Archive for August, 2008

Eve no Jikan – I, Infectiously Cute Robot

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008


Martin, being the fine purveyor of all things curious and my uncanny taste-zen-twin, got me interested in the work of Yasuhiro Yoshiura. I’ve seen his previous two works and have a particular affection for Pale Cacoon with its beautiful claustrophobia and gentle melancholy, so I was eager, like Martin, to feast my eyes on his latest animated effort.

It’d be silly to dance around the fact that Eve no Jikan is another success. The animation continues to edge towards realising Yoshiura’s strange vision and particularly here he nails the art of comic timing brilliantly. Everything is so tightly synchronised from the shaky camera angles to the snappy verbal exchanges that you’ll notice one hilarious moment only to miss another ten lines of dialogue from laughing out loud so unexpectedly.

One moment that really stood out for me was the introduction of Akiko, the café Eve no Jikan’s resident ADHD suffering, caffeine-fuelled moe girl. She pops up at protagonist Rikuo’s table and promptly reels off a mass of non sequitur hyperactivity leaving Rikuo and his friend completely dumbfounded. It was specifically the little rolling tap of her fingers at the outburst’s end as she looks eagerly at one boy to the other that had me in stitches. The use of music and sound effects here, too, really accentuated the quick-witted humour of the scene and Eve no Jikan in general makes fantastic use of its audio as well as everything else. I’m not bullshitting when I say this show is a sensory delight. Flowery and a bit purple, yes, but bullshitting, no. The use of light had me salivating over the lush beauty of it all. It’s all just a bit stunning, really.

As Martin says, Eve no Jikan is a much lighter-hearted affair from Yoshiura’s previous work, but there was a few underlying moments of paranoia and sadness that peeked through and caught my attention (being addicted to misery as I am). Rikuo’s terror over the possibility of androids being more sentient than they appeared seemed very palpable and reflected a surprisingly realistic attitude a person might have in that situation. Equally, though, the revelation that Eve no Jikan’s robots can actually feel emotion made their pathos shoot through the roof. Once we meet Nagi in her haven for androids and humans alike, witnessing the subsequent neglect she suffers at her job in Rikuo’s school genuinely stings. Initially the androids appear to be typically mindless drones, best exemplified through Rikuo’s dutiful housemaid, but by the episode’s end we realise these machines are actually emotionally aware and suffering in silence. Nagi’s attempt to forge a unity between the two forms of life with her café only drives home the inhumanity of Eve no Jikan’s ‘living’ people and how cruel their ignorant mistreatment really is.

I thoroughly enjoyed this brief but elegantly formed experience, but was definitely left wanting more. And not just in the it-was-so-good sort of way; many elements that I really wanted to be expanded upon felt left in the dust of its relentless pace. The speed made considering emotional implications of various events difficult, and there were so many that caught my imagination that I was scared to blink in case I missed something new. Of course this makes the show ideal for rewatching, but it’s hard not to imagine how much more satisfying the experience would be if we had a little more time to breathe and take it all in. By the sounds of things this is the first in a series of ‘acts’ so perhaps these intriguing plot threads will be expanded upon in due course. Regardless, Eve no Jikan is a fine achievement both visually and thematically and you’d be a fool not to sacrifice fifteen minutes of your time to enjoy its many delights.