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Jan 27, 2020 4:04 PM
#151
What a huge disappoint this ending was and hear I thought I have finally found a short good thriller mystery anime with deep themes. Ahhh ...idk from where to start, this show started okay for me then middle arc become really interesting but this last arc literally made the previous arcs waste of time if this was focused on Magase and Seizaki cat mouse traps it would have been better I just feel like this was the poor version of the Naoki Urasawa's masterpiece manga "Monster". It felt like this show wanted to portray the themes but badly failed in it therefore how much people say that ending is deep it felt cheap and forced for me becuz there was no buildup or motivation of characters I mean What is the reason of Magise doing all this things?? Literally show made her some sort of superhuman she killed all man in the building and reach the top floor without anyone capturing her what a security for president of America I would have understand if they showed her using other people for doing these things by blackmailing them,manipulating them or by giving them some kind of drug but I guess she was invisible and what's the point of shifting the story to America and focus on it's president I mean who cares what he thinks "what's good and evil" I mean if Magse wanted Seizaki to understand this ideology (which I don't understand why she wanted him to understand this ideology) then she could have done it by other methods. Also in EP 5 till 7 Itsuki was the main focus for this sucide law debate but writer just throw that plot point I mean he could have focus on itsuki's character or Magase's reasoning for her actions instead of just throwing them and goes into another plot point gosh I have never written so much in any post but I am really disappointed the first 3 eps were 6.5/10, eps 4-7 were 8/10 and this last arc was 4/ 10 so I guess it's overall 6/ 10 and I am being too generous here but I think my rating will drop more after some time becuz the more I am thinking the more I am disliking this and the more show seems stupid to me |
ArshjJan 27, 2020 4:28 PM
Jan 27, 2020 4:17 PM
#153
Wow. I'm speechless at how bad that ending was. Was the entire purpose of this show to discuss what good and evil are? Honestly... so much unexplained - so much gone to waste. This show served no purpose. All the drama and tension built up was all for nothing. All the thrilling moments... nothing! No payoff. Evil wins in the end? Suicide law? Who cares. |
Jan 27, 2020 4:22 PM
#154
That's one hell of an ending. So ... what the show meant for evil is "to end" & unfortunately "Evil" won in the end 'cause everything will end one way or another, but that doesn't mean all meaningless, because to continue/to life is to be good ... What seems to be very fucking weird here is about "Kuyo Kanae & Haru" story, about a girl got pregnant pretty young with her "boyfriend." But "boyfriend" suddenly missing. Wonderful life as a single mother with her son, only to be taken away with some kind of worst luck ever as the son fell to a sudden death syndrome. OK ... at the end scenes, both Seizaki & Magase remembered a same freaking "home town," she literally being welcomed by Seizaki's son in that very town!! YES, what I am insinuating here is both Seizaki & Magase were from the same town & knew each other in the past!! Seizaki WAS Magase's boyfriend that was missing but suddenly lost all of his memories about her. That's why he was the only one that didn't really affected by her seducing/hypnotism powers!! |
Jan 27, 2020 4:38 PM
#155
Well...the scene when he persuaded the lady not to jump was sweet and heartwarming, but apart from that- what a mess this episode was. The soundtrack was pretty though. What was the conclusion to the puddle deep philosophical/ethical debate throughout the entire series? I expected it to be stupid, but this takes the cake. The show to me felt downright pretentious which was disappointing because it was built up quite well initially. Just glad it's over! Imma keep my memories of Babylon from 1-8 (ish) and destroy the rest. Perhaps even read the manga! |
strawberaetaeJan 27, 2020 4:45 PM
Jan 27, 2020 4:57 PM
#156
Eonlars said: Frostyinside said: Eonlars said: I think at the end, Zen had no choice because Alex called him a "Good Man" which meant he shouldn't kill magase while magase called him a "Bad Man" which meant he should kill magase. Here is the problem that Zen faced, if he killed magase he would be a bad man as he would end someone and he would prove magase was right by calling him a bad man but at the same time he would kill a bad person like Magase. If he didn't kill magase he would be a good man and he would prove Alex was right about him but he would by leaving magase alive, he would do bad by not ending the worst evil in the world. Now, killing magase is going to make her right and not killing magase is going to make her come out alive. Former sounds better in theory so it would have been safe to assume Magase was killed but she wasn't as shown in the last scene. Let's leave that for a second. Now, we should think about Magase's action as she also followed the same logic(Good=life, bad=end) She claimed to be an evil person and also claimed Zen was also a bad person, she didn't touch him like she did with every other person around him, meaning Zen had a special status as a bad person and Magase didn't kill bad people. If Magase somehow killed Zen in that scene whom she saw as a bad person, then it would make her a good person because she would end a bad person, making her a good person so this is a reason why she couldn't have killed Zen. Now, Magase didn't have a reason to kill Zen(Other than the fact she had a chance of being killed by him but I really don't count this as one because she obviously doesn't fear death) and had a reason to not kill him. So here is my assumption. 1- Zen didn't kill Magase, proving he was a good person and making sure Magase was wrong. 2- Magase didn't kill Zen as well(Bullet shot at the end could be explained with lots of things) and since she was proven wrong by Zen because he didn't kill her like a bad person, it could be argued that she had a change of mind about good and evil. 3- It is possible that Zen and Magase survived, we know Magase survived for sure and it looks like Zen's family is in their hometown, where we saw Zen think about when he was explaining what good was. Though there are many things I can't explain such as "Well he killed the president, what about him being in jail?" or "the suicide law" I would love to see what the novel did so if there is one person who read it, I am open to what happened at the end. I mean the whole thing about magase falls flat if you consider he had already killed the president, like he had already proved that he was bad, bc alex (president) was good, and yeah, he killed him. So, I don't think he didn't kill her to prove he was good as he had already killed a person moments before President knew he was going to kill him, that's why he gave the gun to Zen and still called him a "Good Man" Also Zen didn't end the president, the president was already done for as he was about to jump no matter what Zen did. Magase called Zen a bad man after he killed the president but she did it to mess with him and the fact that she challenged Zen to a "who will shoot" when she obviously had the chance to kill him reinforces the idea that she wasn't fully sure about Zen being a bad man. Makes sense, but I can't see how she had the chance to kill him, she was only pointing her fingers at him. The ending was pretty confusing tbf, I thought someone in the helicopter shot him, but i saw someone saying he killed himself, both are real possibilities. The thing with the president is confusing too, like if to end is bad then Zen killing alex makes him bad, but he did it for a good cause, in order not to make the world think that suicide is good so it can be considered as a good action? Idk |
Jan 27, 2020 5:23 PM
#157
MehmetY said: Swagarot said: MehmetY said: Swagarot said: MehmetY said: Swagarot said: alot of stuff don't make sense also they never explained ai's powers, the ending just didn't feel right for me, i did enjoy the ride though so a 7/10 for me to this show as a whole Actually they kinda explained Ai's power. She seduces people too hard so they can't take it anymore and want to die just like how your body can't take masturbate anymore and wants to finish it. Basically Ai's power is super duper seducing. ye i mean that's what her power is but there's no explanation to why she has it, how it works and so on. honestly i feel like they should've just ended it without any answer if the only answer we're getting is good is continue and bad is to end. In my opinion, fictional works don't need to explain some powers, like Okabe's Reading Steiner in Steins;Gate. But only answer that we got is "Good is continue, evil is end." was really not climaxing. i feel like in steins gate it wasn't as important as in Babylon cause in steins gate while it was important it wasn't used as the main "thing" while in here ai's powers are pretty important cause they cause a lot of major events in the story, i feel like without explaining it ai's powers are just another plot device. Okabe's power as important as Ai's power imo. Without Reading Steiner, Okabe couldn't keep memories from other time lines and this was one of the main things at Steins;Gate events. Reading Steiner is explained though in 0. Not in a really satisfying way as it was one of the most interesting but not properly developed storylines in 0, but still enough to accept it, why Okabe is special. Anyway agreeing it wasnt needed in Babylon to explain Ai. It was obvious she was just a abstract concept like the Otter in Sarazanmai just to drive the story and make the readers/viewers in this case rethinking their believes about good and evil. I wished at the first episodes it was more grounded thriller, like it actually tried to be most of the time, but it still works for what it is and it was expected since the beginning of this last arc to end in a way like this. So in a sense kinda wasted potential, but still enjoyed it. |
Jan 27, 2020 5:46 PM
#158
The wiki for the novel says: "Original run: 2015/10 - " Probably, this would mean the novel hasn't finished yet. And one of the reviewers in Amazon says: "Although the subtitle of Vol. 3 is 'end', the story continues." As I'm not a keen audience for this series and haven't read the novel, I'm not sure about it. |
Jan 27, 2020 5:49 PM
#159
I wish I could be optimistic and think that this ending was always planned but don't think I can. I don't have a problem with having such a dark ending but... It feels like things didn't go as plan in this show. 1. The long December break was unusual. Production problems? 2. The pace in the last 3 episodes was extremely slow while the last 5 min of episode 12 seemed rushed. 3. The switch to the "USA Arc" felt so forced. Almost like I was watching a different show. Did we really need that many episodes with the President playing online while he debates ethics on his head to reach this conclusion? 3. The idea of committing cold blood murder to avoid legalization of suicide is a really hard pill to swallow. "I need to stop suicide... by killing you!". Wait what?! 4. I wish she didn't have that insane mind control power. It was so over the top in otherwise realistic show. Like watching a shonen main character in a seinen series. She would be scary to me if she did things that could happen in real life. I had a hard time buying into the Professor X got a sociopathic kid vibe. When you don't explain how this things work in a realistic setting some people will wonder if you go ahead with the "because of her powers" when you don't know how to move the plot forward. 5. I feel like I watched a show that it was going to have a second season and midseason they told them it's not going to happen. 6. I understand that some people didn't care about the resolution of the suicide law but you can't blame people for expecting answers. The anime used 80% of it's time debating about it. I don't think there a right or wrong answer. Some people wanted answers to the mysteries and questions the show threw at them. Others are ok without getting those answers. We don't need to agree, it doesn't have to be a masterpiece or instant turd. It's up to you. |
removed-userJan 27, 2020 6:25 PM
Jan 27, 2020 5:51 PM
#160
lol best comedy 2019-2020 seriously what the f*ck, how can you get so bad in such a short time. kuroneko99 said: The wiki for the novel says: "Original run: 2015/10 - " Probably, this would mean the novel hasn't finished yet. And one of the reviewers in Amazon says: "Although the subtitle of Vol. 3 is 'end', the story continues." As I'm not a keen audience for this series and haven't read the novel, I'm not sure about it. It finished on the third volume. It's just trying to look cool because to end = evil and continue = good. This is so pretentious lol. |
Jan 27, 2020 5:56 PM
#161
What is good and evil? I think the whole conclusion to the definition of good and evil is that there is no general answer. This was demonstrated by the paradox at the end. Zen defined evil as "ending". By shooting the president and ending his life, Zen committed evil by his definition. However, there was a flashback in the same scene where the president said, And as for the gun I'm going to give you, I want you to use it to do the right thing. The key word is "do the right thing". Zen used the gun to shoot the president, meaning Zen also thought that ending the president's life was the right/good thing to do. There is a clear paradox here where "ending" was both good and evil. As for context, Zen shot the president to prevent him from committing suicide and the suicide law from passing, as the president committing suicide would essentially be the same as him approving of it. The story also suggested that Zen reached the wrong conclusion about good and evil, as demonstrated by this quote from Magase, Well then, I'm sorry, but... The key word is "but...". but" suggested that Magase was about to disagree with him. The definition of but is "[a word] used to introduce a phrase or clause contrasting with what has already been mentioned." The sentence could be finished as something like, Well then, I'm sorry, but... that's incorrect Magase disagreeing suggested that Zen reached the wrong conclusion about good and evil. Another piece of evidence that suggested Zen reached the wrong conclusion was that Magase did not congratulate Zen, which would suggest some form of approval, at all after all he had been through. Did Zen live? Probably not. Zen went as far as to kill the president to preserve his 'justice'. If he was willing to kill the president, there was absolutely no way he would let Magase live after all she did. The anger was also clear in Zen when he shouted, 'Magase' . The fact that Magase lived meant that she probably killed Zen. Also, going back to this quote. Well then, I'm sorry, but... Why would she apologize? Possibly because she was about to kill him. What is Magase's power? Her power is likely the ability to cause an overwhelming temptation to sin. This was explained in the quote No matter what anyone tells you, just don't eat the fruit. That's what's "best." But I'm going to eat it. Why? Because the fruit looks really delicious. I'm about to snap right now. Like the moment before a balloon bursts. Or the moment before a piece of popcorn pops. Even though they know what they are doing is wrong, they are unable to control themselves due to the overwhelming temptation. Another clue was the fact that Magase usually appeared in a seductive manner and the audio given to her were usually whispers of temptation. Was it necessary to know the exact details of how Magase's power worked? Not really. Even if the audience knew, it would have not made much of a difference. What happened with the suicide law? That was left unanswered. Was the story conclusive? Somewhat. There were 2 major plot elements: 1. the suicide law 2. the definition of and good evil Number 2 was concluded but number 1 was not. I felt that there should have been a conclusion to the suicide law, as it was a major aspect of the plot. Other questions Something I am unsure about is why Zen struggled to pull the trigger at the end. In the close-up shots of his hand, his finger was shaking. Meanwhile, Magase was perfectly stable. |
eWEQRW123123Jan 27, 2020 7:52 PM
People with low average anime scores don't have high standards. They are just bad at choosing good anime to watch. |
Jan 27, 2020 6:11 PM
#162
UltiMa_Despair said: Magase surviving was expected, but giving no answers to the actual plot of the show makes me feel like I wasted my time watching You're right bro! |
Jan 27, 2020 6:19 PM
#164
EdHaku said: I see. Thank you for the additional information. Well then, it seems the author has poor skill to finish story (or to make promising premise).kuroneko99 said: It finished on the third volume. It's just trying to look cool because to end = evil and continue = good. The wiki for the novel says: "Original run: 2015/10 - " Probably, this would mean the novel hasn't finished yet. And one of the reviewers in Amazon says: "Although the subtitle of Vol. 3 is 'end', the story continues." As I'm not a keen audience for this series and haven't read the novel, I'm not sure about it. This is so pretentious lol. |
kuroneko99Jan 28, 2020 2:42 AM
Jan 27, 2020 6:30 PM
#165
It's rare for a show to have such a significant nosedive in quality. After an intriguing start they gradually sabotaged themselves, episode after episode. The combination of the long break and this episode perfectly encapsulates their failure as a show. The long break right when the show was starting to hit its apex completely destroyed the flow and enthusiasm. Upon resuming, nothing that made the show interesting remained. I would've preferred the show end on episode 7. Sadly, they took the theme of the show far too seriously and dragged out the long and slow suicide that is the ending. Dumpster fire of a self-important anime. |
Jan 27, 2020 6:32 PM
#166
i heard the novel had different ending so we might have the anime original ending fuck up case again |
Jan 27, 2020 6:35 PM
#167
@eWEQRW123123 that is some diving analysis done right. Coming from the earlier post I've made, the main thing about this show has always been about the Bible and its biblical terms against the entire world a.k.a the Whore of Babylon Ai Magase herself vs. the world that's full of sin. And if you hadn't realized it yet, please go back to Episode 11. And again, as much as the anime tried to take a book off Mado Nozaki's complete novel, it was an open-ended ending just as expected. Remember Episode 11's opening where the story of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden were told NOT to consume the fruit in the garden? That's the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, seemingly what the world wants: they're all Adams and Eves before the Serpent of Evil, Ai Magase herself. She IS A TEST to see how much mankind has succumbed to the idea of "heaven and hell" even if God and sin do not exist in the fictional world. Then again, if sin already existed in the world, the interpretation of "good and evil" in this last episode was done right IMO. There is NO CLEAR-CUT ANSWER to what is right or wrong, and that is dependant on each and everyone of us to see duly. NOT EVERYONE will like this ending because it kills off the entire build-up in the past few episodes, ESPECIALLY Episode 11's opening prologue of the Whore of Babylon (if you'd get it then good for you, but if not, PLEASE READ IT UP), and this is where I'd felt Mado Nozaki kinda had a 20/20 vision of what is "right or wrong" in the 1st place. IN THE END, it's up to us to define that and mankind will still fall in on sin while the Serpent of the Garden of Eden creeps up on us to do evil. It was a great ending, though the foreshadowing was somewhat drastic from expected. |
Jan 27, 2020 7:28 PM
#168
what the heck was that ending lol. i have more questions than answers. this last arc felt super weird and a huge change in direction. |
Jan 27, 2020 7:35 PM
#169
No...just no having the villain "winning" doesnt make it close to a good ending when the concerned villain was empty to begin with. We know still know nothing of her motivation or her goal, clearly none of the people in charge of the writing knew what to do with her. This is a downright insulting ending and they even have the balls to have it being an open ending. |
Jan 27, 2020 7:39 PM
#170
I guess "continuing" to torture and kill people is good then. Jks, but seriously. Nothing is ever that simple. I'm pissed that bitch is still breathing. She needs to get away from that child. Fuck. #Zendeservedbetter |
Jan 27, 2020 7:50 PM
#171
That was a rather anticlimactic ending, though fitting considering how much of a mess Babylon's second half was. Suppose some quick thoughts on things... 1. Ai Magase: Ai's very character proved to be the most frustrating element of the series for me in later episodes since her seemingly supernatural nature went against the realistic mood that Babylon had in its earlier episodes. Worst still, her true nature and abilities were never defined thus it seemed she existed as a convenient plot device to shift the series into whichever direction it desired. 2. Suicide law: I assumed this was going to be the main focus of the show as episodes progressed. The debate on the matter while in Japan did offer some solid points on the moral ambiguity of the act of suicide in specific circumstances and I was at first under the impression that shady political and corporate activity of some sort was at play with the law's existence. But things derailed with it in the final arc of the series as for whatever reason, focus shifted internationally and mostly every country was considering adopting their own suicide laws following Japan's, not helped by Ai Magase's role as convenient plot device to cause all hell to break loose in the final episode. 3. What's good and evil?: The attempt at dabbling into this in episode 11 felt quite pointless and pretentious at that stage within the series, not helped by Babylon not seeming to have a clue what it wanted to concisely focus on with its final arc. Want a series that explores moral ambiguity while retaining a realistic mood and clear direction as a crime thriller/ drama? Naoki Urasawa's Monster does this much better than this mess of a series. |
Jan 27, 2020 7:52 PM
#172
Worst episode of the entire series by far. Helicopter saw the president at the edge of the building, knew he was going to jump and the guys recording did nothing to try to stop him, could have easily done it by lowering the helicopter behind him and bringing out a ladder, or a lifeline. Nope, just keep recording. An entire team of bodyguards could have been dispatched to catch the president in his fall at the cost of several injured/dead people. HE IS THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. Zen shooting the president is ultra pepega: considering he is hell bent on killing Magase, why he would even care about the state of the world at this point is beyond me, just kill Magase and be done with it. Nope, has to be a pansy and quake in his boots. I just don't understand. This entire episode was KEKW |
Jan 27, 2020 8:01 PM
#173
I swear this creator is doing this on purpose. First with Kado and now Babylon, luring us in with interesting premise and making us think we'll get a good show and then ends up throwing a bunch of random shit together at the end. He's probably laughing at our misery. I won't be fooled a 3rd time! 4/10 |
Jan 27, 2020 8:34 PM
#174
Anyone who thinks this ending wasn't excellent is crazy. This was about as perfect as it gets for this series. If you don't like the ending, then you never understood the series to begin with. I'd advise those people to rewatch the series and try to understand it for what it is as opposed to what they wanted it to be. |
Jan 27, 2020 8:36 PM
#175
I would first like to apologize in advance for any errors that I may have made in addition to my relatively lengthy post. I am no theologian nor Christian Scholar, so please do not hesitate to point out any mistakes. I should also mention that English is not my first language, so I am sorry for any grammatical and/or spelling mistakes. Anyway, this is my interpretation of what Magase Ai embodies, and the events that transpired during the finale. Magase could be considered as a parallel or a representation of the Whore of Babylon; the striking similitude between them is rather apparent. As @JoelSavvi mentioned in post #153, according to the passages from the Book of Revelation, the Whore of Babylon’s full title is Mystery, Babylon the Great, the Mother of Prostitutes and Abominations of the Earth—she “was arrayed in purple and scarlet colour”. Additionally, it is stated that she committed fornication with the kings of the earth, and have caused the inhabitants of the earth to be “drunk with the wine of her fornication” (it is noteworthy to mention that the word “fornication” in this context may be interpreted as “idolatry”). Several similarities may hence be inferred: 1. Analogous to the Whore of Babylon’s full title, Magase remains somewhat of a mystery—her abilities, her motives, remains unknown. She is also referred by Seizaki as something along the lines of “pure evil” and “the worst type of woman”, which also echoes the aforesaid title. I shall proffer my reasons as to why Magase is considered evil (if evil equates “end” or “ending”) later. 2. Magase’s character design incorporates different hues of purple, which does loosely match the description of the Whore of Babylon. 3. The word “fornication” denotes “voluntary sexual intercourse between two unmarried persons or two persons not married to each other”, and that it connotes “idolatry” within the context of the passages relating to the Whore of Babylon. Not only did Magase commit fornication in the literal sense early in the series, but it can also be argued that she caused her victims to commit fornication (idolatry)—the men among her victims yearned for her before they took their own lives. Even the manner that these suicidal urges manifest within them is highly sexualized, as Kujiin indicated in his final moments how the whole experience felt like intercourse/orgasm; he was imbued with the desire to cross the line and “release it”. Magase takes delight in causing people to go astray from the “correct” path; she actively leads and tempts people to commit suicide—an act of “ending”, or as the story suggests, an act of evil. Though it may seem that those who committed suicide only did so due to Magase’s enticement, they ultimately acted in their own volition— Magase never explicitly commanded her victims to kill themselves, her words were simply “one drop of poison”. This implies that Magase’s victims have forsaken “innocence”, and are relegated to being “sinners”. Furthermore, since they have “chosen death”, they no longer have the means to rectify their sins—it is only through “continuing” or “living” that possibilities, and the notion of good and evil, can exist. By abandoning the right to live or to “continue”, possibilities cease to exist, and these people are inevitably left with nothing. This reinforces the notion of “ending” being evil. I suppose Magase’s rationale behind her actions is simply to deviate the masses from justness and create a “twisted world”. Regarding the scene where Seizaki shot the President, it may be understood that both President Wood and Seizaki have concluded that the only viable option given the circumstances was for Seizaki to kill President Wood. The President realized that he had already crossed the point of no return and may proceed to kill himself at any moment; if he jumped off the building, it would implicate that after his rumination about what “good” is, he is convinced that “good” equates suicide, that “good” is “to end”. President Wood remarked that he would be telling a lie to both Kanae and the world if the aforementioned were to occur. To preclude this, Seizaki (the President’s only ally present on the rooftop), must kill him—Wood understood the implications of having Seizaki undertake said action and thus apologized. Although he previously handed the pistol to Seizaki so that Seizaki could do the right thing, and have also promised Seizaki that he would be able to reunite with his family, this could no longer be possible. In this scenario, Seizaki would be doing the “wrong” thing, and he most likely would be unable to reunite with his family. Nevertheless, the President reassured Seizaki that he was “a good person”; Wood smiled as he fell to the ground. During Seizaki and Magase’s final discourse, when being questioned about what evil is, the deaths of five characters (who all shown incredible gallantry) were displayed in seriatim, namely Fumio, Kujiin, Sekuro, Hardy, and Wood. The scene then cuts back to Seizaki. I speculate that this alludes to the following passage from the Book of Revelations: “And there are seven kings: five are fallen, and one is, and the other is not yet come; and when he comes, he must continue a short space.” The five kings who have fallen corresponds to the aforementioned five, the king that is would signify Seizaki, and the final king that is yet to come might mean Seizaki’s son. Finally, I am inclined to believe that Seizaki has subsequently committed suicide. |
removed-userJan 27, 2020 10:12 PM
Jan 27, 2020 8:44 PM
#176
Also i think i understand what the "magase appears in front Sezakis son" was supposed to mean. It means that the fight against the always existing evil (Magase) is now passed down to Sezakis son. Makase calls him a "good boy" maybe indicating that he is her next opponent (her opposite). |
Jan 27, 2020 8:59 PM
#177
Overall, a very good 1st half, and a pretty weak 2nd half of the show. With the President's conclusion that good = continuing and evil = to end, being manipulated into committing suicide by Magase would have contradicted his earlier notion, and as a result, the suicide law may have been passed. The President was basically putting the ball in Zen's court and asking him to make a decision. Kill the president or let him kill himself, knowing the consequences for each. With Magase still being alive, Zen's either killed himself or shot and purposely missed. All in all, I'd probably give it 7/10. |
Jan 27, 2020 9:15 PM
#178
Something that was never really explained was that Seizaki Zen is able to talk to Magase and wasn't pushed into doing something "evil" ie: comitting suicide. This is just a theory but after Seizaki first interrogated Magase I believe he acted a bit differently throughout the rest of the show. He overall just seemed very much out for Magase's blood, more "evil." If Magase's "power" is to influence people to do "evil" and at the end of the series they give evil the defintion of "to end" then I believe its not too far fetched to assume Seizaki was influenced to do evil after he interrogated Magase. As I mentioned previously he seemed a lot more out for blood after speaking to Magase, he then kills Alexander and presumably himself based on the last scene considering his son wasn't seen with either his mom or Seizaki himself and instead Magase. So in the end Magase did in fact influence Seizaki just like anyone else to do what the show defines as "evil." While the ending itself didn't really give much closure or a concrete ending with an explanation of what happened and why, that does not simply mean it was a poor or bad ending, I believe it leaves the ending up for theorizing for the consumer to think about. It was an interesting ending, I liked it. In fact trying to explain why someone has a supernatural power that makes people do evil and the reasoning behind it I think would honestly make the show worse. |
ZrynJan 27, 2020 9:21 PM
Jan 27, 2020 9:35 PM
#179
Zen probably died. He went as far as to kill the president to preserve his 'justice'. If he was willing to kill the president, there was absolutely no way he would let Magase live after all she did. The anger was also clear in Zen when he shouted, 'Magase' . The fact that Magase lived meant that she probably killed Zen. Also, going back to this quote. Well then, I'm sorry, but... Why would she apologize? Possibly because she was about to kill him. @UltiMa_Despair @LynBir @adbeaver @YutakaYamadafan |
People with low average anime scores don't have high standards. They are just bad at choosing good anime to watch. |
Jan 27, 2020 10:06 PM
#180
Magase used gender card to escape, either way, zen has gun obviously so yeah and uh US cops nuff said Evil wins, Magase gets a nice cozy vacation with her son, fair enough 6/10 a disappointment with a all that hype but I wouldn't say it's a massive disappointment |
Jan 27, 2020 10:28 PM
#181
I wanted the President's Thinker abilities to reverse Uno Magase and make her so that she'll surrender. but what we got is what I have expected sadly it was a 9/10 but I'm reducing it to 8/10 it has some good part. |
Jan 27, 2020 10:55 PM
#182
Well, Babylon have been quite the ride. This anime have been controversial from the start and the final episode took this sentiment one step further as we can clearly see from the episode's voting. One thing for sure is that it have kept viewers interested enough to complete the series even after a 1 month break. This thread is a little more than 24 hours old and it already got as much votes as Beastars final episode that aired a month ago! It's a common theme to have open ends in thrillers and let the viewer paint the ending with his own interpretation, this happens not only on anime but also movies, especially Asian ones and i think this is what the author wanted to do here. A thriller is supposed to play with your senses and keep you on your feet generating suspense and i truly believe Babylon has achieved that right from the start. On the other hand Babylon has created a lot of hype so i can understand why so many are scoring it so low based on their "disappointment", as they probably expected a different type of conclusion or maybe a more detailed one. That's not my case, i am satisfied with the conclusion of this story. I enjoyed the finale a lot, we as viewers got bamboozled with last episode's cliffhanger thinking 'Magase was the one at the top of the building', posters were even calling it "obvious", yet Babylon surprised us once again, it was just a bluff, the plot has been quite unpredictable since the start. When everything seemed to be taking a safe path after the President talked to the girl, out of nowhere comes Ai Magase with a pysco-sona rattack! The sound was done great on that scene, there's been some very compelling low key attributes of this series that's been great the whole season like the sound direction, the OST, the video edition have all been top notch, they have greatly contribute to generate a latent atmosphere of tension. It was a wonderful episode since Ai Magase's appearance and the conclusion of having Zen kill the president makes me think that it was not a total victory to Magase since the message given to the entire population that the President of the US would get killed is very different than him suiciding especially with the rise of the suicide law's worldwide talk. After that my interpretation is that Zen gets caught on Magase's spell before answering her questions about good and evil and he is unable to pull the trigger and ends up either shooting himself or getting shot with her escaping which is later confirmed with the post-credits scene in which i believe Magase is just clearing everyone possible related to knowing of her existence. 5/5 episode and a solid 8/10 for Babylon, i'm glad to see more anime series aimed at older audiences with stories that feels fresh and takes risks compared to other contemporary "follow the success-formula" popular anime. Hopefully we get to see more seinen that explore different delicate themes in 2020. |
SoulblightJan 27, 2020 11:17 PM
Jan 27, 2020 11:33 PM
#183
what the fuck just happened?!!! My goodness I didn’t know the president of USA just can get killed in this matter!!! Magase,you genius!! |
Jan 27, 2020 11:40 PM
#184
The first two episodes of Babylon were quite good, after that everything became a mess. Ai Magase could have been a great villain, but she is just too powerful, unbelievable powerful. So almighty that it became ridiculous and that she is surviving this whole show is even more ridiculous. Shitty final to a mediocre show which explained nothing at all. 4/10 |
Jan 27, 2020 11:45 PM
#185
Very entertaining Final Episode... Well, this is pretty hard.... But we all know that we are gonna agree that this final will divide our opinions as f*ck... The first episodes, were very shocking... In the mid ones the trama grew as hell... And in the last ones, it became more complex... = making it even more diffiicult to end it well. But, in my opinion, despite some minor detailes i didnt liked.... it was a Very Good Final... Not Great nor Awesome, but neither Bad or Boring... Just Good enough and the right one to close this series or at least this season. It would be interesting to get a Second Season, but this ending also opened TOO much the series... (or never closed it at all) And saddly, most of the times... this makes second season, pretty bad. (i hope im wrong, and i hope we get more Magase). PS: the ED Songs were pretty great... Started with 8/10... Ended with 8/10. |
YuyoAlbertoJan 28, 2020 6:44 AM
Jan 28, 2020 12:05 AM
#186
Unexpected ending though |
Jan 28, 2020 12:28 AM
#187
Super interesting plot and concept for majority of its run, but I lost a little interest in it during the second half with the inconclusive ending. Ai Magase is a fantastic villain, she was definitely the highlight of the anime. Ending fell into a predictable trope, once Zen was granted privilege to a gun I suspected he'd end up using it on the Alex Wood himself because of Ai. Overall a solid 9/10 in my book, wish it was more conclusive though. I don't think it really needs a season 2 or anything though, better to just let it stay as it is. I very much enjoyed my time with it. |
Jan 28, 2020 12:44 AM
#188
jungsae said: pretty much, she was a disappointing villain. we didn't really understand her intentions other than she's fucking crazy. I prefer other detective shows like PP and monster where the villain had motives and you can see how they turned into a mess who liked killing. This one was just "look, a hot girl who can hypnotize people into killing themselves"what a lazy writing, good god. idek what made me cringe harder, the villain whose entire character is literally "let's say, she evil and has psychic powers", or the show's attempts to look deep by vomiting pseudo philosophical ramblings for five episodes straight. |
Jan 28, 2020 1:09 AM
#189
Brainless people dont'n understand this title, and will have butthurt in finale ))) |
Jan 28, 2020 1:13 AM
#190
Wtf ranking dropped from 1000 to 1758 Sad to see this Score 7.79 to 7.49 |
Jan 28, 2020 3:32 AM
#191
Azazin said: The first two episodes of Babylon were quite good, after that everything became a mess. Ai Magase could have been a great villain, but she is just too powerful, unbelievable powerful. So almighty that it became ridiculous and that she is surviving this whole show is even more ridiculous. Shitty final to a mediocre show which explained nothing at all. 4/10 Episodes of 1 to 6 was good Never Don't be mess |
Jan 28, 2020 5:24 AM
#193
I'm tired of the people in this thread saying that anyone who scores this show a low score must automatically mean we're too stupid to understand this mess that is called Babylon. evaw said: The title was explained in the anime already. Trust me, dude, we all get the title. It's not that deep.Brainless people dont'n understand this title, and will have butthurt in finale ))) |
Jan 28, 2020 5:32 AM
#194
HaXXspetten said: Uhm... what? That's it? I really don't get it. Why did he even have to shoot the president to begin with, but more importantly that was such an anticlimatic ending anyway. So much plot potential that they never did anything with and it all feels like it amounted to nothing in the end I still liked the show a lot for most of its airing but... yeah that wasn't a great ending >_> If he didn't kill the president, the president would have killed himself, giving an official declaration on America's stance on the suicide law. Kanae would have followed suit, and then the suicide law wouldn't have a chance at being stopped |
Jan 28, 2020 5:37 AM
#195
I feel like, that was either an ending you'll love or hate. Before this episode, I was ready to give it a solid 7/10; I really enjoyed the philosophical drama and thematic concerns. Then I saw the ending, and the rating became a 9/10. I thought that ending embodied the nuances explored throughout the show. Each character was on a journey, and none of them mattered at all in the greater context - only in their miniature microcosms. Then I saw the after credit scene, and Babylon became the second show that defies the rating parameters I set myself - It's now a 10. The concept that Magase is the only character that truly mattered, that truly continued is so thematically relevant it's incredible. But it's layered so deep. Personally, I think that was the best ending the show could have from an artistic/textual perspective. |
Jan 28, 2020 5:38 AM
#196
liamhabib said: I know that much, but my point is the whole show kinda revolved around the topic of whether the suicide law was right or wrong in general and there isn't really an obvious answer to it. So if the president eventually arrived at the conclusion that it is fine then shooting him just seems paradoxical to me. It's like saying that because the suicide law is good, therefore it is evil and must be prevented, so to speak. By shooting him, to me Seizaki only proves that he is wrong. If he can't convince him that suicide is wrong and therefore not jumping then I think he should just let him jump. Shooting him just shows that he was unable to objectively prove that suicide is evilHaXXspetten said: Uhm... what? That's it? I really don't get it. Why did he even have to shoot the president to begin with, but more importantly that was such an anticlimatic ending anyway. So much plot potential that they never did anything with and it all feels like it amounted to nothing in the end I still liked the show a lot for most of its airing but... yeah that wasn't a great ending >_> If he didn't kill the president, the president would have killed himself, giving an official declaration on America's stance on the suicide law. Kanae would have followed suit, and then the suicide law wouldn't have a chance at being stopped But idk the whole thing can be interpreted in many different ways. Would've been better if they were more clear with what they wanted with the anime in general imo |
Jan 28, 2020 6:24 AM
#197
HaXXspetten said: I know that much, but my point is the whole show kinda revolved around the topic of whether the suicide law was right or wrong in general and there isn't really an obvious answer to it. So if the president eventually arrived at the conclusion that it is fine then shooting him just seems paradoxical to me. It's like saying that because the suicide law is good, therefore it is evil and must be prevented, so to speak. By shooting him, to me Seizaki only proves that he is wrong. If he can't convince him that suicide is wrong and therefore not jumping then I think he should just let him jump. Shooting him just shows that he was unable to objectively prove that suicide is evil But idk the whole thing can be interpreted in many different ways. Would've been better if they were more clear with what they wanted with the anime in general imo In my opinion Seizaki shot the president because he was under hypnosis by Magase, although the president himself came to the conclusion that the good thing is to continue living. The shot of Seizaki ensures that the USA does not take a direct position on the suicide law and therefore remains neutral. The events will probably be more in favor of the Suicide Law anyways. Many different endings have already been mentioned, but I personally think only one is the best. That Seizaki shot himself out of his own will. That he was a suicide risk was already hinted at in ep.8. It wouldn't have made sense for me if Ai Magase would use hypnosis to make Seizaki commit suicide, because the whole plot around Seizaki and Magase is based on the fact that he will do something evil. Seizaki, who is good through and through, but would never have done anything bad if in the end he would only kill himself through hypnosis. I won't deny that Ai Magase had no influence at all, but this last decision was more about his own will to die. Especially since there would be no reason for me why Seizaki should die by Magase? There were plenty of opportunities and there would also be more drastic situations where his wife and child might kill themselves by hypnosis. I can understand the hate of the second half, but I personally found the change very good. It got the spectator out of Seizaki's tunnel view, who was now rammed into the ground by Ai Magase in such a way that you wouldn't get more than a revenge story out of him. The philosophical part is a bit thick towards the end but I had a very good time with Babylon. I personally wish me another 3 episodes :D |
Jan 28, 2020 6:36 AM
#198
What the actual fuck! I'm still processing what just happened rn. Just left shocked and speechless wtf. I think the ending was pretty inconclusive. I wasn't expecting Seizaki to shoot the frikin president..i mean i kinda was but not like that. Now i get it that he did it to stop him from proving that the suicide law was good. Ai and Seizaki's face off was.. 'interesting', ofc it didn't end well for Seizaki :( The conclusion for the discussion of good and evil was nice, that Good = Continuing and Evil = Ending, 2 strongly opposing powers and also maybe the answer for suicide that people want to continue living for all its worth. Although the fate of Suicide law wasn't that clear and actually felt like it was forgotten lol. Ai Magase is one of the best villain in recent times. Terrifying, mysterious and just all out crazy. Might be obviously be inspired by Johan Liebert from Monster since both them are alike. Ai did survive in the end and its great to see the Villain win for once much like saying 'Evil won in the End' but they could have done that a lot better and the fact that Ai's power wasn't even mentioned much less explained was certainly disappointing. Needed Moar exposure for Ai. The Show itself was so great to watch it was just shocking, dark af and kept me at the edge of my seat alot. Easily one of the most Intense show ever and I love intense stuff! The Direction and the soundtracks were just freaking incredible. Ep 7 was one of the most horrific eps ever, and also one of the absolute best. This show had a lot of potential with its fresh and unique concept that had the courage to tackle the topic of Suicide, but lot of it was unexplained, and the ending is debatable. In the end, its 7/8 out of 10 from a solid 9 due to its ending. Peace. |
Jan 28, 2020 7:03 AM
#199
I completely disagree with a theory that existence itself is the good thing. |
Jan 28, 2020 7:10 AM
#200
HaXXspetten said: liamhabib said: I know that much, but my point is the whole show kinda revolved around the topic of whether the suicide law was right or wrong in general and there isn't really an obvious answer to it. So if the president eventually arrived at the conclusion that it is fine then shooting him just seems paradoxical to me. It's like saying that because the suicide law is good, therefore it is evil and must be prevented, so to speak. By shooting him, to me Seizaki only proves that he is wrong. If he can't convince him that suicide is wrong and therefore not jumping then I think he should just let him jump. Shooting him just shows that he was unable to objectively prove that suicide is evilHaXXspetten said: Uhm... what? That's it? I really don't get it. Why did he even have to shoot the president to begin with, but more importantly that was such an anticlimatic ending anyway. So much plot potential that they never did anything with and it all feels like it amounted to nothing in the end I still liked the show a lot for most of its airing but... yeah that wasn't a great ending >_> If he didn't kill the president, the president would have killed himself, giving an official declaration on America's stance on the suicide law. Kanae would have followed suit, and then the suicide law wouldn't have a chance at being stopped But idk the whole thing can be interpreted in many different ways. Would've been better if they were more clear with what they wanted with the anime in general imo From the 'apple of Eden' metaphor, I believe Alex was saying that, despite his arrival at the meaning of 'good' (ultimately siding against the suicide law), he had been corrupted by the personification of what he classifies as 'evil' (Magase). And to prevent the suicide law and therefore prevent the widespread flooding of 'evil', zen had to commit an act of evil. I think this is where his name is extremely relevant to the thematic concerns and symbolism; zen (which as you know means 'good'), must perform evil to preserve the veil of 'good', which in it of itself poses a myriad of philosophical questions, like: 'is good just a veil, hiding the truth?' |
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