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Hunting ghosts gets sexual but does the main couple’s dynamic rub viewers the wrong way? Nicky and Jean-Karlo check out the anime adaptation of the fan-favorite manga.
This series is streaming on Crunchyroll
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed by the participants in this chatlog are not the views of Anime News Network.
Spoiler Warning for discussion of the series ahead.
Well, October is over Nicky, but there are still a lot of freaky man babies sleeping in my bed. But let me tell you something:
Bustin’ makes me feel good.
Well if people were sad The Season of Spooks was over, we’ve still got many frightening things to come. After all, we of This Week in Anime are accustomed to horror shows. Think of all the clowns we have to deal with on a regular basis!
However, nothing has prepared me for the nightmare that is this man’s fashion sense.
Somewhere, an old librarian is wondering who made off with her wardrobe
But if you’re going to do a show about looking at a couple of Hot Guys bustin’ (ghosts) together, the visuals are a major priority so it does feel like more of a let-down than not at times.
It’s a “psychic” thing they’re doing, I swear.
You see, even though Hiyakawa is in the business of spirts, he can’t exactly see them too well so he quickly pushes Mikado into becoming his partner (literally).
This is also true with how he treats Mikado as a partner. He pushes him into scary ghost-related situations where he isn’t comfortable. Though he doesn’t consider their relationship to be wholly negative because soul-touching and stuff feels Pretty Damn Good, apparently. As well as helping him come to terms with his fear via exposure and experience.
Like the wise man said, “Bustin’ makes me feel good”…
And if you think we’re simply being coy, the show is rather upfront about the sexual and romantic aspect of the whole thing.
This is a pretty common element in horror, romance, and romance-horror. Those familiar with women-oriented media would be familiar with ye ole possessiveness tropes. However, what I like about this is that I find it to be relievingly straightforward about his behavior? It’s very clear that this isn’t something that’s desirable in a partner even if it is a little sexy.
Plenty of other characters are quick to reach out to Mikado over Hiyakawa’s possessiveness, however.
Like yeah, having your soul and emotions fisted all the time without being careful isn’t healthy!
She also seems to have a thing for Mikado and he might also have a thing for her. Since he doesn’t have the experience to say no to people that leads to a lot of problems. Did we also mention that she’s a murderer?
At any rate, if we’ve made this series sound like a particularly well-paced series of supernatural encounters filled with innuendo and compromising situations, we’ve done a bad job because The Night Beyond is more of a “stuff happens while Erika looms in the background”-kind of story. Hiyakawa—or someone who works with him—will drag Mikado on another job where he has to watch ghosts and get creeped out. Also, Erika looms in the background.
So like the girl with self-esteem issues, the haunted high-schooler, or the woman whose curse is her own controlling mother, all of these reflect a piece of their lives.
But I do agree, it doesn’t have a lot of room to play out as much as I’d like, but they’re moments I still enjoy.
I also appreciate how she approaches how his dad walked out in a way that isn’t resentful or melancholy. She clearly still cares, but doesn’t let it crush her spirit.
It might be my own experiences speaking, but I did catch an underlying vibe of Mikado’s mother being too protective of him, which explains a lot of Mikado’s weird shelteredness. I’d like for the series to address that somehow, where the relationship isn’t toxic but maybe could be.
I think that’s also not really farfetched for the story since we see a lot of other similar relationships with mothers. The woman who defended her mother’s goodness even though she was clearly being cursed and twisted by it as seen earlier, or watching Erika Hiura trying and failing to make contact with her own mother, like a spirit haunting her own household.
That could be true of Mikaido’s negative relationships too! Just like how positive experiences and relationships have negative effects. I consider his relationship with Hiyakawa to be negative for his wellbeing at the moment, but it also seems like he’s starting to build more confidence in himself through his experiences. So I don’t consider them to be unfixable. This is something that fiction is good for exploring in a way that’s more unsafe in real life.
Now that we’re talking about this, I wonder if any of this will somehow fit in with Hiyakawa? Like, maybe Hiyakawa had some kind of strained family background that’ll humanize him and make him less of a tool?
Also as the rule with any story, I find that the less we’re told directly about a character, the bigger the skeletons they keep shoved in their closet. I’m talkin’ some people who went and bought that 12ft baby from Home Depot last year and instantly regretted it types. Assuming they didn’t rock it on their yard all year round.
At any rate, I walked away from The Night Beyond rather unimpressed. The simple visuals weren’t much of a factor, I’ve watched workmanlike shows before. But the innuendo between Mikado and Hiyakawa was on-the-nose and a little trite. Like, Twittering Birds Never Fly at least had the balls to have yakuza getting spit-roasted in an alleyway. I’m not saying The Night Beyond needed hardcore pounding, but the twee “Oh dear, isn’t this a compromising situation!” setups are kinda bland. Are these men gay or not? Kindly don’t waste my time, I’ve got gayer things to watch.
Mikado’s interactions with Erika quickly become a highlight if only because it’s something concrete to go off of that isn’t euphemisms and also holds a mirror up to each character. The show is only half-over, so this potentially marks the point where this show finally grows the beard, as it were.
And deep inside, I keep glancing at the parts of what could belong to a better show. There’s some cool elements here that provide window for one that could live up to it’s greater potential. But the current view is very muddled by poor execution and lack of a bigger picture.
Like I said earlier, The Night Beyond feels a bit too much at times like a random-events-plot where Mikado gets dragged into a new supernatural curse to investigate while Reigen hawks spoopy Bitcoin at people. Maybe give it a look, it’s not too late for the show to turn it around.
If you’re like me and want to get a little more of the story beyond what the anime has to offer, it’s never too late to read a goddamn book by checking out the manga!
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