The First Ten Mushi-Shi

Posted on September 24, 2007 by super rats in Anime

I wandered into a random screening room sometime around ten at night, mostly just looking for a place to sit down and rest. It almost didn’t matter what anime was showing; a seat and a break from the convention was the goal. As soon as I sat down, the opening for the next episode began. Some seconds pass. Hazy forest images and the first phrase of an acoustic guitar walking beside a gentle voice singing — I knew Mushi-Shi was something else. The opening imagery and music were so atypical of anime that I found myself relieved of any cynicism I might have carried into the viewing experience. Almost a purification. It’s kind of funny that the opening song is The Sore Feet Song considering the only reason I was in that chair at that particular time was because my feet hurt.

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Wallpaper from Desk Top Anime

Ginko is a mushi master that wanders the landscape and encounters people whose lives have been touched by the mushi, creatures invisible to all but a few. Mushi are said to be the purest form of life. Ginko describes the relation between human and mushi on the continuum of life by saying if humans exist on the tip of the middle finger the mushi are at the point closest to the heart and all other life forms lay at some point in between. There is great distance there, the furthest possible distance. Interesting that humanity resides at the point furthest from the heart. Perhaps it is that distance that makes it impossible for most people to perceive the mushi.

mushishi01_1.jpgEach beautiful episode is a self contained story of a life altered by the mushi. These encounters people have with the mushi are often tragic, lives are destroyed and even lost, yet Ginko says that the Mushi are not evil. The destruction that their existence brings into people’s lives is not the fault of the Mushi for they are simply trying to live. Part of me agrees with that view. Is the fox evil for killing the rabbit for food? In the grand scheme of things, the fox needs to eat and isn’t evil; however, another part of me views the situation from the rabbit’s perspective.

In any case Ginko refrains from passing judgment as he tries to remove the mushi from where they don’t belong. The matter of fact view he holds, that mushi simply are, does something to what is essentially a monster of the week formula in Mushi-Shi. The mushi become background and setting. There is no villain. What’s being fought for, the struggle in each story, isn’t against the mushi. The real story in each episode is the past, watching a life (or lives) destroyed and that person finding either hope or despair, taking either or both as the next step in their destroyed lives. Mushi-Shi feels very much like a fable, the dark kind, the old kind that lurk in the part of the brain where the ancient and timeless memories reside. These stories haunt.

Ginko is kind of a strange character. He is different from everyone else in the land. The setting of these stories appears to be a Japan before the modern age, a time where science hadn’t yet turned the popular consciousness against the unobservable. In this place Ginko is an anachronism. He is a modern in an unmodern world. His wardrobe is something out of a recent Eddie Bauer catalog, whereas everyone else wears what today is considered the costume of Japan in antiquity. Part of me wants to say he is a scientist in a world that hasn’t absorbed science as a world view. His observation of the mushi is scientific rather than mystic, such as in the third episode, where he describes the motives of the Aa mushi in terms of their ecological needs. However, many of Ginko’s methods for removing the mushi from its human host aren’t scientific and he seems to have some sort of mystical connection with the mushi.

mushishi_ep02_1.jpgOne of the interesting things about each of the mushi tales so far is that almost all of the persons that had been cured feels a loss with the removal of the mushi from them. They express an emptiness. It’s interesting in consideration that the mushi had pretty much destroyed the life they would have had otherwise. I’ll be interested to see if some of the other episodes show a little more about what happens afterward. A couple of the stories on the second disc show Ginko trying to guide these survivors back to path of a normal life and warning against the lure of bringing the mushi back into their lives.

For now, I see Ginko as a guardian.

The Funimation Dub

Mike McFarland directs the English cast for Mushi-Shi. From some of his previous directorial work (Fullmetal Alchemist, Trinity Blood), he struck me as the bold brush stroke type, a style contrast to Mushi-Shi. There is something to be said about getting the chance to work on something different. This is one of the best dubs of 2007.

Naturally, the lead is the key. Travis Willingham perfectly expresses Ginko. Nothing in the performance feels cheap to me. Funimation must have to explore all avenues to cast this show, since each episode has a different set of characters to cast that the usual talent pool just isn’t large enough. Sure enough, reading through credits of each episode gives me a couple of names I’m not that familiar with and a who is who among voice actors who work in anime in Texas and beyond. For the most part, these roles sound much better than episode characters tend to sound. In particular, Laura Bailey and Brina Palencia in the second episode were devastatingly good as Sui and Biki.

The only thing that takes me out of the show is the narrator. It feels like they were going for the same narrator style as those old PBS story time shows, where an artist would draw a scene while the narrator would tell the story. I used to be fascinated by those draw and tell programs, so my memory might be overeager to make that jump.

Summary

Mushi-Shi is a spectacular anime with gorgeous artwork and careful stories that can sit in your head for a couple of days if you let them. While action buffs might find it a bit slow, Mushi-Shi is so first rate that I encourage everyone to give it a shot.

Comments


  • Aya Kyunik
    on September 24th, 2007
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    My friend introduced me to this but I didn’t really watch it due to available time.

    Your post just reminded me to get my butt off and watch it XD
    While I love my action, I also like my brain to be stimulated in another way like you described, having thoughts sit in my head for a few days.


  • Anon
    on September 24th, 2007
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    (okay, second time trying to type this, I didn’t give my email the first time, it complained, and I also lost all my post! grr…)

    I’ve never seen Mushi-Shi, for some reason whenever I hear the name I think “bugs”, which puts me off (is the Japanese for ‘bug’ similar to that or something? if it’s not, I haven’t got a clue why that association is in my mind). I do intend to get around to watching it one day, with any luck.

    On another note, I think perhaps your positive impression of the anime wasn’t just down to the anime itself but the place you viewed it. When I was in the middle of my exams, totally drained from studying, I just wanted some catharsis and some quiet time for my mind to be recover whilst concious, and so I watched some anime. And because of that it left a very vivid impression on me, even though it was a good anime besides, it just seemed even more so then.

    To put it another way, I think that, personally at least, when I’m watching anime my mind’s often too busy with other things to really just slow down and absorb what I’m watching, however much I try and set aside some time to just watch anime, somehow other thoughts always seem to wander in. It’s a shame really…

    Anyone else know what I mean?


  • Totali
    on September 24th, 2007
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    Mushishi has always been one of my favorites. Every episode is just a joy to watch, with stories that just make your imagination soar. Some of the later episodes are even more amazing. If you plan on finishing this series, you’re in for a treat.


  • super rats
    on September 24th, 2007
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    Bugs, eh? My first association with mushi is mushi cake…now I’m going to be looking for strange things every time I bite into one now. I get what you’re saying about being distracted by other things. I try to be deliberate when I’m watching something, make sure everything that needs to be done is out of the way. Where, when, and if anyone else is with me I think has some impact on how I take in a show.

    I find it easy to have Mushi-Shi take me someplace and plan to watch until the end.


  • coeli
    on September 24th, 2007
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    My Japanese director friend introduced me to Mushishi. He told me that I would like it so I got the whole set. I still haven’t finished it due to lack of time, but as far as I know, I liked Mushishi a lot.

    (…and I’ve been meaning to write an entry about it on my blog after I finish it too…)


  • aoil
    on September 25th, 2007
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    Mushishi would be better as a thirteen-episode series; the visuals are nice, but the pace was way too slow


  • super rats
    on September 25th, 2007
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    On the plus side, at least with Mushi-Shi, you can pretty much get out whenever you’ve had enough. There isn’t that overarching plot that’s keeping you on a show just to finish it.


  • bigearl
    on October 6th, 2007
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    I bought the “Sore Feet Song” a while ago on iTunes, I love that song.

    Anyway, I think Travis Willingham specializes on characters that lose their left eye. I love this show as well.


  • super rats
    on October 8th, 2007
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    I’m just waiting for Ginko to snap his fingers and blow stuff up.

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