Ajin: DemiHuman 2016 220https://images.goodsmile.info/cgm/images/product/20151127/5370/36646/large/8b11310480f4796c7e76fc0ba89aa552.jpg Upon the 21st Centurys Golden Age of Television around the early 2000s antiheroes became a prominent figure in media entertainment once again. From Mad Men to The Sopranos storytelling saw a drastic change in the way we perceive heroism in the modern grittier era. Japanese animation on the other hand have always embraced antiheroes as part of their storytelling but it was not until the late 2000s that sociopathic antiheroes became more prominent and even embraced as a figure worthy of admiration. Characters like Light Yagami from Death Note were no longer the traditional villain but the main protagonist whose fans have even considered him to be in the right. By the time the 2010s came around we witnessed several anime entries that were far more subversive of the more traditional heroic tales like Attack on Titan PsychoPass Tokyo Ghoul Terror in Resonance and of course Ajin. These anime are far more flexible when showing moral righteousness and ambiguity. This has been around in anime before but the 2010s saw a significant surge in such gritty psychological anime. Of course only one title among these left an impact on me. As Ive mentioned before its like a hybrid of the best parts from those aforementioned anime titles but I feel like thats simplifying a bit how I came to feel such satisfaction from this anime. Lets start at the beginning. Around five years ago Ive seen almost 400 anime titles most of which consisted of popular mainstream mustwatch titles like FMA:B Death Note SteinsGate Cowboy Bebop Ghost in the Shell and many more. I felt like I hit a wall at that time and nothing really satisfied me the way those classic titles did leaving that impact of having experienced a polished story with the right balance of action story and character music too. So I started to search for more niched titles specifically the more psychological stories that challenge the viewers perceptions. When I stumbled upon Terror in Resonance it felt like such a novel idea a show with terrorists being the main protagonists the good guys even good luck pulling that off in America. But ultimately it disappointed me when it entered the cliched territory of a melodramatic villain with a generic backstory. Without spoiling anything it delves into your typical science experiment gone wrong/government coverup. It all just felt so samey and lacked that genuine freshness and the villain acting so hammy really didnt help. I dont particularly enjoy hammy villains. Speaking of villains I couldnt take seriously some time before my viewing of Terror in Resonance I saw Tokyo Ghoul which I only picked up because it reminded me of a favorite anime of mine Shiki. The idea of the bad guys being as human as the human good guys wasnt anything new but Shiki managed to pull it off in such emotional intensity through its showcase of humanitys hypocrisy and cruelty towards any one different. Tokyo Ghoul on the other hand felt like a showcase of how pretentious the villains could act with their overdramatic speeches. The focus was off. It was a showy effort that turned it into an actionpacked anime lacking any contemplation on the human condition. Feels like a kids show but with gore. But why am I explaining my gripes about these other anime in my Ajin review you ask? Well Ajin took those wasted potentials and polished it up into something far more engaging. Gone are the unnecessary megalomaniacle villains preaching false moral superiority and instead we have a better focus here a character study almost of a sociopathic kid who is forced to reveal his true colors of being an amoral monster long before his realization of being a literal one. Its like if we never gave Light Yagami the Death Note in the first place and just disrupt his status quo to see how his sociopathic side would react. Kei Nagai is a fascinating protagonist in the realm of storytelling because usually with selfish characters like him the show would try and justify his existence by showing his good side. Ajin does that to some extent but halfheartedly focusing more on showing how hypocritical and sometimes terrifying Keis actions are especially towards his sister. The show was perfectly comfortable in placing an emotionless creature as the main hero without rectifying his behavior later on or spelling out just how morally wrong Kei really is to the audience either. Hes simply there without plot armor or deus ex machina for us to observe him in the purest way. Such an effective moral ambiguity could only achieved by one key element in the show: evil vs. evil vs. evil. There are literally no good guys between the three main factions in this series whether its Yu Tosaki crazed government agent comfortable with torturing Ajins in science experiments even if theyre children or Sato militant rebel Ajin whose extreme methods made Malcolm X look like Mr. Rogers. Thats why theres no forced or contrived moral preaching about whos in the right or wrong. Instead we just get a satisfying battle royale to see who gets the upper hand without any distraction. I feel like with villains being the main characters it can be more interesting and provocative because most of us know what the right thing to do is the morally righteous actions so to watch goodnatured heroes perform actions we already know theyll do for the thousandth time can get... a little stale. But with villains like Light Yagami I feel like were scientists watching lab rats waiting to see just how much more evil they can get how extreme they can become and how far they would go. Especially fascinating are the intelligent villains like the truly intelligent ones not those preaching Nietzsche nihilism who create elaborate schemes to get away with their amoral actions. In a way its almost like a voyeuristic escapism like watching a heist movie and fantasizing about getting easy money. But aside from simply having an interesting character study Ajin also taps into some relevant social themes but not in a heavyhanded way that leaves the audience eyerolling. There are subtle xenophobia themes of persecution against those who are different than you and also themes of looking the other way instead of speaking out against injustice two subjects that Im sure all of us could relate to today. This is not the animes strongest suit of course since its not something new in anime but its worth mentioning nonetheless particularly how the themes arent heavyhanded enough to distract. Even the torture scenes are mostly left to viewers imagination instead of showing gratuitous gore for viewer satisfaction. I feel like such subtlety only strengthened the shows focus on the character analysis devoid of superficial story elements. And even right until the end even when the terrorists made their big explosive move I feel like the show has always been rooted in the study of Kei and how he reacts to people as well as how people react to him. That one old lady who was sympathetic to him along with Keis storyline being moved to the remote villages was a strong move that further examine how Keis twisted logic works. He showed compassion for the old lady not out of kindness I feel but out of some distorted logic that the elderly should be helped. I feel like thats how Keis amoral mind works defining his world and the people around him as statistics and data to be analysed. Fascinating. But its not all slowburn character study of course as theres plenty of Ajin action and fight scenes. This is one of those shows like FMA:B that doesnt overcompensate with action scenes that they would become boring. Instead almost every fight scene felt like it adds something important to the story rather than just being there for the sake of showing new Ajin moves. That being said I really LOVE what they did with Kei in a surprise twist. Its pretty much a powerup cliche you would find in most shounen anime but this was the one time I could overlook because of how satisfying it is. And I think its only satisfying because in spite of all the hypocrisy and selfishness Kei has displayed theres indeed a good guy to root for in this show. There has to be in any story unfortunately as its a basic story structure that cant be broken otherwise the audience would be left apathetic and hating everyone. Kei is the lesser of the three evils here but only because of 1 the aforementioned twisted logic and 2 torturing children Ajins. Yeah. Its a given who to root for. An honorable mention should be made to Kou Nakano unfortunately the only good guy deuteragonist around. Hes probably the only likable character in the entire show for obvious reasons the classic shounen hero full of hotblooded justice and reckless impulse. Unfortunately for him hes stuck in the wrong genre. Its almost like how the girls in Madoka Magica wouldnt have faced such a gruesome fate in a vanilla magical girl anime. To close off this review theres one more significant element I must mention: the music. So good. The opening is an appropriately exhilarating and fastpaced song thats memorable enough to compete against the likes of HxH 2011 and Tokyo Ghoul but its the ending theme where it truly shines which is rare for an anime. The ending to each episode features a graphic montage of Ajin committing suicide to reset themselves so its a pretty emotionallycharged outro in all honesty. Being an anime ending theme its naturally a somber piece but the melancholic tune here that describes the Ajins loneliness in this world of insanity is truly fitting for the show. Cant wait for season 2.
88 /100
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