03 April 2013

'Trapeze' ~ absolutely realistic

'kuchuu buranko' or 'Trapeze' is the kind of anime works that immediately divides its viewers into those who cannot stand it and drop, and those who watch it until the end. most of the latter give it 5 out of 5, ten out of ten, and so on. except for me
it did not become my favourite, nor I want to rewatch it in the future. I did not become particularly happy after watching it. however, I consider it absolutely realistic, despite the fact it looks otherwise - and hey, can you imagine this is a work of Toei?

plot and characters
dr. Ichiro Irabu - better to say, two of them... or, no, three
and Mayumi, a nurse in pink
know what a person needs when he comes to a psychiatrist. well, in case of Mayumi there is only one thing - her 'shot'. I mean, vitamin injection. yeah
Dr. himself does not even bother that much. his method includes 1. stating a well-known general truth about how the illness is usually cured, 2. expressing his own will to do something related with the patient, like going to the circus or writing a novel or taking an audition - which always pisses off the patient as Dr. looks like he is not even going to treat the patient, and 3. giving very, very light hints on what to do. well he might look like he is giving a piece of actual advice - you need to give vent to your emotions, or you do not even need to struggle with your illness, but that is an audio illusion - since in the end the illness gradually fades away by itself - or not, but anyway, the patient find his way out by himself
however, whatever the treatment itself may be, Dr., with the help of Mayumi and Fukuicchi providing explanations, made several valuable statements
and was constantly taking the patients' hearts out of them

and changed their lives
Dr. is like this 
and yet
the first question to ask is - would you like to receive treatment from such a doctor? no? well, what you answer is not important. the second question is - do you believe that such people exist in reality? again no?
and still, there is something you can learn from him. look at the first screenshot again
and remember one thing

graphics
recently I have learned a new word - idiosyncratic. I feel like it can be applied here. have you seen a lot of animes with such shapes and colours?

music
is repetitive, remains stuck in your head and may as well make you fed up with it pretty fast. on the other hand, I prefer that the music is memorable rather than not. the mood was created successfully
and you know? for some reason I never even skipped the OPEDs

voicing
if you look at the seiyuus list you will find a bunch of pretty famous and I guess expensive seiyuus many of whom are frequently voicing characters attractive for the female audience. which is absolutely unnecessary here since in 'Trapeze' the characters were absolutely different. on the other hand, Mitsuya Yuji and Pak Romi created a perfect psycho-doctor. a doctor specialising in psychiatry - as well as a doctor who does not make an impression of a sane person

conclusion
nurse Mayumi has a great ability to express everything in brief phrases. she was seeing through the patients' nature. in the end, she expressed the nature of this series, too
but still, tell me if 'tis really far from this real world?

p. s.
do you know that the ending theme, 'Shangi-La', more precisely 'Shangri-La (Y. Sunahara 2009 Remodel)' is a cover on BeForU 'Shangri-La'?

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