SIDONIA NO KISHI
STATUS
COMPLETE
VOLUMES
15
RELEASE
September 25, 2015
CHAPTERS
78
DESCRIPTION
Outer space, the far future.
A lone seed ship, the Sidonia, plies the void, ten centuries since the obliteration of the solar system. The massive, nearly indestructible, yet barely sentient alien life forms that destroyed humanity’s home world continue to pose an existential threat.
Nagate Tanikaze has only known life in the vessel’s bowels deep below the sparkling strata where humans have achieved photosynthesis and new genders. Not long after he emerges from the Underground, however, the youth is bequeathed a treasured legacy by the spaceship’s coolheaded female captain.
Meticulously drawn, peppered with clipped humor, but also unusually attentive to plot and structure for the international cult favorite, Knights of Sidonia may be Tsutomu Nihei’s most accessible work to date even as it hits notes of tragic grandeur as a hopeless struggle for survival unfolds.
(Source: Kodansha USA)
CAST
Izana Shinatose
Tsumugi Shiraui
Nagate Tanikaze
Shizuka Hoshijiro
Yuhata Midorikawa
Sasaki
Kobayashi
Lala Hiyama
Benisuzume
En Honoka
Ren Honoka
Ittan Samari
Ro Honoka
Norio Kunato
Ochiai
Eiko Yamano
Hou Honoka
Mozuku Kunato
CHAPTERS
RELATED TO SIDONIA NO KISHI
REVIEWS
YourMangaSucks
17/100Knights of Sidonia bored me to deathContinue on AniListKnights of Sidonia is one of the first titles I encountered as a recommendation when I first got into manga. Since then I 've been curious to check it out but it mostly stayed as a staple in my Plan to Read until I randomly decided to give it a chance not knowing what else to read. Having read BLAME! (which I didn't really enjoy) I expected another compilation of cool art and a loose story and well... I was wrong.
What I liked:- As someone who has studied architecture, Nihei does an amazing job visualizing his fictional worlds. The environment always looks authentic and provides for many great panels.
What I didn't like:
- Unlike the locations in the story, the character designs in Nihei's works are simply unimpressive. This is especially problematic when the story has as large a cast as in Knights of Sidonia. Most designs are unimaginative and feel deprived of any life to such extent, that the most interesting character visually is just a bear (kinda).
- Having striking detailed designs is not always a necessity, however. What really matters is the characters themselves. Well Nihei fails to deliver yet again. The entire cast feels extremely bland to the point that I can't say anything about any of the characters' personalities. All the slice of life moments were like watching robots exchanging prerecorded sounds. Due to this being the case, my involvement with the story was minimal which leads to the last point.
- The story of Knights of Sidonia was as basic as it could get. It followed the same formula of enemy appears ---> good guys fight enemy ---> back to normal for the ENTIRE time. It became repetitive so fast especially due to the previous point and helped frustrate me to no end. To add insult to injury, the dialogue is 80% random terminology which after a while became indifferent to me as I did not care what happened anyway. There is also the fact that Nihei never forgot to add a cheap fanservice moment at least once a volume as if he was trying to make the readers not leave before the story gets to its peak.
- Finally the ending was dumb. Having our main character end up with his dream girl regardless of any logic felt purely forced. Not to mention how the great revelation that he is a clone was used as a brief moment of shock and had no purpose. The final arc in general was not much different from the previous with stakes being as low as possible.
Overall I can say I totally wasted my time on a manga I will soon forget. I think Tsutomu Nihei should just do art exhibitions and not make any more miserable attempts at storytelling. So unless you are a major fan of his, don't read this series. It is not good.
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72/100Tsutomu Nihei is one of the nuttiest individuals to have ever inhabited this orb hurdling through spaceContinue on AniListKnights of Sidonia is a freakish manga. Some have called it Tsutomu Nihei's sell-out work. They hate it for the notably harem-esque organization of the cast, the high school romance style gags and the resulting flaccid interpersonal drama. In terms of its characters and their greater social context and relationships, it's no Gundam Zeta. It's not even a Code Geass, though that's closer. Yet there's not a charismatic sort like Lelouch (assuming that's your type, of course) to take the spotlight here. If you're looking for a good character driven drama, perhaps this series isn't the one. In spite of that, a good portion of the series is devoted to Nagate Tanikaze, our hero, missing love signals from the girls he works with, or eventually lives with. When he's not pulling out a miracle on the battlefield, he's accidentally peeking in on a gaggle of naked girls in the photosynthesis room, or getting his lip hooked on a fishing line. How typical.
This splicing of high school slice of life and fanservice with breakneck, harrowing action sequences amid bleak, apocalyptic circumstances has become conventional in anime at least since the dawn of Evangelion. While I'm painting that as a negative in this series' case so far, because I think many people won't believe themselves capable of bearing Knights of Sidonia due to its adherence to these conventions alone, it occurs to me that a good number of fans love it for how it handles the blend, even while they ignore or miss some things happening beneath the surface. And that's fine for them. Just like there are fans who care for arguing about whether Rei or Asuka was best girl more than they are concerned with what Anno meant when he said that Rei's character was already over when she smiled in episode six.
What I suspect is, knowing that these conventions have been done to death, and that he'd basically be stuck dealing with them nevertheless, Tsutomu Nihei said to himself, "you know what? To hell with this unstoppably powerful yet loveably oafish protagonist, and to hell with any relationship he has. You can't have an interesting relationship with a guy like this if it's with some stock, cute girl anime character." He knew this was doomed to be the weakness of the manga anyway, so he threw it all out the window and decided to make this into the most twisted and strange manga he could despite its vacant youth protagonist, and all the time he and his friends have apparently got to kill just screwing around.
If anything, it's drawn by the guy who made Blame!, so you're bound to get a world of astonishing scale and detail delivered through his art. Almost everything takes place on one ship, everyone lives in one tower of residences, but it feels massive, like there's much more to explore beyond what we see in the manga. There's a whole freaking ocean in one part of the ship. Nihei cleverly begins most of the chapters with a drawing of a random scene from inside Sidonia's residence area, allegedly borrowed from a book entitled 100 Sights of Sidonia, which the characters also refer to themselves as a real book. We see about 50 of those sights throughout the manga, so we're left to imagine what's been left beyond our perception. Furthermore, the manga's got its hideous monsters and even a fair dose of unsettling body horror, while going for a less scratchy, more poppy and clean look than Blame! Though most unsettling are those reaction shots wherein Tanikaze's face goes from cartoonishly simple and flat to uncannily realistic and detailed, with bulging veins and everything, in moments where he's been burned by a pot of water, or some girl's got him in a choke hold.
If you've heard that the ending is the worst part, that it's an incoherent, asspull fanpleaser, I'm here to tell you that that's not true. The ending is the most horrifying and twisted part of all. If you'll bear with me, I'll break down the major players in the narrative and some of the more crucial scenes, in order to bring out how Nihei takes Tanikaze's optimism, sense of righteousness and duty, and charming obliviousness, typically ideal traits for an anime hero, and subtly turns them against him over the course of the story. Knights of Sidonia is a manga rife with contradictions and ambiguities displayed so brashly that you have no choice but to carefully consider what the author's intentions truly are.
(The rest of the review will contain an extremely massive amount of spoilers)
Gauna
Gauna are a force of nature. As a lifeform, I think they're most akin to a kind of mold. A single entity, yet a colony of smaller units. It isn't clear whether they share a consciousness, or each have their own. It isn't clear that they're fully sentient at all, or merely acting on instinctual drives, except in the cases where a Gauna is replicating a human. In those instances, it seems that a replica of the copied person's ego arises almost as a side effect from the placenta's replication of the person's physiology. Gauna copying human form just seems like a random outcome in their unending development of new and better weapons for to defeat Sidonia. Other than the ones with (emulated, possibly phony?) human consciousness (or is it our own consciousness that is more automatic than we like to believe?), Gauna are guided by the same goal: to chase down and consume dense concentrations or emanations of Higgs particles. The curse of the Gauna is a result of humanity's harnessing of the machinations of the universe for our own ends, using higgs particles as a power source. It's like the universe itself is keeping us in line. This is a story of the struggle of humanity against nature, attempting to overcome, master and subsume a new part of nature, with science as our primary tool and weapon. Is our intellectual adaptability and our alchemical manipulation of resources from our environment a match for the instinctual adaptations of the Gauna, whose own endlessly transformable and restructuring physical makeup seems to be the only resource they depend on?
The protagonist
The protagonist, Tanikaze, is something like a walking, repeat plot device; He's not much of a real person. I would argue that he's not even meant to be. There are a few actual characters resembling people in this story (like Kunato, Yuhata, Izana, ironically even Hiyama), but Tanikaze isn't one of them, despite apparently being the "main" character. He's a bot, with three functions: eating ravenously, fighting to save Sidonia and its citizens regardless of the potential risk to himself, and accidentally seeing the women of Sidonia (which there seem to be many more of than men, the likes of whom on the other hand he never accidentally sees naked) naked. Nobody in Sidonia's illustrious and tribulated history is more capable on the battlefield, yet incapable of conducting himself around women. Even if he doesn't know there are women behind that door, or around that corner, he's bound to trip over his own feet, or the building they're inhabiting will suffer some sort of structural mishap, and they'll be exposed to him. He is thus adored by his Sidonian harem for his chivalrous adherence to his duty and astonishing success as a heroic soldier, even while they treat him as a punching bag for comic relief. He's like a test-tube grown action hero and harem nucleus, and he has only the precise qualities necessary for fulfilling those roles. Other than that, he's a blank.
He's ostensibly a sort of lower class citizen at the start of the story, but he was actually selected before his birth to be Sidonia's savior, so that doesn't matter. We don't catch many glimpses of other proles, so the dimension of class struggle is really only nominally present, even while he occasionally, peripherally brings up the differences between his new life and his old life underground, which in any case seems to have mostly consisted of his playing virtual reality pilot training games.
While he has countless potential love interests, he recognizes only the most ridiculous possible partner: a scientific weapon, a chimera between Gauna and human, with the mind of a child. She's capable of transferring her mind into, and is frequently represented as one of her tentacles outside of battle, which even Ichigaya Teruru, the sexy android, points out looks like a penis. Tanikaze is not really aware of the fact that all of the other women on the ship are attracted to him anyway, even his close friend Izana (who's actually intersex, until she becomes a woman due to her attraction to Tanikaze), no matter how obvious they make it. I'll go more into his fascinating, but limited sex life later on.
What is a human? Who is the real me?
In Knights of Sidonia, the parameters of what defines human are expanded well beyond contemporary boundaries. Some of us live forever (at least, until we're killed) and regenerate quickly, even when seriously injured. Most of us only eat once a week, and all of our other sustenance comes from photosynthesis. Some of us are born sexless and develop sex characteristics according to who we're attracted to, like Izana. There's a family of sisters who are all clones bred for combat, although what that exactly means, why this specific individual, whoever she was, was chosen for cloning for the sake of combat, isn't really clarified.
Early in the narrative it's explained to Tanikaze that as far as he and Sidonia are concerned, no matter what degree of intelligence or resemblance to Hoshijiro's original psyche her placenta clone seems to develop, she can only be looked at as a hunk of placenta, and a potential threat to Sidonia. Much later, Honoka Shou's placenta clone doesn't realize she's not the real Honoka Shou, and is horrified when she learns the truth. In these cases, is the central Gauna consciousness, or whatever form of consciousness or instinct seems to guide Gauna toward the same convergent goal, fighting for bodily control with the accidentally generated ego relics of Hoshijiro and Honoka Shou's placenta bodies? In any case, it seems on the one hand we're meant to believe that the ego is directly tied to individual physiology. If you copy the body and brain perfectly, a likeness of the original ego will form, too.
However, we're also expected to believe that blood nematodes can contain transferable copies of a person's ego, and thereby we have to suspect that a person's psyche may have nothing to do with their physiology, per se. An alternative explanation is that blood nematodes DON'T copy a person's "ego," they merely copy things like memory and knowledge; and the person "possessed" by a blood nematode just thinks they've become whoever the blood nematode says they are based on their possession of that knowledge, those memories. In that sense, the main antagonist of the series isn't Ochiai at all, but just a blood nematode that contains his will, knowledge and memories. Likewise, maybe the Tsumugi copy Tanikaze ends up with at the end of the story just thinks she's Tsumugi, but she's really just a blood nematode who's turned Hoshijiro's cloned body into a meat Gundam with the illusion of Tsumugi's personality. Is an ego in general a mere construct that disguises and facilitates our unconscious drives? Maybe if these characters, or any characters, asked themselves who they really were, they would grow deformed and paralyzed by doubt, just like Honoka Shou's clone when it realizes it's a Gauna:
On the other hand, there are other "clones" in the story who clearly don't share the same ego. Tanikaze is a clone. ALL of the Honoka sisters are clones. But their brains all developed from scratch, without experiences pre-encoded, while the Gauna clones included clones of their referents' brains at the times of their deaths. So do experiences leave physical traces in the brain? By my estimation, there are just no irrefutable answers. Is it intentional ambiguity on Nihei's part, or symbolic sloppiness? There are things we call egos here, and their apparent avatars. The third essential ingredient for a self to be accepted, other than physical construction and experience, seems to be recognition of and belief in that self. Whether Ochiai's ego is inhabiting Kunato or Kanata, he's Ochiai if he believes he is, and if others believe he is, too. The body is just the avatar. Meanwhile, Ochiai's ACTUAL clone, captain Kobayashi's right hand man, is not Ochiai, since he lacks Ochiai's experiences, and everyone knows it.
But who is Tsumugi, and what is her avatar? Is it her big feminine biomech form, is it her inquisitive tentacle, is it her true body, or is it the blood nematode in Hoshijiro's clone? Maybe all of them.
How do we save ourselves?
Humanity are painted as utterly utilitarian. We use higgs particles even after we know the Gauna are attacking us over our usage of them. Among the other bizarre science experiments we put ourselves through (photosynthesis, immortality, cloning, genetic manipulation), of course we are not going to have reservations about fucking placenta clones or living on a placenta planet if the potential benefits outweigh the dangers, or the drawbacks are simply invisible and easy to ignore, which is the ending the story gives us. Placenta is too powerful and valuable of a tool to look down upon.
This is despite humanity's apparent reluctance to accept Ochiai and his perverse experiments as our potential source of salvation. After his experiments prove themselves to be safe enough, we get rid of him, because it's his ego that's the true threat to humanity, despite all its done for us. Unlike with higgs particles, the dangers of keeping Ochiai around outweigh what he may contribute going forward.
However, is Ochiai that different from Kobayashi?
Isn't the bitter irony here, as Ochiai partially points out, that Kobayashi, an immortal who killed off most of the immortal ship committee, and who has been gracefully, deviously manipulating the course of Sidonian civilization, as well as the information available to civilians, from behind the scenes, in many ways is the exact same as Ochiai? She has ultimate faith in her view for how Sidonia is to be saved, and is ruthless in bringing it into actuality. Sidonia's reliance on her, and on a clone of its former hero, Hiroki Saitou, a reliance enforced by Kobayashi herself, doesn't exactly imply a willingness to leave the fate of Sidonia to the next generation. Her egalitarianism and will to trust are nominal. They're political aesthetics that are undermined by her choices, but her choices are made, allegedly, in the name of those ideals. Just as Ochiai's ostensible goal, to assure that "humanity" lives forever, really just depends on him living forever, by himself, in an immortal, indestructible chimera body. Whether he lives or dies though, humanity itself will become chimera. We will incorporate placenta into our technology, into ourselves, just like we previously incorporated higgs particles, and regardless of the cost, we will undergo another evolution into a new type of humanity, under a new paradigm.
Deeper into desire
In the world of Sidonia, sex has all but disappeared. There are a handful of occasions throughout the series where sexual activity nearly takes place, or is potentially implied to have taken place.
Sex and eating have been combined into one urge: photosynthesis. Tsuruuchi is practically begging Samari to give him a shot with her throughout the whole manga. Anytime Tanikaze stumbles on the girls photosynthesizing, he pays the price. It is unclear if photosynthesis is innuendo, i.e. Tsuruuchi really wants to bang Samari, but photosynthesis is a cleaner and cleverer way of suggesting it, or if photosynthesis is the entire sexual act. Is penetration expected, or is it just the mutual gaze and flesh made bare? The women eat naked together daily. Doesn't the repeated sexualization of this task imply a sort of homoeroticism is present in their daily meals?
There are humans with both genitals who can asexually reproduce. There are clones everywhere, and a handful of immortals. Sex, more than ever, is an activity of pure pleasure. It has no utilitarian function. Perhaps the same is true of romantic relationships. This seems to have had a devastating effect on Tanikaze.
The one time it's implied Tanikaze actually has sex, although we don't see a second of it, it's with Kobayashi, after she reveals to him that he's a clone of his grandpa, Hiroki Saitou, who was actually a centuries old hero of Sidonia. Afterward, she tells Tanikaze to spend the night, as she lets her hair down. It's clear that she loved Saitou, and is treating Tanikaze as a surrogate lover. Tanikaze is Saitou's avatar, for her sexual fantasy, and as he's a physical clone of Saitou, he's ideal for the job, even if his persona is totally different. Sexual fantasy necessarily involves this separation of the psyche from the physical object of desire. For both participants. Once, in the midst of sex, a person thinks about what they're actually physically doing, it somehow ceases to feel all that sexy. It's rather sort of ridiculous and strange. And the stranger the sex, the more haunting is the post nut clarity.
A couple days later, Tanikaze blushes when he sees her staring intently at him in an important meeting he's been invited to as a newly crowned "highest ranking officer in Sidonia." Sounds like he performed his duty to the best of his ability. Of course Tanikaze would sleep with Kobayashi if she commands him to. He listens to everything his commander tells him to do. This is after his relationship with Tsumugi has already begun, but it's Kobayashi who makes him a man. Yikes?
The closest Tanikaze comes to a genuine sexual encounter before serving his commander is when Benisuzume penetrates his Tsugumori, and Hoshijiro's placenta clone forces herself on him. This is one of the most densely layered scenes in the entire series.
Is it just me, or is this scene as hot as it is grotesque?
It is unclear here what exactly it is about this scenario that is so painful and provoking for Tanikaze. He has stood outside of the false Hoshijiro's tank gazing at her, wondering about her, in the Outer Sidonia Research Lab on the ship for countless hours, and now that she's in front of him, he cannot breath. Is it the fact of being confronted with her unbound desire that he cannot handle? The proximity of her naked body? He does subsequently end up choosing the one girl in the cast, Tsumugi, who doesn't have a woman's body after all. Until, after his experience with Kobayashi, he is prepared to accept "Tsumugi" uploaded via blood nematode into the false Hoshijiro's body. That implies he also doesn't have a problem with the fact that her consciousness and her body are copies.
Perhaps he has no idea what sex actually consists of at this point, having lived his entire young life underground, just like he knew nothing about all of the biological and social structural changes humans had gone through. Perhaps he is enjoying it after all, and it's his own arousal despite himself that terrifies him. As she penetrates his mouth with her tendrils, he uses Tsugumori to penetrate her true body, prematurely cutting off Hoshijro's sex dream.
When Tanikaze sleeps with Kobayashi, it's Saitou's body that Kobayashi wants. Tanikaze's most romantic moments with Tsumugi are when they're clasping hands, or flying around the residence tower on their one date. Tsumugi's tentacle interacts with Tanikaze on a daily basis, but their most precious moments together are when Tanikaze is inside a mech. What is it that we provide one another through love and sex? I give you my body, my avatar, to project desire onto, and my ego has to deal with the consequences of your treatment. Before we can do it right, we have to learn the rules of the game. We must learn to be aware of our desires and considerate of the other's ego, which persists beneath our projections whether we want it or not.
I can't help but think of the iconic Hokusai shunga image, The Dream of the Fisherman's Wife, a crucially formative work in the tentacle fuck canon. The sexual encounter depicted is typically taken to be mutually pleasurable, rather than forced, and some have touted it as feminist at its core for its depiction of a woman's sexual fantasy totally bereft of a (human, at least) male pleasure source, implying the woman's independence in her ability to satisfy her sexual urges.
The problem with Hoshijiro's placenta clone is that we don't know if it's a woman or not, but it looks way too much like a one Tanikaze knows. Anime and manga, hentai and doujins have established themselves as sources of male pleasure independent of any reliance on real female bodies. It's when one gets too close to their fantasy, and one is no longer in control, that it becomes a terror. Tanikaze reticently longs for Hoshijiro, but her lust for him takes on a monstrous form that he's not prepared for.
This is the end, my only friend
The way Knights of Sidonia treats the questions desire and identity leaves me feeling that its ending is not a dream come true, but a revelation of the nightmares that hide in plain sight.
Is this truly a happy ending? Isn't it rather quite disturbing and even absurd? Tanikaze now accepts a relationship with the placenta Hoshijiro, which both he and Sidonia were initially meant to reject no matter what, all because it's now controlled by a blood nematode that seemingly contains Tsumugi's consciousness. We've provisionally decided these entities, blood nematodes and placenta, are useful enough, that we'll just accept them as safe and normal. Again, isn't it quite possible that it's not Tsumugi's true consciousness, but the illusion of her consciousness? Is that just as good, since we can't really tell the difference? Whether it's truly her or not, isn't the fact that she's sharing a placenta body with fragments of Hoshijiro's mind, which she can still sometimes feel the presence of, and which we never really determined definitively to not be a genuine copy of Hoshijiro's ego, enough to undercut the purity of this so called fantasy ending?
As we become increasingly chimerical, and stretch the boundaries of what it means to be human, do we indeed remain human? The questions this series poses have always been too complex for a moron like Tanikaze to wonder about. He waits for Kobayashi to tell him who his grandfather was, why he was chosen for his job, why his body regenerates. He doesn't ask questions himself. He can't sense the feelings of the people around him. He has essentially no awareness, whether about his internal environment or his external one. He just does his job, both as a citizen and soldier of Sidonia, and on the level of the narrative, as a hapless, single-minded, but powerful protagonist. He waits to be told who he is and what he's supposed to do. The truth, what we take as "normal," both in Tanikaze's case and for all of humanity, is whatever we choose to take for granted, what ever makes living life most convenient. Perhaps it's better not to ask if higgs particle technology was really worth it. Perhaps it's better not to ask if my wife is actually just a blood nematode creating an illusion of my dead girlfriend's personality in an alien replica of my other dead girlfriend's body. Perhaps it's better not to ask.
DrFlapJack
80/100Nagate Battles The Red Gauna: An entertainingly bizarre Frankensteinian abominationContinue on AniListTsutomu Nihei has been my favorite manga author ever since I read my first manga, BLAME!. There's just something about the way he writes that sends a shiver up my spine. However, if you asked me why I like his manga so much, I could not give you a coherent answer because his style of storytelling is, quite frankly, utterly indescribable. At the risk of sounding cliche, the only way to know is to just read them for yourself. Knights Of Sidonia is a bit different in that it makes an effort to be enticing to a larger, casual audience. However, in its attempts to be more accessible and understandable, the manga ended up feeling somehow more mystifying to me than any of Nihei's other cryptic cyberpunk capers. It definitely has a lot of problems. Even so, I found this outlandish story be quite charming, warts and all.
Welcome to Sidonia, Humanity's Last Stronghold Knights of Sidonia suffers from one of the most unappealing beginning arcs of any manga I've ever read. It took three tries to read, because in my first two tries I couldn't make sense of what was happening and had to stop reading because I was so confused. And I don't necessarily mean confused as in I can't understand the plot, more like I'm confused because I don't know how I'm supposed to feel or think about any of it. Am I supposed to laugh? Am I supposed to sympathize? What is happening and who even are these people and why should I care about them? Progression of the story is oddly terse in the beginning. The abrupt nature of it all made me feel very detached from the characters at first, as I felt like I had no time to really get to know them. In another school/fighting manga, the main character would have become a pilot after chapters and chapters of character development and training. In Knights Of Sidonia it takes about 6 chapters. There's no catharsis or sense of accomplishment in it, because we don't get to see Tanikaze Nagate learn and grow. He already did all of his learning before the story even began. Perhaps it's a bit unfair to expect this, however, as it's pretty clear that this manga is not a story about an individual. It's about a war spanning multiple generations, and how Sidonia's society revolves around it.
The war with the gauna is the manga's biggest strong point in my opinion. It's made quite clear from the very beginning that humanity is fighting a losing battle, yet they always manage to beat the insurmountable odds in spectacular fashion. Sidonia's army have very well fleshed out tactics and protocol, and it's so fascinating watching them in action and getting to learn how they operate. One of coolest parts to me is not the main battles themselves, but the desperate arms race that goes on behind the scenes. The gauna are a very crafty foe, as they carefully observe the humans' behavior and technology, and assimilate them into their own battle plans. Thus, Sidonia needs to constantly improve their guardians and invent new weapons to keep up. As a matter of fact, the gauna are much more interesting villains than they first appear. They seem downright innocent at times with their penchant for mimicry and child-like curiosity, almost as if the war they wage is simply a playdate to them. Their true purpose remains a mystery up to the end, but the depths of their mysterious intentions are fascinating to peer into.
Nihei's new, softer art style complements the lived-in, welcoming feeling of Sidonia. Shown through the "100 Sights of Sidonia" lovingly displayed at the beginning of each chapter, this manga and the people that inhabit it want you to get to know the beautiful world within its pages. Sidonia is a seed ship containing the last hope of the human race, and they treat this responsibility with grave determination. The people are proud of Sidonia, and they're proud that they've survived for so long even with the cards stacked against them. Knights of Sidonia's world building is deftly communicated through the environment and the everyday actions of the characters. Every citizen wears safety belts and magnetic boots in case of a gravity malfunction or sudden acceleration. Clothing is treated as a precious resource, carefully patched and preserved so it can be passed down for the next generation to wear. The whole manga is flush with all these little details about their way of life that may seem insignificant, but go a long way towards showing that despite how different life is in Sidonia, there is no doubt that it's a place where ordinary people go about their ordinary days just like we do.
A Story With Two Faces One thing that stands out to me about this manga is its extremely peculiar sense of humor. The jokes are like if someone ran up to you, dropped a box on your foot, and then ran away again without a single word or explanation. The comedy slice of life sections are oddly stiff and unnatural, like the characters are just going through the motions. The nekked jokes in particular stand out like a sore thumb in how badly they're executed. Women smack Tanikaze around and call him a perv not because he is one, but because they are in a manga and they are contractually obligated to do so. Tanikaze's healing factor is exploited constantly for the sake of slapstick laughs, but everytime he gets hurt it looks too uncartoony and makes me cringe rather than chuckle. Bit of an odd comparison, but if anyone is familiar with the infamous Freddy Got Fingered, it's like that running gag where the unlucky kid keeps getting hurt in increasingly realistic and disturbing ways. My point is, it's almost like a black comedy parody of slapstick. I wouldn't say that Knights of Sidonia is devoid of comedic value as I did eventually find it quite amusing. I suppose if you get hit over the head with a dumb joke enough times, you'll get loopy and laugh at just about anything.
The art takes a bit of getting used to for sure. It lacks the daring black lines and grim hostility of Nihei's earlier art, opting for a lighter, more polished look. Personally, I think it looks pretty neat, no real problem with it. His crazy architecture, elaborate machinery, and grotesque alien lifeforms are still second to none, so I'm perfectly happy with the new style. However, Nihei has one Achilles heel that he still hasn't quite gotten over, and that is people and their rubbery, expressive faces. Knights of Sidonia is meant to have characters that you can spend time with and get to know, characters who act like normal people, and that's a problem when the only emotions they can muster are dull surprise and vague consternation. The few expressions that they are able to manage often look exceedingly odd, at least to me.
Now, usually I'd devote at least a little bit more time to talking about the individual characters, but I really don't have anything to say about these ones because they were all somewhat nondescript in the personality department. Hiyama the den mother is a talking bear for crying out loud, and she still didn't stick out enough for me to remember that she existed until I gave it another read. Tanikaze is a cookie cutter vanilla protagonist with one defining trait to his name, which is his level of intelligence. If he stood in a high wind, you'd hear a whistling as it blew in one ear and out the other. What I mean is the lights are on but nobody's home, if you catch my drift.
Mind you, I don't hate him. I quite like the little dimwit, bless his heart, and I like the other characters too (except Teruru. Forget you, Teruru). I'm just saying it's a miracle that I was able to remember any of their names after finishing the manga.
Knights of Sidonia is a manga that constantly seems to be at war with itself, which is a result of the attempt to appeal to two very different audiences at once without being totally committed to doing so. It wants to be a niche science fiction for hard core science fiction fans, yet it also wants to be a wacky rom-com with widespread appeal. The big crack in the foundation of the manga is not any one of its parts, it's the fact that they're all in the same story that's the problem. The two different lines have to interrupt each other in order for either of them to progress, as if they're two different manga sewn together like Frankenstein's monster. It's perfectly possible to mix and match different genres, I've seen it done plenty of times, but the two sides of Knights of Sidonia just can't seem to coexist without clashing.
Such a Special Place in Outer Space... The main reason for Knights of Sidonia's existence is that it's Tsutomu Nihei's quest to replicate the successful shounen formula of physical comedy, flashy action sequences, the power of friendship, and beautiful women falling over an average joe protagonist. The only problem is that Tsutomu Nihei is still Tsutomu Nihei no matter how hard he tries, and the whole thing went cattywampus with his magical Midas touch of weird. Unlike the detestably generic Aposimz that came after, Knights of Sidonia still very much has that signature Nihei flair to it despite the efforts to make it otherwise. I am not sure if I should be praising a manga for trying and failing to be generic, but whatever. I'm doing it anyway. Now, even though this manga isn't the best representative of Nihei's unique style as a mangaka, I think it has great potential as a gateway series to Nihei's other works and dark science fiction manga as a whole. It's just familiar enough to invite new readers in, just out there enough to lure them deeper down the rabbit hole. And if it can sucker more unsuspecting manga readers into exploring the weird side of sci-fi, then I'm all for it.
So far I've been pretty hard on Knights of Sidonia, but does that mean I dislike it? Hell no, I love it to death. But I'm not going to sit here and tell you that it's some sort of profound, flawless paragon of writing that everyone should read, because it's not. It's a rough, off-kilter, incredibly badass mess that's just as entertaining as any highly polished manga masterpiece. It's definitely not for everyone, but if you take a chance on it then you just might be rewarded.
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SCORE
- (3.7/5)
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Ended inSeptember 25, 2015
Favorited by 244 Users