It’s hard enough to be living in a world surrounded by
monsters that you cannot see, it’s a whole other issue when you get thrown into
that world and be expected to survive. This is exactly what happened to Ken
Kaneki, an average student who loved to read his books and spend his days off
in his head. This would all change though when he is attacked by a woman that
turned out to be a ghoul, creatures that feed on human flesh and prey on human
beings. He is fortunately saved by an unknown presence but in order to survive,
parts of the ghoul were implanted in his body and permanently altered him into
a mix between human and ghoul. After a series of grueling events, we find
Kaneki finally awakening his powers as a ghoul. Viewers saw brief glimpses
of his strength all throughout the first season but Tokyo Ghoul √A starts out with Kaneki’s
powers being unleashed in full upon the world. We see a new, quieter but fierce presence from his
character and I’ve eagerly awaited to see what he is now capable of and what
lies in store. So without any further stalling, let’s dig in.
I am not going to lie, many of the issues that I had with
the first season of Tokyo Ghoul had
stemmed from Ken Kaneki not being an engaging main protagonist. He was a
character that seemed to have great power locked away inside of him but was too
afraid to use it. His character should have gone through the typical
transformation that you see main characters do in order to get stronger but he
never did, he kept getting his butt kicked and whining about it. I do however
understand why he didn’t want to unleash his powers, in order to become more
powerful as a ghoul you need to feed on humans, you need to let go of your
humanity and that wasn’t something Kaneki wanted to do. Now though I have
fallen in love instantly with his character transformation. Kaneki has dawned a
new white haired look and gone all leather on us and it is frankly very epic.
But, it isn’t just the fact that he looks better or even that he can now put up
an actually fight, his character actually has some depth and interest to him
now.
In Tokyo Ghoul √A,
Kaneki is on the opposite side of things and joined forces with the very people
that employed Jason last season and effectively got him kidnapped. Aogiri Tree
is the name of this organization and they’re a group filled with insanely
powerful ghouls (probably could tell in the last episode of season one). His
reasons for joining the group are a little confusing to me, even after watching
the season all the way through it’s still a tough one to nail down. It’s sort
of one of those “I did this to protect you” things that you see people do but
it ends up seeming too convoluted. Regardless of the reason, it puts Kaneki in
an interesting position with things and his struggles became far less whiney in
nature. He doesn’t go all full ghoul and starts killing humans, quite the
opposite in fact and he goes through many new transformations and issues. It’s
far more of an engaging process this time around and I was more invested in
Kaneki as a main character.
As for the story, things mainly revolve around the inner struggles
that I have spoken about at great lengths for Kaneki and his overall
transformation. It may not seem like it but the whole series is really his show
this time around. In Tokyo Ghoul’s first season viewers were
subjected to a lot of introductions and character development that further
bogged down the story. It seemed to take quite a significant amount of time to
introduce all the players and people that you will be seeing throughout the
shows entirety and it left little time for anything else. Now, characters have
all been established on either side of the story and the new ones that come
along get introduce but develop gradually as the story goes on. It seems the
developers this time around found their groove with bringing in new people and
were now free to work with the solid characters that got introduced.
Amon, the by the books CCG agent, is another example of how
things are progressing more smoothly for characters in this second season. Amon
was a bit bland and hard to figure out, you knew he had strong convictions but
he still never stood out too much, perhaps it was his insane partner outshining
him that caused this. This time around though you see a lighter and stronger
side to his character when he is not only partnered up with Akira (daughter to
his former partner) but you also see into his past and what made him become a
CCG inspector. I burst out laughing when Akira finally goes out to drinks with
Amon and another inspector and he ends up staying the night at her place
because she drank too much. A lecherous thought pops into his head and he
begins to do push-ups, almost like his own version of a cold shower.
This experience wasn’t entirely perfect however, there were
four or five different characters that came into the story briefly but quickly
disappeared. Two other half ghoul characters (Kuro and Shiro) appear in the story and bring up
some memories for Amon and another CCG agent named Juuzou but then quickly disappear, never
seen again. During the prison break episode, Aogiri Tree invades a secret CCG
prison to release the high level ghouls imprisoned there but one powerful ghoul
in particular was meant to be released and this guy ends up beating the snot
out of Kaneki and is also never seen again. Perhaps the biggest plot hole character though would be Kaneki’s
old friend from his human days, Hide. Hide appears numerous times throughout
the season at the CCG headquarters, he apparently becomes some sort of delivery
worker. But what is overall confusing about him is when he appears in the final
two episodes in CCG armor and is fighting off ghouls. Was he doing it to find
Kaneki? Why was he there at all? What was he trying to do the entire time at
the CCG?
Confusing questions like this have popped up in my mind more
than once with Tokyo
Ghoul √A, despite my overall enjoyment of the series there is a fair amount
of information that feels left out. This point especially comes up for me when
I watched the final episode for the series when things abruptly come to a
close. The final episode isn’t a bad one in anyway; it’s a very slow and quiet
experience but does a great job of saying a lot about Kaneki’s character and
what he’s gone through. The big issue though is that everything piles up and up
and you get ready for the big finish and the screen fades to black. No more, no
less and you can’t help but wonder what the heck just happened. It isn’t a
brilliant cliffhanger to be left with, yes it makes me wonder what’s next but
it ends so quickly that it doesn’t explain what you’ve just experienced and really
is just bad storytelling.
Despite its problems, I cannot hide my overall enjoyment for
Tokyo Ghoul √A. The characters are so much
stronger than they were the first time around, before you were bogged down with their
introductions and getting to know them took an insane amount of time. Kaneki
also becomes a solid lead character for a change, he was so hard to like when
you first met him and it was hard to sympathize with him when a lot of his attitude
got in the way. The story does need some work though; there felt like plenty of information had been left out in certain areas of the story, plenty
of confusing questions needing to be answered and some characters that weren’t
explained well. Hopefully with the promise of another season on the horizon the
developers can get these questions answered but for now it left a bit of an
after taste in my mouth for a show that could have been rock solid.
Good:
- Kaneki goes through an amazing transformation that makes him
a stronger lead character
- Other returning characters are much stronger and more
engaging
- A quieter but fantastic story
- What action there was this time around was great
Bad:
- Plenty of new characters get introduced but immediately
disappear
- Plot holes and left out information make the story feel like
you’re missing something
Scully Rating: 7.8 out of 10
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