Posts Tagged ‘nogizaka haruka no himitsu’

Is it over yet?

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

I feel like I’m about to cop out on you.  Yes, I’m back, after all this time.  I’ve been steadily managing to do one post each week over at Superfanicom, but between that and class work I haven’t done much here.  I was drafting a post on the new Lucky Star which I hope to get up here soon, we’ll see about that.  In the meantime, I finally got around to another episode of Nogizaka Haruka no Himitsu.

You may be reading these posts about this show years from now — as in, they’ll be new, hot off your rss reader, or whatever we use to get websites delivered to our retinas forty years on.  By God I’ll finish this show if it breaks me, but I’m not sure how much I can take at once.  In fact, I watched the first few minutes of this episode a few weeks ago and shut it off.  ”I’ve seen this already,” I said.  ”I watched Ai Yori Aoshi,” I cried, “and the characters were better in that!  Why do I have to do this again?”

That is, I watched a young, middle-school aged girl fake dating the lead male.  The plot was slightly different, in the end, but it was still completely uninteresting overall.  A few bits and pieces were funny, thankfully.

Horrifyingly enough, it looks like the next episode, maybe more, will be taken up by the bitch, Shiina.  Super good.

Ding! Yuuto gains a level of badass.

Monday, September 1st, 2008

nogizaka_kaasan.jpg picture by cuchlann

Well, Nogizaka Haruka no Himitsu appears to be like those asshole drivers who go really slowly until I could pass them, then they speed up and drift toward the far lane to keep me from goung around.

What I mean is, after the honestly lackluster episode six, episode seven was fantastic. It hit all its parts exactly right. It’s got the sleepover jokes, the oppressive father drama, drunken maids, inexplicable sword-wielding older sisters, and even a (predictable, yet awesome) “I wear the relationship pants under the kimono” mother. There’s another episode out, I know I’m behind — I just got back from Dragon*Con. I might even post some of the pictures I took if you’re nice, by the way. Expect more than a perfunctory post soon, sorry about this one.

I suppose this qualifies as nerdy

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

nogizaka_blush.jpg picture by cuchlann

Episode six of Nogizaka Haruka no Himitsu finally rolled around, and things have gone awry in the world of Haruka and Yuuto. Apparently Haruka’s street clothes look exactly like a cosplay for a show that I think doesn’t exist, so people take pictures of her and actually threaten Yuuto for trying to help her (this after the show made a point of showing how orderly and organized the comiket and its patrons are); the doujin Haruka wants sells out before she gets to it; and the trio of maid, maid, and little sister save the day (and the episode) again.

Maybe it’s just because of how tired I am, but I don’t have a lot to say about this episode. I’m an asshole for comparing this to Genshiken, but the comiket stuff was better there, and this seemed lackluster. However, a full-on plot concerning Yuuto, Haruka, and some MiBs seems to be swinging in, so next episode might promise fun times.

I’ll try to post something more coherent — and useful — tomorrow, but probably about another show.

Is it Comiket yet?

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

Well, I decided, several weeks ago, to blog every episode of Nogizaka Haruka no Himitsu, if for no other reason than to force myself to keep up with this blog, even once school starts back — which will be in a week and a half, by the way. Sometimes I like the “year-round” system Japan uses, that we in America sometimes consider, and promptly discard, for our public schools — the return to school seems like it would be less shocking and horrible if you just got more breaks that weren’t as long.

Anyway, Episode five of Haruka delves into a dark world; it shows the landscape of a veritable Lovecraft Country of terror and abysmal fright: high school shenanigans. Nerdery gets two passing mentions in this episode: the first when Nobunaga talks up the summer Comiket at the beginning, and the second when Haruka does the same at the end. In between is the kind of fluff that made me stop watching Tokimeki Memorial: Only Love. I will remind you, if you’ve forgotten, that I have a strange streak in me that forces me to finish shows, even if it’s years after I begin. I enjoyed To Heart well enough, though it wasn’t the force of glory and bliss for me that it was for some. I despised To Heart: Remember my Memories, seriously. I knew I despised it after the first episode, and could sense a future of agony after the second. However, I viewed the two series as one, and forced myself to sit through the horror. I even went so far as to watch the first episode of To Heart 2, and finally ducked out before I pulled my intestines out through my face in an effort to throttle myself with the bleeding length.

Anyway, back to Haruka. Episode five summary: everyone is cute, everyone loves everyone, and more than one woman is falling in love with our gormless protagonist. This could have been covered in the intro. It is covered in the intro, but with more interesting visuals. Fanservice amuses me, by the way. I have not sworn myself as an enemy of pany shots, though a series constructed wholly to deliver these to the viewer generally loses me if it’s not funny enough. This episode wasn’t very funny, and the fanservice went up. How? Pool time.

I’ve made it clear previously that I don’t expect this show to be constantly up in my face about the plight of the otaku in Japan. I had hoped it would have a little more to do with otaku. I may be jaded, bitter, or insane, but generally nerds are driven by their interests. Years ago The Ferrett wrote an essay about the difference, as he perceived it, between nerds and not-nerds, or “normies” as I sometimes call them. Fill in your term of choice. Specifically, I think he talked about jocks. It used the typical high school breakdown, which I become less and less comfortable with as time goes on. However, a lot of what he said stuck with me. Specifically, many of the interests of people like jocks are only attainable during a certain age range, while nerds, devoted to more cerebral pursuits, can do what they like until they die. This is basically a tangent, sorry. The pertinent part has to do with “pursuit.” In this episode, Haruka does nothing pertaining to her interests. She talks a bit about piano, and we can only assume, at this point, that she enjoys playing piano. It could, conceivably, be something her father forces her to do. So far as I’ve seen, the series length hasn’t been announced — correct me if I’m wrong there. This would, then, be the classic “filler” episode, and as such, probably doesn’t even bear blogging about.

Basically, as my title line implies, I just really want to see the Comiket episode. Hopefully I’ll be settled enough from moving to watch (and blog!) it next week.

Haruka finally shows her chops

Monday, August 4th, 2008

haruka_shana by you.

As you might have been able to infer from the title, Nogizaka Haruka no Himitsu finally let itself do what a show about nerds needs to do: it got nerdy. It wasn’t as major as I would have liked. As you can guess from my page layout, I’m a big Genshiken fan, and I also love Lucky Star. Compared to these, Haruka’s just paddling around in the kiddy pool. However, it is pleasing that she’s a cosplayer, and that she would think a Shakugan no Shana cosplay is the perfect cover for stealth ops.

Up until now we’ve mostly seen her moe-lust after Aki-chan, the dojikko character that is to this show what Kujibiki Unbalance was to Genshiken. Real anime references make everything better, especially as she decides to get a little into character. It’s comforting that she isn’t just a fan of characters who are exactly like her. Note of interest: Haruka’s voice actor did Hecate in Shakugan no Shana.

That’s not the only voice actor humor in the episode, but I’ll let you discover the other one for yourself. I’ve noticed that voice actor humor is getting popular, what with the KyoAni cast running roughshod over the world.

This show is still sugary fluff filler, but it knows that’s what’s going on and I like it anyway. This particular episode didn’t do much to advance the main plot; you know, the thing that has the anime-blogohedron all paying attention. In fact, as I had worried, this episode acts as though Haruka’s brave act of revealing her otaku-nature never happened. Indeed, they don’t go to the school. It does further some of the interpersonal relationships, deepening the connection between Haruka and her maid — who is one of those job-focused types who never bother to change out of their maid outfits. You know, like Wilhelmina. What with the glasses, deadpan expression, and hair color, I thought Hazuki was a riff on Yuki Nagato. She still might be, what with all the talk of her being able to sense people.

[I apologize for this next joke in advance, but the Mario Marathon guys have given me a taste for
it.]

Presumably because it’s over nine THOUSAND!!

Okay, finished.

Haruka is well on the way to becoming a really well-loved fan icon of geekiness. We just need to get used to the fact that this show isn’t going to tackle most of its inherent issues head-on. And maybe I’m wrong about that. It could take one of those turns that anime loves so much, like Shuffle! did, what with the crazy and the murdering and shit. To really satisfy me, they’re going to have to actually attend that fan convention, or something, I need some hardcore nerdcore up in here. I need her to start talking about yandere, or something suitably nuts and off the beaten path, and for Yuuto to just stand there slackjawed and wonder what’s going on.

That is a good point, though. I’m glad they didn’t make her the typical boy-love fangirl. Sayonara Zetsubou Sensei went there with its token otaku. Girl-love is the realm of Lucky Star‘s resident doujin expert. Not everyone desperately wants people with mirrored love-parts to hump in the shows they watch. Though maybe this sheds some light on the stereotype of anime as cartoon porn?

That could just be Ninja Scroll‘s fault, though. . .

P.S.  Does anyone have a suggestion for an anime that would have a nice “summer escapades” episode?  I watched several a year ago, but my plate seems to be sadly devoid of random beach, pool, or festival scenes.

Emote! Emote, damn you!

Monday, July 28th, 2008

haruka_flap by you.

The third episode of Nogizaka Haruka no Himitsu is very much an episode of two parts — even though, you know, it’s in one part. In the first half we’re introduced to three new characters, all pictured above. A quiet maid, a clumsy maid (both in glasses!), and a loli-little-sister. Oh good. The second half goes all angsty on us. Haruka gets depressed, we get sad flashbacks, and Haruka reveals her secret.

Buh-wuh?

This episode really drives home the societal bias against otaku in a big way. It’s crazy. I had to pause partway through Yuuto’s ostracization and re-watch some Dr Horrible just to make it to the end without shouting. It’s not exactly a big revelation for anyone, of course. Yuuto’s gossiped about in the halls — the show uses the classic method of people gossiping in the halls, as Yuuto passes, seemingly unaware that he can hear them. I don’t think this technique was ever employed by Saved by the Bell, but I’ve thought of it, so I thought I’d shoehorn in a reference right there.

The show’s unloading its bird gun at this point, scattering social critique through ugly mirror image everywhere. It’s on the rug, the curtains. . . It’ll never come out of my sheets. Of course, only otaku are watching this show, I’ll bet, so it’s not going to do people much good. Of course, how many people read 1984 without either agreeing with its notions or being so young as to have no notions yet?

I understand that it’s good television, but, honestly, the scene where Haruka drops her bag and everyone in the school sees her convention catalogue doesn’t seem so accurate. High schoolers, in my experience, didn’t pay that much attention, honestly. If she had just grabbed her stuff the worst would be someone heckling her about tripping — though, of course, given her role in the school hierarchy, even that wouldn’t be likely.

The thing I’m most curious about, now, is what the show plans to do from here. As I hinted earlier, at the end of this episode Haruka tells some sleazy douche that the catalogue, which the douche is using as ammo against Yuuto, was actually hers. We don’t get to see any reactions, but given students other than the douche were around, if the show implies that the douche doesn’t tell anyone, or that no one believes him, I’ll be irritated — that’ll just be a ploy to keep the “secret” thing going past Haruka’s honestly brave attempt to reveal the truth. Of course, the next episode preview hints something about the quiet maid and a whole jealousy issue, but overall the theme of the show seems to be sabotaged at this point.

That’s only true if the show stays as what it is now. It could still go in interesting directions, and this early reveal could help in that, if they’ll let it.

Unless something drastic happens, I’ll likely be watching this entire show, actually. I’ve forced myself to finish worse. I finished that awful show where a guy secretly writes the scripts for the all-girl sentai show, and tortures them with humiliating scenes after he overhears them abusing him in the locker room. Of course, I have dropped shows that entertained me more, it’s just that one happened to be short, and I’m stubborn enough. Or something.

Anyway. Probably I’ll keep watching. Perhaps.

At least she didn’t try to buy a Wii…

Friday, July 25th, 2008

Another week, another episode of Nogizaka Haruka no Himitsu. I’ll say up front that this episode was better than the last one, though I think it gave me diabetes.

Set-up: Haruka wants to buy a PDS, or “portable dream-station.” This is the unholy union, I must assume, of a PSP and a DS. She wants one bad, but wants to spend a day in Akihabara, so she puts it at the end. Yes, she draws a cute little itinerary, finally winning my heart — I’ve spent too much time laughing at Rukia Kuchiki’s terrible drawings not to love this one.

Set-up: complete. I’ve noticed that a lot of Japanese comedies take as a premise something that can go somewhere really serious, but then ignore that for the laughs, or “the lulz.” I’m basically okay with that. Derrida once claimed (I’m paraphrasing here) that a fluent user of a language can’t use a word in that language without meaning all its meanings. Example: having read Derrida, I refused to ever use the word “impotent” when describing Beowulf in a paper about sword-use in Beowulf. It would have made sense, as in English it can mean “powerless.” It also means, though, well, “impotent,” and I was talking about swords. So I just didn’t use the word.

With the same logic, then, I can claim that the ideas brought up by comedies like this one (and Ouran High Host Club, the first show I noticed this tendency in) are still there, the creators just don’t spend all our time bitching about the problems of the world. I am okay with this.

What I’m getting at is that this episode doesn’t further the cause of integrating otaku into society, or whatever. It’s just funny. What’s interesting, actually, is that the “secret” is functioning as a way to hold Yuuto and Haruka together. Of course, each episode they add more things to that binding. So, basically, it’s a comic romance. Again, this is not a problem. Yuuto is slightly more interesting than the typical wimpy anime dude, and manages to be embarrassed about intimate moments with women without becoming Keitaro Urashima. Fuck that guy, by the way, Negi’s more awesome.

So the show’s not going to be a polemic. The best fiction can’t be polemic, because it gets in the way of the story. But crazy people — like me — can then use the fiction to create points of conversation and debate. Nogizaka Haruka no Himitsu, if it turns out to be entertaining, can become the founding block for a lot of discussion about societal marginalization, but I don’t think it’s going to drive the point home all on its own.

Of interest, though, is the flashback — we learn Haruka became an otaku because she was depressed and a stranger gave her an otaku magazine to cheer her up. That’s actually a pretty polemic statement, while still acting as fluffy character development. It intimates, even says, that geeky pastimes cheer people up. It’s left up to us, the viewers, to finish the sentence. “Moe makes people feel good…”

Everyone: so it’s just another thing. Get off our backs.

P.S. We finally learn what sort of fangirl Haruka is. I’m basically okay with her being a moe-tron — both in her interests and, we’re finding, her self. I’m not quite sure how I feel about her total ignorance of slash, though, as she seems fairly well-informed.

To be a fangirl, you must be a fan of something.

Friday, July 18th, 2008

As is entirely normal, OGT beat me to a post about Nogizaka Haruka no Himitsu. This is not unusual, and indeed should comfort those of you who place your faith in an orderly universe. Not surprisingly, OGT speculated on the root cause of the “shame” associated with being an anime fan, or オタク (you read anime blogs and don’t have Japanese characters on your computer? For shame). It’s a very interesting topic, but not quite where I want to go with this. I’m more interested in the effects the show could have — which, to be fair, OGT also talked about.

Nogizaka Haruka no Himitsu, or The Secret of Haruka Nogizaka, is about a guy, Ayase Yuuto, and a girl, Nogizaka Haruka. The basic set-up is that Ayase has grown up with an overbearing sister who invites his teacher, also overbearing, over to party a lot. They’re both typically either drunk or hungover, demanding food. As a result, Ayase doesn’t care for women too much — indeed, within three sentences one of his friends says everyone thought Ayase was gay for a while.

Nogizaka, on the other hand, is the typical sweet-oujo of the high school. As far as I know, she doesn’t fit exactly the mold of The Oujo, but she does fit the role. She’s rich, beloved by everyone in the school — she plays piano, somehow loudly enough (while retaining dynamics) for everyone anywhere in the school to pause and listen. She has, predictably, a reputation for being unapproachable for dates — which, running with the anime norm, is sort-of unfounded, as apparently no one’s ever tried.

This sounds like the set-up for a lot of romantic comedies of the Japanese persuasion. Hell, it matches a fuck-ton (a technical term, don’t try this at home kids) of comedies set in high school, and nearly all the cookie-cutter high school dramas/comedies that we usually forget about after a while. God help me, I watched nearly all of Tokimeki Memorial: Only Love, so I should know this pattern when I see it.

Yes, I’ve been putting off what you’re waiting for. The selling point of the show is that, secretly, Nogizaka is an otaku, or “akibe-ken,” as I think the show put it. Gasp, I know.

Nogizaka reacts poorly when Ayase finds out. Eventually they come to share the secret together, and they’re friends. Fine, good. This show could go in a few different directions. It could culminate in Haruka’s secret getting out somehow — in which case, I think no one would care in the school, because they’re all in love with her anyway. Indeed, the consumption of anime in the school would probably go up, as she even has one of those awful “defense force” fanclubs who are so obsessed they keep other people away from her (more on this later, as it’s a trope I absolutely loathe). This option is, I think, fairly shallow, as it says the nerdy hobby doesn’t matter — when you’re totally hot. It’s like that American movie, She’s All That, where the jock falls in love with the nerd when she’s all dressed up like a cheerleader. He doesn’t really accept her, he just notices her. There’s a difference.

The show could go in a different direction — Nogizaka could become comfortable with her identity, and the “secret” would no longer be a “secret,” merely a facet of her personality. This is, of course, what most of us persecuted nerds would most like to see, I’m guessing.

The show could also just continue on into the sunset, keeping the status quo. That is, it’s still a secret, Nogizaka is still awkward about other people knowing her hobby, and Ayase, uh, you know, stands there.

Finally, the show could do something entirely crazy, I don’t know.

The show has the potential to give us a rallying cry, a kind of backbone or support system for our passions that happen to stray from the norm. It probably won’t, though. The show itself is a little too white bread typical for that to happen. Ayase isn’t all that interesting — he’s not as boring as a lot of protagonists are in these situations. The aforementioned Tokimeki had one of hte worst, but think of most harem comedies. I suppose what’s-his-face from Kanon is an exception. Ayase isn’t quite that boring, but he’s still pretty faceless. What does he do for fun? I’m forced to wonder. Apparently he doesn’t actually like anime, but he doesn’t hate it either. He doesn’t like cooking, apparently. Does he have a hobby? Nogizaka, in the first episode at least, hasn’t actually revealed her nerd-fu. I’m guessing she’s not a Gundam-freak, as her apparently super-otaku-ears pick up conversation about the clumsy girl show that’s just started the night before, but what is she in to? Is she like Konata, fascinated by moe and girls in the same way the guys are? Does she fangirl over shoujo manga and bishounen? She’s an oujo who happens to like anime a lot — we’re told. But as anyone who’s been through even one workshop class can tell you, they’ll need to show, not tell.

That’s my main point there. But, as promised, my take on “pretty girl defense forces.” I hate them. I’m not sure where I first saw them, but one really good example was Shuffle! Yes, I watched all of it, and enjoyed it. The three main girls, angel, demon, and human — I can’t remember their names, so I didn’t enjoy it that much, apparently — all manage to become so popular in the school that they have oodles of boys swearing to defend their honor. This is, of course, incredibly selfish. I recall one show, I don’t know which one, that openly stated that some of this stuff was due to the members not wanting anyone to get an advantage over them. Wait, right, it was Fruits Basket, so it was the manga more than the anime. In it, the Yuki fanclub all swear never to talk to Yuki without another member present, so no one can ask him out, basically. Then they proceed to try to keep all the other girls in the school away from him, just like the guys in Shuffle! and Nogizaka Haruka no Himitsu. Basically these people are dillweeds. They usually show up to keep the protagonist from talking to the object of obsessive, stalkery-love — even though we know the protagonist and the object are actually friends, if not more, and they have no business interfering. If it’s a comedy like this, the protagonist also ends up being unfairly assaulted, which I never find funny at all, actually. Hell, I was uncomfortable with Tom and Jerry cartoons growing up, a bit, as they never seem to have a reason for what they’re doing.