Monday, November 5, 2012

Darker than Black (Season 1)

This series follows the story of BK-201, AKA "the Black Reaper" as he works in Tokyo as a Contractor: an individual with special powers that exists in secret from the public.  BK-201 is referred to as Hei (meaning "Black") by his team.  His mission is to carry out orders passed down by his superiors in the secret organization known as The Syndicate.  On a personal note, Hei is searching for his lost sister, who he was with during a conflict known as Heaven's War, but during the conflict she disappeared.  Also on his team is a fellow Contractor who is forced to live in the body of a Cat, Mao, a young woman, Yin, that exists as a Doll, capable of sending out "Specters" to remotely observe and perform reconnaissance, and their leader, Huang.   As the story unfolds, people from not only Hei's past but people important to other members of his team make appearances.  As things progress, allegiances are challenged, motives questioned, and the painful memories of the past threaten to repeat themselves once again.


To call this series a masterpiece is to insult it by trying to compare it to any other series out there.  When they titled this series, they also provided an appropriate way of describing it. The plot is very dark, with conspiracy, betrayal, and characters familiar to providing and receiving both.  Both the characters and the story are sophisticated and challenge you consistently throughout the series. There are some charming and witty moments to make you have a chuckle, but if you go in looking for humor it won't be as plentiful as other shows.  Normally this would be a bad thing, but with the themes the series runs with, humor would only detract from the overall narrative.  Contractors pay prices for their powers, these can range from drinking a beer to breaking your own fingers.  This adds an element of limitation to these powers, which helps humanize these characters by not allowing them to simply run rampant with their powers.  Another mutation that Contractors and Dolls face is their complete loss of emotion.  This may seem to create an absence of character, but it really comes off as an intentional void by the writers.  To have heartless Contractors and Dolls existing in a world full of heartless people intent on using them makes it seem appropriate.  Furthermore, this ensures that the intentional moments where some emotion leaks out seem significant; as well as make the emotion itself come across that much stronger.  The action in this series is fairly grounded, aside from the powers, providing a lot of martial arts in hand-to-hand combat.

As a protagonist, Hei is obviously central.  As the Black Reaper, he wears a mask to conceal his identity.  As Lee Shenshun, his alias, he wears another mask to hide his identity from the public.  This results in a character that you'll spend half the series trying to figure out, which is a great thing for the story.  Throughout the series, you'll find him surprising you with not only his ability to change his personality in a moment's notice to avoid arousing suspicion, but at how he can even hide his feelings from his own team.  This gives Hei some essential depth, making you wonder which one is the real protagonist: Hei, the desperate brother clinging to the past, Lee, the person trying to just get by, or the notorious Contractor: BK-201, the Black Reaper.  You find moments where these characters cross over into one another, making you further question which one is the one we're watching at the particular moment.  And as the series progresses the story twists and turns, and these characters, as  well as the team, are tested.  But the other characters that appear aren't sideshow attractions, they all offer a lot to the story and give the world even greater depth.  

To conclude, this series goes down as one of my all-time favorites.  The characters are full of both life and death all at the same time with the subtle use of emotion in naturally emotionless characters.  The story is suspenseful and sucks you in from start to finish, and the overall impact of it is like a bittersweet symphony that you're sorry to see end. The ending of this series forces an impossible decision on Hei, forcing him to choose who he is going to be.  The significance of how and why Hei makes this decision, however, is something you will simply have to watch the series to understand and appreciate; because nothing I say could adequately explain why this character and story will go down as remarkable.  "Darker than Black" contains a sense of brutal honesty with its' story and characters that feels right, even if the story itself leaves you aching.  It's exactly that sensation you have after watching the show that helps redefine what "hero" might mean for you.  Like the movie "The Dark Knight," this series will hit you at the core and help redefine what a true hero is and does.

Good:
-Deep, complex story that feels like a puzzle, providing the pieces and challenging you to put it all together.
-Memorable characters that carry a lot of weight and depth to them, adding to the already compelling narrative.
-Powers have limitations, resulting in a more grounded atmosphere to the already exciting action.
-Strong, dark tone, but with enough humor and hope sprinkled in to keep it from feeling needlessly dark for its' own sake.

Bad:
-No impact on my personal rating, but be warned that there is a lot of violence, blood and gore, and the dark vibe to prevent this from being appropriate for all audiences.

Scully Rating: 10 out of 10
Watch "Darker than Black (Season 1)" at: http://www.animefreak.tv/watch/darker-black-online