「二年間の休暇」 (Ni-nenkan no kyuuka)
“Two Years Vacation”

Sonny Boy was a lot of things, but it certainly wasn’t a mass-produced model. The first thing that should probably be said is that I very much appreciate it. I’m glad it exists – it’s a truly singular piece of fiction that represents the aesthetic of its creator with seemingly minimal corporate meddling. Those are rare in anime, where the idea of “committee” has become encoded all the way to the medium’s DNA. Sonny Boy is, as I noted once before, like a single barrel whisky – you never know exactly what you’re going to get, but it’s going to be unique, with no blending or batching to smooth over the rough edges.

That said, I would be lying if I said I loved it. The series engaged me intellectually more than emotionally, but even there an element of indifference exists. I’m not going to say that Natsume Shingo was dishonest with the audience, because he never pretended Sonny Boy was anything apart from what it ended up being. The issue for me is a lack of clarity, or even seemingly interest in providing it. I get the sense of Natsume riffing for twelve episodes, which is undeniably fascinating but ultimately (for me) unsatisfying. There were no explanations, no real resolutions – just a bunch of interesting and often contradictory ideas strung together in semi-chronological order.

Maybe that comes down to personal taste. I love Miles Davis better during his hard bop and modal jazz period than when he went fully free-form and experimental. Hey, I like a nice melody – so shoot me. Maybe that makes me a pleb and not sophisticated enough to fully embrace Sonny Boy’s genius, I don’t know. I do appreciate it, especially for its relentlessly fascinating visuals and resolutely iconoclastic nature (and its music). But give me a choice between a Van Gogh and a Paul Klee and I’ll take the Van Gogh every time. But I’d still take the Klee over the variations on “Dogs Playing Poker” that constitutes the bulk of anime these days.

As to what actually happened in the finale, I’m hesitant to try and interpret (much less explain) it, because I’m not convinced Natsume himself could do so. And I think one has to accept with this series that explanations and making sense really aren’t the point. Was this all real, or was it a metaphor for Nagara’s social anxiety disorder? Is there no connection between this Nozomi and Asakaze – who’re together in the “real” world, by the way (eww) – and the ones Nagara and Mizuho left behind in the driftlands? Where were Rajdhani and Hoshi in this world – and if they were present, why didn’t Nagara try and befriend Raj?

If you’re keeping score, it’s apparently ride a Saturn 5 into orbit, build up to faster than light, and head for the nexus point of dimensions. The drifting Asakaze is there, and he takes a karmic hit to make up for his counterpart’s good fortune – seemingly left behind utterly alone. Not that Nagara’s life in his old world is anything to write home about. Nozomi is taken, he still has no friends, and he supports himself working at a banquet hall in a hotel where his sempai berates and abuses him. And Mizuho pretends she doesn’t know him, too – I’m not sure why she initially did that, though she did come around in the end.

In point of fact, this whole post-return sequence had a very Evangelion – or Anno Hideaki at the very least – feel to it. I don’t think one could describe it as anything but melancholic, though I suppose Nagara does seemed to have gained enough perspective from his travels to accept that obstacles are just part of the journey. In last week’s analysis I said that I hoped this finale would focus on Nagara and Mizuho’s reasons for deciding to come back, and in point of fact she asked him that very question this week. Not that the answer was particularly satisfying…

Sonny Boy leaves us not just with a ridiculous tangle of loose plot threads, but a lot of interesting philosophical questions. Frankly I’m not sure Nagara and Mizuho made the right choice but more than that, I think this series begs the question of whether what they experienced in the Drift was any less “real” than the world they chose to return to. Time apparently moves at different speeds for different people in there (that’s one of those things for which no explanation is forthcoming), but for MizuGara it was only two years apparently. If it had been a lot longer, I very much doubt they would have been able to slip back into their 0ld lives – and more interestingly, probably not willing either.

Even if Sonny Boy was not, for me, a brilliant work, it was the sort of series which often is. It’s nice to see Madhouse doing something like this, and it’s essential to anime’s creative survival that auteurs like Natsume are allowed to take chances and express themselves through anime. Great works of art are rarely created by committees – they’re created by individuals who follow their vision wherever it leads them. It’s the nature of the medium that an anime creator needs support from the production system to do this, and as the Hoshiai no Sora atrocity shows us, that support can be a fleeting thing. Sonny Boy gives the impression of a series that was never forced to compromise, and whatever the result, as anime fans that’s something we should always celebrate.

3 Comments

  1. I really enjoyed Sonny Boy. I watched a lot more shows than usual this season and this is easily the one I looked forward to the most.

    After the first few eps, I stopped thinking about it as an intellectual exercise; the discontinuity between episodes, scenes, worlds seemed to me that the nature and mechanics of the drift *did not matter* – this was purely about these middle school kids, their relationships, their journeys, their changes.

    The sheer creativity of the This Worlds was also a pleasure; there was a nice balance between logical and illogical in pretty much every This World. I liked seeing what the kids would be up to each week and what the eps This World would be.

    Now, if one insisted on being logical and try to apply some philosophical meaning to various elements, clearly this is a story of adolescence. The act of drifting and the creating of This Worlds, each with peculiar rules, could serve as abstracted metaphors for the teenage practices of disconnecting; seeking self, forcing a definition on the self; accepting or resisting peer pressure or adult authority; leaving the safe reliability of childhood, ect …. ad nauseam. All this has been done before in anime, hundreds of times over but here it is again, in such a package as to be overlooked but still here, refreshingly obtuse.

    I’m glad Nagara met with Mizuho. I understand her initial reluctance. These 2 are important: of the kids we got to know somewhat, these 2 had been the worst off, socially: no friends, resisting others, being lonely. That Nagara went to find her was a big step for him; for her to initially reject him is her default nature showing but she did overcome herself to meet with him later.

    Nozomi might not be the same Nozomi Nagara was able to befriend, which is initially disappointing; however, they are still able to connect. She recognized him and initiated a conversation. He’s bumped in to her today; he will certainly see her again, and each time, perhaps they can connect more.

    Thus Nagara can walk away, disappointed that he didn’t immediately get everything he wanted but he’s no longer the passive, cynic he started the show as: he’s willing to make an effort, to risk himself, and carry optimism despite a moment of disappointment.

    This is what Sonny Boy is saying, I think.

    The 2 people who *needed* the drift to find themselves, find friendship, are the ones who came back. And to do it, they had to resist those who wanted to hold them back, the adult who tried to deny them, they had to share with each other, to work hard and then be bored, take risks,… all of this from Nagara who wanted to do nothing but lay around uninvolved and Mizuho who literally castled herself away with her support cats….

    The others… didn’t need it. Nozomi, Raj, Asakaze… didn’t need the drift. (Nozomi needing the drift to save her life is a non-topic on this point, she didn’t personally change the way Nagara and Mizuho did because she didn’t need to)

    How did the drift happen? What literal space(s) did it happen in? How did the 2 re-enter themselves? What was the deal with the principal? Eh, those things didn’t matter.

    But perhaps I’m ok with that because I love Klee’s work.

    Danny

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