Shinji in Kamen RIder Ryuki ep 1

Shinji and Kamen Rider Ryuki episode 1 revisited

I thought that my first post of the year would be Sherlock, since it’s back on and I’m just loving it (I’m completely obsessed with Lestrade), but I watched Ryuki’s first episode for the first time in a long time, after recommending it to a friend, and I ended up having things I wanted to say about it.

Word of warning for anyone that hasn’t seen Kamen Rider Ryuki through to the end: several of my observations relate directly to the very end of the series, so this will be spoilery. Very spoilery.

Anyway.

Five minutes in, during Shinji’s first scene, it struck me how it basically tells you everything you need to know about Shinji; or rather, about Shinji as he was at the beginning of the story: good-natured, excitable, easily distracted. We’re introduced to Shinji while he’s in the middle of an argument over a traffic accident. Shinji insists that the accident was the other man’s fault, and we assume for a moment that the man hit Shinji. But when his cellphone rings with a call from Ookubu, the Editor-in-chief at Ore Journal, where Shinji is an intern, we realize that Shinji wasn’t even involved. He was distracted on his way to work when he saw the truck hit a driver, and just had to get involved… hilariously nearly picking a fight with the driver while the biker sits forgotten and frustrated to the side. It wasn’t quite making a mountain out of an ant hill, but it was certainly making a mountain out of a foothill, so to speak. Here it’s played for comic relief, and it really is quite funny and endearing, but it also encapsulates so much about Shinji and about the journey that he’ll take over the next year.

Shinji is a sweetheart, and is fundamentally incapable of standing by and letting what he perceives as injustice just slide by. He will rush in to get involved, not bothering to ask any questions, without knowing the context of the situation he’s stepping into. He doesn’t ever stop to wonder what he’s getting into, or even whether his intervention is welcome. As evidenced by this first scene, the way he rushes in headfirst to right wrongs will as often as not have unexpected results, hilarious in this particular case, but when we look back on this scene after watching Kamen Rider Ryuki play out we can also see the potential for tragedy. Just like he rushed in to pick a fight in order to defend a biker that got hit by a truck, Shinji will rush into the Rider Battle with no real knowledge about it beyond what is immediately obvious to his eyes: the Riders fight monsters that are preying on people, therefore he will get involved in order to save those people. He can’t see the forest for the trees, and even though Ren’s manner should have been a clue, he doesn’t realize that there is a lot more to it than that, that there are rules to this game and stakes he can’t even fathom. And because Shinji is who he is, always driven by his heart, by his need to do what he (subjectively) perceives to be the right thing, he’ll keep on going even as it becomes evident that he may be getting a lot more than he bargained for. Along the way he’ll realize things weren’t as simple as he thought. He’ll realize, primarily through coming to slowly know and understand Ren and Kitaoka, that maybe right and wrong aren’t so cut and dried, and what is justice for one person may actually be an injustice to someone else, and this realization will make him seriously question his actions and beliefs.

There’s episodes late in the series where it’s downright painful to watch Shinji wander around lost in self-doubt. He comes out on the other side, finds new motivations, but he remains essentially the same kind-hearted guy who doesn’t think before he leaps. And in the end (SERIOUSLY, HUGE SPOILERS. STOP READING NOW IF YOU DON’T WANT TO KNOW THE END), the result won’t be hilarious. In the end, letting himself be led around by his heart, by his need to get involved, will get him killed by a random monster the day before the end of the Rider Battle. It’s a seemingly meaningless end, until you stop to consider the effect Shinji had on those around him. Yes, he got involved by apparent chance; no, he wasn’t quite prepared, and yes, it ends tragically for him, but Shinji’s actions do have a ripple effect, he does change things, even if it’s not in a way he might have anticipated.

In thinking about how that first related to Shinji’s larger character arc, I started to notice just how much of the story at large is set up here, even though we don’t actually learn much at all about what is actually going on. Hindsight lets you appreciate what is really different, what is constant, and just how much will come full circle.

There’s Reiko, of course, plucky journalist to the end, and what struck me is how at the start she really has no use for Shinji at all. She sees him as nothing more than an annoyance, a fool who gets in her way and whom she’d much rather do without. She doesn’t put any stock at all in a single word he says. She’s impatient and barely civil with him. The beauty of how that relationship develops is that it’s impossible to say when things get turned around, and by the end Reiko has come to appreciate Shinji, she likes and even respects him. He’s still Shinji, and kind of a dumbass, but he’s no longer an annoyance, he’s a friend. When Reiko finally finds out the truth about Shinji and the Rider Battle, it’s not that her perception of him suddenly changes, it’s more like she’s finally seeing clearly something that has been there all along. She’d already come to respect him, but only then will she truly understand him.

And of course there’s Ren. Ren and Shinji’s relationship is hands down my favorite “bromance” in the Kamen Rider franchise, to the point where there’s very little that I can say about it, other than the single most heartbreaking moment of the finale is the moment in the epilogue when (SPOILERS AGAIN) Shinji and Ren get in each other’s way and finally pass by each other, and something nags at them, and they both look back but eventually each goes on his way, never realizing he just passed by the person that should be like a brother, his best friend in the world.

The thing that jumped out about Shinji and Ren in this episode is they way they first pass by each other, seemingly completely by chance. There’s no getting in each other’s faces like there is in the epilogue, but there is a beat, marked by the soundtrack, which makes you realize this is important, the moment they first crossed paths. There’s so much to come and they don’t even know.

Obviously that seemingly random encounter is framed they way it is because these two are our two heroes, but on another level it brings up something that’s at the heart of Ryuki for me: how much really is up to chance anyway? One way to look at it is that Shinji’s entire involvement with the Rider Battle was an accident, that he should never have been involved… or at least that’s what the puppetmaster behind it all believes. On the other hand, isn’t it revealed later that no matter how many times Kanzaki Shiro tried to do it over, he could never get Shinji out of the Rider Battle? Does that mean Shinji was always fated to be Ryuki, to be wrench in Kanzaki’s Xanathos Gambit? Personally, I see it more as sort of a string of apparent coincidences, all leading him to that card deck. It wasn’t some ominous inescapable fate, it wasn’t that Shinji was some sort of Chosen One, he was a regular guy who could have chosen a different path at any time, but the thing is, he didn’t, and he wouldn’t have, because of who he is; and without him, things would have turned out very differently. So maybe it wasn’t destined, but he was definitely needed.

Other observations:

  • Isn’t it interesting how Shinji’s very first trip to the Mirror World ultimately saved Reiko’s life, at a time when she didn’t even want to give him the time of day? And the thing that I find really fascinating is that neither of them ever actually realizes it. Shinji knows something is up and that it’s after Reiko, he tries to tell her to run away, but he never actually finds out that the way he crashed into the Mirror World was what allowed Reiko to unknownly drive away from the monster that would have killed her.
  • Really, the way Ren assumes Shinji must know what is going, the way Shinji fumbles around that first fight, it all seems to drive home the idea that Shinji’s involvement is entirely accidental.
  • On that note, I love how Shinji is the very first “fail!Rider”, at least as far as I know. It really amuses me how the next one will be Ryotaro, who is also Kobayashi’s creation.
  • “I don’t really understand it, but… I’m going too!” Oh, Shinji. This is what you always do. ;__;

 

5 thoughts on “Shinji and Kamen Rider Ryuki episode 1 revisited

  1. I agree on pretty much all points. :)

    One of the amazing things about Shinji is that while he does make so many decisions apparently without thinking and knowing the context, we learn that that rarely changes the decision he would have made.

    I have one episode in particular in mind (I don’t want to give details and spoil other commenters) in which Shinji knows exactly what’s going on, and makes a hard decision – then backs out to go with what he would have naturally done WITHOUT knowing what’s going on.

    Like many Kobayashi characters, Shinji just is what he is, and things may happen around or to him, but he still is what he is.

    AND I HATE THAT EPILOGUE. Why does she do this? Here and in Timeranger – both head-messy and EXTREMELY frustrating.

    1. Yeah, Shinji basically just always follows his conscience in the end. The problem he has late in the series is that for the first time he starts to see that there’s other sides to things, so he questions his right to act on what his conscience tells him. In the end, he regains that faith, or maybe it’s more that he realizes that all he CAN do is what he thinks is right, yeah?

      I actually really like the epilogue in an OMG, THIS HURTS SO GOOD sort of way; I mean, I get why someone wouldn’t and I respect that, but I feel like it wasn’t emotional whiplash for the sake of whiplash, in the sense that this is set up earlier in the series, and in my opinion it fits the end. And despite it being a timeline reset, it doesn’t actually wipe the slate. Everything happened and it matter. But yeah, YMMV.

      As for Timeranger… spoilers! I haven’t watched it, mostly because I’ve been told that the only available subs are shitty. I’ll get to it eventually.

      Thanks for the comment!

  2. The part in the first episode where Ren and Shinji half-glances at each other makes me wonder about the cyclical nature of the rider war. If you like taking into account that the movie and special were other iterations of the game that failed – I wonder if it’s already inevitable for Ren and Shinji to meet and befriend each other because of some sort of ‘bleeding over’ effect.

    I like to think that Shinji’s true contribution to the rider war was that his presence always derailed it to the point that it wore down Kanzaki to acceptance.

    1. Oh god, I’m sorry I didn’t see your comment before and it was left unapproved!

      Anyway, that is a very interesting possibility… that they’re having little moments of deja vu when encountering each other before they meet in any specific iteration. They do kind of give each other pause in the epilogue, after all. I think I may adopt this as my head canon, because it’s just so sad to think of Shinji and Ren never becoming friends that final time, I think I’d rather believe that all the times they have fought together have left a mark that will inevitably bring them together. Actually, I’d also like to believe that of Kitaoka and Reiko, and Shinji and Miho.

      As to Shinji’s contribution, isn’t it pretty much out right stated that that is exactly right? Or something that hints heavily at that, I don’t remember exactly.

      Thanks for commenting!

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