I’ve been continuing to watch Clannad, and I’m thoroughly enamoured with it. I haven’t yet finished it, though I am pretty sure how it’s going to end and I am also pretty sure that if it follows the path I think it’s going to follow it’s going to be very, very sad in the way I perversely enjoy so much.
Mild spoilers ahead?
One of the things that has struck me throughout is how quietly weird it is. For the most part, it’s your usual sort of slice-of-life story complete with all the clichés that usually involves — someone trying to resurrect a long-dead school club; a harem of female characters who each initially seem to encapsulate one main defining factor but later reveal themselves to have hidden depths and/or dark pasts; a protagonist who is down on his luck but inspired to become a better person by said group of girls.
But then it goes and throws a few curveballs along the way, the first of which is the character Fuko, whose physical presence and relationship with the other characters is seemingly impossible due to the fact that she’s really lying in hospital in a coma. After her particular story arc is finished, she disappears, not only from regularly appearing in episodes but from the characters’ memories, too — though every so often she shows up for a brief cameo in a future episode, usually in some botched attempt to make a difficult situation better. Since I haven’t finished watching the series as a whole yet, I don’t know if the deal with Fuko is truly and conclusively explained, or if it’s left somewhat open to interpretation. I’d be fine with either, actually, though at my current point 18 episodes deep into the complete run, I’m torn between a few theories.
Then there’s the character Kotomi, who initially appears to be the resident socially-inept “weird genius” character, but whom it transpires has some forgotten history with the protagonist. Not only that, but her parents were supposedly researching some sort of theory about when the universe was created, a tiny dimension was sealed away. I don’t know if that gets resolved, either.
And then there’s the occasional cuts to “the girl who lives alone in a world that has ended” with her mechanical companion. These sequences are almost Nier-like in their bleakness, and at present I have no idea how they fit into the narrative as a whole.
I’m absolutely and completely intrigued by what’s going on, though. Someone is clearly going to die at some point, or perhaps they’re already dead. There’s a feeling of “fever dream” about the whole thing, where it’s not quite all making sense yet, but I feel I’m getting closer to the truth.
In other words, I’m very much looking forward to seeing how the whole thing plays out — and it’s pretty much a given that I’ll be checking out Clannad After Story once I’m done, too. Expect some more spoileriffic thoughts when I’ve made it through the whole lot.
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