「今日ウチ親いないんだ」 (Kyou uchi oya inai nda)
“My Mom’s Not Home Today”

It’s usually a concern that applies more to comedies and hard-core slice-of-life series, but Yofukashi no Uta isn’t immune. What happens when a series that’s more about the journey than the destination gets “serious”? Almost all series do in their last couple of episodes, and it can be a real problem – especially when a show loses sight of its true identity in order to make it so. Being an adaptation of an ongoing manga can impact that – but only if there are realistic hopes for additional seasons.

When you think about it, Call of the Night does check a lot of boxes for a slice-of-life. It’s really the experience of being out and about after midnight that drives the narrative more than conventional plot. Basically, this is a series about the art of wasting time. But as you’d expect, plot is taking center-stage over the final stretch (the last 3 episodes to be precise). But it’s working, so the question then is, why? I think it’s because the nature of its idyll itself asked a lot of questions that demanded addressing. That. and the fact that for two eps at least, the plot developments feel very authentic and organic to the themes of the series as a whole.

My view of the symbolism of vampires in Yofukashi has evolved, but remains pretty consistent. Vampires are those people that don’t fit in – the outcasts, the loners, the “weirdos” society would rather pretend don’t exist. As Nazuna tells Kou during their very revealing conversation in his bedroom, the appeal was simple – “different”. Especially when you’re 14 anything different is going to feel exciting, especially forbidden stuff like what Kou is doing. But for all the appeal the call of the night has for introverts (and I speak from personal experience in saying that it’s powerful) there’s a dark side to it, too.

The night is exciting, most especially if you never feel quite comfortable in the light. Scary too, but that’s a big part of the appeal. But it’s is also full of junkies and prostitutes and alcoholics too drunk to make it home that night. If you want to live in that world, you surrender the privilege of acting as if those people don’t exist. Not to carry the symbolism too far, but it is what it is. What we saw last week – the dark side of vampirism – is just that, the dark side of becoming a person of the night. If Kou decides to becomes a vampire, he embraces all of the experience, whether he wants to or not.

That Kou would be traumatized by what he saw last week is inevitable. He’s shaken, as well he should be. He now knows what a vampire out of control looks like – but he doesn’t know how easy it might be to get to that point. Nazuna’s sexualized hunger for him takes on a far more sinister undertone. Most crucially, this has all caused Kou to ask the question “why?” Why does he want to become a vampire? Mahiru asks it of him, but he’s already been asking it of himself. Isn’t he already free, becoming a person of the night and living on the periphery of vampires? But at the moment, he always has the option to bail and rejoin the world of the normies – and that colors all of his emotional reactions.

Mahiru’s is the honest concern of a friend and fellow child, just as Akira’s is. But again, Kou is already unsure of himself. He confronts Nazuna with his concerns, reluctantly – and she seems unaware of Anko’s existence and genuinely surprised there’s a human who can kill vampires. She also confirms that a vampire will die after not drinking human blood for ten years. I was a bit worried when she invited herself to Kou’s house, but it seems to have been relatively benign. That visit is further confirmation of how empty his home life is – his father is long-gone and his mother consumed enough by work that their only interaction seems to be her leaving him money for food. It confirms a lot of other stuff, too.

How to interpret the nature of that conversation? It’s sexually charged despite Naz joking about it – the mentality of no parents at home and a hot girl in your room speaks for itself. But it’s serious, too – and I think it represents Nazuna trying to give Kou an out, if he really wants it. If she oversold the romance of the vampire experience before, maybe she oversells the downsides a bit here. Naz does seem to care about Kou on some level beyond the taste of his blood, it seems. But oversold or not, I have no doubt that boredom is among a vampire’s greatest enemies. Again, that’s the other side of embracing the night – the side you see once the romance of it starts to wane.

Having failed to settle his mind with Nazuna, Kou turns to Anko. But her motives are if anything more opaque than Naz’. Maybe she’s legit concerned for Kou as a child in danger. Perhaps she really does want a forbidden fruit fling with him. Or maybe she just likes emotionally manipulating people. But he can’t see the world of vampires in black and white like she does, because they’ve become people to him now. For Kou the question of whether he really wants to become one is separate from the matter of whether he believes they should all be killed – on that matter he feels the certainty of a teenager with a teenager’s worldview.

Anko calling the cops on Kou is certainly a game-changer, plot-wise. It means the status quo is no longer viable and forces Kou to make a decision on what he really wants. For the moment he goes into hiding – and it’s interesting that it’s Hatsuka who shows up at that moment. Hatsuka is the one vamp from that rooftop affair that’s remained an undropped shoe, their role in the story still undefined. I don’t know what that role is, but I’d encourage you to listen carefully to Hatsuka’s brief dialogue at the end of the episode. I had an inkling about the character that may just have been confirmed in those final moments.

9 Comments

  1. There’s a lot to chew over these past few episodes. Like the old “immortality is all very well but it’s so damned boring” thing – I guess it all comes down to whether you’d rather be bored or dead. And did Anko really call the cops or was it a bluff? Then finally Hatsuka, bokukko or otokonoko? Hopefully two of these things will be resolved next week.

    My only concern with this show is one of balance. It starts off as SoL, but that’s not really the main focus later on. So the question is whether there was too much scene-setting before heading into the real subject-matter. A 2 cours series wouldn’t have this problem, but just in terms of a teaser for the manga, it might still work very well.

    Angelus
    1. The focus of Call of the Night (Yofukashi no Uta) was never simply on Slice of Life. It’s a collection of genre tags switching from one to the next when it’s felt necessary. Here are the tags according the manga: “Comedy, Psychological, Romance, Shounen, Slice of Life, Supernatural”.

      Not to mention that the manga is still ongoing. There are currently 142 chapters.

      BlackBriar
      1. I’m not talking about the manga but the anime. I am reading the manga too so I’m aware of how it’s structured, but constantly switching genres is a problem if you just take a small chunk of it effectively out of context, which is what the anime is forced to do.

        OK, there’s one more episode to go so we can’t be completely sure how and where they’ll end it (just pray it’s not anime-original), but right now it just feels unbalanced. OK, so it’s nowhere near as bad as if had started out like Ms. Vampire Who Lives in My Neighborhood and then after 10 episodes turned into Vampire Hunter D, but that’s kind of the thing I’m getting at.

        Angelus
        1. Look you don’t have to watch it if you dint like it. Frankly I see it as build up. The darker nature of Vamps was hinted at when the camp girls debut and now it will be further explored. With the way S1 is going there is definitely going to be a part 2. Also its an adaptation so of course it will make changes and be slightly different from the manga. Sounds like you are just nitpicking

          Zemo x2
          1. You know, it is possible to really like something without having to think that it’s perfect in every way.

            Anime adaptations always have to make compromises, the question each time is whether those were the right compromises. And as I said, this isn’t an easy manga to make a coherent single season from so I’m willing to wait until the final episode before coming to a conclusion on that.

            Season 2? I’ll be happy as the next person if it gets one but I’ll also be quite surprised. I guess it will depend on how the manga sales have been going as I don’t think the very poor BD sales will swing it on their own.

            Angelus
  2. I am afraid of Anko-san the vampire slayer now more than of vampires themselves.
    Sure, they might kill you if they find you a danger for their nightly life, but Detective is a fanatic trying to kill all vampires. I wonder what is her side of the story… Someone close to her got killed by vampire, or turned into one? Friend, lover or family?
    One thing I like about the show is that pretty much as Yamori-kun , we are in the dark about all things vampiric, and we learn as we go.
    I think Kou is definitely destined to be vampire – or die trying. Anyone half-hearted would be already running scared for safety of the home and day life (illusionary as it may be). He instead invites Nazuna home, act that is symbolic as in many legends Vampire cant enter it without invite.
    As for the source of the all Kou-kun dossier Anko had on him it is pretty obvoius, she grilled Mahiru (and maybe, offscreen, Akira too) about Yamori-kun and his life. Hacking his phone would be plausible too if she works for some vampire-hunting organization, If she’s lone hunter , it is much less likely.
    That aside, comedy is good side dish to all the vampire drama. Anko teasing mercilessly Kou, Nazuna looking in vain for the porn stash that is not there, and busty lady flirting with the bous made my… night.

    ewok40k
      1. With the existence of vampires, humans are simply being subjected to the same treatment they give the creatures they prey on that’s lower on the food chain. It provokes the hypocritical image of not being able to take what one dishes out.

        BlackBriar

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