All across the Aniblogospheriversemension, an amazing thing is happening.
Episodic bloggers are making really good posts full of interesting content, sometimes even better than anything they’ve written in the past. And they’re all posts about the soccer anime Giant Killing.
I’m not sure why this is happening. Perhaps it’s because Giant Killing is a show with a lot of meat to chew on, or maybe it’s being held up by World Cup fever. For whatever reason though, anime bloggers are producing high-quality Giant Killing posts. They’re analyzing character motives, they’re breaking down the pace of the episodes and the strategies used by each of the teams, and they’re sometimes even eschewing summarizing episodes in favor of transmitting their feel and excitement and discussing the way they themselves relate to the show.
Examples:
The payoff for all of this suffering comes in being able to feel the rush of adrenalin when a play comes together. When that happens, you know the makers of the show did something right, because you believe it.
—Abandoned Factory Anime Review
I always thought of Kuro as simply a strong hard player with no particular strengths mentally (other than screaming his guts out and be a total idiot). Hence, it is a huge surprise for me to see that he actually has the ability to read the game more effectively than anything that I expected. A high line will always have a huge danger in the offside trap, and someone who can read the game can reduce the chances of the offside trap being broken.
The 8th episode of Giant Killing sees the likely conclusion of Tatsumi’s engineering of the squad and probably finding a settled lineup. It also reveals a real method to his madness in the process. However, football is a results business, and Tatsumi will eventually have to get some results out of his vision.
We despair when an athlete retires at the height of his powers; we want to watch greatness as long as possible. But we also lament when an athlete sticks around past his expiration date. It’s a horrible double standard. I respect a guy who knows the right time to walk away, but I know it’s a difficult choice. How many of us could suddenly abandon our jobs at such a young age?
And that’s just a handful. The more you explore, the more you’ll find that Giant Killing might be the best thing to happen to episode blogging in a long time.
Oh, and this goes a long way in fighting the image that anime fans are a bunch of sports-hating nerds who look upon the athletically fit with disdain, and it’s done fairly naturally. It’s not like anyone is actively writing these posts to not seem like a geek. We’re anime fans after all.
ETU!
I agree with how were all anime fans after all , thats a great say , nice post ive never hard of the giant killing so it was news to me for sure
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This is awesome!
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yea for sure
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I think it might be difficult at first to see it, but Giant Killing is a very high quality anime. It isn’t high quality in the same ways we have become accustomed, though. For example, the show has a fairly large cast of characters that have at least been sketched in, and they DON’T fall neatly into convenient “roles”.
When you think you have found a clear “hero” character, he is sidelined, or even fails. When you think you have someone pegged as a villain, you get a glimpse of them that, frankly, changes your mind. This might sound like a frustrating, confusing experience, but, to me at least, it has given the show remarkable depth. I truly enjoy it.
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Despite being the opposition I can’t possibly think of the Brazilians as villains. Pepe is a melon pan-eating champion.
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For me, Giant Killing just seems to be hitting every note of all the various things I enjoy about sports. The series is about its sport, but it also has a lot of details about its sports world that I find interesting (the fans, the front office, the economics, sportswriters, etc.). Giant Killing is not nearly as good as, say, Cross Game; however, its focus on all aspects of its sporting world (and the balance of those aspects against the football) makes the series a lot of fun to think and write about.
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Given the all-encompassing nature of Giant Killing, do you think the series would stand to do well in places outside of Japan? Let’s exclude the US and its lack of interest in sports manga + lack of interest in soccer for this.
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Ookiku Furikabutte + GAR = Giant Killing.
OK, I overstate. And honestly, I love Oofuri more: its storyline is more natural & complex, less “big setup, big payoff”. But they both push aside a lot of the easy drama sports stories are prone to, and get into the complexities – of the individual games, and of the nature of the sport: how it’s run, its role in the larger world.
And it’s definitely more GAR than Oofuri.
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