TFW2005
Hisstank
Thundercats
TokuNation
Toyark
Home
News
Garo
Godzilla
Kamen Rider
Metal Heroes
Power Rangers
Super Sentai
Ultraman
All News Categories
Forum
News & Rumors
Power Rangers
Kamen Rider
Super Sentai
Other Toku Series
Toys and Collectables
Marketplace
Creative
Galleries
Companies
Bandai Japan
Tamashii Nations
Saban Brands
Bandai America
Toei
Characters
Kamen Rider Ghost
Kamen Rider Specter
Kamen Rider Necrom
Mighty Morphin Green Ranger
Dino Charge Red Ranger
Toylines
S.H. Figuarts
S.H. MonsterArts
DX Mecha
Megazords
Legacy
Shows
Kamen Rider Ghost
Doubutsu Sentai Zyuohger
Power Rangers Dino Supercharge
Power Rangers Movie 2017
TokuNation.com
>
TokuNation
Integration
User Name
Remember Me?
Password
Rules
Register
Community
Today's Posts
Search
Community Links
Members List
Search Forums
Show Threads
Show Posts
Advanced Search
Go to Page...
Thread
:
Kamen Rider Die watches Kamen Rider Kiva
View Single Post
05-28-2021, 06:20 PM
#
366
Fish Sandwich
The Immortal King Tasty
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Every diner you've ever been to.
Posts: 4,020
Today's track gets used fairly regularly during the opening narration from Kivat, including for episode 18 of course, and probably because of that, it's... I mean, I don't even know how to describe
this
well. It's just one I hear and instantly go "oh yeah that's music from Kiva?" Anyway, it's really tense and cool so maybe give it a listen the next time a bat is lecturing you about music history or something i don't know
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Kamen Rider Die
I know it’s a fill-in story, writer-wise, but this was about as definitive a Kiva story as I can recall.
I kinda think this is a scenario where it might be
because
of it being a fill-in story that it turned out so good? Like Yonemura realized this was his one shot to write Kiva and tried to essentially put the entirety of the show as he saw it all in that single script. Hence all the characters being peak themselves, and the narrative structure that makes such textbook use of the dual time periods.
I've mentioned that I'm skimming back through all these episodes to pick out music for them, and these two ended up being a lot more
gripping
than most so far? I can't remember much about my initial reaction to this two-parter; I'm pretty sure I liked it quite a bit because Kiva as a whole was still very much riding high for me in this stretch, but nothing about the plot stuck too much with me. While I basically got the highlights reel version jumping all around from scene to scene, and haven't rewatched it in full, I have a feeling I'd be echoing a lot of your thoughts here, because many of those isolated moments I was catching really commanded my attention in a good way. It even gave me a new appreciation for the overall themes of the show, in fact!
There's a lyric in the first verse of Break the Chain that's rather cruelly cut out of the TV-Size edit despite summing up the nature of Kiva's plotting so perfectly: "everything that surrounds you in the present is a message from the past." And that's so much of this show, of course, from the scars left on bits of the environment from battles in 1986, to something used to great effect in this episode, which is Wataru being taught something by someone who learned it from Otoya. I don't know why it was looking back at this particular episode that convinced me of this, but I'm starting to guess Kiva's whole thing about connections is something I would appreciate
significantly
more on a rewatch in a post-Ghost world.
There's stuff about that central gimmick of the show taking place across two years so far apart where I think people like to look at it very literally and poke fun – the constantly escaping '86 Fangire being a particularly popular subject for that – and while I'm always down to poke fun at Kiva, it's becoming apparent to me there are genuine thematic strengths to
emotional
parts of that gimmick I feel like I've been underestimating. There's this real beauty in the idea of Wataru as a character desperate to connect with his father as he makes his way through a turbulent life, scarcely realizing how often the love of that father keeps finding its way back to him when he needs it most. Otoya looking out for his son without even trying. Being there for him without being there at all.
I don't know. Whatever point I'm trying to make, it's obviously underdeveloped having such an incomplete recollection of the series, but there's something very
poetic
going on here that I'm pretty sure I like.
__________________
Fish Sandwich
View Public Profile
Send a private message to Fish Sandwich
Find More Posts by Fish Sandwich
TokuNation News & Rumors
Question about the KamenRider_TV Twitch channel
SHIN ZERO: a Graphic Novel for the Rent-a-Sentai Generation
Singer NoB has passed away
Kamen Rider Amazon & Stronger Bluray Announced
Choriki Sentai Ohranger 30th Anniversary
More New Posts
Kamen Rider Gavv Episode 50- "Aim For It! A Delicious Future" Discussion
No.1 Sentai Gozyuger Episode 28- "Dancing With Love! This Is The AI" Discussion
S.H. Figuarts (Toku Related) Thread
What are you watching (Sentai edition)
Kamen Rider Die watches SSSS.Gridman and SSSS.Dynazenon
Kamen Rider Gavv Episode 49- "I Believe In Snacks!" Discussion
No. 1 Sentai Gozyuger Episode 27- "Win The Battle! Get Rich Quick!" Discussion
Funny Toku Images thread
Is ZI-O good?
Blog Ideas. Please help.
Current Poll
How Would You Rate This Episode?
Excellent!
Good
Average
OK
Poor...
»
View Poll Results
»
Comment On This Poll
»
This Poll Has 4 Replies
Search Forums
»
Advanced Search
All times are GMT -5. The time now is
02:26 AM
.
Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Powered by
vBadvanced
CMPS