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diff --git a/src/anime/review/world-god-only-knows/document.en.rest.txt b/src/anime/review/world-god-only-knows/document.en.rest.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..18d0c99 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/anime/review/world-god-only-knows/document.en.rest.txt @@ -0,0 +1,89 @@ +========================== + The World God Only Knows +========================== + +God of Conquest? God of Objectification, more likely. +===================================================== + +:CreationDate: 2012-12-16 15:29:08 +:Id: anime/review/world-god-only-knows +:tags: - anime + - review +:rating: 1.5 +:original: http://www.easternkicks.com/reviews/the-world-god-only-knows + +I've watched the whole first season of this series hoping for some +redeeming feature, but I couldn't find any. Oh, the animation is not +bad at all, the songs are average-j-pop-cute, there's some humour, +there's even visual references to old anime (although there's no real +reason for them, they just happen). So why do I dislike this much? +Let's start from the story. + +KATSURAGI Keima is a master of dating simulation games: he's +constantly playing and winning (and also keeping up his grades at +school, without apparently ever studying or even paying attention in +class). This has led to his title of "God of Conquest". In the +meantime, in Hell, there's a problem with "loose souls": they've +escaped from Hell, they have occupied the hearts of some young girls, +and the only way to bring them back is to make the girls fall in love, +thus pushing the loose souls out of their hearts. The "God of +Conquest" is obviously the person best suited to the job! (Thus +proving that even Hell has a rather poor intelligence network). The +demon Elsie (conventional klutzy girl) is dispatched to the human +world (i.e. Japan) to assist him. Keima is not thrilled at the idea, +partly because he has already signed the contract without realising, +and failure to deliver will mean both he and Elsie will lose their +heads; mostly, though, because he much prefers the girls in the games +to the real ones. Under duress, he accepts his task and tries to woo +the "possessed" girls using his vast knowledge of dating sims. + +Which would be a valid (although not exactly original) starting point +for a reflection on the shortcomings of multiple-choice simulations +designed to fulfil the romantic wishes of customers when used as a +guide to real-world relationships. But that is precisely the opposite +of what this show says: Keima's techniques, which are clearly shallow +and manipulative, work perfectly every time! And the girls are +conventional stereotypes, as well: the sports-loving one, the rich +snotty one with a secret, the insecure idol, the pathologically +introverted librarian. They all match common in-game archetypes, and +their behaviours follow simple patterns that were well established in +games and manga decades ago (and probably long before that, in +theatre). + +Elsie is essentially a comic relief character, who very rarely does +something right, and gets regularly berated for what she does and for +her ignorance of the ways of the human world. She has no agency, and +the one time she tries to do something on her own, she produces +monsters. + +Even Keima's mother, Mari, is a bad character: when Elsie shows up in +their household, presenting herself as Keima's illegitimate +half-sister, Mari gets understandably upset and angrily calls her +husband to demand explanations. Keima explains this behaviour, not as +a perfectly normal reaction to the upending of everything she knew, +but "oh, she's scary, she was in a biker gang when she was young". And +after that initial show of rage, she never mentions her husband again, +and happily accepts Elsie in her house. + +So what do we learn from this series? That girls are simple and easily +seduced, that ignorance and lack of practise is the same as stupidity, +that only violent women get really angry, that ruining a family only +warrants a minute of screen time and has no serious consequences. + +«But no,» I hear you say, «it's all done ironically, they obviously +mean the exact opposite of what you think!» Well, that's essentially +the "redeeming feature" that I was looking for. And I honestly +couldn't see it. Sure, there's a few times where Keima's expression +seems to imply that he's actually having feelings for the various +girls (total screen time of the feelings: maybe one minute over the +entire season), but that does not stop him from lying his way into +their hearts, and from spending the entire last episode expressing his +love for games and his dream of leaving this world for what is, +essentially, a harem full of multiple-choice girls. And from some +descriptions I've read of the second season, things are not going to +get better. + +So, if you like a harem fantasy with no consequences, and you like +your female characters really bi-dimensional, you'll probably enjoy +this series. Me, I'm off to find something nicer to wash off the bad +aftertaste. |