For those who don’t know, Reverse Thieves set up a secret santa project in which random people picked anime for other random people to watch. My benevolent giver of cartoons, whoever he or she might be, bestowed this lovely OVA on me.
If it walks like a duck and talks like a duck, call a horse a horse.
The beauty of a human-emotion based story is that it’s context-irrelevant. Mizuhito Akiyama, the writer of the light novel Iriya no Sora, UFO no Natsu (Iriya’s Sky, Summer of the UFOs) managed to create a tale of intense pathos and understated love can live inside a saga of manipulation, secrecy, and conspiracy.
I spent a bit of time early on worrying about how Iriya is not a sci-fi story: science (speculative) fiction generally means creating some sort of technology or alien-based situation — plausible or not — and speculating what might happen to humanity in that situation. Iriya, however, follows the pattern of moe-based bishoujo series and eroge: create a cute girl with a terrible backstory and portray the simple inevitability of what will happen. In this case, rather than some vague but potentially girl-killing disease, it’s a potentially girl-killing war between aliens and earth. Or is it?
It’s appropriate then, with this downward path to tragedy, that Toei’s OVA adaptation of the light novels was helmed by Naoyuki Itou, the director of their Kanon adaptation. The sickening sense of the inevitable that Iriya no Sora pushes in its second half is pretty similar to the Makoto arc of Kanon (though I didn’t see that adapation — I’m going by the Kyoto ’06 version).
But it’s pointless to bemoan what something isn’t. Regardless of your opinion of the bishoujo meta-genre and whether it has any place in your precious science fiction fandom, the OVA has its own merits and faults. Aaaaaand… the faults are many.
For one, Toei is not who you look to for balls-out great animation. Their heyday is long past, and even footage of Kenshiro was recycled quite a bit. It’s not awful, not by a longshot, but the CG is uninspired and character designs just aren’t that appealing. Newer guys like Kyoto and SHAFT can make a prettier heroine and a less irritating-looking male lead these days, and Toei’s generic shocks of hair in the front just aren’t doing it anymore.
The bigger problems, which probably stem from the short length of the OVA, are the baffling pacing and forced situations. The events of episode 5 are a bit of an enigma, not so much in the “what?” department, but the “why?” one. If you want to be an apologist, you can just let it be — the story is simple and you probably won’t have an issue following it. But if you really expect events to flow naturally, you’ll feel pretty jarred by a sudden change of heart that just as inexplicably changes right back. Ultimately, these events are water under the bridge in the overarching plot, but taking up a whole 6th of the series with badly conceived plot development makes for a bad ratio.
The good stuff is a little more sparse, and mostly comes from the strength of the original story. It’s nothing new (did I mention Makoto, or maybe inevitability?) but it tugs at the heartstrings at just the right times, and the characters have just enough guts to elevate them above the noncommittal Key-types. Punching, slicing out tracking implants from your own neck with a box cutter, even killing are all possible in Iriya’s world of love conquering all.
In the end, tragedy is inevitable, but it’s not quite that manipulative kind of tragedy from the “cry game” VNs. It’s still rich in moe, an attribute which in my mind will keep this from being completely sci-fi. And with all that pathos and cute-girl factor, I wish the character design was a little more appealing. But overall, you could do a lot worse than Irya No Sora, considering its small time investment and fairly consistent level of enjoyability.
I’m seeing a bunch of reviews that are lukewarm at best from this Secret Santa blogger project. You, OGT, even Hisui and Narutaki themselves. What’s with this trend of you guys avoiding the shows you knew were going to like? I’m curious, what were your other two choices?
It’s not so much that I avoided stuff I knew I’d like, but rather I avoided stuff that I knew I was already going to watch. I used this for an opportunity to see something I normally wouldn’t.
The other two were Astro Fighter Sunred (too long given my schedule), and 08th MS Team (I was already watching War in the Pocket), so there were other reasons.
I think it’s strangely ironic that I picked something I actually would want to watch.
Maybe I didn’t get the memo.
I picked the thing that I wasn’t sure about. I’d never heard about it. You are more pumped than me about it, that’s for sure, but it wasn’t a bad watch. Overall, I think you did right by me in picking the 3 things you did.
@otou-san
Great review. If nothing else I went into the review not knowing anything about the show and instantly knew it was not a show I would like after the review. That is always the sign that the review has done exactly what it was supposed to do. I really have a dislike for anime based on “cry game” VNs. My dislike is eclipsed by Narutaki’s hate for them.
Thanks for participating in the project. I hope we can work together in the future.
@kadian1364
The main idea was to pick something you were not sure about. Not shows you knew you would love or hate but shows that would be shows you had no idea about. Or at least that was supposed to be the ideal Narutaki and I were going for.
Yeah I think if you’re really opposed to the bishoujo/cry-game style VN story style you really probably wouldn’t enjoy this. I had fun doing this though, and I’m glad I gave it a look. Myself, I have a love-hate kinda feeling about these style of works.
One question, and I mean that quite seriously:
Why does this “moe” attribute keep this from being science fiction?
Does the “gar” attribute keep a show from being science fiction just because some guy is extremely stereotypically manly? If not, why would Moe do that?
It’s a good question, because I guess I do imply that in the post but it’s not exactly what I mean.
What I mean is, it’s a matter of context. For instance, Macross is sci-fi, sure, but in the end it’s the old “romance set against the backdrop of X” story where X = space war. Music and a love triangle are more important in the end.
With Iriya, it’s similar: a sad girl with tragic story is more important than the sci-fi backdrop, which is interchangeable. “Sad girl in snow” is pretty much the same as “sad girl in secret military testing facility.” Ultimately the sci-fi is really kind of incidental. So if, like Hisui and Narutaki, you are really not a fan of this kind of story, that incidental sci-fi is not going to sway you.