Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Final Thoughts: My Love Story Forges It's Own Path In Storytelling


              Final Thoughts: My Love Story Forges Its Own Path In Storytelling

 

At the conclusion of the show it’s easy to associate it with various directions or formulas it may have adopted but look close enough and you realize it’s done none of these but manages to forge its own path,  in the way it has developed its own uniqueness and drawn us in as viewers.

 

     Like the opening suggests and the episodes until this point, Suna is alone, you wonder if he will find love. Being Takeo’s friend but truly the friend of Yamato as well, Suna is the voice of reason, the calm one who observes but also a dependable friend. His amusement and admiration for Takeo knows no bounds and he doesn’t exactly keep it a secret. Being these things Suna is as Takeo has always observed, popular with the ladies who ironically never has a lady.

 

      So when someone confesses it leads to lots of twists and turns, one reason being that Suna knows the girl whose admired him from afar( besides on White Day) since kindergarten.  When everyone hoping along with the girl that something will come of this, Suna actually goes on a date with the girl, being his usual calm and understanding self. However he’s also being true to himself when he basically let’s her down gently. That doesn’t mean Suna believes he will never love someone, when asked throughout the show he acknowledges it will happen, he like everyone else though just doesn’t know when. My Love Story will not give you illusions as strange as that sounds,  not everyone can be happy or can they, perhaps, just not in the conventional sense that most shows project it as.

 

      The usual everyone gets together toward the end to wrap the show up and tie all the character’s stories and loose ends isn’t what this show is trying to do. How My Love Story does it is intelligent, while staying true to the series and what we loved about it from the first episode.  As we move to the conclusion of the series we see Rinko Yamato apply for a part time job at a Bakery.

 

     This is significant because she’s a baker, it’s also one of the connections she’s had with Takeo since the first episodes, appreciation given in the form of various pastries. In this way it kind of feels like cake got it’s on backstory or spotlight in these last episodes, even if in a small way compared to what was going on. I’ll explain what I mean but to grasp it is to understand what happened next. While Yamato is working at the bakery she meets the talented pastry chef of the bakery Kouki  Ichinose, egocentric and before she arrived, a quiet outsider.

 

       He also represents the typical handsome protagonist seen in some shows or the strived for love while overlooking the main character of the series. Ichinose finds Yamato to be his inspiration, a muse for his baking and she is wowed solely by his skills but never falters or questions her devotion for Takeo. Takeo soon catches on that this man develops feeling for her and the man says it himself, declaring that he is what Yamato should seek out not someone like Takeo, meaning his appearance. As if he was the needle to pop the bubble of this dream.  Takeo doesn’t respond in anger but feels struck as if it may be true. For a moment that feels like what we’re seeing as Takeo runs to the bakery with an umbrella because it began to pour, only to find his love getting a ride from Prince Charming.

 

    So this is rolling towards a bitter-sweet ending to the romance or a violent confrontation  in which Takeo would obviously win, something to show what we could critique as finally having conflict in the series but it’s always had its small dilemmas as well as its large ones just not in the way some other shows focus on it.  Despite the sweetness of the show, the tender affection of two people trying to understand a relationship still looks to plenty of moral questions and comments on several turns on who these characters are. So seeing it this way are we losing that with the end of the episode, a possibly surrendered Takeo.

 
 
 
 

        Yet we do not, the acknowledgment of what’s happening with Ichinose looking to be with Yamato is there for Takeo as is seen by Suna, even his sister, at the moment and in the pep talks at home. Taking place in Suna’s room. However the relationship continues, there is questioning on Takeo’s part, wondering if he really is the right choice for Yamato but everyone dismisses such a question and it becomes clear to him and us that he will not giving up loving her. Still though no violence or curses comes from Takeo, instead he sees that Ichinose is trying to accomplish something with Yamato, to win a competition (first place, no gold medal) and what does Takeo choose to do?

 

      He chooses to help in any way possible, doesn’t even consider it even if helping this man win this competition would mean that he confesses his feelings to Yamato as he told Takeo he would do beforehand. Which means running the chance of losing her.  But Takeo does this because he is Takeo and this is how My Love Story is. So when Yamato declares she’s in love with Takeo and only him when Ichinose wins and confesses (which being turned down seemed impossible in the man’s head, his internal thoughts spoke on how much she loved him.) You know that is why it is their relationship and no one else can take away from that, it also allows you to understand, this is how the show is and defies being like any other show.

 

     This allows a small step for Takeo in say her name Yamato's first name, Rina. You can even argue that Ichinose baked magnificently because he observed their love without consciously knowing this was the reason. Declaring that he would bake in order to bring such happiness it also a way of showing the cake's significance and perhaps realizing in his own way what we have seen in the characters throughout the series. Yamamoto’s ignorance toward how Ichinose felt the entire time is a shining example of her wearing Takeo’s shoes and was his character in these last few episodes.  The idea that cake is the bond between Takeo and Yamamoto is only valid because of the love she has for Takeo which could be one of the major reasons she wanted the job in the first place.

 

       In doing this  as the show ends, it forges its own path, not the conventional sense in what should happen to a show at this point (whatever that conventional sense might be), not twists that go against what it was supposed to be about, just reinforcing the idea that My Love Story was tenderness and much needed focus of love between the two and all those closest to them. It’s pure uncompromising while still looking at the little pieces of a relationship  bit by bit. All the while it promises this is a journey for two characters to take beyond the episodes of the series which is uplifting, not in a way that feels forced or needed or even unresolved but only in the truest sense of what My Love Story represents.

 

  

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