Saikano: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Rape as Drama]]—In a recent volume of [[Omake|canon stories happening in the universe of Saikano]], one story focuses on the relationship between a teen soldier and a girl who got raped by soldiers from the other side. Particularly jarring since {{spoiler|he waited for them to be finished before he killed them because he knew they'd be "spent" (and therefore easier to dispatch) after sex. Once they supposedly fall in love, he convinces the girl to have sex with him when she doesn't really want to}}.
* [[Rape as Drama]]—In a recent volume of [[Omake|canon stories happening in the universe of Saikano]], one story focuses on the relationship between a teen soldier and a girl who got raped by soldiers from the other side. Particularly jarring since {{spoiler|he waited for them to be finished before he killed them because he knew they'd be "spent" (and therefore easier to dispatch) after sex. Once they supposedly fall in love, he convinces the girl to have sex with him when she doesn't really want to}}.
* [[Rule of Cool]]—Let's face it, a moe with tech wings is ''cool''.
* [[Rule of Cool]]—Let's face it, a moe with tech wings is ''cool''.
* [[Schrodingers Cat]]—In the manga, one of Shuji's friends goes deaf during the first bombing. In the anime, said friend bites it (though from how little he gets featured in the manga, he might as well have died).
* [[Schrödinger's Cat]]—In the manga, one of Shuji's friends goes deaf during the first bombing. In the anime, said friend bites it (though from how little he gets featured in the manga, he might as well have died).
* [[Seinen]]—In the small Afterward in the manga, [[Word of God]] stated this was for young adult boys to adult men. This is also how he got away with {{spoiler|including a rather graphic sex sequence}}.
* [[Seinen]]—In the small Afterward in the manga, [[Word of God]] stated this was for young adult boys to adult men. This is also how he got away with {{spoiler|including a rather graphic sex sequence}}.
* [[Shadow Archetype]]
* [[Shadow Archetype]]
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* [[There Are No Therapists]]
* [[There Are No Therapists]]
* [[There Is No Higher Court]] - Girl changed into weapon without her knowledge or consent. No one bats an eye.
* [[There Is No Higher Court]] - Girl changed into weapon without her knowledge or consent. No one bats an eye.
* [[Twelve-Episode Anime|Thirteen Episode Anime]]
* [[Trailers Always Spoil]]: The trailer for the live-action version shows the very ending of {{spoiler|the end of the world}} even though it doesn't make sense by itself.
* [[Trailers Always Spoil]]: The trailer for the live-action version shows the very ending of {{spoiler|the end of the world}} even though it doesn't make sense by itself.
* [[Transformation Trauma]]
* [[Transformation Trauma]]
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[[Category:Studio Cockpit]]
[[Category:Studio Cockpit]]
[[Category:Studio Fantasia]]
[[Category:Studio Fantasia]]
[[Category:Anime of the 2000s]]
[[Category:Thirteen-Episode Anime]]
[[Category:Film]]

Latest revision as of 15:44, 19 February 2022

"This is perhaps one of the most emotionally flaying anime series I have ever seen."

"Every time I watch the last episode of Saikano, I feel like I'll never be happy ever again. The world could end, and I wouldn't notice because I'd be too busy feeling the after effects..."

a.k.a. Saishuu Heiki Kanojo; She, the Ultimate Weapon; My Girlfriend, the Ultimate Weapon. In the French translation, Larme Ultime, a pun on "the ultimate weapon" (l'arme ultime) and "ultimate tear".

The tentative budding relationship between petite Chise and bitter, emotionally distant Shuji becomes a little more complicated when Shuji discovers that Chise has been converted into a living weapon of mass destruction by the JSDF.

Sound like the setup for many an anime featuring a troubled young man and his extraordinarily empowered girlfriend? Brace yourself, because despite the trappings of the genre, this isn't your creepy bachelor uncle's Magical Girlfriend series. The series is subtitled "The Last Love Song On This Little Planet" and they don't pull any punches in delivering on the bittersweet tone implied by that line.

This is a love story where the love is complex and unidealized; it's a war story where the war is distant and, if portrayed at all, done so in brief, brutal vignettes. If you are at all emotional, be prepared to be gobsmacked repeatedly by the savagings inflicted on the protagonists by the world and by each other.

You'll likely need a box of tissues for this series... though again, not in the same way your creepy uncle might.

Originally a manga series by Shin Takahashi, it was adapted into a 13-episode anime in 2002. An OAV side-story was released in 2005, Saikano: Another Love Song, as well as a live-action movie in 2006. All of these, apart from the live-action film, are licensed by Viz Media.

Tropes used in Saikano include: