Well, the scanlation is up.
Okay, the fight was wrapped up really well. There's not much to say about that. It kept the same level of intensity as the last several chapters. And seeing the blob get eaten by the Gate was worth it.
I still think Roy getting his sight back cheapens it. That wasn't the only option. But at least she did it in a way that makes sense; his eyes weren't healed, the implication was that he actually went back to the Gate and used the Stone as the toll to get them back. But it still annoys me.
At least Al and Ed didn't settle down right away. I'm glad she showed them preparing to travel around and learn.
The Ed/Winry stuff... I'm not upset that it happened. I knew it was coming I'd resigned myself to it. And Ed's way of 'proposing' was actually pretty Ed-like and cute. But there are still some things that bug me:
Winry was always Ed's equal. She was never one to submit or back down. To the point of being, eh, kinda abusive, but the point is that they've always been on a pretty even footing. But now we get this:

A condescending pat on the head, and her hiding in his arms like a little girl. If I was an Ed/Win shipper I'd be pissed (I'm pissed anyway), because the dynamic of their relationship was just ruined within a handful of panels.
But that's not the end of it. In the photos at the end, we don't get to see how Ed and Winry are getting on some years down the road. We get this:

Hohenheim and Trisha, take 2.
The picture itself is not the problem (I can see them doing that to honor Ed's parents), it's the fact that it's all we get. Way to honor the characters, turn them into clones of the previous generation. It's particularly insulting to Winry; at least Ed looks like himself. Did Winry really have to be wearing Trisha's hairstyle?? Let her be her own person!
I can mostly live with this ending. We knew we - 'we' being the yaoi fans - would have to rewrite things to some extent anyway, so that's irrelevant. But Roy getting his sight back doesn't sit well, and Ed and Winry's relationship went from boring to disturbing. It's aggravating.
Beyond that, there's always going to be a let-down when something ends, especially something that's been going on as long as this. May we all continue to find solace in fandom!
Okay, the fight was wrapped up really well. There's not much to say about that. It kept the same level of intensity as the last several chapters. And seeing the blob get eaten by the Gate was worth it.
I still think Roy getting his sight back cheapens it. That wasn't the only option. But at least she did it in a way that makes sense; his eyes weren't healed, the implication was that he actually went back to the Gate and used the Stone as the toll to get them back. But it still annoys me.
At least Al and Ed didn't settle down right away. I'm glad she showed them preparing to travel around and learn.
The Ed/Winry stuff... I'm not upset that it happened. I knew it was coming I'd resigned myself to it. And Ed's way of 'proposing' was actually pretty Ed-like and cute. But there are still some things that bug me:
Winry was always Ed's equal. She was never one to submit or back down. To the point of being, eh, kinda abusive, but the point is that they've always been on a pretty even footing. But now we get this:
A condescending pat on the head, and her hiding in his arms like a little girl. If I was an Ed/Win shipper I'd be pissed (I'm pissed anyway), because the dynamic of their relationship was just ruined within a handful of panels.
But that's not the end of it. In the photos at the end, we don't get to see how Ed and Winry are getting on some years down the road. We get this:
Hohenheim and Trisha, take 2.
The picture itself is not the problem (I can see them doing that to honor Ed's parents), it's the fact that it's all we get. Way to honor the characters, turn them into clones of the previous generation. It's particularly insulting to Winry; at least Ed looks like himself. Did Winry really have to be wearing Trisha's hairstyle?? Let her be her own person!
I can mostly live with this ending. We knew we - 'we' being the yaoi fans - would have to rewrite things to some extent anyway, so that's irrelevant. But Roy getting his sight back doesn't sit well, and Ed and Winry's relationship went from boring to disturbing. It's aggravating.
Beyond that, there's always going to be a let-down when something ends, especially something that's been going on as long as this. May we all continue to find solace in fandom!
no subject
Date: 2010-06-10 10:19 pm (UTC)Basically my only thought, reading your comments, was nodding in agreement to your opinions and going "well what did you expect?" when you expressed displeasure with the way Ed and Winry's relationship went.
The fact that Ed and Winry are drawn to look like clones of Hoho and Trisha is absolutely unsurprising - it's a major trope in anime and manga, children always end up doing exactly what their parents did, or inheriting qualities in a really unrealistic way. It's both a way to "close" a story and a symptom of the Japanese belief that children will/should grow up to be just like their parents, fill the same social niche, do the same job, work for the same company, go to the same schools etc. It's a mindset that prizes the social group over the individual, and it shows up constantly in almost any story where families are present.
I do think it's a trope in animation and comics in general to show children in a similar situation to the parents when it's a story that's followed their whole lives, but in Japanese media I tend to find that it's more pervasive and doesn't just include an iconic image to show that the story has come full circle, but often times a literal implication that EVERYTHING is the same. I guess for the Japanese audience it's a "feel-good" ending, because it shows that the troubled protagonist(s) have taken their place in the circle of life, blah blah blah, they have found true happiness by settling down, becoming a useful member of society by having a family and doing exactly what their parents did!
Just a couple of examples off the top of my head:
- Kaitou Kid from Detective Conan has character relationships with others in the series that are identical to the relationships that all of their parents had, when they were young. And all of the children are filling the same roles that their parents filled.
- Prince of Tennis has Ryoma spending an entire (extremely lengthy series) trying to not be like his dad.........except he's just like his dad anyway.
- Fruits Basket makes a big deal about Yuki becoming student body president because Ayame was student body president. Yuki doesn't want to do it but eventually he gives up and accepts it, more or less.
- Lupin the Third obviously does exactly the same things his grandfather and father did, and almost every other recurring character in the series is also a descendant of someone famous that they are doing the exact same thing as, too. And in the aborted series Lupin the Eighth that never got past a pilot episode, the descendants of Lupin and everyone else from the show continued to do exactly what all their ancestors did (only IN SPACE!)
- CLAMP's Man of Many Faces shows Akira as a kid who absolutely hates stealing, but is forced to follow in his catburglar dad's footsteps, and end up in a relationship with a girl that's similar to his moms (he has two mothers, don't ask).
There are more examples but I can't think of them right this moment...
Why is this trope so prevelant in stories about kaitous? I have no idea...though I think possibly they're all paying homage to Lupin ...but it doesn't change the fact that the authors all seem to think this is a GREAT idea and is the best, nicest way to wrap up their story.
no subject
Date: 2010-06-11 03:46 am (UTC)