Kino's Journey Episode 1 Discusion.

This forum is for discussing Chuck's videos as they are publicly released. And for bashing Neelix, but that's just repeating what I already said.
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Kino's Journey Episode 1 Discusion.

Post by MithrandirOlorin »

Since I don't we have one on the new Forum.

I generally firmly support Chuck's decisions to use the Dubs. Kino is an awkward position however as I recently learned, in the Japanese Kino used a kinda Masculine Pronoun, "Boku" but generally didn't Gender themselves, though was clearly assigned Female at birth. The voice performance was also more Gender Ambiguous, while the Dub makes Kino's voice noticeably more Feminine.

I learned this reading a good review of the New Reboot.
http://www.animefeminist.com/review-kin ... episode-1/
the original anime featured instances of Kino protesting to being referred to as “boy” (bouya) or “miss” (ojou-chan). Kino’s response to both was “I’m Kino” (Boku ha Kino desu).
Contrary to what many people think, They/Them being used as a singular pronouns is not grammatically incorrect.

Getting back to the actual Episode. I suppose it's a moral about why telling "Little White Lies" is okay.
Last edited by MithrandirOlorin on Wed Oct 18, 2017 5:00 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Kino's Jounry Episode 1 Discusion.

Post by MithrandirOlorin »

Does anyone want to repeat what they might have said on the Old Forum?
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Re: Kino's Jounry Episode 1 Discusion.

Post by Ghilz »

That poor thread title...
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Re: Kino's Jounry Episode 1 Discusion.

Post by MithrandirOlorin »

Fixed.
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Re: Kino's Journey Episode 1 Discusion.

Post by Nevix »

Episode 1 takes ideas in Objectivism and arguably the Freedom based US' Second Amendment to an extreme, to make a point that is... there.

The point of the episode is that, to have a society that allows everyone to be armed and free to kill, you would need both people who are willing to see people killed, and someone who is willing to kill for them.

In Objectivism, which begins with a solid moral foundation before anything else, murder would not need to be illegal because Objectivists would already have the standard that murder is both immoral and unnecessary in most circumstances.

It's not supported in the reality of countries that have free/armed populaces, as there are plenty of places where people are armed, and don't kill for fun. While this does have exceptions (Las Vegas being a recent example), they ARE exceptions to the rule of law abiding armed citizens handling guns safely.

Also, it makes little difference to me whether Kino is a travelling girl, as is shown in the original anime version, or if she's a girl pretending to be a boy, or if he's just a boy in the new version. It literally matters not to the overall story thus far.
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Re: Kino's Journey Episode 1 Discusion.

Post by MithrandirOlorin »

In Japan Kino has always been gender Ambigious, this is not new to the new Reboot.
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Re: Kino's Journey Episode 1 Discusion.

Post by TGLS »

Nevix wrote:Episode 1 takes ideas in Objectivism and arguably the Freedom based US' Second Amendment to an extreme, to make a point that is... there.
Did we watch the same episode? I thought the episode was about a society that collapsed because everyone became a telepath.
Nevix also wrote:In Objectivism, which begins with a solid moral foundation before anything else, murder would not need to be illegal because Objectivists would already have the standard that murder is both immoral and unnecessary in most circumstances.
I suppose in Objectivist societies, the criminals also arrest themselves.
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Re: Kino's Journey Episode 1 Discusion.

Post by MithrandirOlorin »

Nevix I think was commenting on pilot of the new Reboot. Which I mentioned in the OP but wasn't meant to be the point of the thread.
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Re: Kino's Journey Episode 1 Discusion.

Post by J!! »

there was a reboot?
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Re: Kino's Journey Episode 1 Discusion.

Post by excalibur »

Nevix wrote:Episode 1 takes ideas in Objectivism and arguably the Freedom based US' Second Amendment to an extreme, to make a point that is... there.

The point of the episode is that, to have a society that allows everyone to be armed and free to kill, you would need both people who are willing to see people killed, and someone who is willing to kill for them.

In Objectivism, which begins with a solid moral foundation before anything else, murder would not need to be illegal because Objectivists would already have the standard that murder is both immoral and unnecessary in most circumstances.

It's not supported in the reality of countries that have free/armed populaces, as there are plenty of places where people are armed, and don't kill for fun. While this does have exceptions (Las Vegas being a recent example), they ARE exceptions to the rule of law abiding armed citizens handling guns safely.

Also, it makes little difference to me whether Kino is a travelling girl, as is shown in the original anime version, or if she's a girl pretending to be a boy, or if he's just a boy in the new version. It literally matters not to the overall story thus far.
SPOILER if you want to watch the show

In the previous show, many of the stories used to be about concepts that sounded ideal, but when implemented, had a lot of darker undertones to it. This episode is all about a country that sounds like a dystopia, but when you actually go there - it's a good place to live in. In a way, the flip to a more beautiful art style feels like this is a 'mirror' to the original Kino, while still being the same world.

The use of Wild West scenery for the buildings subverts the normal things we think about when we think about Westerns. We usually think Westerns are full of lawless killing, but this doesn't have any of that.

I thought that the episode would end with Kino just leaving, but the extra touch with the second traveler is what pushes this story to a higher level. It shows the difference between a guy who merely dreams about killing and acting lawless, and a guy who has actually experienced it. Ultimately, the moral seems to be that even in 'anarchy', or what should be a chaotic state, humans will always aim towards order and law to earn mutual benefits.

To go deeper to the point, it has nothing to do with guns or owning weapons and especially the 2nd Amendment of the US constitution. To those that say it's pro gun, remember how the one guy was killed and it wasn't from guns or even from enthusiastic people. They did it because that's their way of dealing with a problem, not because they want to. This is a society that's developed on the idea that as a community, they need to look out for each other and protect each other.

I'm not saying this will actually work but it is the idea of, if you can be killed and it isn't illegally for it, then suddenly what bounds us together isn't law, but our morals.
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