The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya S2 -24
September 15, 2009 at 2:10 AM | Posted in Anime, Episode | 2 CommentsTags: Anime, comedy, finale, kyoani, romance, The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya
This was the most satisfying new episode of The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya in this second season. It’s a shame that (I think) it will be the last new episode.
The abrupt (or rather complete lack of) transitions that have marked the Sighs of Suzumiya Haruhi episodes continues. We are thrown into the filming scene with nary an explanation, expected to have the ending of the last episode fresh in our minds. It’s just lazy editing and directing; since the story of all 5 episodes is based off of one straightforward novel in the Haruhi series, it was as if KyoAni decided to make the whole thing, and cut it into fifths without concern for how the results might hold up when viewed episodically.
But I digress. This episode was a little different from the other ones in the arc. It succeeded because it finally presented us with a greater glimpse into the underlying scifi/fantasy setting where all this typical high school comedy is taking place. The Shimasen scene in the beginning was one of the only moments in this season that I found genuinely funny, but more than that, it gave us a segue into discovering more about the mysterious powers of Suzumiya Haruhi.
Alas, The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya is no Arrested Development.
But I’m being nitpicky here. That said, the final bits of the episode was undoubtedly a call-back to the last episode of season 1, where we’re shown Haruhi and Kyon meeting together sans the rest of the brigade for club activities. Then, Kyon’s narration only hinted that he would tell her about the time travelers, aliens, and espers around her. This time, we’re shown him actually trying to do it. I wasn’t a fan of the scene. I do think KyoAni was being faithful to the novel, though. At this point, we’d expect that, if he really wanted to get the truth across, he would know Haruhi well enough that he’d know that just telling her wouldn’t work. But maybe that’s the whole point; he himself didn’t want Haruhi to know, but another part of him wanted to just lay everything out on the table, so he did it in a way that both looked genuine on the outside and was destined to fail. But now I’m getting too pop-psycho-analytical.
In any case, whatever Kyon’s intentions were, they weren’t conveyed very well here.
Yet, I liked this episode because it gave us a reason to care about Haruhi again. With this season, starting with the OP, it was clear that KyoAni was giving us a show about a stubborn girl who got her way, and by getting her way, she would force everyone around her to have fun. That had been one of the main themes of the first season. But this season, it was as if all other ideas had been muddled and dimmed out in order to only highlight that one.
And that’s how we ended up with the mess that was Endless Eight and the overlong Sighs of Haruhi Suzumiya. This episode was like a glimpse into the first season, the (what I consider to be) masterpiece that made so many many of us fall in love with the series in the first place.
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Maybe a subtle thing, but it bumped up the episode several points in my estimation: right at the end, as Haruhi storms out of the cafe. She stops, picks up Kyon's coffee, *swallows it*, then slams down the empty cup and walks out.Did she do that just to cause annoyance, as an expression of her anger towards him? Well, maybe… and if you asked her I'm sure she'd claim that was her only motive. But remember the Japanese drink-sharing cultural thing, like in FLCL. This season, just like last season, is sealed with a kiss.
Comment by Matt— September 15, 2009 #
That action did catch me as an indirect kiss, just like Haruhi had blocked Kyon and Mikuru's in a previous episode, but I didn't make the connection to the last season's ending until you mentioned it. It really was a fitting way to end it, once again. I just wish everything up to the ending had been as good.
Comment by lvlln— September 24, 2009 #