PeripheralVision said:Dinobunn said:
It's kinda crazy to compare him to school shooter because even in the first episode he never actually want to murder Yamada, in fact he always did the opposite. He always tried to protect her and made her feel comfortable in every situation, such as the presentation scene. This idea of "murder" in his head is just his way to not acknowledge his feeling for her. He's basically just a chuuni and not an actual psychopath. That's why it's very easy for him to drop that idea once he actually realize his feeling
That is quite the interpretation. As I see it, his initial resentment of Yamada and wanting to kill her stems partially because he sees her as representative of his wider issues with society. Having violent fantasies of this nature is not normal. There is a difference between the everyday sort of anger mixed with hormones, and then there is wanting to murder someone because of your broader issues with the world and the people around him. It is this part that is reminiscent of a mass shooter.
Just because the idea is not taken seriously by the premise does not mean it is not troubling and not an actual part of his character; why not make him someone with a plan to shoot up his school and treat it just as lightly as his desire to stab his classmate? It ends being the same thing not just because his mindset is any different, but because of how the story treats this as some passable flaw. If he is a Chuuni, he is a very disturbed Chuuni. In the context of Japanese culture, this is far darker than you may realize if you are a resident of the states, where murder in schools is fairly benign news. Wanting to stab your classmate evokes earlier memories of the Sasebo slashing or the Osaka school massacre. Kyou is by definition the Japanese cultural analaog of a mass shooter in America.
The issue is that his idea of "protecting" Yamada is still very much in line with someone with seriously emotional disturbances. I hate to rain on your parade, but women do not necessarily appreciate this sort of "protection"; it undermines their autonomy with the sort of paternal oversight reserved for children, not people who should be your peers. You say it is the opposite, that he doesn't want to really kill her and wants to protect her and to an extent I agree, it is the opposite; he swung from one healthy extreme to the other extreme. This is not as inconsistent as it appears.
People with these sort of issues regarding resentment also tend to be highly possessive in their relationship. They often have abandonment issues/low self-esteem, and a tendency to blame the world for causing all their personal turmoil, instead of you know...themselves.
Ichika, is described as:
Early on in the series, Ichikawa is a bitter social outcast, often having violent fantasies involving people who slight or annoy him. This, accompanied with his interest in true crime and fantasy stories has his internal monologue being that of a psychopathic killer.
While Ichikawa quickly realizes that he has unique opportunities to interact with Yamada, his poor self-esteem and still-negative personality often causes him to dismiss her cues that she is also developing feelings for him
I mean...yeah, sounds like a mass shooter in the making to me. I am not attempting to criticize the anime, and in a way I think it is mildly neat that there could be a more cohesive explanation to Ichika's seemingly tsundere-kuudere personality. Regardless of whether or not you think he genuinely wants to kill Yamada, it is very true that his fantasies stem from incredibly poor self-esteem and an intense dislike of others. Those are very much real, and literally the point of the story. He is suppose to grow to be more tolerant and accepting of the rest of society through his relationship with Yamada.