Episode 9 – The Summer Hikaru Died

©Mokumokuren/kadokawa/Summer hikaru dies
This episode starts with removing the boys’ previous tensions with powerful impurities, only to draw conclusions at more shocking moments. well played. Despite the heavier procedures of this week’s conversation, the narrative continues at a relaxed pace, developing major relationships while revealing more dirty secrets hidden in the village’s past.
I have to apologize to Currebayasi before I am ahead of myself. I’m skeptical of her advice and intentions about Yoshiki, but I feel like I have a better grasp of her right now. Her “husband” had an extra flashback hurting her son, and she still felt introverted, although I also admired the camera and showed us the spirit and cried. Malicious intention is not a prerequisite for causing harm. Kurebayashi verifies that Hikaru is not malicious and that she takes a motherly approach when talking to the two boys through knowledge of impurities. Humans like her always forget about what lightning rods also make her more likable.
Meanwhile, Kurebayashi will definitely be on guard around Hikaru. She stressed that attracting supernatural troubles is merely the essence of Hikaru. He might even have created it for this purpose (I have some theories). Her second sight still sees a sharp contrast between Yoshiki and Hikaru’s nature when she calls them two “good boys”. After Yoshiki left, she pulled Hikaru aside and basically told him not to be too close to Yoshiki. She thinks it is safest for everyone, but she lacks a general view of what Hikaru means to Yoshiki. This may be similar to her relationship with her husband, but she herself admits that Hikaru is a very different creature. He is unique. He was very strange.
Yoshiki, as far as Yoshiki is concerned, thanks more completely to Hikaru’s queerness. We see this with his tribute to the real Hikaru, as he makes quiet destructive views, only he knows to mourn him. This story is able to figure out what you like, and it is one of its most powerful assets. When the present hikaru walked into him, they mirrored the cold openness, and the two young men stood on the grave of hikaru dad. However, this time it was Yoshiki who deflected humorously after Hikaru brought attractiveness to his friends.
I’m in a weird and circuit-to-nose way, and I think Yoshiki’s closedness prompts him to accept Hikaru’s inhumanity. He pointed out directly that he did not want Hikaru to try to be human, he imagined that a future Hikaru could be himself. Some of them are almost certainly projections. Yoshiki’s repressed openly homosexual desire manifests itself as such a supporting role. But if his attraction is not a human male, his internal logic may also believe that he does not have to face homosexuality. In other words, in his mind, the feeling inside his friend’s open and warm flesh hole was essentially not homosexual. Of course, absolutely.
Hikaru’s desire is more like a mystery. They are hard to be sure because he tends to have respect for Yoshiki’s thoughts and opinions. However, we might infer that Hikaru wants to be human or human. He didn’t take over Hikaru’s body, just because a dying boy asked him well and could pose like him. He might want to leave that mountain and blend with the ordinary people, and even though he hadn’t run in his mind at the time, he had grown to enjoy his quotidian life. In fact, he was willing to kill it to save it. Yoshiki can slap these ideas with a full head, but inevitably, Hikaru’s desires are not perfect with Yoshiki’s desires. This will be important when these conflicts occur.
When the boys met the old man Takeda, the episode slowly laughed at the speech and the character jumped suddenly and boiled. An elderly hermit shouts in the protagonist that mysterious omens are the staple food of the town’s horror, and their conversations escalate. Takeda offers more clues to the true nature of Nonuki-sama, calling it “disability” (perhaps Hikaru is the terrible amalgam of countless dead people), and he confirms that the Indian family has a bloody past, and that their current ritual should atone for sin. He was possessed before we got the direct answer, but that was enough information to keep the mysterious gears spinning.
Finally, Tanaka saved a day and carved some meat. I wonder what would happen to his first contact with Hikaru, but I can’t say I hope I’ll be beheaded soon. True to his laid-back character, Tanaka is very ridiculous of the attack, which adds to the surreality of the chart. I was not surprised that this wasn’t enough to kill Hikaru, which didn’t seem to be Tanaka’s intention, but Yoshiki’s presence occupies the scene in emotional reality. After all, he is just a child. The creepy image was tragic and premonition when he held his friend’s head in his hand. hikaru died in summer No intention to make us comfortable soon.
grade:
hikaru died in summer Currently flowing
Netflix.
Disclosure: Kadokawa World Entertainment (KWE), a wholly owned subsidiary of Kadokawa Corporation, is the majority owner of Anime News Network, LLC. One of the companies mentioned in this article is part of the Kadokawa Group.