Bungou Stray Dogs: Dead Apple

This movie is a waste of time.

This is coming from someone who absolutely adores the Bungou Stray Dogs series. Needless to say, Takuya Igarashi might as well be my pallbearer so that when I die, he can let me down one last time.

I’ll start with some positives–the animation was pretty good (although that’s to be expected for a feature length anime film), the voice actors did their jobs well, the music, while not exactly noteworthy, was decent, and there were a few interesting elements and events relating to the protagonist that I found to be genuinely interesting. The film, however, puts them to waste with

a confusing plot, a seizure inducing climax, and probably the dumbest and most contrived antagonist to come out of BSD.

The story is about a series of (presumed to be) suicides by ability users using their own abilities. The reality is that a fog causes their abilities to manifest into this ghost of sorts that attacks their own user. Defeating this manifestation will return the original user’s ability. This isn’t a bad plot device in it of itself, if only it were an actual plot device at all. Instead, this predicament (which is made out to be this serious and daunting problem) serves as a mere triviality as the heroes of the movie take care of it in a matter of a few minutes, save for the main protagonist, which I’ll get to later.

The cause of this entire conflict is the new character that is introduced, Shibusawa Tatsuhiko. BSD’s strongest point is easily the lovable and empathy inducing characters. Kafka Asagiri lovingly crafted the entire life stories of each and every single character, and it shows without even needing a tragic flashback for most of them, even making a literal PEDOPHILE likable. The fact that no character, not even the villains, are tied to the good and evil binary is one of my favorite things about the series. That said, the new villain is absolutely dreadful. His motives are unclear–he wants to die? He wants to attain the perfect ability? What in God’s name does he want?! The movie shoves down your throat that this character is simply too complex a person to understand and that only two other people (Dazai <3333 and Fyodor) match his wit, but from a writing standpoint, it sounds like a poor excuse. If the audience is unable to fathom the sheer complexity of a character, there’s no point in having him be that complex in the first place. You cannot write a complex character if you yourself are not that complex. It’s simply impossible. It’s not artistic or poetic or thought provoking. It’s just plain stupid.

By the climax, the movie had completely lost me. With all the information being thrown at your face, it’s damn near impossible to piece together what the hell is going on, much less enjoy it. The movie’s lack of exposition only makes the confusion worse–none of what happens is ever explained, and none of the information from the main series explains it either. The entire time, I was thinking, “Why and how is this happening? Is that even possible?” The film tries to surprise you by pulling a completely unnecessary move (for the sake of not spoiling, I won’t say what) that leads to no consequence whatsoever and was so obviously only included for shock value, and it didn’t even do a good job because it’s a freaking anime movie, and nothing that happens in anime movies ever matter or affect the main series. The final battle against Shibusawa wasn’t anything interesting either; just a generic shounen mindless punchout where Atsushi believes in himself enough to defeat him.

Speaking of Atsushi, his character arc was very poorly handled in the film. The anime watchers know all too well of the tragic past he’s had to endure and carefully watched him move past his insecurities. So that’s it right? No more of him screeching about how he isn’t good enough? Nope! The movie needlessly brings back what was already resolved in the anime by making Atsushi 90% less sweet and lovable and 200% more annoying. I cannot wrap my head around why the hell they would touch this internal conflict when it was so phenomenally handled in the manga. As a matter of fact, this was a common complaint of the original anime, that Atsushi was a whiner, so why, dear God WHY would you bring it back??

And lastly, the little to no screentime from the supporting cast. They were discarded as quickly as they were introduced. I would’ve liked to see more of them working together for more group dynamic material like in the manga, but they were never to be seen again after the fog settled and at the very end where they pop out of nowhere to remind the audience of their existence.

All in all, disappointing. I’m honestly surprised at how many stellar reviews there are for this movie when picking apart would show how bad and rushed it really is. It’s a shame, I was hoping they’d put the money towards a third season.

Reviewer’s Rating:

3

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