2013-01-23, 20:28 | Link #31721 | |
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Especially when there could very well be others, particularly given the way that concepts were developed like "Eva became paranoid in her old age" or "there are theories about Battler and his family being the killers" or even "Battler feels enormous weight from realizing the extent of his sin and doesn't feel he can face his sister until he can explain." There are lots of reasons Battler could be perfectly fine but still have difficulty getting back in touch with Ange. Saying "he'd totally have shown up in public by October 7th but whoops, he forgot" kind of feels cheap. Especially when you put forth the notion that Battler could be alive and not give a reason for his disappearance. It encourages us to speculate, and the very first thing we'd hit on is amnesia... then reject it for being far too stupid. As a consequence, nearly any non-amnesia solution sounds better just because it feels like more thought was put into it.
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2013-01-23, 21:00 | Link #31722 | |
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What I meant was more, at this point of the story it would have been difficult to introduce a whole subquest of events for Battler that explained away why Battler would be dead yet still alive and not contacting at least Ange. There are of course ways to make it much less abrupt and oversimplified, as the amnesia element did, but we already discussed how rushed EP8 appeared at several points and it wouldn't surprise me if he just glossed over it because of time and space...well and possibly imaginative restrictions. The big problem I have with the amnesia explanation is that there is not much information given how it came to pass. There must have been a traumatic trigger, but if that was Beato/Yasu's death or his own guilt in the events is left open as many other elements, especially those introduced in EP8. |
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2013-01-23, 21:11 | Link #31723 |
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True. I could stomach it a lot more if we knew the exact cause and how his memories return, when, and why. It presumably arises from his continued association with the whole Rokkenjima story. Which is interesting, because he's uncomfortable with it but pursues it anyway. There's a lot to work with there! If only it didn't come so late.
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2013-01-23, 21:53 | Link #31724 |
黄金の魔女 Golden Witch
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Natal-RN, Brazil
Age: 28
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Mind you, they DO notice. Keiichi attempts to ask Hanyuu about them in Matsuribayashi-hen but decides to stop after noticing that she has some sort of complex over it. Other people like Takano also point it out (Takano even said that "[Hanyuu] looks like a monster".
People think that they're just accessories, but it's implied that the club sort-of thinks that MAYBE the horns are true (it's pretty obvious that Hanyuu has a complex over being called a "monster", as you can notice from her backstory and she lets it slide sometimes). So they probably think "She somehow was born with horns and bullied for it. But she's a cute girl and we don't mind at all". But all of this is cut from the anime, sadly. Note: This gave birth to a meme. Someone on 4chan attempted to post "Why can't anyone see her horns?", but instead typed "Why can't anyone her horns?", to which someone answered "I'd her horns". The joke is about which verb goes in the sentence.
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2013-01-23, 21:56 | Link #31725 |
Blick Winkel
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Gobbled up by Promathia
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I think pretty crazy things can happen with near-death drowning experiences, though I'm not sure Tohya's case is -possible- exactly as it is. It was convincing enough for me, anyway. My bigger problem is "if we believe that he fell off of the boat, how likely is it that his body made it all the way back to shore?"
I can't really think of a non-convoluted way of setting up the same situation, honestly. "Battler's death" is something that's pretty important for the story he creates with 1998+ (not that I necessarily agree with this choice, but that's how it is). The only other thing I can think of is "to cope with the sadness, Tohya dissociates himself with this persona and tries to become another person". But then he'd be a real dick to leave Ange alone like that, which doesn't seem entirely in character. And "shedding a persona", while it is something Yasu does and is not entirely out of the question, is certainly not something any old person can do. It would have been cool to have more elaboration though, I agree. |
2013-01-24, 02:59 | Link #31726 | |
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Join Date: Sep 2010
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2. Okonogi is actually Yasu. Amakusa is actually Yasu. Kasumi is also actually Yasu. Ange never witnesses any of them at the same time, right? Kihihihihi..!! But no seriously I would literally prefer that TOHYA was somehow actually Yasu, with Ikuko still being a random stranger. 3. I'm sure I've mentioned this opinion on the subject before, but I just didn't see any reason to doubt Ikuko's narrative, as it was given. To say nothing of the logistical leaps of faith Ikuko=Yasu would require. I also wouldn't compare Ikuko to Shannon / Kanon / Gaap / Clair etc., because all of those selves are literally based in/on Rokkenjima, and we're told more than once that for Yasu, Rokkenjima was pretty much the entire world. Ikuko, on the other hand, is completely unrelated save for living (apparently) somewhere nearby. She has past misadventures, and siblings, and employees. Hell, when did Yasu learn to drive, even? To go further, I kinda like the idea of Ikuko=Random because it reinforces this idea that uh, how to phrase this ... "real life is not fiction". Or rather, sometimes, stuff just happens. Completely inexplicable stuff. And Tohya's / Ikuko's narrative is occurring in (by a somewhat generous assumption, I admit) the realiest level of real Umineko is probably going to give. Though, as Renall has already stated, she's really only necessary because of lol Amnesia™, which is pretty bull-shitty on Ryukishi's part to begin with. Of course, I'll have to accept any clarification that's given when the manga reaches that point, but maaaaan, I would totes declare Ikuko=Yasu the villain of the entire series. |
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2013-01-24, 03:21 | Link #31727 | |
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I have to agree with you there, because not only would that mean that Yasu had accounted for everything on the island to happen exactly like this, which would make her not only a mass-murderer but insane beyond repair, she would also be so selfish that she'd be not satisfied with having Battler all for herself after robbing him of everything. It would be a heavily dick move from her to go one day: "Hey, Touya, I found this article online and I thought it would go great in my book about this murder on a remote island...it's called the Rokkenjima Incident." Her actual thought process would be like: 'I will make you solve my game, even if it kills you three times!!!' |
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2013-01-24, 06:19 | Link #31728 | ||||
Goat
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Gnawing away at Rokkenjima
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If we aren't biased against magical explanations from the start, then there's no shortage of evidence of Hanyuu in early Higurashi (it's just that at that point we only know her as Oyashiro-sama and don't yet understand her motives very well). It wasn't the character of Hanyuu that came out of nowhere sp much as it was magic itself being real. Ikuko, on the other hand, shows up late (with completely no foreshadowing) and serves more to further complicate things than provide answers for them. My problem with Ikuko=random isn't that she was in the right place to save the protagonist (it's quite natural that our helpless amnesiac needs somebody to take care of him). It's that she's a lot more than that: I mean, what narrative purpose does it serve to have a person completely unrelated to the incident have her hands in writing about it? Battler doing it by himself would be fine. Why inject her as a factor? Quote:
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Here's a general outline to a Ikuko=Yasu scenario I'd prefer:
Something like that. ----------------------------------------------------- And, since it's related to the current discussion and has been on my mind recently, I'm going to bring up the topic of how real the "magic" ending really is. Aside from it being a so-called "magic" ending and requiring a liberal amount of "Rule of Drama" to swallow, there's also the one conversation between Ange and 'Hachijou' at the end of EP6: Quote:
To me, it seems to suggest that the EP8 ???? is not Prime, or perhaps that there isn't even a Prime at all. What do you think, everyone? |
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2013-01-24, 08:13 | Link #31729 | |||||
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It might just be that I found Hanyuu's insertion into the story much more jarring (cranking the necessary suspension of disbelief up another 200 points) than the insertion of random mystery author X into Umineko (even if she was suspicious beyond belief). Quote:
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Police reports are said to have dated the letters in the bottle to a date shortly before or during October 4th-5th 1986. It is also said that one of the two bottles was found during the investigation started on October 6th. There is no clue within the stories that these stories could be wrong. Quote:
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If the ???? does not depict any "Prime" then there truly might not be a prime universe at all, which basically puts all our musing about "what actually happened" at rest. We can concentrate on solving the mysteries of each world separately and any unifying element is simply fabrication by an author we can never truly be sure about. |
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2013-01-24, 09:36 | Link #31730 | |||
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Which dovetails off your theory of Amakusa/Kasumi/Okonogi being Yasu... Literally every person Ange has ever met after the Rokkenjima Incident has been Yasu. Eva? Yasu. The bodyguards? Yasu. Her schoolmates? All Yasu. Professor Ootsuki? Yasu (how else did he recognize the handwriting?). Ikuko? Yasu. Tohya? Yasu. The Maria delusion from reading her diary? Yasu. Ikuko's cat? Assuredly also Yasu. I'm not sure yet but Ange may also be Yasu. Quote:
Unfortunately, narrative simplicity and narrative morality are at odds there, and that's why her character kind of sticks in my craw. I want her to be something simple that ties things up nicely, but if she is she's a huge dick and not worth liking. Quote:
Spoiler:
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2013-01-24, 12:33 | Link #31732 | ||||
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It's not as if he's leaving Ange in the middle of the street and, if his parents were involved in the invident, he could have been enough upset to not feel up to meet her and think 'it's better if she believes me to be dead'. The real problem is that really, the future was sort of tossed there without any real explanation and Ange seemed to swallow anything Battler/Tohya told her without too much investigation. It's obviously not the case but what if the person she met wasn't either Battler nor Tohya but someone who incidentally resembled Battler a bit (each difference can be waved off as him aging) and that planned to gain her trust presenting as his brother and sort of playing disinterested for later getting some money from her? Quote:
Theoretically however we can assume that Ikuko is Yasu without Yasu being really a mastermind or something if we say that: In truth once Yasu inherited she left the island however continued to toy with the idea of writing a murder placed on it and then would place her stories in bottles and toss them to the sea. She's in contact with Kumasawa and finds out the new servant is sort of crushing with George while Jessica is interested in the boy servant and in her tales depict them as if they'd been her. In that fateful year she found out the Ushiromiya were having economical troubles and sent money to help them although she did it in such a way it couldn't be connected back to her. After the Rokkenjima tragedy she finds Battler out of luck and hides him partly because... well she's Kinzo's daughter/grandaughter and partly to spare him from the troubles of a police investigation. She however finds out he lost his memory and that he's growing fond of her again and is tempted to live in her little happy heaven with Battler, even if she'd like for him to remember her, ence she involve him in the Rokkenjima mystery tales series. As she doesn't know what happened on Rokkenjima and fails to understand Battler couldn't take it so well she doesn't see anything wrong with it. As her plan begins to show side effects since Battler doesn't react well to it she begins to grow concerned if what she's doing is right or wrong, ence she will encourage him to see Ange. Battler will later fully recover his memory and sort of write a tale to explain he recognized her or something. It would match with: Beato writing tales to make him remember about their promise. Battler finding horrible the whole game Beato is playing with him and reacting to it not as if it was a game/tale but something really taking place. Beato losing hopes and stopping to wait for him (Yasu left Rokkenjima) Beato sort of resurrecting but as a different person Battler writing a tale for her. This would also insure that Yasu is innocent of the tragedy but could make her feel guilty because her tales whom she tossed gave the idea to people that there was a conspiration and that it was all the work of a witch. And of course considering how little data we have on the future I'm sure a lot more theories can fit with the few info we have that would rance from Ikuko being Yasu, Yasu being Tohya who believes to be Battler, Ikuko being evil to being a nice albeit odd person. Quote:
Shannon left it with George and had been always planning to leave it, first with Battler and then with George. Plus she didn't study on Rokkenjima meaning each time she went to school she left it. If she were to truly leave Rokkenjima it would make sense, considering how she is, she would take on another 'personality/persona' who's not the servant Shannon but neither is the witch Beatrice and become Ikuko the sort of not very wanted child of a rich family. Also... it's all a matter of believing. Pick up the other ending. Can we say for sure Amakusa wouldn't have killed Ange and that Ange was solely being paranoid? That Kuwabata actually wasn't in with the Sumadera? And at the same time: can we say for sure that Ange wasn't being paranoid but had good reasons not to believe them? Plus Ange in that bit is aware that the witches said that Battler was dead with red truth... so for all we know it could even be all a fantasy scene and in truth Ange never met Tohya, she just build a fantasy over it. So not only we can't be sure if what was said was reliable but if it even took place... Quote:
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2013-01-24, 18:09 | Link #31734 |
"Senior" "Member"
Join Date: Jan 2012
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What I always found strange about Ikuko was Ikuko's "character development". The Ikuko we see from EP6 on seems to be a very confident and quite mysterious person.
And in EP8-??? she even appears like someone with "eternal youth" or something like that. I immediately had to think of Yasu, an experts in changing her own appearance. And even though she appears as an "otherwordly being" here, she does appear as quite the opposite in Tohya's first memories. It gets revealed that she seems very inconfident about her scripts, a big contrast to the confident, almost arrogont person, she would later become. Also a parallel to Yasu again, because both are authors and both had problems about being "acknowledged". Also both had a rich family, which neither had real stable contact with. ___ Well aside from all these reasons, I am not really saying that Ikuko must really be Yasu. The scenario that she "recreated Yasu in her own image" would be possible too, which would however mean that we NEVER see the real Yasu (aside from Legend and Turn) and that Yasu was merely a "self-insert" by Ikuko. ___ Which leads me to another matter: How did Battler get his "brain injury"? Well nothing speak against the possibility, that the reason Eva and Battler "seperated at some point" could be that she became too paranoid and then shot Battler, leaving a big injury, that was not immediate live-threatening though. While this assumes Ikuko=Yasu again, I actually just try to make sense of EP7, escpacially "Kinzo's story", which seems very strange to me. Did we all of a sudden have a authorial narrator that "magically" speaks to the viewers? I think this would then be the FIRST TIME WE HAD AN AUTHORIAL NARRATOR in the whole of Umineko (aside from possibly the bit with after incident news reports or something like that, shortly before the scene, where Eva-in-deathbed and 1998 Ange were introduced). So of course I become sceptic? How did anyone in the post-Rokkenjima world get to know about Kinzo's past in the Rokkenjima-military base? Was Battler (and so by extension Tohya) was just told these things before Yasu died? (Which would be necessary for Ikuko=RandomStranger to work and seems very unlikely for me, but we had the message bottles written in 2-3 days, so I "wouldn't put it past R07"). Or did Yasu write it from what was told her by Genji etc. (If Ikuko=Yasu would be true). Until now EP7 feels so disconnected from the story... was the content really just a "DEUS EX MACHINA authorial narrator", or was it just... "guessed" like this? And since we had so many parallels between WizardBattler and Kinzo, could the scenes in the military base of Kinzo's past be a parallel to what happened in October 1986 Of course my premise could be wrong too (sudden authorial narrator being an "asspull"), that's why I would ask you: Did I get something wrong with my impression?
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2013-01-24, 18:10 | Link #31735 | |
The True Culprit
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Because if Ikuko is inherently connected to Rokkenjima AND IS ALSO Toya's only emotional support and companion then he has no reason to have the Battler VS Toya identity crisis? Because of Ikuko is inherently connected to Rokkenjima her negligence in taking care of Toya's proper emotional and psychological needs makes her an unequivocal monster that apparently gets an intellectual boner out of PTSDing an amnesiac cripple hobo? Seriously come on. Leave Yasu some dignity, here.
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2013-01-24, 19:28 | Link #31736 | |
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Join Date: Aug 2011
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Also we run into the novel problem. Since in Ep 3 & 4 (and probably 5) Yasu is the culprit and she's also Shannon and Kanon either: - Tohya solved the two messages in the bottle although apparently there's no known solution of them (neither Ange nor the witch hunters seem to worry about Shannon/Kanon being the culprit in the messages and if the police checked if the writing matched with Shannon the fact is apparently unknown to the witch hunters) - Banquet and Alliance as written by him were rather different and didn't involve Yasu being the culprit or Shannon and Kanon being the same - Someone else helped to create the story in such a way that such solution would work with Tohya not realizing it So yes, it's possible to make a theory that involves Tohya having extensive knowledge on Rokkenjima's most secret matters and a theory that allow Ep 3, 4 & 5 to have a Yasu culprit theory but if that's the solution I'm going to be disappointed. Also, if Yasu knew what happened in Rokkenjima and she knew it was something bad (or example Kyrie having her 'kill everyone fun time') she might have thought Battler's amnesia was a blessing as he wouldn't have to remember bad stuffs and he wouldn't be questioned by the police. Sure, it wasn't fair toward Ange or Battler but she might have thought it was better for Battler and that Ange wouldn't miss too much a stepbrother. She could have also be scared the police would involve her and ALL her situation would come up. And really, Yasu might not be as evil as to kill everyone but somehow I doubt she's a really nice, selfless person so I wouldn't be surprised if she said who cares about Ange? She'll get over it. Battler is happier without memory and I'm happier with Battler. Isn't this the miracle I was hoping for? |
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2013-01-24, 21:01 | Link #31737 | |
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2013-01-24, 22:27 | Link #31738 |
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But that is exactly the point some people here, including me, are alluding to when trying to say that this would make Yasu a horrible person. She does NOT leave Battler with the miracle and happiness of having become Touya. If she were Yasu she'd knowingly drag out the Rokkenjima story under the pretense of writing a story only to satisfy her own semi-sexual needs for him to recognize her.
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2013-01-25, 00:40 | Link #31739 | |||||
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Join Date: Sep 2010
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I also interpret Featherine's relationship with Bern this way. Like, Bern was Featherine's miko in the sense that Rika was the protagonist of Higurashi, which was a huge success for R07, and he made her deal with a lot of crap, too. Quote:
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WOW. WOW. WOW. Quote:
Secondly, man, that's a lot of hoops held by their bootstraps to jump through trying to make Ikuko=Yasu both not-a-murderer and sympathetic. Quote:
I have no doubt that she probably had genuine intentions to eventually leave the island, either with George, or (rather unlikely) with Battler, or just finally considering herself too old to continue in the same way, but Rokkenjima was pretty much her entire memorable life. We're also told in Requiem that while she was friendly with a few kids at school, it was nothing Yasu really cared about, apparently, and we are told literally nothing, NOTHING about her school life other than a vague "well ... she went." So ... I ... should ignore the whole "kidnapping / mental torture to fulfill a adolescent infatuation" thing? |
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2013-01-25, 07:48 | Link #31740 |
Eaten by goats
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Rokkenjima
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I wonder if anyone's opinion about a Yasu-Ikuko would change if Battler was actually the culprit behind the murders? That would at least give Ikuko a reason for keeping Battler a secret, and might be a reason for Battler to want to stay secret too, if he was able to remember anything. Although I'm not sure how that would all work with their forgery writing...
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