Post by Rogo on Feb 20, 2012 6:33:11 GMT -5
Okay from time to time something will pop up anime I'm watching that I have this urge to discuss and instead of spamming my Twitter with it, I thought I'd discuss it here.
If you haven't guessed by the title this post will contain spoilers, specifically for Guilty Crown and Future Diary - so leave if you don't want either show spoiled for you.
So basically for those who don't know and don't care about spoilers, both Guilty Crown and Future Diary have gone through something of a 'break the cutie' arc - a part of the story where the naive and innocent character is put through emotional hell, which in this case has resulted in both characters going - for lack of a better phrase - evil.
What I want to discuss here is how this sort of arc should and should not be done, and honestly these two shows serve as great examples.
Let's start with Future Diary, or How It Should Be Done:
First off, the main character Yukiteru has NEVER really been all that pure and innocent to begin with. He's a pretty selfish teenager whose incredibly naive and his weakness was his fear more than anything else. He was thrown into a game of death and had a psychotic girlfriend dumped on his lap, so of course he wasn't going to be strong at first. That being said, he still killed two people and tried to kill another before the recent events that broke him, though in those cases it was self defence.
So before the 'breaking' event, Yukiteru was constantly in fear of his life, trying to stop his psychotic girlfriend from killing anyone she saw as a threat (read: EVERYONE) and dealing with how weak he was. It's amazing the kid didn't break BEFORE this in all honesty, but when his parents died, he broke and became single minded in winning by slaughtering the competition.
Here's the catch, if Yukiteru wins then he will become god. He's aiming to use that power to resurrect his parents and in the latest episode - as he's gunning down orphans - he makes it clear he intends to do the same for everyone he's killing to get there.
So what we have is a character who was stressed as all hell before his breaking point, was already kind of self-serving before hand and even after his breaking point, has some kind of twisted reasoning for it.
Now let's compare this to Shu in Guilty Crown, or How not to do it
I took a while to describe Yukiteru's character before his breaking point but Shu is a little tougher to talk about - because there is NOTHING to discuss. He was a nice kid who was forced into fighting in a war. a little bit of a wuss but was good at rallying people and was generally speaking your average shonen hero. Think Shinji Ikari with more back bone.
Recent events have cut him and the rest of the school off from the rest of Tokyo and they are basically going to be 'purged' by the government because of an illness in the area. Up until three episodes ago the story was about Shu rising to become the leader of his high school and lead a great rebellion.
And then the writer's said 'LET'S MAKE HIM EBIL!!!'.
They decided the best way to do this was by having his love interest killed off and suddenly Shu is a tyrant, hated by all. His crimes include allowing sick people to die whilst doing all the hard work, with-holding important information and silencing those who oppose him with threats to their lives.
I re-iterate, before his girlfriend died, Shu was a nice, stereotypical shonen hero - where the HELL did this tyranny come from? Real human beings do not react like this and as a result, I'm not shocked to see Guilty Crown is being boo'd by the general fanbase right now.
So why are people happy with Yukiteru's heel-turn but not Shu's? Simply comes down to if your going to do this kind of character change, you have to build it up. It cannot come from absolutely no where, as is the case with Shu. Future Diary isn't perfect - far from it lately actually - but it was well-written enough that you can tell the writer had intended this for Yukiteru from the beginning - and even then we know it's probably not gonna stick.
Guilty Crown? It's obvious this was done for shock value to grab more viewers. The proof is in the pudding as if you watch the past two episodes we've had with 'evil Shu' it looks weird and awkward. Shu doesn't look right in the place of a tyrannical dictator, he's meant to be a wussy hero.
So can you guys think of more examples - both good or bad - of hereo's going evil?
If you haven't guessed by the title this post will contain spoilers, specifically for Guilty Crown and Future Diary - so leave if you don't want either show spoiled for you.
So basically for those who don't know and don't care about spoilers, both Guilty Crown and Future Diary have gone through something of a 'break the cutie' arc - a part of the story where the naive and innocent character is put through emotional hell, which in this case has resulted in both characters going - for lack of a better phrase - evil.
What I want to discuss here is how this sort of arc should and should not be done, and honestly these two shows serve as great examples.
Let's start with Future Diary, or How It Should Be Done:
First off, the main character Yukiteru has NEVER really been all that pure and innocent to begin with. He's a pretty selfish teenager whose incredibly naive and his weakness was his fear more than anything else. He was thrown into a game of death and had a psychotic girlfriend dumped on his lap, so of course he wasn't going to be strong at first. That being said, he still killed two people and tried to kill another before the recent events that broke him, though in those cases it was self defence.
So before the 'breaking' event, Yukiteru was constantly in fear of his life, trying to stop his psychotic girlfriend from killing anyone she saw as a threat (read: EVERYONE) and dealing with how weak he was. It's amazing the kid didn't break BEFORE this in all honesty, but when his parents died, he broke and became single minded in winning by slaughtering the competition.
Here's the catch, if Yukiteru wins then he will become god. He's aiming to use that power to resurrect his parents and in the latest episode - as he's gunning down orphans - he makes it clear he intends to do the same for everyone he's killing to get there.
So what we have is a character who was stressed as all hell before his breaking point, was already kind of self-serving before hand and even after his breaking point, has some kind of twisted reasoning for it.
Now let's compare this to Shu in Guilty Crown, or How not to do it
I took a while to describe Yukiteru's character before his breaking point but Shu is a little tougher to talk about - because there is NOTHING to discuss. He was a nice kid who was forced into fighting in a war. a little bit of a wuss but was good at rallying people and was generally speaking your average shonen hero. Think Shinji Ikari with more back bone.
Recent events have cut him and the rest of the school off from the rest of Tokyo and they are basically going to be 'purged' by the government because of an illness in the area. Up until three episodes ago the story was about Shu rising to become the leader of his high school and lead a great rebellion.
And then the writer's said 'LET'S MAKE HIM EBIL!!!'.
They decided the best way to do this was by having his love interest killed off and suddenly Shu is a tyrant, hated by all. His crimes include allowing sick people to die whilst doing all the hard work, with-holding important information and silencing those who oppose him with threats to their lives.
I re-iterate, before his girlfriend died, Shu was a nice, stereotypical shonen hero - where the HELL did this tyranny come from? Real human beings do not react like this and as a result, I'm not shocked to see Guilty Crown is being boo'd by the general fanbase right now.
So why are people happy with Yukiteru's heel-turn but not Shu's? Simply comes down to if your going to do this kind of character change, you have to build it up. It cannot come from absolutely no where, as is the case with Shu. Future Diary isn't perfect - far from it lately actually - but it was well-written enough that you can tell the writer had intended this for Yukiteru from the beginning - and even then we know it's probably not gonna stick.
Guilty Crown? It's obvious this was done for shock value to grab more viewers. The proof is in the pudding as if you watch the past two episodes we've had with 'evil Shu' it looks weird and awkward. Shu doesn't look right in the place of a tyrannical dictator, he's meant to be a wussy hero.
So can you guys think of more examples - both good or bad - of hereo's going evil?