mined from a zombie apocalypse). He shed his insecurities along with his clothes? Sure, the metaphor works, but it was still silly. Oh well, he checks off another item from his list and even if the facial hair one didn’t work out.