EkaCoralian wrote:I almost want to say it was something the writers put in so that they could end the show well, but I haven't read the manga so I really don't know
It was a novel actually.
Ah. Ok well, something the writers put in to end the show well different from the novels then. Have you read them? If so, is that actually a point in the story?
EkaCoralian wrote:I almost want to say it was something the writers put in so that they could end the show well, but I haven't read the manga so I really don't know
It was a novel actually.
Ah. Ok well, something the writers put in to end the show well different from the novels then. Have you read them? If so, is that actually a point in the story?
I haven't actually. I'm not planning to look into the
Spoiler :
eye/color of death
issue until after I've seen the final episode. I don't feel like inadvertently running into spoilers.
I just finished watching episode 3 and I'm sure I'll end up really loving the show. The story seems clichéd but for someone like me who used to watch Asian horror movies obsessively it's hard to come up with original school ghost stories. It looks somewhat like an anime version of the likes of Bunshinsaba and the WhisperingCorridorsfranchise
Rendakor wrote:Come back after episode 5 and let us know if you still think it's a cliché.
I still think it's a cliché.
Spoiler :
It just "changed" from a generic ghost story into a generic cursed place/object story. I've seen a lot of those too. Ofcourse, all of them slightly differ in their own unique ways (sometimes the cursed object is a video tape, sometimes shoes, sometimes a wig, sometimes even a town obsessed with spirals ) but the form (the cursed place/object, what it does and how you survive from the curse or not..) is repeated over and over again. But it's not really the idea of a cursed place, which is the problem. On the contrary, I love Asian horror and all the repetitious ideas in them. What I'm looking for in Asian horror is how they build up the story and the characters around these ideas and how everything is executed stylistically. Another doesn't disappoint me on this one because..
..it's a really stylish show. It's visually very beautiful, carefully paced (slow pacing is a key to good horror, imo) and I'm very pleased with the lack of music. I know there's music sometimes but it's usually very quiet and ambient. A nice touch! I don't feel so drawn to the characters though, at least yet, and I still have 7 episodes to watch. I'm predicting it'll get darker and more plot twists will be introduced. I hope they'll leave some things open because patching up the story with explanations is usually a good way to ruin it. What I'd absolutely loathe is a plot twist, in which...
Spoiler :
...it is revealed that somehow one of the main characters, or even the leading character, was behind it all. Or that the whole class is behind the "accidents". OR the typical "everything was just delusions" kind of revelation. I'm really hoping the story will get properly abstract towards the end rather than relying on a cheap horror cliché like that. Mindfucking supernatural endings are the best
Didn't really expect the broadcast about Mei tbh. The preview from ep10 gave me the impression that all the students would start accusing each other like Teshigawara did with his friend then it would start a bloodbath with all of them. At the moment, the only thing I don't really get is why the inn's owners starting going crazy and cut up the students, that was majorly unexpected, at least for me it was. Then there was the whole mutilated corpse in the dining hall and the fire. I'm also wondering who hurt the student outside the dining hall. Was it the couple? If so why didn't they cleanly kill him off then dispose of him instead of leaving him stabbed and half dead for someone to find? Also, Sakaki had like I dunno, 10 different chances to ask Mei who the real "extra" was so instead of running around, hiding and trying to explain to people they're wrong about Mei, he should have just told them who it was so they'd get off their back. That is, if they'd believe him and Mei's story about her eye. But then this is anime, and like many other shows, logic doesn't quite work all the time. And probably less in dire situations like that where they don't have time to calmly think things over. Although for a viewer, it's quite frustrating. xD
At the very least, despite the mini rant I'm still highly anticipating watching episode 12 this monday.
Didn't really expect the broadcast about Mei tbh. The preview from ep10 gave me the impression that all the students would start accusing each other like Teshigawara did with his friend then it would start a bloodbath with all of them. At the moment, the only thing I don't really get is why the inn's owners starting going crazy and cut up the students, that was majorly unexpected, at least for me it was. Then there was the whole mutilated corpse in the dining hall and the fire. I'm also wondering who hurt the student outside the dining hall. Was it the couple? If so why didn't they cleanly kill him off then dispose of him instead of leaving him stabbed and half dead for someone to find? Also, Sakaki had like I dunno, 10 different chances to ask Mei who the real "extra" was so instead of running around, hiding and trying to explain to people they're wrong about Mei, he should have just told them who it was so they'd get off their back. That is, if they'd believe him and Mei's story about her eye. But then this is anime, and like many other shows, logic doesn't quite work all the time. And probably less in dire situations like that where they don't have time to calmly think things over. Although for a viewer, it's quite frustrating. xD
Spoiler :
Oh noes, one shouldn't bother oneself with such questions. I never pay attention to such things but if I do I like to think, just like you said, that the characters are just panicing too much to think things through rationally And it's true, no? If you're in a mansion full of maniac killers and fucked up supernatural stuff is going on, you don't suddenly withdraw and say to yourself: "Hey, let me just relax for a bit and I'll analyze the situation."
As for my thoughts about the ending - I'm slightly disappointed. I've never seen a good action-ish ending in a horror film. At first the show felt like the ending might be loyal to the style of the show, keeping it stylishly creepy, mysterious and minimalistic, but it turned into a LOLMASSACRE afterall. I hated it in Memento Mori, The Doll Master, Carrie (granted, I haven't seen the original version), and all the others I saw... It's as if all the careful work put into building up tension and mystery is just suddenly flushed down the toilet. But we'll see what happens in the final ep...
I've seen plot twists before, but never anything like this. Like seriously...the effort that the show went through in order to misdirect and mislead the audience was pretty amazing.
Interesting plot twist; I thought for sure it was going to be
Spoiler :
the girl in the pigtails (and they almost went that way too by showing the color of death on her!) My friend reminded me of the Reiko/Mikami-sensei thing (I forgot they were the same person, pff) so it wasn't all that surprising when the big reveal happened.
Personally I was more interested in the random assailant who murdered her in the first place.
And I totally loved it when
Spoiler :
Kazami went batshit nuts and tried to kill Sakakibara. Felt so bad for Teshigawara though. ;_; Mypoorfavoritecharacter. *pats*