Let’s Watch OSHI NO KO Episode 4 – “Actors”

Let’s Watch is a weekly recap column where I follow an anime for the course of its entire runtime. Expect spoilers!


In with an out with a bang. If you’ll remember the closing minutes of last week’s episode, Aqua promised to make his performance in the final episode of Sweet Today count. And, implicitly, that was the show also promising to dazzle us. So, the question of how exactly it goes is what’s on our minds as we enter this week’s episode, and rain drips in to the leaky, abandoned warehouse that serves as the site of the shoot.

As we open, we actually lead with Kana’s side of things. A quick recap of her whole situation; former child prodigy-actor, now the subject of waning public interest, is given the lead role in a crappy live action miniseries adaptation of a beloved shoujo manga. She’s desperately trying to make her co-stars look decent in spite of their own lack of acting chops and nearly everything else about the series. This is something she cares about, she wants to be back in the spotlight and she wants to make a good show from this manga that, we learn, she loves too. It is just not happening; in particular her co-lead, played by the character Melt [Seiji Maeda], is an absolute cardboard cutout. She is getting nothing off of him, so she can’t give anything back.

This is when Aqua steps in. Improvising basically anything in a scripted performance—be it film, TV, whatever—is usually quite a bad idea. But Aqua does it anyway, in an admirable show of sheer audacity. He really leans into his role as the villain within Sweet Today, here, playing his character with an appropriate amount of sleazy grime and even deliberately antagonizing Melt just out of earshot of the camera.

Right or wrong, Melt’s sudden burst of emotion in response gives Kana something to actually play off of, and suddenly the child prodigy who can cry on command is back. Some of the show’s staff are a little annoyed (honestly, they’re not wrong to be, this isn’t the sort of thing one should try at home), but the series’ director isn’t, so it stays in, despite the alterations to the program it ends up necessitating. The staff aren’t the only people who’re charmed; this is the last shot of Kana while she’s being filmed that we get. Look at that blush!

Another group of people are grateful for the step up in Sweet Today‘s finale; the actual manga staff themselves. Not the least of which is the series’ actual mangaka. There is some palpable irony in the discussion she has with her assistants—about how manga artists often tell each other to keep their expectations in check when it comes to adaptations—being had in an adaptation of a manga. And indeed, the necessities of the format curtail a bit of the emotional punch. Still, it’s an effective scene, and we learn that the Sweet Today miniseries develops a small cult following on the internet off the basis of its strong final episode. (Previously mediocre shows suddenly and inexplicably becoming a lot better happens in anime, too, although it’s rare.) The mangaka ends up actually thanking Kana specifically during the show’s wrap party.

That party is also where we get our next plot thread. Kaburagi, who you’ll remember is the show’s producer and one of the many people on Aqua’s suspect list, ends up talking to him about Ai after casually remarking that they look rather similar. Aqua, who’s already crossed Kaburagi off the suspects list, presses him about how he knew Ai in the first place. Assuming Aqua to be more of a simple stan than anything else, he offers to trade a piece of little-known gossip for something; an appearance on a reality TV show that he’s the producer on.

We don’t get to see that just yet. The episode’s final third actually revolves around Aqua and Ruby’s new high school, a performing arts academy where Kana is their senior. Here we split off and mostly follow Ruby for a while. This is good, because it lets us get, say, her impressively bisexual reaction to entering her class for the first time.

She also makes a friend in the form of effusively pink gravure model with a fake Kansai accent Kotobuki Minami [Hina Youmiya]. In general, Ruby’s side of Oshi no Ko will tend toward the light and comedic for a good bit yet. She is very much the secondary protagonist after her brother, although this does mean we get to see more of her silly wild takes when something funny happens.

We also meet Shiranui Frill [Asami Seto] here. Regarded in-universe as a top entertainer even in high school, Frill mostly serves as the indirect conduit for the other upcoming plot line. (And as fanservice for Kaguya-sama: Love is War! fans. She’s the younger sister of minor character Shiranui Koromo.)

Ruby, a huge fan of Frill’s, feels insecure about not having a job in the industry yet. This leads to her pressuring Miyako to get her idol group together more quickly, but just as Miyako retorts that unaffiliated showbiz-grade cute girls are in short supply in Japan—precisely because of things like idol auditions—Aqua pipes up that he might know somebody who’s looking for an opportunity.

Namely, Kana.

Once again, though, that’s a development for next week, as the episode cuts there.

Until then, anime fans!


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Let’s Watch TAKT OP.DESTINY: Episode 4

Let’s Watch is a weekly recap column where I follow an anime for the course of its entire runtime. Expect spoilers!


It starts out so simply! “Let the Performance Begin -Showtime-“, takt op.Destiny‘s fourth episode, opens with Takt and Destiny engaging in a little bit of training under Lenny’s guidance. It’s a great little demonstration of the kind of thrilling combat animation that takt op seems to be able to just summon with a casual flick of the wrist. Laser fire bounces off of scenery like rubber, a D2 is whacked to pieces like a busted action figure.

The usual. Eventually, this builds into what is probably takt op‘s most natural episode since its premiere. Perhaps “natural” is a funny word to use to describe an anime, but the focus here, at least with regard to Takt and Destiny, is the pair learning to fight like duet partners. And, on a less literal level, learning to find meaning in their new calling as protectors of the weak.

But first; we were promised a trip to Vegas last week. When our heroes roll into the town itself, it initially seems like we’ve been misled. Most of Las Vegas as we know it today is, here, abandoned, and a majority of the population survives by farming in fields outside the ruins. Our brief tour around the Vegas fields here is charming, but it quickly becomes clear that not everything is above-board. Most viewers will start to get the impression that something’s amiss with the introduction of Mr. Lang, a man wearing a decidedly not-farmer-ish suit and escorted at all times by a pair of armed bodyguards. When he’s introduced as the land’s “owner”, one need to connect only a few dots to intuit that the man is, at best, an exploitative landlord.

Before that particular thread can be tied up, though, we should also touch on Leonard’s interactions with Takt, here. We’ve only known Leonard for a little while, but he fills the role of the somewhat-cryptic (but seemingly, largely good-natured) mentor well. He and Takt discuss the meaning of music itself in one of “-Showtime-“‘s quieter scenes. Leonard espouses that music is a bringer of joy and a figurative guiding light. He argues that this is true even if the music itself can only come into existence through pain or loss, a fair enough idea. Less scrupulously, he also uses this concept to defend the Symphonica’s policy of not necessarily telling endangered populations that D2s may be nearby. The reasoning is sound, if cynical; fear saps peoples’ motivation, and that isn’t something that can be afforded when the world is just starting to get back on its feet. That, and they can’t really do anything to defend themselves without a Conductor around anyway. (Perhaps tellingly, Leonard doesn’t say that last part himself. It’s Takt who picks up the ball there.)

Leonard is an interesting and somewhat ambiguous figure, and his driving the episode’s plot doesn’t end here. It’s he and Titan who take the initiative into investigating Mr. Lang, uncovering a secret casino–a remnant of old Las Vegas in both physical form and spirit–without much effort. And while Takt, Destiny, and Anna eventually make their way to this place, too, it’s Leonard who gets in without a fight. When Destiny eventually drags Takt and Anna there, it’s because she’s following “vibrations” under the ground, and she’s more than happy to kick the living daylights out of Lang’s security guards to get in.

Of course, the inevitable eventually happens and Mr. Lang’s underground gambling den is promptly invaded by freaky spiked beetle-gorilla D2s, who bust in through the floor and bounce around the place like Sonic The Hedgehog in a casino level’s pinball table. Leonard gives Takt a sort of live-fire exercise here, and it’s over the course of this sequence where he and Destiny finally learn to “play” together like a proper pair of musicians should. Because this is takt op, that entails kicking a lot of monster ass. And indeed, much of it is kicked over the course of these few minutes. It’s the kind of scene that makes you want to break out old-timey adjectives like “rollicking” and “rip-roaring.” The show’s just fun to watch, OK?

After all this, we bid goodbye to Lenny here, with him shaking Takt’s hand Conductor to Conductor as he wishes our protagonist well. Their own business in Vegas taken care of, Leonard and Titan ride off into the sunset. I suspect we’ll be seeing them again. Oh, and if you’re worried about Mr. Lang, don’t be. Titan rounds him up in the episode’s closing minutes. What exactly happens to him is left to our imagination, but aside from confirming that yes, he was stealing money from the farmers to fund his bougie casinoland fantasies. This sequence also proves that Titan can be quite scary when she puts her mind to it! I really do hope we see more of her.

“This shot is mostly just to remind you that I’m not human and also carry a firearm.”

This episode lays some groundwork for future ones, certainly, but more importantly than that it’s the kind of engaging fun that you (or at least, I) look for in a series like this. It’s a nice reprieve after the rather serious nature of the last two episodes without being so lightweight that it feels inconsequential. This is what you want out of a traveler story series, and I hope many more episodes like this are to come.

Until next week, anime fans.


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All views expressed on Magic Planet Anime are solely my own opinions and conclusions and should not be taken to reflect the opinions of any other persons, groups, or organizations. All text, excepting direct quotations, is owned by Magic Planet Anime. Do not duplicate without permission. All images are owned by their original copyright holders.