I love a good fiction, and Takaya-sensei's work is a masterpiece. SPOILERS AHEAD
- The moon references
- Baby Kyo scenes
- The craftiness of the summer/beach arc being mobilized after Shigure discovered Yuki visited Haru
- Kagura's "All Mine" episode; realizing your "pretend-love" is real love, at the point you give yourself closure
- The point where Akito "snaps" and the importance of Yuki's role
- The imagery
- Communication and how Shigure tried to open the lines for her to tell him
- Why Ren happened
- The empty box plot device
- Kureno and the choice he made parallel to Akito thinking when things began to fall apart
- Shigure's character: "Shigure can be vindictive & selfish & nasty but he’s just a spoiled rich english major of a man who has kinda yucky ways of teaching people lessons they need to learn or getting them to see the bigger picture outside of the shit pile they are sitting in." LOL
- After 3 seasons, realizing that the entire story from the beginning is "god's plan"; "he is the character who creates the foundation of the story’s plot; his plan is the thread to which everything returns to. somehow, everything that happens – most of which is outside of his control – falls in line with his plan."
- Conclusion of the chess game, beautifully depicted in the anime remake. The pain he inflicted on her was something referenced, sprinkled, throughout the three seasons. "He can’t be kind because he knows that he must be her adversary, and he feels resentful enough and justified enough in his actions not to back down. From his point of view, this is both legitimate revenge and a necessary evil. He is a cold, pragmatic bastard, and he knows that she will suffer anyway, so best he vies for the happy epilogue. But, though necessary (and without him, no curse-breaking!), his actions still hurts her." ... "It’s more that perhaps he realizes that they’ve come to the point where distance and coldness are no longer relevant, and that pushing her to the brink exacted a price."
- The parting
- Passion in a few lines
- Toxic love that is achingly real and not romanticized
- Tying back to the implications of the curse to this love story "The curse is what made him fall in love with her, but it’s also why he can’t allow himself to love her." ... "I think they bring something to the other that’s otherwise lacking in their life: truth, a truth that originated in the bond they formed when the curse started, and that mutated into romantic feelings, with this need to see each other for exactly what they are (and isn’t it ironic that it’s the curse that stops them from being true to themselves?)"
- No clean slates
apr 10 2024 ∞
may 2 2024 +