Being the blog of one Audie Thacker, who is, amongst other disreputable things, a writer.
Wednesday, May 30, 2018
Thursday, May 24, 2018
review: Violet Evergarden
A
couple of years ago, we anime geeks started seeing a trailer for an
upcoming series called Violet Evergarden, and though this trailer was
only a half-minute long, there was more than enough in it to catch
our interest, as it hinted at a very moving story with art and
animation quality usually reserved for anime movies. More news and a
few more trailers slowly came our way, until, earlier this year, that
series was released.
Summary
After
years of war, the people of Leidenshaftlich are ready for peace. In
this post-war time, many educated young women want to begin work as
Auto Memory Dolls, people who can type and take dictation, even
writing personal letters, for their clients.
Having
known little except war and life in the military, Violet Evergarden
finds her new peaceful life to be difficult and confusing. But
instead of retreating from society, she chooses instead to train to
work as a Doll, and as time passes and she meets more and more
people, she learns to understand them and the things they really want
to communicate.
The
series has a very episodic feel to it, especially in the middle of
the season, as most of the episodes are like vignettes of Violet
traveling to a certain location so she can type for her company's
clients. Her job often involves writing letters, but there are other
writing assignments, too, such as when she is hired to help a
playwright finish his most recent work. But there is also an overall
story, much of it involving her desire to understand the last thing
her former commanding officer, Major Gilbert Bougainvillea, said to
her during the war's last battler, before he went missing and she was
hospitalized and had to be given artificial arms and hands.
Emotional
Devastation
My
summary of the series may have seemed a bit dry, so let's get this
one great truth about it stated now: if you're the type of person who
likes stories that shred your heart into a million sobbing pieces,
Violet Evergarden is very much the show you have been waiting for and
training for. It's the series you deserve, and the one you need right
now.
No,
I'm not exaggerating one bit.
Storytellers
like to think that our stories can accomplish many things, including
being emotionally moving when it comes time for it. This really
isn't an easy thing to do, though.
Getting
a reader to care for a character is tricky business. Some stories
I've come on seem to act on an assumption that, if a character is
crying, then that's suppose to mean that the reader or viewer will
find that scene very moving. Maybe I'm rather hard-hearted as a
reader or viewer, but I usually don't find that kind of thing very
moving. It feels less like the storyteller is inviting me to care for
these characters, as that they are kinda trying to wring my neck
while shouting at me “You will care about this character!”
One
thing that makes it even trickier in Violet Evergarden is that in
many episodes it is the people Violet is sent to write for, people
who usually appear for just one episode, who are the main emotional
focus of the story at that time. Yet the story is able to pull this
off very well, while also giving the viewer glimpses of how being
around these people is affecting Violet herself, as her personality
becomes less distant and mechanical and more able to feel along with
the people around her.
Even
outside of enjoying and appreciating the series, one could learn a
thing or two about emotions and storytelling from this series. After,
of course, you've recovered from the emotional devastation this
series will cause you.
Whatever
Happened To...
I
can't help but consider it a very bad sign that many of the anime
that I watch take the concept of sin even more seriously than far too
many places that are called churches. Violet Evergarden is one of
those series.
When
she was in the military, Violet was essentially a killing machine,
feared by the enemy, but also by those on her own side, too. In the
second half of the series, Violet begins to deal with the things
she'd done as a soldier, the many lives she'd taken, and how those
actions have affected her, even in ways she had not previously been
aware of.
But
it is here that the story's main weakness also shows up. All the hope
that she can be given is that her work as a Doll, the things she's
written for other people that have been helpful to them and to the
people they've written to, is also important,that it will be
remembered, too.
The
weakness of this view should be made plain: who has decided how many
good works we must do to make up for any one bad deed we have done?
If Violet writes 100 letters, will that make up for 1 person she
killed as a soldier? Will she need to write fewer letters than that,
or, most likely, many, many more to pay for that 1 life? And what
about all the others she either killed herself, or had a part in
killing?
(I
don't want to get sidetracked, but maybe a bit of something should be
said here. I do not think that a soldier killing another soldier in
combat is a violation of the command to not murder. Even after God
gave Israel that command, they will fought wars, and their warriors
still killed the warriors of their enemies, and even did so a God's
command.)
But
even if we could somehow do enough good deeds to make up for one sin,
what about all the sins we commit, even the innumerable ones we
committed while we were doing all those good deeds? The truth is, as
the Bible rightly says, even the works we consider righteous deeds
are no better than soiled rags.
Though
to some degree Violet Evergarden takes sin seriously, it still does
not take it seriously enough. Perhaps the thing it misses most is the
question, if we have sinned, who have we sinned against, whose laws
have we violated?
It
is here that a church that takes sin seriously can also offer a real
hope, a serious hope. It can point at each of us and say, “Yes, you
have sinned, you have broken God's laws”, and it can also point to
the cross and say, “Here is God's response to your sins, the
sacrificial death of his son Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your
sins, forgiveness He gives to those who repent and believe the good
news of Christ's death for them.”
Conclusion
If
you've read all that, what are you waiting for! Go get whatever you
need for those times when a story hurts your heart, get double for
when you reach episode 10 (no, I'm not exaggerating, you'll need
double for this episode), then go watch this series!
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