Review of The Disappearance of Haruhi Suzumiya

VivisQueen

Adventurer
<img src="http://www.animeuknews.net/img/uploaded/2011-11-16Disappearance image.jpg">

<b>Review of The Disappearance of Haruhi Suzumiya by VivisQueen</b>

When <em>The Disappearance of Haruhi Suzumiya</em> begins on the 16th of December, it appears to be just another episode:&nbsp; Kyon bemoans Haruhi&rsquo;s now-permanent intrusion into his life, Haruhi voraciously feeds her Id, and the rest of the SOS Brigade try to keep up or risk annihilation of their egos. Their world remains one of vibrant, cartoonish colours and cheerful lighting, and with our ears, we barely notice the tuneless synth music that fills the gaps between lines of dialogue. But as soon as Kyon wakes up on the 18th December, the fateful day Haruhi disappears, the animation floods with heavy shadows and thick, muted lighting while haunting orchestral music floats on the edges of our attention like a barely-remembered nightmare. And then the special effects come in &ndash; the eerie wobble of a hallway, the unsettling zoom-in of a camera, the slow-motion stalk of an old enemy. In an instant, the ditzy, schizophrenic TV show transforms into an evocative cinematic experience with consistently stunning direction.

This is the success of the <em>Haruhi Suzumiya</em> franchise: it presents a surprisingly easy blend of plucky high school harem and sober metaphysical science fiction. I remember the grandiose final episodes of the first season and how naturally they seemed to flow from the preceding instalments of random adventures. Considering this is the same Kyoto Animation team behind <em>Full Metal Panic: The Second Raid</em> and <em>Kanon 2006</em>, their triumphant marriage of the unlikeliest tropes wrapped in superb animation here should be no surprise.

There are intriguing revolutions to Kyon&rsquo;s quest for the missing Haruhi, accompanied by smatterings of metaphysical screwiness, but at the core, this movie is an excuse to talk about him. Haruhi, the dominant personality of the series, has a minimal role here and the emphasis on Kyon, I argue, is probably the only way this 163-minute marathon could have been any good. I struggle to take the egotistical Haruhi seriously as a human being, preferring to think of her more as a force like the weather, a dancing mascot, all chaos and funny gimmicks. No, I am not jumping on the &lsquo;hate Haruhi&rsquo; bandwagon since I think she constitutes one of the most enjoyable plot devices in anime and plays perfectly off Kyon. But neither can I ignore the feeling that a Haruhi-focused movie of this length would have felt precisely as long as the 163 minutes imply. Instead, we can expect the endearingly neurotic Kyon to drive the story while his narration provides the satirical tang to complement the sombre narrative.

Arguably, this thematic focus organically picks up where the final episodes of the first season left off, namely confronting Kyon with some important questions. What does Haruhi mean to him? What impact has she had in his life? What does he want to be to her? Here we get to see him not so much struggle for words to answer but show it in his reaction to her disappearance. The mystery of Kyon is that he possesses a seemingly unending capacity to take the world as it is. If he reacts to his misadventures, he does so privately, choosing to express shock or irritation through diversionary quips rather than on his face. Here, for the first time, we get to see Kyon under duress <em>and reveal it</em>, and the effect is so moving precisely because it is <em>he</em> undergoing the trial.

I note that the performances are a smidgen more skilfully executed in the Japanese dub. Not that the US equivalents are bad &ndash; in fact, they're excellent &ndash; but the finer details inevitably relegate them to a close second place. Take the difference between Tomokazu Sugita&rsquo;s and Crispin Freeman&rsquo;s performances as Kyon. The key to Kyon is that he must sound as though too intelligent for this whimsical high school drama and yet too lazy to escape it. His is a performance of accumulated weariness, barely-repressed annoyance, and cunning amusement. Freeman captures most of the serious traits but his deadpan delivery needs fine-tuning, especially when executing an instantaneous switch from one tone to the other. Granted, Sugita defined the character in the first place so there is little surprise in his &lsquo;perfect&rsquo; performance, but Freeman once again does not compare. In most other respects that matter, the US dub rivals the Japanese: they nail the characters in the first instance (I like Wendee Lee as Haruhi so very, very much), and their comic timing and general matching of grunts and sighs to the movements on screen resonate wonderfully. This is a veteran American cast that has learned to adapt to the idiosyncrasies of a Japanese screenplay rather than trying fruitlessly to overcome them. The result is one of those rare releases where both dubs deliver equal amounts of pleasure.

The movie <em>is</em> too long. It could have lost half an hour with minimal shortcuts. Nevertheless, the fact that this remains a minor flaw is a testament to its quality. For the mammoth running time hampers not so much enjoyment as simply the capacity to watch it over and over again. In the end, it still made me believe that an overbearing harpy like Haruhi is worth fighting for.<br>
<b>Final score: 8 out of 10</b>

<b>Additional screencaps</b>

<img src="http://www.animeuknews.net/img/uploaded/screens/2011-11-16Haruhi 1.jpg">

<img src="http://www.animeuknews.net/img/uploaded/screens/2011-11-16YES DEF 1.jpg">

<img src="http://www.animeuknews.net/img/uploaded/screens/2011-11-16YES DEF 2.jpg">

<img src="http://www.animeuknews.net/img/uploaded/screens/2011-11-16YES DEF 3.jpg">

<img src="http://www.animeuknews.net/img/uploaded/screens/2011-11-16YES DEF 4.jpg">
 
Not a bad score. A pretty good film in my opinion that ties up a few lose ends, Notice how Kyon is now the slider (as such). Makes one forget about the travesty that is the horrid endless numerical value that shale not be uttered.


VivisQueen said:
<b>Final score: 8 out of 10</b>

FFFFFFFFUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU!!!!
 
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I disagree that half an hour could have been cut. While the movie is indeed long (I can't deny that) I felt that every minute was necessary. As you become engrossed in the film you really do not feel its length at all, each of the twists comes along at its own pace which allows Kyon to react to each and every one of them rather than them all piling up at once with the majority of them to be ignored.

I also have to say that I love the soundtrack (by coincidence, I'm listening to it right now). One moment that stands out to me as one of the most perfectly executed scenes in any movie I have seen is when Mikuru and Kyon go back in time (Well for them, forward in time) to stop Yuki from creating this distortion. Just as we think the movie is going towards a quiet conclusion - BAM. Orchestral music bursts in full force as Asakura returns and stabs Kyon - that entire scene was absolutely beautiful in a dramatic way..

Seeing each of the characters change in the "alternate world" was fantastic - especially Yuki. She was absolutely adorable and it really gave a breath of new life into the rather plain character. The subtle remarks made by Itsuki about Kyon's relationship with Haruhi as well, it's like seeing into their minds.

The extras on the bonus DVD are also very intriguing, like watching them location hunting at a hospital and seeing the comparison to the one featured in the film.

The animation is also superb. I watched my DVD upscaled on my blu-ray player and even then it was phenomenal; I will definitely be double dipping when the blu-ray comes out.

Especially considering that this film was released shortly after the second season (which I still haven't purchased - I won't until it goes down in price. Not paying that much for Endless Eight!), it was definitely a triumph. Has to be an 8.5 or a 9.

(Oh and odd fact - the actual DVD is a 12).
 
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Otaku-san said:
VivisQueen said:
<b>Final score: 8 out of 10</b>

FFFFFFFFUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU!!!!

Ah yes, my favourite kind of reaction (READ: pet peeve). The I-am-going-to-overreact-to-a-one-or-two-point-score-difference-even-though-I-generally-agree-with-the-content expression. Always helpful, because it tells me not to bother with eight-hundred words - just read everyone's mind and post a number that the loudest shouter will agree with.

You know what 8/10 means? It means 80th percentile. You know, a bit like 80%, which also sort of like resembles 4/5. It means, if you had a bell-curve of all the shows I've seen and their scores, this movie would be on the narrowing right-hand side. It means its subtitle is One Of The Best Movies I've Seen. Had I rated it a 5/10, I could understand you bringing that up, because we'd then be arguing the difference between 'average' and 'excellent', but as it stands, you wasted extra letters complaining about me saying it's 'excellent' rather than 'excellent'.

Maybe you're used to people throwing out 8/10s like confetti at a Gay Pride parade, but I like to think that when a show's getting 80%, my readers know that means much, much more than just 'oh, it was fine'.

/ 8am breakfast rant over
 
Otaku-san said:
Not a bad score. Makes one forget about the travesty that is the horrid endless numerical value that shale not be uttered.


VivisQueen said:
<b>Final score: 8 out of 10</b>


VivisQueen said:
Otaku-san said:
VivisQueen said:
<b>Final score: 8 out of 10</b>

FFFFFFFFUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU!!!!

Ah yes, my favourite kind of reaction (READ: pet peeve). The I-am-going-to-overreact-to-a-one-or-two-point-score-difference-even-though-I-generally-agree-with-the-content expression. Always helpful, because it tells me not to bother with eight-hundred words - just read everyone's mind and post a number that the loudest shouter will agree with.

You know what 8/10 means? It means 80th percentile. You know, a bit like 80%, which also sort of like resembles 4/5. It means, if you had a bell-curve of all the shows I've seen and their scores, this movie would be on the narrowing right-hand side. It means its subtitle is One Of The Best Movies I've Seen. Had I rated it a 5/10, I could understand you bringing that up, because we'd then be arguing the difference between 'average' and 'excellent', but as it stands, you wasted extra letters complaining about me saying it's 'excellent' rather than 'excellent'.

Maybe you're used to people throwing out 8/10s like confetti at a Gay Pride parade, but I like to think that when a show's getting 80%, my readers know that means much, much more than just 'oh, it was fine'.

/ 8am breakfast rant over

I could be wrong, but I think Otaku was saying your score of 8 was a reminder of Endless Eight (which many Haruhi fans did not like).

As a personal opinion how about in future you provide a make out of 10 for the main feature, another mark for the extras and then an overall/value for money mark (this is not directed at you personally Vivi but all the dvd/blu-ray reviewers). The number of discs I own which have clean OP/ED and trailers only. At least the Haruhi shows/film made an effort with the extras.

Other than that, good review.
 
Can you at least explain what you think could have been cut? My eyes were glued to the screen and my brain never wandered, so I'm curious as to what you think could have been removed. I'm also rather surprised you didn't comment on how much Disappearance resembles Back to the Future.
 
VivisQueen said:
Otaku-san said:
VivisQueen said:
<b>Final score: 8 out of 10</b>

FFFFFFFFUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU!!!!

Ah yes, my favourite kind of reaction (READ: pet peeve). The I-am-going-to-overreact-to-a-one-or-two-point-score-difference-even-though-I-generally-agree-with-the-content expression. Always helpful, because it tells me not to bother with eight-hundred words - just read everyone's mind and post a number that the loudest shouter will agree with.

You know what 8/10 means? It means 80th percentile. You know, a bit like 80%, which also sort of like resembles 4/5. It means, if you had a bell-curve of all the shows I've seen and their scores, this movie would be on the narrowing right-hand side. It means its subtitle is One Of The Best Movies I've Seen. Had I rated it a 5/10, I could understand you bringing that up, because we'd then be arguing the difference between 'average' and 'excellent', but as it stands, you wasted extra letters complaining about me saying it's 'excellent' rather than 'excellent'.

Maybe you're used to people throwing out 8/10s like confetti at a Gay Pride parade, but I like to think that when a show's getting 80%, my readers know that means much, much more than just 'oh, it was fine'.

/ 8am breakfast rant over

Obviously this was before you had breakfast, else you would have read what I was implying at.
 
Haha, yeah I do really like this movie. One of the best anime movies I've seen.
The visuals are wonderful though, and I think the DVD will likely hamper them enough, to justify giving the Bluray 9/10 :) and make the 8 dissapear ;)

I also went in expecting it to feel too long, and have watched it a few times since, and enjoyed it each time, so despite it's depth being as long as Kyon's sarcastic trait, it does use that time to do things, unlike so many other things which really feel too long.

I will definately be grabbing the BDs.
 
That 8 thing totally went over my head too. I'm clearly not annoyed enough about this series (or rather, I liked it, and went on with my life thereafter).

R
 
Haha, I liked what E8 was trying to do, but did find it tedious.

I can see why people who'd watched it weekly would have hated it though. 2 months of virtually the same episode lol
 
Never having heard any of the dub for Haruhi, I'm quite curious to hear it now.

My only complaint about Disappearance is that I didn't feel like it advanced the overall story in a noticeable way. I wouldn't accuse it of being filler, but it didn't feel like the story made any lasting change to the characters or their situation. I should also point out that it's been the best part of a year since I saw the film and longer since I saw any of the series, so if there was something subtle, I probably just haven't picked up on it.

Having said that, is there actually an ongoing story to speak of beyond what happens in the first series of Haruhi? Not being familiar with the light novels, I wouldn't know whether the subsequent stories are all just self-contained adventures or not.

Either way, I don't think it's detrimental to the film itself. It's tremendous fun, it makes 160 minutes absolutely fly past and I could never complain about seeing more of Kyon's reluctant adventures.
 
I'm not that fond of the Haruhi dub tbh. I found it made Haruhi sound too vapid, too much like the cheerleader stereotype, rather than the overtly energetic, determined thing she is.

There is an advance in the overall story, but its only relatively minor, since the film is based on one book, whereas the series was based on several. It was also more character growth and development than outright changes apart from the reveal on Kyon's technical role in the original group of 'careers' Haruhi expressed interest in.

As I understand the novels are a continuing storyline rather than just self-contained adventures.
 
Professor Irony said:
Having said that, is there actually an ongoing story to speak of beyond what happens in the first series of Haruhi? Not being familiar with the light novels, I wouldn't know whether the subsequent stories are all just self-contained adventures or not.
.
Well literally only half of what has been animated from the novels advances the plot. I have read the first 3 novels so far and only the first one actually progresses anything (in the anime this is the first 6 chronological episodes). However I don't think that's what the series is about. I don't feel it's something that is walking towards a conclusion. To me it's more about Kyon trying to cope with a situation beyond his control and the various adventures he has with the rest of the SOS Brigade. The seemingly unconnected stories are half the fun, in other words. Disappearance is no exception.

ilmaestro said:
I'd 8 to be on the end of an Endless rant like that.
/golf clap
 
Maxon said:
Well literally only half of what has been animated from the novels advances the plot. I have read the first 3 novels so far and only the first one actually progresses anything (in the anime this is the first 6 chronological episodes). However I don't think that's what the series is about. I don't feel it's something that is walking towards a conclusion. To me it's more about Kyon trying to cope with a situation beyond his control and the various adventures he has with the rest of the SOS Brigade. The seemingly unconnected stories are half the fun, in other words. Disappearance is no exception.

Yeah, I've never been one to consider self-contained stories a bad thing, I think it was just the first tv series made me wonder if there was a more of an ongoing narrative.
 
Otaku-san: So the 8 thing was some kind of joke that I didn't get? Then I apologise. I'm so used to people blathering on about how they disagree with my ratings elsewhere (usually when it's just a 1 or 2 point difference and they clearly haven't read a word I've written) that I saw what I wanted to see.

Maxon: The monologue Kyon has while standing outside the prestigious school could have been shortened, the ending scene with Yuki could have been shortened, the dialogue with Koizumi at the end DEFINITELY could have been shortened. Shortcuts could have been made when Kyon's depression sinks in after realising Haruhi is gone. They aren't bad scenes at all (which is purely attributable to the outstanding script and Kyon's ironic charm, because any other show and such long chit-chat would have been unbearable) but they are just extending a movie that didn't need to be that long.

I've gathered this from live-action, but I'm sure it counts for animation too: a good live-action director/editor will cut a movie down to only what is useful. A great director/editor will cut down a movie to only what is directly necessary. So great editors are those that can make massively painful decisions. I think further painful decisions could have been made with this movie. But like I said, it's not a major flaw.

Professor Irony: The movie may not advance the plot, but it advances the characters, and the best ones to boot - Kyon and Yuki. And being a character-trumps-plot kind of person, this movie gave me everything I could have wanted out of the franchise. I see Haruhi as the kind of thing you watch just to be in the moment and not because you're expecting any particular kind of outcome.
 
I still don't see why anything that isn't absolutely necessary has to be cut. Having scenes like that are useful in letting the audience take a mental breather. If it's just plot plot plot plot plot plot all the way through then it's harder to take in what has happened and digest it, especially after the film has finished and the audience has forgotten stuff that happens earlier in the film. You saying "could" instead of "should" and that the scenes are not bad just confuses things as well. However, your phrase "A great director/editor will cut down a movie to only what is directly necessary." is something I strongly disagree with. If that were the case, Quentin Tarantino films would be 20 minutes long. Cutting content for the sake of making a film shorter is the wrong way of doing things. I think you should try to see scenes like the ones you mentioned as the director's way of giving the audience more insight into characters or even as a build up to the next scene.

To me, a film is only too long when I find it completely dull, no matter how long it actually runs.
 
Not only that, but every scene shown was not added in to beef the film up, it was taken as it was straight from the novel. Nothing was missed, nothing was added. I honestly don't see much wrong with it, if at all. I had at first assumed there was a small detail missed near the end of the film, but i haven't come across it since, so yeah.

I personally never found a point in the movie where i thought, ya know, this is dragging. I was hooked for every minute there was. Going from how Season 2 ended up with the hellish E8, i was actually a little sceptical going into the film too, could KyoAni really do this justice or will they troll the fanbase more so? But they did it right. Everyone played their roles perfectly, and it shows through, especially with Yuki and Kyon as you said. If you where to cut some of that down, i'm not sure you'd have the same impact it had. Kyons monologues are always long(ignoring the fact that the entire series is told by himself, of course), so it never bothered me.


@Professor Irony: Maxon kinda summed it up nicely. The series doesn't really have this major narrative, bar the fact that it's the story of the SOS brigade from Kyons perspective. However that's not to say there is advancements in any way. The thing is, novels 3, 5 and 6 are primarily the short story novels, they so they don't really advance anything more for it, though both Bamboo Leaf Rhapsody and Snowy Mountain Syndrome link to Disappearance a bit(former more than the latter). You don't really get more advances until the 7th novel onwards really. That's not to suggest the material isn't worth reading, it is, just look more to character development than plot advancement i'd say.
 
I hadn't realised it was a long movie when I started watching it one evening, so I was surprised by how much time had passed when the end approached. I didn't think it dragged though, even though I'm not a Kyon fan (which seems to be rare among Haruhi watchers!).

Dialogue between Kyon and Koizumi should never be shortened, I love the contrast between their personalities. For me it would have been a score of 8-9 overall, I think, which would make it an excellent movie of rare quality in my books (all the more so for being rooted in an ongoing series rather than standalone, which can often hurt movies).

R
 
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