Showing posts with label soft-boiled. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soft-boiled. Show all posts

Sunday, May 2, 2021

Kindaichi Case Files #4-6 - The Legend of Lake Hiren Murder Case

The first case of Kindaichi Case Files (1997) consisted of the first three episodes in this 148 episode long show. This post will be about the second case in the anime series, The Legend of Lake Hiren Murder Case adapted from the sixth case in the manga, but I wanted to say that so far the anime did a pretty great job at condensing volume length of chapters into about three episodes, and it seems like that trend will continue; the pacing has potential to be well handled in this adaptation, but not without its risks. There were some parts that maybe shouldn't have been cut off, like half of the Seven Mysteries of Fudoh High that the adaptation could have shown us, but I don't feel like the first story was missing anything actually important. The first case was intriguing enough in a school setting which I think is one of the best way to garner more audience, considering that time has proven that school setting always works in any media. Be it a Japanese game, manga or anime series, school setting is key. Or even Hollywood adaptations of anime franchises.

Let's see now... I guess the series could flesh out its overarching characters - there are three of them; Kenmochi, Hajime and Miyuki at the moment - more from now on, give them backstories and stuff. But at least we did get a lot of good character moments to enhance the atmosphere of the previous case. I'd say the series works pretty much like the ideal detective series at the moment as the way the stories seem to be built are surprisingly similar to even Western golden age detective fiction stories, be they from Christie or Queen. Though let's see if this can match some of the better ideas those series have as I haven't seen or read all of the original Kindaichi Case Files cases before and whatever I do know of the series for sure mainly just includes Takato.

But, it's time to go over the second case of the animated series, The Legend of Lake Hiren Murder Case, that is slightly inspired by Texas Chainsaw Massacre with a serial killer named "Jason" going after everyone in the middle of nowhere, and see how it holds up compared to the first case. This time I'm going to just write about every little thing here I guess.


File 1

The holidays are starting for Fudoh High's students. As Hajime Kindaichi, our main character, is walking about after school, his acquaintance inspector Kenmochi Isamu arrives while in the backseat of a car and starts to tease Kindaichi about how the adults have to work while Kindaichi can't even spend his golden week vacation with a date. Kindaichi quickly turns Kenmochi down and starts looking for his childhood friend Miyuki Nanase whom he soon notices at a Hamburger joint, however another male student, the former class president Touno, is spending time with her. As passerby's walk past a crouching and spying Kindaichi, he overhears them say that Touno and Miyuki used to date back in the middle school days, which gets Hajime suspicious. Obviously this seems to just mostly be a comedic element that slightly sets up a romantic angle to this story. Kenmochi then teases Hajime again and tells him that unless he makes Miyuki his girl, someone's gonna take her instead.

As night falls Miyuki gets a surprise visitor her household as her cousin Shigeru Kitsukawa, an university student, visits her and gives her free tickets to a four-night trip at a lake resort. The reason why Shigeru gives her the tickets is because he'd been invited as a tester at the Hiren Lake Resort which will open next year, but because of university exams, Shigeru is instead going to let his cousin Miyuki go to the resort in his place and he also pleads her to comically offer "some guy" to go there as well with her. This surprises Miyuki but Shigeru explains that she needs a guy to go there pretending to be him. Shigeru is sure that Miyuki has a boyfriend that'd be willing to go with he, but as she's about to answer with a "no" Kindaichi all of a sudden jumps out of Miyuki's closet while wearing a rag over his head. Miyuki tries to ask Hajime what in the world he's doing but Hajime just quickly takes the envelope with the tickets from Miyuki, shakes Shigeru's hand and tells Shigeru that he's agreeing to go as a stand-in in Shigeru's place, pretending to be Shigeru, and head to the resort.

The very next day Hajime and Miyuki travel on a train towards Nagano Prefecture's Hiren Lake Resort, a place that is about the same size as Yokohama city. Their job is to be there on a "monitor tour" which means that Hajime and Miyuki are going to have to give feedback on how enjoyable and safe the Lake Resort tour is before it can be opened for the public.

After getting out of the train at the Nagakari station, Hajime tells a suspicious Miyuki (who doesn't believe it's going to be as entertaining of a trip as her cousin Shigeru claimed) that they should just enjoy themselves and he also says out loud that "it's going to be his chance" (to try and make Miyuki her girlfriend), but as Miyuki asks what Hajime means by a "chance," he runs away towards the nearby bus which will take our duo and the other chosen participants to the resort. In the bus a great coincidence takes place as Touno Eiji, the 3rd year student Nanase was sitting at a hamburger joint with earlier, makes his appearance, claiming to be part of the tour group as well. As Touno goes to sit with Miyuki, Kindaichi, who is angry because he thought he'd get to date Miyuki, notices other people in the bus as well. The first one to make an appearance is Kawanishi Sayuri, a 2nd year student who was scared that all the participants would be just old men. Then Kurata Souichi, a 20-year-old university student, makes his introduction. Sayuri pushes Souichi away, calling him a sumo-wrestler-lookalike, and then introduces herself to Hajime who almost says that his name is Kindaichi before remembering that he was going to the resort as "Kitsukawa Shigeru, a college student" (despite Kindaichi looking and being younger than a college student, he'll have to bear up in that role for now). Sayuri seems interested in Hajime and goes to sit with him.

The tour guide and conductor hired by Mizuki Travel Agency is a man named Kujyou Shyoutarou. As the group finally reaches the resort, Kujyou explains that there will be no automobiles on the at use on the island as the tour also aims to preserve the nature. Thus, the group will be adventuring on foot throughout a large forest area.

The next part is very odd as the group is supposed to go over a very worn-down and unsafe looking wooden bridge with ropes as walls. Kujyou claims that when the resort opens, there will be other methods to get to the place, however right now the bridge - that conveniently looks like it's easy to burn down so that the place will be cut-off from outside world so that murders will happen and no one, not even the culprit, can escape - is the only way to the Hiren Lake Resort, aside from a boat or something. And the worry is proven correct as the wooden boards below Kindaichi all of a sudden break and he almost falls to the rocky river, but luckily he got pulled to safety by Kujyou, who notices the name "Kindaichi Hajime" on Hajime's bag. The name tag plus the fact that Miyuki calls him Hajime-chan were enough to expose Hajime already at this point in the story.

To Hajime's luck however, an older man named Kouda Seisaku, a doctor, tells the group to just take Hajime with them anyway as they are far from civilization and they can't go back to the bus either. As rest of the introduced participants also agree to take Hajime with them, the dust all settles neatly. Then a man named Kayama Saburou, an Estate Agency President and his wife Kayama Seiko, both also other tour participants, make their appearance and say that Hajime is not "qualified" and Kitsukawa has thus lost his "rights" due to being a stand-up. Apparently the qualifications towards some kind of reward are things Miyuki and Hajime were unaware of as Miyuki's cousin, Shigeru, never told her anything about it.

Kayama's explain that among the participants of the Hiren Lake Resort tour, there's a raffle. There will be two winners who will get membership cards to the Hirenko Lake Resort. However Kindaichi plan was to rather spend some romantic time with Miyuki than think about a raffle, so he doesn't care about Miyuki's cousin getting kicked out of the competition.

Time passes and Hajime and the others walk right by the lake surrounding the resort. Touno tells them that the lake has a legend to it and stops to look at his watch. As the bright red color of the falling sun starts to reflect light over the lake, something happens that surprises Hajime and the rest - the lake turns crimson. 

Touno explains the legend: There were once a man and a woman who weren't allowed to be together, but they still fell in love with each other. After a while the man and woman decided to exhange vows with each other and do a double suicide by drowning themselves in the Hiren Lake. Since then, the lake has always turned bright red around the same time the two threw themselves into the lake.
Note: Hiren-ko apparently means Tragic Love Lake or Broken Heart Lake.

Miyuki leaves off with the "cool" Touno after Hajime told her that Touno is just a show-offing with his knowledge. The evening ends as Sayuri gazes towards the "blood-colored" lake.

It's nighttime. Inside the Hiren Lake Resort area's tourist buildings, the adults are drinking beer and celebrating the tour. At the dinner table Touno has a talk with Miyuki and claims that she resembles a person he knows. As Seiko Kayama notices them talk, she teases that a new couple has already born from Miyuki and Touno. They both get flustered but Seiko's husband, the company president Saburou, tells them that he met her wife while camping as well. This situation makes Hajime ponder why he even came along but Sayuri tells him to forget about Miyuki and spend time with her instead. These school girls are kind of active these days, huh. Makes you kind of wonder why Sayuri, supposedly a 2nd year high schooler, is alone on the trip. 

 
In the dining area, a new person, freelance writer Itsuki Yousuke, makes his appearance because he notices a man who he's interested in. The man Yousuke recognizes is painter Kobayashi Seiji who is still in the middle of creating a painting.

Then an emergency news announcement is spread over the radio as everyone listens. According to the announcer a death-row prisoner has escaped the Nagano Prefecture's jail cells. The prisoner's identity is Tomaru Taketo, 35 years old, who murdered thirteen people in Nagano ten years prior. After the radio gets shut, the group starts to get worried that the murderer might be nearby and some start to claim that it would be better if they were to get back home the next day. However some of the participants are planning on staying and making others leave to raise their chances on getting Hiren Lake Resort membership cards from the raffle as the ones who leave won't be able to participate anymore.

Outside, Kurata Souichi, a 20-year-old university student and one of the participants is taking a leak before heading towards his cottage to sleep. As he's thinking of raising his chances to win the raffle, an ominous figure; a man with a mask, can be seen behind him as the scene cuts to the very next morning without showing what happened to the participant.

The lake resort tourists sit at an outdoor table to enjoy meals in the morning however they notice that Souichi Kurata is missing and that there are 9 participants and the tour guide at the morning feast, so ten people out of eleven are present.

The Hiren Lake resort tour group list

Hajime Kindaichi, high school student
Miyuki Nanase, high school student
Sayuri Kawanishi, high school student
Touno Eiji, high school student
Souichi Kurata, university student [Missing]
Seiji Kobayashi, painter
Yousuke Itsuki, freelance-writer
Saburou Kayama, Estate Agency President
Seiko Kayama, Saburou's wife
Kouda Seisaku, doctor
Kujyou Shyoutarou, the tour guide

Conflict at hand:
Takero Tomaru, a 35-year-old death-row prisoner has escaped in the Nagano area and could still be around. People start to go missing and wind up dead.

Before the group gets to eat anything, the huge amount of crows that have been sitting on the trees start to poop on the group's dinner - hilariously there just doesn't seem to be anything good about this resort that would warrant it getting opened for public in less than a year's time. Outo of annoyment Kindaichi tries to kick the tree that crows are habiting, but the tree won't budge. Then Yousuke Itsuki kicks the tree with force and as the crows fly away, an unidentified corpse also drops from the tree immediately with shredded clothes and torn face - the instant Yousuke sees this, he claims that "It's Jason... Jason killed him!" This sudden outburst gets Hajime to wonder what he means. 

We get an explanation from Yousuke, the freelance writer, that he's seen pictures of terrible crimes done by Jason 10 years ago and those murders also had the victims get their faces torn off by axes. The painter Seiji Kobayashi then for the first time starts to talk and says that it's easy to notice that this victim has also been done in by an axe. Hajime is suspicious at him claiming to be a mere painter.

The rest of the group run in the cottage to call for help but there is no reception in the Hiren Lake Resort so they can't call for help and the next bus comes in four days. The group still decides to cross the wooden rope bridge they came from as there could be a chance of a ride that could take them away. Seiko Kayama doesn't care a bit about the corpse and is worried of the raffle not happening as she came to the resort for it, and then the group notices a smoke cloud that originates from the direction of the dangerous rope bridge that the group crossed on foot to reach this so-called tourist resort. The bridge is, unsurprisingly, completely set on fire. Thus, the bridge that was their only way to get to and from the island is now gone and fallen to the depths of the river dozens of meters below a straight rocky wall, and Hajime notes that Jason has to be with them on the island as there is no way out.

The group has decided to head back to the tourist hut and everyone is either panicking or acting suspiciously calm and interested in the situation. The one who seems to be scared the most is the Estate Agency President Saburou Kayama who doesn't understand the reactions of the other participants, such as the painter's who seems unusually calm. As Saburou throws the painting that Seiji was working on to the floor, everyone notices that he's been drawing a corpse. The freelance writer Yousuke says that Seiji used to be a great artist who was talked about a lot, but "since that incident ten years ago, Seiji has been unable to draw anything else but corpses" and Yousuke also claims that people think Seiji has murdered someone because of the drawings having too much realistic aspects to them. Saburou tells his wife to pack so that they both would leave but she declines and claims that Saburou had tricked him to marry her for money and then left all the money to his children and nothing to her, so she's not leaving and will stay for the resort raffle despite the gross murder happening. Saburou doesn't care of her and decides to head out alone. The problem however is that it's nigh-impossible to travel the forest area alone and it would be almost suicide, not even counting the fact that if people were to try and travel through the forest they might run into the murderer (who obviously is part of the group though...)

In the evening Hajime looks down the burned bridge and wonders why the culprit would have done something like that such as burning the bridge. Sayuri tells him that they must have tried to trap the group in the forest, however the culprit is also stuck on the island, so Hajime has to wonder - what is "Jason" planning on doing after killing them all? Is something like that even Jason's plan? Then as the Hiren Lake turns crimson once more as it always does during evenings, Sayuri grabs Hajime from the back at the same time as Miyuki arrives to call Hajime for dinner. This makes Miyuki think that they are making out or something like that. As Hajime tries to run after Miyuki to explain the situation, Sayuri stops him as she doesn't want to be left alone.

The next night Saburou Kayama, the Estate Agency President, is seen running away as he travels the forest, thinking he would get away. But as he hears voices, he turns behind to see a person with a white mask and an axe. "He must be Jason..!"
Time passes quickly once again and the next morning the group notices that the tour lodge has been wrecked overnight. While the living room has been destroyed, Hajime goes to the kitchen of the lodge to notice that it looks fine except for something peeping from a shelf. Hajime opens the cabinet and the corpse of Saburou Kayama with a destroyed face falls down from there - someone has murdered him and carried the old man from the forest to the closet. 

Yousuke Itsuki, the freelance-writer, then questions Seiko Kayama about how she feels after seeing her husband, who ran away alone, brutally murdered. To this Seiko seemingly just cries. Yousuke goes to the case bag left behind by Saburou and notices that it's filled with yen bills and a card. As Yousuke claims that at least she has something to enjoy with the money the man left behind, Touno gets angry from seeing that non-sympathetic act from the freelance writer.

Kindaichi and the others then notice that there is no sign of food being taken which is odd as Jason escaped from Nagano prison a few days ago and must've walked two days through a path with no food, but yet he hasn't eaten anything in the hut. Hajime wonders if it really was Jason that's behind these brutal murders. Later, at the dinner table, the freelance writer Yousuke and Kindaichi get into an argument; Hajime claims that if Yousuke won't change his attitude, he'll be left alone. To that the writer claims to have high confidence in surviving even against a man who apparently carried a body from the forest to the inn. Miyuki then tells that this might be a chance for Hajime to get "lucky" with Sayuri but Hajime doesn't like that type of talk in this sort of situation and runs away. Miyuki quickly starts to regret what she said and heads out as well to run after Hajime, however he's out of sight, and then Touno, the other high-school student, appears. Miyuki once again brings up the fact that Touno said before that she "really looks like her," to which Touno answers "yes, frighteningly." We as watchers don't know who they are talking about, but the situation is that there is someone Touno knows or knew of who looked almost exactly like Miyuki.

The episode ends as Miyuki runs away from Touno to find Hajime in the forest and then suddenly her leg hits a booby trap rope that shoots an arrow through her leg. Touno and Hajime both hear Miyuki scream and go to find her. Then both Touno and Hajime think that what Miyuki got caught up in was a trap laid out by Jason the escaped serial killer and Kindaichi makes a "surprising" claim that he will catch Jason in the name of his grandfather!

Thoughts and theories on the first episode

My thoughts on the first episode of Hiren-ko Legend Murder Case is... it's fine. I noticed that the Touno-Miyuki and Hajime-Sayuri "romance" aspects are handled poorly as they are clearly meant to be comedic and to make the reader wonder whether or not they are actually talking about romance, but it's clear there is no real romantic conflict. The setting of the case is kinda generic and the character dialogue this time around leaves a lot to be desired. In the previous case you could kind of see what kind of dialogue and moments Miyuki and Hajime would be having throughout the series and that Miyuki would constantly have to be saved but in the previous case the presentation was on-point to sell the series to new watchers. This time around I'd say the drama and tension with Miyuki and Hajime feels kind of abrupt and the pace is off. Soundtrack for this series is definitely not its strongest suit right now either. 

The case itself is still seemingly decent as it does all the necessary things right for the bare minimum or what one would expect: there's the set-up to the pasts and the quirks of each character and you can somewhat pinpoint how they relate to the events 10 years ago. I have quite a few theories on who could the suspect be; the journalist seems strong enough to carry the victim, but that type of thing is usually misleading in these stories as the authors for some reason don't often think about how to move things around (example: Tantei Gakuen Q vol. 6's Q vs. A Overtime case). 
The corpse faces being wrecked means that there will most likely be a body swap - for example the university student who went missing and is likely dead could easily be the killer or victim, hell, he could have killed Jason when Jason tried to attack him and then made Jason's corpse take his place. Miyuki looking like someone Touno knew (most likely one of the victim from 10 years ago or the one based on the legend of Hirenko) is of course also quite suspicious. And of course you can make some theories about the tour guide as the resort seems like a joke and almost like a fraud to me; nothing works in this awful resort. Crows poop on foods, a shaky wooden bridge that breaks when you walk over it, a deadly forest, a deep fall to a river, you name it. There's no way anyone would actually want to spend time in a place like that, so it's funny to see all these people - such as the wife of the now-deceased company president - wants to get the raffle prize so much. It's almost as if they want to get a piece of the past; want to spend time at a crappy resort to find something from 10 years ago. The Hiren Lake would be a pretty nice setting for a case in concept but I feel like the place isn't presented in a beautiful manner at all. The aesthetics and atmosphere kind of just give me the feel of a place that just makes you sweat uncomfortably and a place that's constantly clouded and filled with flies and rocky rivers.


File 2

We have reached episode 5 of the Kindaichi Case Files series with the second part of Hirenko Legend Murder Case moving at full gear as a death row prisoner nicknamed Jason continues his violent acts at the rather crappily constructed Hiren Lake Resort

The Hiren Lake Resort tour group contains:
Hajime Kindaichi, a high school student who went to Hiren Lake Resort in place of Miyuki's cousin.
Miyuki Nanase, a high school student who went to Hiren Lake Resort in place of her cousin.
Sayuri Kawanishi, a high school student who seems to have a crush on our main character.
Touno Eiji, a high school student who claims to know someone that looked exactly like Miyuki.
Souichi Kurata, a university student [Missing, possibly deceased].
Seiji Kobayashi, a painter who fell from grace and started to draw realistic looking dead people.
Yousuke Itsuki, a freelance-writer with a bad attitude towards everyone.
Saburou Kayama, an Estate Agency President [Deceased].
Seiko Kayama, Saburou's wife who was left no money by her husband and who wants to win the raffle.
Kouda Seisaku, a doctor.
Kujyou Shyoutarou, the tour guide.

Conflicts at hand
- Takero "Jason" Tomaru, a 35-year-old death-row prisoner has escaped from prison in the Nagano area where the Hiren Lake Resort tour testing trip is being held. Did Jason burn the only bridge leading to and from the resort area and why would he have done that as now he's trapped as well?
- A corpse with a messed up face fell from a tree to the outdoor dining table.
- The corpse of Saburou Kayama was found in a closet, even though he ran away to the woods. Did someone strong carry the man back? Is "Jason" that strong?
- Miyuki, who was a victim in the previous case "The Seven Mysteries of Fudoh High" as well, accidentally gets her leg pierced after she activated a booby trap that Hajime assumes was laid out by "Jason."
- Why are some people hellbent on winning the tour raffle even under these circumstances?
[- Sayuri with that accent gives me some nice vibes of a certain other female character.]

It's still morning as Hajime and Touno have carried Miyuki, whose foot was shot through by a boobytrap, to doctor Kouda Seisaku. It's good to have a doctor at the Hiren Lake Resort as the group can't leave the area because of the burnt-down bridge and the fact that traveling through forest takes too long and is deadly, and the bus would arrive to take them away only after just two more days anyway.

Kindaichi gets angry at the high school student Touno Eiji who didn't manage to watch Miyuki more when Miyuki ran after Kindaichi to the forest before getting her leg pierced, but Miyuki then wakes up to calm Hajime down and then tells him that she's not feeling well; it's better to leave her alone.

The rest of the group now have to ponder about what to do. There's no way to run through the forest if it's filled with traps. In the living room Touno and Kindaichi look at the creepy-faced Kobayashi the painter, and get shocked to see Kobayashi draw Miyuki who was hit by the trap - the rest get angry as they believe Kobayashi thinks Miyuki is dead or hopes that she is. However the facts of the matter are that Miyuki still has to wait two more days for help to come. Kindaichi then grabs all of Touno's papers and throws them away, shouting at the painter that he has to stop being such a maniac. That scene is pretty cool from Kindaichi, honestly. It's always entertaining to see the main character interact with the case cast, and the freelance writer Yousuke whistling at Kindaichi's actions was perfectly inserted. Hajime's actions reveal something new: Kobayashi has drawn a picture of a boat that's at the lake on one of his papers that Hajime threw to the ground. Hajime asks the tour guide Kujyou whether they have a boat like that, and he hesitantly answers that they do. As the group runs towards the lake to see the boat, Hajime ponders why in the world either of them didn't say a word about there being a boat if they knew about it. The group finds the boat and Kujyou explains that if they go to the other side of the lake to a hotel that's being constructed, they should be able to find a working phone there.

As the group ponder who's going to be the one to go seek help, nearly everyone declines as it seems suspicious. Then, Touno Eiji agrees to be the one to go and introduces himself as the son of the Mizuki Tour Agency's creator. Touno explains that his purpose was to research the reactions of the tour participants. Touno was scared of getting the blame for the terrifying events so he didn't say a word about his original intentions until now. However as Touno heads towards the boat, Kindaichi stops him and tells that he's going as well - the danger is too serious for a solo mission. Touno declines and leaves alone. As Touno heads out to ask for help on the boat, he looks back to say last words: I'll leave the rest to you, Kindaichi-kun. 

Back in the cottage of the Hiren Lake "Resort," Miyuki and Hajime finally talk it out about the rumours that were being spread about Touno and Miyuki having been going out during middle school. Miyuki explains that Touno had picked up something she'd lost which was why they met at the hamburger shop, and what's more, Touno's rumored girlfriend was not Miyuki but a person who looks exactly like Miyuki, which was what they were talking about previously as Miyuki wondered "do I really look exactly like her?" and Touno answered "eerily so." Miyuki also tells Hajime that he and Sayuri were looking like they were having fun together so she was acting unnaturally as well. Both Miyuki and Hajime tease each other about being worried about the other.

Hajime again wonders if Jason was really the one who killed Kurara and Kayama. The burned-down bridge makes the escape from the island nearly impossible so Jason somehow knows a lot about the area despite never supposedly being there before, and the body of Kayama Saburou that was carried to the closet of the cottage brings another weird question to us - it's odd that Jason, who would have had to run for multiple days throughout a path with no shops or places to get food from, would not take any food from the cottage. Thus, the culprit must be "among us!" Then, the doctor Kouda Seisaku makes his appearance and claims that the motive of the culprit might be the raffle, that Hajime and Miyuki dropped out off, instead. As there can only be two winners of the Tour raffle that will get the unimaginably valuable Membership Cards to the resort. The doctor explains that when the lake resort will open next year they will somehow have a ski resort, golf course, tennis course and a large pool as well as a possibility of the resort having a direct way to the highway. All of this will raise the Membership Card's value to 50 - 100 million yen each. The probability of winning rises if they drop the amount of participants by murdering them.
If that is true then the culprit would rather murder than to try and steal a card.

Later, the boat that Touno used finally came back. Hajime, Sayuri and the rest go to the boat but as they go to look at the returning man. However, Touno is in the water-filled boat flace planted straight downwards, apparently drowned. Somehow "Jason" got Touno despite him going alone on a boat to get help. [Suspicious thing here is that they did not investigate the body of Touno more than just looking at his back.]

Hajime and doctor Kouda go to Miyuki once more where Miyuki tries to comfort Hajime about how Touno's fate wasn't his fault. The doctor gives a brief explanation of his past as he wants to repent his sins which was why he joined the tour, in order to open a clinic at a place where there are no doctors, he needs the Membership Cards for their massive value. The doctor then says that he knows of Hajime's grandfather and pleads Hajime to solve the case.

Miyuki gives Hajime a picture drawn by the painter Seiji Kobayashi who likes drawing corpses. In the picture there's Touno on the boat with his face towards the water. Miyuki tells Hajime to look at the wrist of Touno's left hand where Hajime notices that Touno is missing his watch - why would the culprit remove the watch?

The doctor runs right back to Kindaichi who was outside and tells him to get ice as Miyuki was hit by fever. As Hajime runs back with a bag of ice, he notices the painter Kobayashi listening to the news after fixing the radio. Kobayashi claims that he's realized something about Jason but won't tell Hajime what it is yet, instead, he will talk about it in front of everyone tomorrow.

The scene shows a suspicious person with an axe walking towards the hut where Kobayashi was drawing. Kobayashi is drawing more corpses and talking to himself - "Kill more, Jason!" and right after he gets hit by "Jason" with an axe from behind and shouts "impossible! why are you...!?" hinting at certain things.

After the group finds the newest victim, Kobayashi, Hajime claims that "Jason" is not the killer because Kobayashi was attempting to leave a dying message behind - there's no way he'd do that if Jason, the obvious killer, would be the culprit. Now, as the estimated time of death was from 2:30 to 2:45 p.m., all they would have to do was to check everyone's alibi, right? [going to bet that's not going to lead anywhere with this group of people] However as the doctor is worried about Miyuki so they would need to gather in her room to do the alibi check,

Alibi Check for the murder of Kobayashi between 2:30 to 2:45
The first one being  interrogated is Hajime Kindaichi. After Hajime returned to Miyuki's hut at 2:15 p.m., he stayed there along with doctor Kouda Seisaku. Kujyou Shyoutarou, the tour guide, was on the inter-phone with the doctor while he was at the storage as the doctor asked him to check for medicine. 
Yousuke Itsuki, the freelance-writer, was with Sayuri Kawanishi, a high school student, in her room suspiciously enough.  
Seiko Kayama was alone in her room without eyewitnesses. However, Miyuki claims that from Seiko's cottage she'd have to cross a log bridge that is visible from Miyuki's window. No one ever crossed the bridge, so it's hard for her to make it through without swimming. However, Seiko claims to be hydrophobic who can't even wash her face in a sink. 

Despite the group suspecting Seiko, Hajime explains that the culprit would have only swam through the river if they knew Miyuki was held in the cottage and would see them cross that log bridge area. It's thus unrealistic to assume Seiko would be the culprit. In this moment it's interesting to note that in the past, apparently Yousuke had been thrown to the waters and had to survive while swimming on a suitcase.

Hajime explains that he doesn't know the identity of the culprit but he feels that the Membership Cards are not the real motive of the culprit - as when the police arrive, they'd immediately suspect that. The motive has to be something else entirely. Hajime tells everyone to come to him in another room one by one to explain the circumstances that pushed them to join the trip - if they held any information back that might connect all the members with each other, there'd be a possibility of the culprit having a personal grudge against all the victims. Hajime claims to be able to find "Jason's" true motive before anyone else becomes a victim.

Interrogation 
 
Kujyou Shyoutarou, the tour guide, is the first one interrogated by Hajime about his circumstances. According to Kujyou, he believes that in the past the tour people got picked by a raffle instead of being chosen. Hajime also asks him another question, why didn't he talk about the boat despite knowing about it, to which Kujyou answers with a ___ as the scene skips to Seiko before the watcher gets to know what he was talking about, maybe meaning that it's not all that important to solving the case.

Seiko claims that in the past she was claimed to have sunk a ship, most likely the reason why Yousuke had to swim on a suitcase. Seiko claims that her hydrophobia is from the ship-sinking accident, and the scene skips to Yousuke.

Yousuke claims that three years prior he was on a ship that sank, the Ship Oriental Sinking Accident in which the ship had a collision with an oil tanker after setting off. The ship was filled with about 500 people out of which many lost their lives. That was the incident where he experienced the moment of survival by hanging onto a suitcase. After the incident Yousuke has gotten a slight fear of boats.

Sayuri Kawanishi also shares the experience of the Oriental ship accident but she is quickly brushed over.

The doctor Kouda Seisaku is also surprised at Kindaichi knowing about him being on the sinking ship and surviving. This all brings us a clear image of what the culprit possibly could be after, or at least where the culprit's motive comes from.

Kindaichi wonders about the people being picked from the sinking ship incident and the culprit breaking the stereo that Kobayashi had fixed before his death. It's odd that the culprit knew of the stereo being fixed - the curtains were down, so was the culprit listening to them? Kindaichi goes to a painting and finds something behind it, and then the doctor Kouda Seisaku makes his appearance and hysterically tells Hajime to come to where Miyuki is because her condition has gotten worse again.

As Miyuki's condition betters, Kindaichi cleans her head with a towel that has the name Kimura on it - Kimura Shinsuke being the real name of Yousuke Itsuki, which is a pen name of the journalist. As Kindaichi hears the real name of Yousuke, he realizes that one more dot connects the case characters and then the episode ends as Kindaichi announces that he will unmask the serial killer Jason's true identity. Comically enough no one knows Jason carries a mask. 


The pacing of the case is too fast for sure. They run in and out of Miyuki's cottage about every 20 seconds which is ridiculous. The case also feels a bit off with the revelations, not showing things like the corpses, and the case just seems to be awkwardly paced in general. In the previous case they managed to cut off unnecessary parts of the manga pretty well to condense the case but this time it feels like they are just jumping from panel to panel at lightning speed. 

Anyway, considering the case itself, it's obvious that the culprit is "one of the dead" as they had their faces destroyed. Now that we had the revelation of the sinking ship we can safely assume that's where the personal grudge comes from. In this episode we focused on Touno's death after he claimed that his father was the owner of the Hiren Resort Tour, and then Touno heads on the boat on his way to get help - and his corpse comes back, seemingly "Jason" killed him when he did that. Remember, when he came back, he was missing a watch, right? What if I said that the corpse is not Touno. The one to go on the boat was him, so it must be a chance that the rest didn't go there, right? What if I said that everyone else is afraid of water or boats because of the incident that they are being killed for. Thus, yes, it's pretty obvious at this point in time that the culprit is Touno, who, due to his supposed father's status, had the possibility of picking his victims on the trip, and who most likely faked his death with someone else's body which was why the watch is missing; it's completely unrealistic to even assume the "culprit" would be waiting for a guy somewhere when he traveled away on a freaking boat, the culprit just can't be anyone else than Touno himself. However: Touno is a high school student so it'd be odd to have him carry an overweight man from the forest to the cottage's closet, however - Yousuke and Kindaichi even make a point of how much strength carrying the body must have required. We don't know 'yet' whether or not Touno picked his victims based on their name's initials or something as their names do share some similarities according to Kindaichi. Touno must have gotten an access to a database about the survivors that had something to do with the sinking ship, but maybe he only assumes that everyone who were included in the incident have a natural fear of boats and water. It might also be a reason why the Tour Guide, Kujyou, never mentioned the boat, because he was afraid of it, but this is all just my guesswork as there's nothing concrete to go by, yet.


File 3

The case takes place at the Hiren Lake that is surrounded by a sad legend of two people that weren't meant to be together having thrown each other in the lake. At the Hiren Lake Resort tour a serial murder case has taken place. Hajime Kindaichi is now resolved to expose the true identity of the murderer that everyone thought to be Jason, a person who escaped from prison around the same time the group arrived to the Resort. As the culprit seemed to have burnt down the rope bridge which was the only way to safely get to the Resort, the tour group is unable to escape, especially with the injured Miyuki, who stepped into one of "Jason's" traps and damaged her legs, with them. For a while everyone assumed that the motive for the murders was the insanely valuable Resort Membership, of which there are two that two of the members of the group will win via a raffle, each membership card assumedly being worth 50 to 100 million yen, however  Kindaichi finally learned a piece of information that gave out the hints towards the true motive behind these gruesome murders where people's faces were cut to pieces - three years prior happened the Ship Oriental's Sinking Accident where 500 people were left to death after the cruiser ship they were on collided with an oil tanker. Nigh everyone aside from Hajime and Miyuki have told that they were a part of the accident. So the culprit has to know of this and be able to invite everyone to do this. Though I have to wonder, was Miyuki's cousin also a part of the sinking ship or was he and anyone he'd take with him to the trip the only ones chosen by random? What is the connection that everyone of the case's character's names have with each other? Since the trick will obviously be a body swap, will Hajime trick the killer to appear while the culprit tries to murder someone? Let's see what happens.

The Hiren Lake Resort tour group contains:
Hajime Kindaichi, a high school student who went to Hiren Lake Resort in place of Miyuki's cousin
Miyuki Nanase, a high school student who went to Hiren Lake Resort in place of her cousin [Injured]
Sayuri Kawanishi, a high school student who seems to have a crush on our main character
Touno Eiji, a high school student who claims to know someone that looked exactly like Miyuki
Souichi Kurata, a university student [Deceased, although it was never focused on if he was the victim]
Seiji Kobayashi, a painter who fell from grace and started to draw dead people [Deceased]
Yousuke Itsuki, real name Kimura Shinsuke, a freelance-writer with a bad attitude towards everyone
Saburou Kayama, an Estate Agency President [Deceased]
Seiko Kayama, Saburou's wife who was left no money by her husband and who wants to win the raffle
Kouda Seisaku, a doctor
Kujyou Shyoutarou, the tour guide

The Hiren Lake is looking more beautiful in the evening. Yousuke Itsuki goes to ask Hajime if he's figured out the truth behind the case, however Hajime is thinking of how the case is getting only harder the more he learns about it. Hajime proposes that every single person should sleep in the lodge together during the night, but the group of course fights back as "Jason" could be one among them - it'd be hard to fight back if they were killed by a person who's supposed to look out for the culprit. However Kindaichi still gets everyone to stay in the lodge after claiming that they can look after each other through the night, it'd be hard for Jason to act. All he now has to do is to get the injured Miyuki there also.

The next night, a person is shown standing outside with earpods on him. They're listening to what's going on inside the lodge - it's a person with Jason's mask who's listening as one of the people in the lodge, Yousuke, decide to head to his lodge to sleep. Jason carries an axe and a key with him and heads to the cottage where Yousuke went, and goes to the bed and hits it with an axe. However as there is no resistance or sound, Jason notices that the bed is actually just filled with bunch of feathers (from a pillow most likely) and then Kindaichi and the rest grab Jason and throw him to the ground - it's time to unmask the serial killer!

What happened is that the method "Jason" used to murder, Kindaichi used against him. Jason wasn't expecting everyone to be in Yousuke's cottage after all. As when the painter Kobayashi was murdered and the radio was destroyed once again, Kindaichi knew that because the culprit knew of Kobayashi fixing the radio, they must have some information on what happened when Kobayashi talked with Kindaichi. However, because the curtains were in front of the windows, the culprit couldn't have "seen" Kobayashi fix the radio, but he could have heard it. Kindaichi then found a mic from the lodge behind a painting that he then used against "Jason" by making it look like everyone was in the lodge when they were really in Yousuke's cottage, and the one who walked out of the lodge was actually Hajime himself while everyone else was in the cottage waiting for him.

The first night when the group arrived, the culprit killed Kurata, who then fell from the tree, and the perp messed up the body to make it seem like it was the serial killer 'Jason' who escaped from prison that was doing the killings. The culprit also knew that Itsuki Yousuke, who wrote an article on Jason, would be part of the trip. Then, the culprit burned the rope bridge and later murdered Kayama who was running throughout the forest and carried his body to the lodge and then destroyed the room to make it seem like Jason did it - but Jason never touched the food even though he wouldn't have eaten for two days after escaping from prison. Later, Jason destroyed the stereo radio for some reason, and the only reason to do that and kill Kobayashi for fixing the radio at that point in time, was because the recording on the radio was pre-recorded beforehand to be used as a trick. This means that the culprit set up many things before they met these people the first time in their lives three to four days ago. Now, as Jason didn't have any time to destroy the lodge and only destroyed the radio once again and left everything else the way it was, the culprit trying to trick everyone that Jason did the murders was instead turned into proof of the news being a fake and that Kindaichi realized that there was a listening device in the room.

The motive for the murders is not the membership cards either. The true motive is a certain connection that each of the tour participants share - aside from Hajime and Miyuki, everyone else spent time on the sunken Ship Oriental three years prior. The motive was kind of obvious when it was revealed. There were about 500 passengers on the ship and no one knows each other, so it's weird that they were being targeted - however, there is one similarity, as Kindaichi points out, and that similarity is their name. Yousuke's real name Kimura Shinsuke is on the towel that Hajime used to heal Miyuki. Other participants include: Kayama Saburou, Kayama Seiko, Kawanishi Sayuri, Kurata Souichi, Kobayashi Seiji, Kouda Seisaku, Kujyou Shyoutarou. The common point of each and every name is the initials; S.K., being present in every one of them. The one who asked Hajime to take his place, Miyuki's cousin, was also an S.K.: Kitsukawa Shigeru who was also apparently a part of Ship Oriental tour. This common point is present with each and every one of the participants, except one..! Now, it's time to unmask the killer!

Jason, the person who did the serial murders, was the one and only Touno Eiji! [is that a surprise to anyone?] Hajime brings up a shocking revelation: the corpse that was supposedly Touno's on the boat was actually the corpse of Kitsukawa Shigeru, Miyuki's cousin. When the group arrived on the lodge the first day and Touno found out that Kitsukawa did not come, Touno called him and met with him after going to Kitsukawa on the boat. Touno also somehow calculated that every S.K. on the tour was also hydrophobic to a certain degree because of the trauma from Ship Oriental's sinking, which was how he managed to be the one to travel on the boat alone just by asking. Kindaichi assumes that Touno couldn't put his watch on Kitsukawa's wrist because it didn't fit, but Touno explains that that's wrong - even if the murders were for revenge, he could never part with the wristwatch which was a memento from his precious Keiko.

The doctor, Kouda Seisaku, immediately recognizes the name Goizumi Keiko as the "girl whom I killed" which obviously goes back to the part where Kouda once mentioned about wanting to win the Resort Membership Cards from the tour raffle in order to build a clinic at a certain place with no doctors to repent for his "sins."

"The Plank of Carneades" mentioned by the doctor tells a Greek story about a man who drifts after falling from a sinking ship. The man had grabbed onto a piece of plank but there was another person who also needed help. At first the man thought that the plank might sink if he and the other person were to hold onto it, so the man pushed the one in need of help away, and the other person later drowned. The man who was saved by the plank was put to a trial but was never found guilty. The reason why the man was never prosecuted was because of the Law of Emergency; "Doing things to save oneself, even at the expense of others' lives, cannot be punished."
This meant that the case from three years ago would go without any prosecution and Touno would have to take the law to his own hands to get justice.

Doctor Kouda Seisaku explains that his situation can be likened to the story about the plank as three years prior there was a girl who appeared when the doctor was pulled up to a boat. However as the doctor tried to pull the girl up, the boat almost sunk. The girl was grabbing onto the suitcase of the doctor but the doctor pushed her hands away, however in her final moments the girl managed to rip a piece of the suitcase, most likely the initial S.K. were present on the piece; in other words the person Touno was after for killing her girlfriend Goizumi Keiko was the doctor.

Touno explains that Keiko and he grew up in the same orphanage. Ten years ago Touno was adopted to the high-class Touno household while Keiko was put into an overall worse family. The two were never allowed to meet each other, just like in the legend of Hiren Lake, and so, the two of them met in secret from time to time like Romeo and Juliet. However Touno's parents learned of the trip Keiko and Touno planned on Ship Oriental three years ago, so Touno could never go on that fateful adventure. As the corpses were picked up and laid down, Touno heard a rumor of Keiko being pushed away from a life boat, which pushed Touno to try to get justice from police, who said to him that they couldn't do anything as it was not a crime according to law, as expected. Touno decided to sell his soul to the devil as he kissed Keiko for the first time when she was but a corpse, and Touno took two things from Keiko as he decided to become the one to get justice if the police were not willing to do it. The things he took was the name plate containing of the initials S.K. that Keiko ripped from the doctor's suitcase, and the another thing he took was the leather wristwatch that Keiko was wearing.

As Touno didn't know who the holder of the S.K. initials was, he thought it'd be okay to just kill everyone that was on the ship that day. It's kind of weird that he even assumed that an S.K. killed her though.
Yousuke gets angry at Touno's actions against innocent S.K.'s but Touno just brushes it off and says that Keiko Goizumi's life was more important to him than 100 innocent people. Then Touno pushes everyone away and turns back towards them, saying that what he holds in his hands, is a detonator that makes bombs explode and that he used that to burn the bridge as well. Touno throws the axe to the ground and tells Kindaichi to kill doctor Kouda with it. If Hajime does that, he'll spare everyone's lives.  Touno wants to make the situation into a "Plank of Carneades."

Hajime tells Touno that there's no way Kouda wouldn't have suffered after pushing Keiko away that day - even if the doctor was never prosecuted, he's been living with the regret of killing someone three whole years and will never be able to live normally again. Each and every day would be suffering to anyone with any form of sympathy and emotion. This is what Touno doesn't understand. But then Kouda takes the axe and claims to be willing to kill himself to make his sins disappears, and then Miyuki appears and tells everyone to stop. Touno all of a sudden gets a flashback to Keiko and starts hating himself as Miyuki looks at him with the same eyes Keiko had; this gets Touno so angry that he runs through the window, runs to the boat and drives away - only to make it explode and fill the lake with crimson color as the Hiren Lake serial murder case with its five victims ends at last.

Back in the city days after the incident, Kindaichi Hajime and Nanase Miyuki are meeting with the journalist Yousuke who had spent time researching something about the case. Yousuke gives the two a photograph with Touno and Keiko Goizumi who looks exactly like Miyuki. To Touno, Miyuki was practically an almost-Keiko. Hajime turns the photograph backwards to see something shocking written on it: "1994.4.5. at Kamakura with younger sister." Yousuke explains that Keiko was actually Touno Eiji's real blood-related sister. The reason why the two were never meant to be together was much more cruel than what anyone expected.

The case ends with Hajime thinking about the Plank of Carneades - if Miyuki and Hajime were left in that Titanic-type of situation where there is no choice but to let the other person drown - what would he do? Well, of course he would do the only thing he's good at doing: Think. Think of a way to save both of them.


Brainstorming about the case 

So that's the entirety of my adventure with the Hirenko Legend Murder Case (or Broken Heart Lake Legend Murder Case) which is also known as the second case of the Kindaichi Case Files animated series or the sixth case in the manga series with the length of 10 whopping chapters,  so this case was also condensed a bit in the three episode length adaptation. 

This case was honestly a mixed bag of goods. Unlike in the first case, every character played a part in this story's history, which is both good and bad as the case, like most long cases, had many characters. What that means is that connecting every character is bound to feel unrealistic at best. The fact that they were all gathered there, the 'how' was never explained either (although we can assume it was due to the culprit's connections), but it's just all odd to see all these characters there right down to their initials, and some of the victims (especially the big twist relating to Miyuki's cousin) being on the scene just feels random if not impossible even.

The culprit's identity was pretty obvious for multiple reasons ranging from the initials (which I didn't even bother to pay attention to even though I knew there was a hint there) to the boat scene (in which Kindaichi should have been able to tell it's not the corpse of Touno as the victim was an university student while Touno was a high schooler). The culprit's motivation was not that well presented this time. It was all foreshadowed pretty well with the Plank of Carneades and the doctor's sin mentions, but all things considered the culprit was obviously an emotionless psycho yet was never presented as such, even to the end. The painter was crazier than the culprit. At the end we had a powerfully emotional reveal to the motive of the culprit, but without really any logical thinking behind it. Also the way the culprit ended up running away and bombing himself immediately after seeing Miyuki felt really stupid and a cop-out from the supposedly tense bomb-or-life situation we had on our hands where the culprit was trying to force Hajime kill the doctor. The culprit's reaction wasn't even surprising and I got a chuckle out of it. I just have to wonder how Miyuki got the strength to walk to them at the end there when her condition kept worsening and she was bedridden for multiple days and was in need of medical help..... The doctor even said that Miyuki might not survive due to having to be there in the middle of nowhere for multiple days in row. Definitely odd, to say the least.

Honestly this case had a good chunk of mostly unrealistic aspects to it as there is no chance for the culprit to call Miyuki's cousin Kitsukawa Shigeru to realistically meet up with him in middle of nowhere with a boat and time it all perfectly like that, such as taking blame for Miyuki's accident for heading out and getting rid of Kindaichi, and I find it odd that they said that the place has a phone but no reception but it was never even made to seem like the culprit cut it off, so how did the culprit even call Kitsukawa Shigeru? I bet or at least hope that scene is explained better in the manga as usually in these types of stories the culprits cut off any phone connections to the crime scene. And now that I think about it, there would have been no way for the culprit to actually know if all of these people were hydrophobic or not. The more I think about it the more silly this story seems. It does all the basics right but everything around them doesn't really work.

Now then, I mentioned that the culprit's identity was obvious, but while it really was, it's not logically sound - aside from the ridiculous hydrophobia assumption from the culprit, how in the world would a high school student have been able to run after the overweight Saburou Kayama in the huge forest, kill him with an axe and the CARRY HIM all that way back to the cottage through the forest and put the victim to a closet without anyone noticing? That's impossible. The characters themselves would agree that that's impossible. Go watch episode 4, the first episode of this Hirenko Legend Murder Case; the characters themselves note that the culprit "Jason" is extraordinarily strong to be able to carry Saburou from the forest to the closet. Hopefully that part is explained in the manga. Or how was the other body lifted into the tree? The whole thing about making everyone think "Jason" was the culprit is also really badly presented in this case - no one saw the culprit ever and it was just assumed it's Jason, but so what? It literally plays no role in a way that would affect this story if the culprit didn't do that fake news announcement thing at all. The legendary killer/superstition/myth aspect could have been better inserted. 
 
The build-up and foreshadowing was surprisingly done well in this case but the case itself was paced extremely off. As I said previously, the characters kept running in and out of Miyuki's room like 10 times in quick succession. I was like what in the world is going on? The setting was pretty generic and I can bet there will be many more like this to come in this series. And honestly, I'm not that enthusiastic about going through another one of these.
Couple of the characters - notably Sayuri and Yousuke - were entertaining.
Although what happened to the culprit regarding Miyuki's inclusion was not that well written, the wrap-up to the case was pretty good with the emotional twist to it that has that symbolical meaning it shares with the legend of the lake. I guess I would have wanted to see what happened with Seiko and Sayuri though, and I can't help but wonder what happened with the raffle for the Membership Cards worth of 50 to 100 million yen? None of that was mentioned after the culprit was exposed and it was kind of forgotten. Was the whole thing truly a hoax? Did a high school kid trick everyone this bad... Also it's honestly odd how he got the tour guide also to be part of the people he'd want to kill and it was odd that the culprit never even questioned whether or not they were the ones responsible for the tragedy 3 years prior. He was just planning to kill everyone and then I guess continue his murders somewhere else, somehow or something. The case obviously had the inspiration from Texas Chainsaw Massacre with the axe and the mask so I guess the authors just couldn't make up their mind of writing a tragic story or a psycho story and this one kind of was what they came up with when they thought of a mix of both. 

I'd say that the strongest aspect of this story was just the fact that it did at least try to foreshadow a good chunk of things and make all the characters connected (for better or worse). Because of that I don't even think it's a bad case, even if a bit half-baked. I enjoyed few parts of it. But those pros are also what makes this story a bit uncomfortable to read at times as you have to suspend your disbelief here and there to make sense of it. It's possible that the authors bit more than they could chew for this one. This was definitely a worse case than the first one; Kindaichi's best moment was getting pissed off at the painter, and not only was the culprit's reaction to Miyuki the same what the culprit's reaction to Kindaichi was in the Seven Mysteries of Fudoh High Murder Case, but Miyuki also was injured and bedridden just like in the previous case - she's going to die of blood loss one of these days. 
 
 
By the way, I really like this piece of music from the original soundtrack of the anime series:
 

 

Monday, June 1, 2020

Kindaichi Case Files #1-3 - School's Seven Mysteries Murder Case

Kindaichi Case Files (1997) also known as The File of Young Kindaichi (Kindaichi Shounen no Jikenbo) is an anime adaptation by Toei Animation of a 1992 detective fiction manga of the same name. The series is illustrated by Saito Fumiya and written by Kanari Yozaburo, and at times written by Amagi Seimaru. Kindaichi Case Files is extremely popular in Japan as the manga sequels still runs these days, and the series has gained the popularity of the second most known drawn new orthodox mystery series in Japan.

The story focuses on Hajime Kindaichi, a young detective high schooler who is said to be the grandson of the great Kosuke Kindaichi by Yokomizo Seishi as Hajime often keeps saying that he'll figure out the truth behind a case in the name of his grandfather. There was a lawsuit in real life about that actually, so it can be assumed that the people that hold Kindaichi Kosuke's copyright ownerships are not happy with what the authors of Kindaichi Case Files did by making Hajime and Kosuke connected.

This post is going start a series of reviews on the cases of Kindaichi Case Files, each # representing a different File of the anime series. The manga actually starts with a different case than the anime but the beginning of the anime series (and the pre-digital era of anime in general) is very atmospheric, so definitely worth the watch just for that.
Since this series is extremely long similar to I need to find out a good ratio to put these out between other series reviews. Regardless, the first case here is a long 10-chapter case adapted in three episodes. While this particular case is the fourth case in the manga series, the anime put it as the first case and also changed some things around. It's understandable for this to be the first case in order to pull the viewers in immediately due to the amount of 'mysteries' the case presents in a school setting.


File 1 - A Neverending Adventure

School's Seven Mysteries Murder Case, the first case of the Kindaichi Case Files anime series, starts abruptly but yet also remarkably when it comes to setting up atmosphere and tension. A boy can be seen walking in darkness in a school with a flashlight as the lights are off. While in a room the boy turns around to see a girl, hanging from a rope, strangled. Then all of a sudden the lights go on and the girl instantly vanishes. That begins the rumours around the school as many other people have also claim to have witnessed the same scenery. The hanged girl began to be known as sort of a supernatural element in the biology room of the school, and the event began to be known as one of the Seven Mysteries of Fudoh High.

Miyuki Nanase, one of the main characters of the show, talks with other students around the campus about the hanged girl and we learn that the case consists of multiple mysteries right off the bat, a whole seven of them that all happen in the old and locked-up building near their school.

The first mystery is the one we already know of, "the forbidden biology room."
The second mystery has to do with a severed hand in the printing room of the old building.
The third mystery is a school fountain filled with blood.
The fourth mystery is unknown to the watcher.
The fifth mystery is unknown to the watcher.
The sixth mystery is unknown to the watcher.
But the seventh mystery is unknown and the student's don't know what it is, and it doesn't help that there is a rumor going around that says that if you find out what the seventh mystery of Fudoh High is, you'll be murdered by a supernatural creature known as the "Afterschool Magician"/"Afterschool Conjurer."

Note: while half of the mysteries are unknown in the anime, they are revealed in the manga. The watcher doesn't really have to wonder about those (I did though) as there's one thing that connects them all together; seven mysteries that can be answered really quickly if you put your head to it. I do feel like they could have been more different from each other and thought they would be more complex than what they were in the end but it's a nice addition to the case and it does make sense. The seventh mystery is the biggest one for certain reasons and basically another mystery in of itself.



Around the school roof Miyuki meets up Hajime Kindaichi, the main character of the series, who often acts in an arrogant and perverted manner; skipping class and peeking on girls' panties. Hajime actually does surprisingly bad in school - such as failing math tests - considering that he has a very high IQ of 180 compared to most people. Miyuki on the other hand is an excellent student who gets excellent grades, something Hajime uses to his advantage as he makes Miyuki do all his homework. Regardless of it all Miyuki and Hajime have been good friends since kindergarten, so they have years of history behind them and it's pretty clear that Miyuki and Kindaichi have some romantic feelings toward each other.

As Miyuki and Kindaichi are on the roof, a senior student from the Mystery Research Club, the beautiful Ruiko Sakuragi, arrives to talk Miyuki down and praise Hajime, claiming that she understands Hajime's true worth. Ruiko has an offer that she makes to Hajime - she will do the math homework for him while Hajime has a job to do for her; Hajime has to solve all the Seven Mysteries of Fudoh Academy.

Kindaichi takes up Sakuragi's offer and heads to the Mystery Research Club with Miyuki. In the club they meet other "smart" mystery solver students; Makoto Makabe, an arrogant student who had won a mystery novel competition and gained a nice amount of popularity on the best-sellers lists with his "The Dead Body Tells Everything" novel, Takahiro Onou, another club member who did not make it past the preliminaries of the competition who seems aggressive towards Makoto, Tomoyo Takajima, a girl who wears plastic gloves and cleans everything due to being careful against allergies, as well as Ryuuta Saki, a student who loves filming other people.

In the club room Ruiko Sakuragi had left a code to everyone by having placed playing cards on a table. Hajime quickly deduces the meaning behind the playing cards just meaning that a club camp is going to be held during a holiday week, his quick deductions leave the others students astounded.

Ruiko Sakuragi then arrives in the club room along with a teacher and they start the club meeting which is about the Seven Mysteries of Fudoh High. It's revealed that the "Afterschool Conjurer"(I'll be using that as is sounds cooler than Afterschool Magician for this case) had sent a threat letter to the principal of Fudoh High. The threat letter claims that if the old school building where the rumours take place were to be demolished (as that's been in plans), the Seven Mysteries would be repeated once more around the school. Regardless the Mystery Club is going to aim to solve the mysteries and the identity of the Afterschool Conjurer. 
During the club meeting Yuuichirou Matoba, the Physics Teacher of Fudoh Academy, reveals that in the past a student who tried to find out what the Seventh Mystery was went missing.

The club meeting ends and Kindaichi and the others part their ways, but before that Sakuragi gives him information about the contents in floppy discs from the mystery club that might be a hint to solving the mystery of Fudoh High.
As evening falls, Sakuragi is on the computer in the school, about to find out clues to solving the mysteries of Fudoh High, the set-up to the case ahead happens with the "genius high school novelist" getting exposed as a fraud, an earthquake happening and Sakuragi finding out what the Seventh Mystery is. Sakuragi soon calls Hajime to come to the school and the last scene of her is a man with a rope behind her.

When Hajime and Miyuki arrive to the school, the other club members also arrive as a male voice had said on the phone that "come at 10 pm to the club room as there will be death ritual." But the whole group gets caught by the school's Security Guard Ryuouzou Tachibana. 

As Hajime and Ryuouzou patrol around the school in order to find Sakuragi, they see through the school's front window to the biology room of the haunted house; and what they see is candle lights presenting the ritual circle along with the corpse of Sakuragi hanging from the ceiling and the Afterschool Conjurer looking at them. However when the group of them arrive to the biology room, and others also gather around to try and break the door down, they can't find the Afterschool Conjurer, the corpse of Sakuragi or the ritual circle in the room.
The next day as Hajime and Miyuki arrive to school their world turns upside-down as Sakuragi's corpse is found hanging in the biology room along with the ritual circle of candles on the ground.

The first episode ends in an emotional way as Sakuragi's body is found and Kindaichi falls down to his knees, looks up at the hanging body and vows in the name of his grandfather to figure out who the Afterschool Conjurer is. 

After comparing the case to the manga I noticed that they censored the ecchier scenes with Sakuragi - they added Kindaichi lifting his head up but not looking at her panties at the school roof. Also they cut off the comedic scenes with Kindaichi getting a boner and Miyuki and Sakuragi talking about him. I think cutting that off helped to pace the episode better. I think they might have skipped too much at the end of the case though. 


File 2 - The Mysteries of Fudoh High

The gruesome event that has now occurred in Fudoh High was as if the return of the seven mysteries as promised by the Afterschool Conjurer, even though the school was not going to get demolished yet. In the school around the crime scene Hajime meets Inspector Kenmochi Isamu whom Hajime has helped to solve cases in the past. Kenmochi is one of the main cast characters of the series.

Inspector Kenmochi then explains the autopsy report to Kindaichi.

According to the autopsy the victim, Sakuragi Ruiko, died between 9 p.m. and 10 p.m. the previous night. Meaning that she died before the group gathered around at 10 p.m. due to the phone call. This acts as confirmation to Kindaichi that what he saw through the window with the security guard was really the death ritual that the others were informed of on the phone when they were called to the school. Kindaichi witnessed the death at 9:40 p.m. 

The layouts of the new and old school buildings act as hints to solving this mystery as we get to see the trajectory from which Kindaichi and the Security Guard saw the ritual happen in the Biology room of the old building from the new building. 
I'm pretty sure anyone can at least guess correctly what the problem is, however, as the two of them only had the Biology room out of sight for a few seconds as they were breaking through the door, the only way the crime could have happened is if the culprit had taken Sakuragi down very quickly and threw her and gotten rid of the noose and the ritual candles as well as somehow be able to hide or take Sakuragi's body away while in a locked room setting in that time it took Hajime and the others to break down the door. 

Because of all the superstitions, a large amount of potential suspects and lack of clues towards the culprit, the answer to this locked room case is quite hard to point out, however luckily Saki, the student who loves filming, got all of the exact times that the people arrived in the room on videotape. The entrance through the door to the Biology room happened in such a way that it took five minutes until every single suspect had gathered. So the problem is, how to get rid of all the evidence, the body and the Afterschool Conjurer costume in that time frame? The windows of the biology room, although locked, also contain marks of being opened or closed by a wire, so that also could be used as a way to create an alibi. A very common locked room trick.
However that is not what actually happened and Hajime doesn't believe that this culprit would stoop so low as to use a simple wire trick because of all the other elaborate setup the criminal had done.

Kenmochi explains that ten years prior, in 1987, there was a female student, Aoyama Chihiro, who had disappeared after investigating the Seven Mysteries of Fudoh Academy, which is where the rumours come from. Chihiro, much like Sakuragi, was also part of the Mystery Research Club. Even though police worked the best they could, Chihiro was never found. It appears that Chihiro was investigating the Six Mysteries instead of seven, and that the old school building has some connections to a group called Takahata Pharmaceuticals. It's worth noting that Hajime also thinks that Chihiro reminds him of one of the people, he can't exactly pinpoint which one, though.

This is when another person gets murdered during the night as they try to figure out the Seventh Mystery by deciphering the contents of the floppy disc he had taken from Sakuragi after she was killed. Kindaichi arrives at school the next day to see the police and Inspector Kenmochi around a dead and beaten dead body, of one of the students, Onoue, that has been covered. According to the autopsy the second victim of the Afterschool Conjurer died by bone fracture on the skull. Even though the scene seems bloody, it's actually paint to imitate one of the Seven Mysteries as the crime scene was the Printing room, although Kindaichi theorizes that the body was in fact moved. The autopsy report claims that the lack of blood means that the victim was beaten by a blunt object that had been wrapped in something.

Things take another turn as Miyuki goes to the room where Onoue was truly killed in order to find the handkerchief that Kindaichi gave her but she'd lost as they were in the room. And then the Afterschool Conjurer in his creepy mask and wig appears once more in a horror-like manner to hurt hurt Miyuki, as they usually do to her, and the story heads towards its climax in the final part.


File 3 - The Conclusion

Miyuki is in the hospital. Her life is in a critical condition and we even see some back side shots of Miyuki's father and mother, but we never learn their names or really get to see their faces.
The attack on Miyuki Nanase hit Hajime Kindaichi really hard so he falls into a slight depression. As Kindaichi sits in the hospital, Kenmochi makes his appearance to bring Hajime information on Takahata Pharmaceuticals that were mentioned in the second episode. Kenmochi learned that Takahata Pharmaceuticals actually owned the old school building 30 years prior. Kenmochi found that the company has a rather shady history as all the people - coincidentally six of them - who were tested on new drugs in there happened to vanish, declared missing.

After telling this new information to Kindaichi, Hajime decides to speak and say that he's going to stop investigating the case because he feels regret about letting Miyuki get attacked and injured critically. This scene is pretty great because it takes a break from all the information in the case and focuses on an important character moment; it's sad that Kindaichi's characters always return to how they were after cases because this could have been a great character development moment in the show! One problem I have with this hospital ordeal however is that we don't know anything about Kenmochi's and Hajime's history; it feels a bit unrealistic to have a higher ranking inspector go tell a teenager important information on a case. It's far too convenient in a sense. I also don't see how the police forgot to investigate certain scenes.

Hajime wakes up from a dream the next morning and goes to Miyuki thinking she'd died; of course not, but this moment is probably one of the more iconic scenes of the show; as Hajime tells Miyuki that he's giving up on the case, Miyuki gives Hajime a pep speech while emotional music is playing: "Don't lose, Hajime. Before there's another victim, capture the culprit as soon as possible. You're the only one who can do it, Hajime-chan." Now that I think about it, it sounds almost like a dying speech, ironic.

Hajime returns back to the computer room to figure out what the code left by Sakuragi on the disc was, but he still doesn't understand all of the case - until he remember Miyuki telling him in the hospital that it was when she tried to take off the poster in the computer room that she was attacked by the Afterschool Conjurer. Kindaichi goes to the poster, takes it off and finally realizes the truth behind the case. But how many watchers do exactly I wonder? Surely not all the clue have been laid out even if you can definitely know who the culprit is, there is definitely something left.

At this point the watcher should be able to pinpoint who the culprit by thinking of the timeline; what can be possible? Think about why exactly the Afterschool Conjurer threatened the principal.



The classic scene seen in many different detective fiction series begins next as Kindaichi gathers all the remaining suspects in the old school building. Although everyone else has gathered, Kindaichi is nowhere to be seen. Until they see a scene through the window about him hanging from a rope while surrounded by candles much like Sakuragi did, in that very same room. The group runs to the Biology room of the old school building, but the room is empty. Kindaichi decides to surprise the others by dressing up in the mask that he had picked up from somewhere and revealing that the Afterschool Conjurer used this same trick to show them the ritual murder when they made Sakuragi disappear. And with that Hajime claims that "The culprit is among us!"

The revelation of the trick used by the Afterschool Conjurer is not that special. In fact I don't think it was foreshadowed at all but it's not hard to think about either. I personally did not think about it but I knew that something like this had to be the case since the view to the window is in a straight line. I think that the original assumed "culprit's scenario" window opening wire trick was not that much different from this honestly, but yes that would have been absolutely impossible to guess. The rest of the episode goes through the reveals one after another up to the inevitable conclusion of the case.


And that concludes this journey with the School's Seven Mysteries Murder Case that consists of the first three episodes of the Kindaichi Case Files anime series. The pacing was frankly surprisingly pretty great as it adapted an entire volume length of 10 chapters in three episodes; while I believe that the manga chapters of Kindaichi Shounen no Jikenbo lack substance to them and feel kind of short, and the art is not as good as it could be, this kind of condensed adaptation of a bunch of chapters in three episodes feels great, it fixes the content problems of the manga when they do this.


So, what are my thoughts on the first adapted case of Kindaichi Case Files? The opening theme Confused Memories by Yuko Tsuburaya is alright, it's nothing special when it comes to visuals or the song and there are some problems with the editing of the opening, however it does fit this series very well. The first ending theme song Futari by Tomosaka Rie is pretty decent. The ending visuals are mediocre but I do like the song as it calms down the tensity from the episodes but not too much.

School's Seven Mysteries Murder Case itself was honestly a really good case, even if you could pretty much pinpoint the culprit with accuracy, it still leaves you doubting due to not giving away too much. The build up to the surprise-inside-the-xxx was neat. Even if I expected it, it's just that some of the theories coming to fruitition is a nice feeling. The plot winds back to the victim 10 years ago and the time of the research laboratory of Takahata Pharmaceuticals 30 years ago during which tests were being done in the old school building. The culprit's motivations were different from what you'd expect; there was lack of personal bias towards the victims. The fact that the case has some history to it also makes the case feel kind of important rather than just being about revenge. The ending of the case was solid although the room trick could have been presented better, even if it was kept the same. There are a some unrealistic aspects about the show for sure, like Kenmochi working with Kindaichi and the ending with the bubble gum feels ironically sort of like the ending event was actually Hajime's fault; there was no need to gather the people, he could have just showed the truth of the old school building to Kenmochi and headed home. Kindaichi's actions there are clearly way too ridicilous but the authors did not focus on it at all so it must have been done unintentionally, to wrap the long case up. Also one complaint I could say is that for one volume, there's very little we know and understand about our main characters Hajime, Miyuki or Kenmochi. They had some cool moments but I feel like they are empty slates at the moment and the case itself could do just as well without two of the three. Kindaichi's importance to the case is there in the first episode however as he's built up to be the person who the victim, Sakuragi, trusts to solve the mysteries of the Academy.

Anyways, for being the first case in the series this definitely has a really nice and tense air to it, which is by far its biggest strength along with the pacing since as I mentioned it adapts a whopping 10 chapters in 3 episodes so there is almost always something important to think about and gather your thoughts on, at least whenever it doesn't take a breather from the case. There are intense amount of mysteries to solve from the identity of the Afterschool Conjurer to the culprit's motivations; why did the culprit try to force the school to stop the demolition of the old school building? Why follow the events of the Seven Mysteries so badly? And The Seven Mysteries themselves that connect to the past of the school, and who does Kindaichi think the victim 10 years ago resembles out of the group?

The atmosphere of this case is on point and it's a really great start to the series with its old cell-shaded style that could send the creeps down most people's spine. I think this 1997 adaptation might be my favourite anime from Toei Animation, even if I really like some episodes from DBZ. The beginning of the first part of this case is tense albeit just a short scene, the end of the first part of this case as Sakuragi's corpse is found the next day, is sort of emotional with the music and build up. The death of Onoue is done pretty quickly but in a tense way as well and the moment when Hajime finds Miyuki's blood in the room where Onoue was killed is pretty atmospheric as well as the soundtrack used for that scene is the sound of heart beat and nothing else, then Kindaichi immediately trying to think where the culprit could have taken Miyuki, and when he does that it's done in a nice way as well, it has some 'oomph' to it. Then there's the scene with Hajime claiming he's giving up on the case and Miyuki giving him motivation to keep going. All of these things manage to enhance the story bring this case to life.
The ending of the case was also really well handled; it hit all the right marks. Now that I think about it, the motive of the culprit in this case is somewhat of similar sort as the motive of the Kamikakushi Village Murder Case in Tantei Gakuen Q from the same authors. This type of motive is very interesting as it deals with the culprit guarding a long-standing secret.

The only major problem with this case was how they threw away rest of the characters such as the girl who was afraid of germs that worked as a ghostwriter to the jerk student was completely forgotten in the adaptation. The manga does give them couple of panels of screen time at the end however. Also you could critisize the lack of foreshadowing for the 'mirror' and the police work - there's no way they would do that little work and be unable to find the blood on a keyboard if they spent any time searching the area, in that sense the way the author hid the "real murder scene" where also almost all the other mysteries of this case were, was somewhat forced I'd say.