Welcome to Guest Review Wednesday on Okazu! Today’s review is a gift to me as much as to you. ^_^ I was thinking about watching this anime on Netflix when Christian said he had just watched it and needless to say, I was delighted to invite him to bring us all this review! Please welcome Chris back once again, and thank him for taking one for the team. ^_^ The floor is yours, Chris!
When I first read the description for High-Rise Invasion on Netflix (based on the manga Tenkuu Shinpan by Tsuina Miura and Takahiro Oba), I wrote it off as silly, violent edgelord fare, along the lines of what I thought those Purge movies must be like. Fortunately, I gave those movies a chance and found a suspenseful string of films that turn a critical eye on society, capitalism and marginalisation, with a cynical view of where Americaās current darker impulses are leading it. Unfortunately, I also watched all 12 episodes of High-Rise Invasion.
Well, I say that, but Iām honestly of two minds about this show. The first time I watched it, I could practically hear the writers coming up with the plot: āWouldnāt it be fuXXed if you got transported to this alternate realm where you have to go from high-rise to high-rise across rope bridges, and thereās brainwashed people in smiley-face masks trying to kill you by making it so youāll throw yourself off the buildings, because thatās the only way down to the ground anyway, and if the masks get damaged then they have to kill themselves, and thereās all different ones so thereās like a butcher Mask, and a baseball player Mask, masked everything right, and thereās like a ton of blood whenever anyone dies, and it turns out this is all a way to create God, like how fuXXed would that be.ā (dramatic pause while writer takes a long drag off a smoke to let these ideas sink in)
I mentioned to Erica that I watched it because Iād heard the main characters described as Yuri and wanted to find out for myself, and before I knew what happened Iād agreed to write a review for her. I hadnāt taken any notes the first time around, so I watched it all again and, while Iām not proud to admit this, I started to enjoy it.
To start with: is this a Yuri anime? Well, the high-school aged main characterās name is Yuri Honjo, so thereās that. Yuri quickly meets high-schooler Mayuko Nise, and unsuccessfully tries to stop her from stabbing an innocent man in the throat. After their little meet-cute, Mayuko becomes ride-or-die for Yuri, blushing and looking away whenever Yuri does something cool, gives her a compliment, hugs her, flashes her panties, bathes or changes in front of her, kisses her while sheās unconscious and struggling for her life, etc. You know, the same way we all secretly showed our feelings for that girl we liked back in high school; for her part, Yuri pretty much feels the same way about Mayuko.
Is this a Yuri romance? Definitely not. This is grindhouse action/suspense through and through, but that doesnāt mean it canāt also be Yuri, of course, and whether it qualifies or not. depends on your own feelings. Mayuko blushes her heart out at Yuri constantly, but it never goes beyond hand-holding, even though they are intimately acquainted enough that Mayuko can recognize her crush by just a quick glimpse of her posterior (which actually happens more than once). Mayukoās first love, however, is stabbing people in the throat. If thereās ever a second season weāll see if she has to choose between her two devotions, but for now, weāll see her face redden either from sweet emotion, or other peoplesā sweet, sweet neck blood. (And to be fair, this is a Shounen anime, which means that the straights donāt get any further than getting exaggeratedly flustered and denying any interest in each other.)
So whatās this all about again, anyway? Well, Yuriās main goal is to find her brother, whoās also trapped here. Mayukoās goal is to help Yuri find her brother (and, on a personal level, stab so many throats). Kuon Shinzaki has pink and blue hair, and an app on her phone that lets her use a giant building to shoot down other buildings; she wants to become God so she can bring peace to this realm. She also has a crush on Sniper Mask, an amnesiac, self-aware Mask whose goal is to recover his memories.
Aside from that, the show tends to abandon plot points, theories and objectives almost as soon as theyāre thought up. Yuri rebelliously declares to Mayuko early on āIām not going to kill any humans. I refuse to follow this worldās rules.ā A minute later and sheās enthusiastically doing her best to shoot down a helicopter with just her handgun, and sheās unloaded a full clip into an assailant ten minutes later (before he commits suicide by biting off his own tongue, naturally.)
Various exposition-dumps throughout the show explain the different types of masks and how their programming bestows powers/constraints on the wearers. There is a consistent, if convoluted, logic to the masks, but the rapidly-shifting goals and theories the main characters have obfuscate this logic, making it feel inconsistent initially. Still, trying to puzzle out these mysteries helps hold the viewersā interest in between gory fights with the Masks (or Angels, as the antagonists refer to themselves…Angels to some, Masks to others, I guess).
Trigger warnings? This show has geysers of blood, flying eyeballs, severed fingers and limbs, decapitations, and crazy amounts of stabbing and shooting. The violence in the show doesnāt bother me all that much because itās expected for the genre, and even gleeful in its execution. Thereās a ton of violence, but very little of it feels truly horrific; itās all in good fun.
On a sexual note, however, Yuri is forced to strip at sword-point for a rogue cop (ACAB) in the first episode, but sheās managed to set his corpse on fire before things go much further. Happily, I donāt remember any further sexual threats to anyone after this.
Is this show dumb? Oh, it is so dumb. Yuriās brother tells her over the phone that she should immediately murder her new friend Mayuko, because āIn this world, there are no such things as allies.ā (This very same brother is shown leading his own litter of new pals minutes later.) Sniper Maskās main personality trait is smoking and looking cool in his stylish suit, and is so good at shooting guns that he can shoot a knife on the ground forcing the bullet to ricochet 90 degrees towards a target hiding around a corner. Yuri happily hands a firearm to a small child because heās excited and would really like to see it. Mayukoās shirt gets ripped open in the second episode, and until she replaces it with a slightly darker shirt in episode 11, sheās just walking around with her chest and bra completely exposed. Yuri never fixes the revealing rip in her skirt; characters change their priorities far more often than they change their clothes. Yuri can shoot ballistics out of the sky. Someone says the name of the show out loud. Characters gain new abilities as soon as the plot requires them, and the entire raison d’ĆŖtre is to simply show Masks looking creepy and cool in a wide variety of cosplay and violence. No, seriously; when it looks like one character is about to die, he at least comforts himself with how cool heās going to look.
āTastelessā is probably the best way to describe a show with this much blood, this many panty shots, suggestively-posed corpses, and a villain who calms himself by plunging his face into a Maskās fully-clothed chest (sheās wearing one of those anime suits where the fabric acts like itās painted on, you see).
Iāve given you plenty of reasons not to watch this show, and yet, depending where you find your bliss, Iāve also given you plenty of reasons to watch this show. If youāre in the mood for senseless, bloody violence and youād like to see some ladies being badass and causing most of it for once, and you can dim your brain just to the point where you can buy in and enjoy the spectacle, then you might enjoy the bright, stylized, creepy bloodshed and mystery contained in these 12 episodes.
Ratings
Art ā 6 Thereās a very ābasicā quality, but itās also stylized, and thereās no denying the care that went into animating the many sprays of blood.
Story ā 6 Thereās enough of a plot that it might keep your brain entertained by trying to puzzle out whatās going on, at least.
Character ā 7 Nobodyās too complex, but it can be a joy watching Yuri flip her internal ācold as hell badassā switch when she goes into action, ambidextrously shooting with both hands.
Yuri ā 3 Thereās a cute scene near the end where, separately, Mayuko and Kuon are each helping Yuri and Sniper Mask dress for battle, both wearing the same blushy, besotted grins as they think the world of their champions. Some viewers may need Yuri goggles to find any representation, but I donāt think youāll need a very strong prescription.
Service ā 8 Panty shots, bras, stripping, bathing, changing, anatomical impossibilities, and skinny-dipping into dream-states (my number refers to quantity, not quality). Conspicuously absent is a ton of boob-jiggle; I suspect the budget for that animation all went towards depicting the copious blood-letting instead.
Overall ā 7 And Iām recommending this to nobody.
Erica here: /standing ovation/ Absolutely splendid review! You may have convinced me to watch it…after all, grindhouse violence, cute blushes and throat stabbing…it reminds me of my youth. /nostalgic sigh/ LOL
One point of order, The manga is released on Shueisha’s Manga Box app, and I’m inclined to think it’s Seinen, with that amount of blood.
Spectacular review, Chris!
The original manga also has almost no romantic development (at least explicit), but it has a lot of sequel hooks and continues through a direct sequel with another MC, so who knows? The only straight ship you can get in this part is MC’s brocon, so I don’t think yuri shipping will have any problems here.
Thanks for your review!
Thanks for commenting! I’m scared of heights, so I’d be too wound up over those rope bridges to even think of romance, were I in any of their shoes XD
I genuinely enjoyed this and didn’t even need my Yuri goggles. it isn’t deep or perfect, but it is popcorn bingable.
Nice! I’m glad you liked it. And I’m glad I gave it a second watch, as I was able to enjoy it more. Thank you for commenting!
Just chipping in to agree – what an excellent review, Christian! May even be one of those reviews more entertaining than what it was reviewing. That said, I suspect I’ll end up watching this when I’m in the mood and in pops up at the right time in my Netflix recs. Atleast it’s good to know this is on the fun side of schlocky!
On the demographic question… yup I just spent an inordinate amount of time looking into this. ^_^’ Kodansha published it under their label KCćć©ććÆć¹ which isn’t much help since that label is pretty much for anything Kodansha can’t fit in under their other labels. As for Manga Box, the series I’m familiar with from there (Love and Lies, Dolly Kill Kill, Spoof on Titan) give a shounen vibe but on the list there’s also a couple more mature looking series with adult protagonists. So my guess is the audience here is roughly the older end of shounen to younger end of seinen.
Thanks so much, Megan! You should really give it a try, if you think it might be fun.
And thank you for that research! I’m always confused by those distinctions, because the show is immature as anything, and that throws me completely off XD I’d say your take is spot on.
Bravo. Standing ovation. I laughed out loud. And I will never, ever, never watch it.
Do more reviews, please.
Aww, thank you, Ivan. I’m glad I watched it, but it’s not for everyone ^_^ And I will do my best! Erica even gave me my own category and everything :)