「佐賀事変 其ノ壱」 (Saga Jihen Sono Ichi)
“The Saga Incident, Part 1”

Thankfully, there is far less of a sour taste from this week’s Zombie Land Saga Revenge because we finally got the Yugiri episode we’ve all been waiting for. And it sure doesn’t disappoint as far as jogging questions of what happened with Yugiri and how many of the “reincarnations” are still around to this day.

It was a bit silly to have reincarnations of Franchouchou, but it provided a little fun to be had. Tae had one line, but it was also pleasant to see it wasn’t a growl. It was funny to see that Saki turned out to be Lily’s mother in a past life. There were also a couple of cute shoe-ins like Junko and Ai strolling around Saga, which at this time was a former shell of itself.

The appearance of Romero, however, is far more interesting because it calls to question how exactly he was able to come back to life. Additionally, the grandfather of Kiichi (Kotaro’s reincarnation) resembles the bartender, and it’s easy to either draw conclusions that the grandfather is a necromancer or that Kiichi grew up to become a necromancer, eventually becoming one of Kotaro’s possible grandpa or great-grandpa.

Additionally, Itou is an odd character that looks like he might be the catalyst towards much of Kotaro, Kiichi, and Yugiri’s despair as he’s coming off as far less trustworthy by the end of the episode. There isn’t much of a vote of confidence in his moral character when he gladly shoots down Kiichi’s dream of bringing back Saga by pushing him to be a worker or a family man not long after he also told him to avoid Yugiri since she’s out of his league.

Sending a cryptic message to a man on the street might also end up causing a chain reaction of events in his favor. Part of me thinks Itou could be Okoba’s reincarnation and that Okoba’s present-day efforts to expose Franchouchou might also tie into whatever treachery Itou might have in mind, but that’s all speculation for now.

It was a very nice episode for Yugiri though because it still reminded us that, at the time, she was still a young girl who was forced to grow up at an early age. Whether it be to become a highly-coveted courtesan or to live on her own with the wealth of a late general who loved her work, she had a lot of baggage on her shoulders. This baggage also helped make sense of her interest in Kiichi since she sees a youthful enthusiasm and an earnest effort in his desire to revitalize Saga into a new prosperous era. This era might not have come just yet due to the events that might happen in the second half of this two-parter, but they did well to make you interested in the adorable bond that Yugiri and Kiichi had as she encouraged him to do his best to let the legend of Saga come back to life.

5 Comments

  1. I think it’s pretty simple.
    After Kiichi and Yuugiri helped realize his goal to revive Saga Prefecture (funny to think about this now, Saga is a “zombie” prefecture, died and was brought back to life) the Gramps, the Bartender, removed the dust from his necromancy and taught Kiichi how to be a necromancer.
    Kiichi must be Kotaro or at least an ancestor that kept passing his necromancy knowledge and will to “Make Saga Great Again!”.
    Yuugiri being revived is an obvious choice, she died for helping Saga’s cause, but the others? Maybe the reason for the cameos is that all the current girls had ancestors in Saga at that time that where hit by the incident that lead to Yuugiri’s execution (Itou is clearly a government eye).

    If… if the cameos aren’t really just cameos.
    There’s that reporter making his investigation, and last we see from him he was saying that he wasn’t able to find anything about Yuugiri. Maybe we are seeing these events from his eyes and the cameos are a way for him to rationalize how they are all connected.

    Oh, yes.
    Just like Maimai’s episode was a Sakura episode in disguise, this is a Kotaro episode in disguise. At front it tells Yugiri’s story, but in the end it reveals Kotaro’s motivation.

    Panino Manino
  2. This series has the possibility of turning into something more than a feel good zombie idol series. There have been compelling stories of Lilly’s dad’s suffering, Junko’s struggles to achieve idoldom, Ai’s iconic demise, Saki’s legacy, and Sakura’s future. The show has set up what could be a very compelling finale. This could be Kotaro’s twisted way of giving Sakura her dream, they were in high school together… The answer to all of this my be given in the Legendary Tae Yamada’s backstory.

    sailor80

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